We have truly world class gravel here, with the gravel network so extensive that it's almost pointless riding a road bike. All rides are 90% plus gravel, with the full spectrum from asphalt-smooth champagne gravel to rutted, gnarly forest tracks.
Our area is one of low population density, so traffic is pretty close to zero, and from May to September, we have excellent (and really rather warm) weather. There are lakes everywhere, the area is 70% forest and it's hilly enough, with climbs of 50-130m vertical being the most common. 130-180m climbing per 10km is typical.
I already created and lead the Glorious Gravel (a UK gravel holiday/events company) Sweden tour, but I'm really keen to get something organised for competitive gravel riders. I'm not in this for the money and my level is that I'm hoping to qualify for the UCI worlds next year in the 40-44 category.
My outline plan is to offer something in late May. It would be along the lines of 5-6 days of accommodation with catering. Planned routes every day (guided or just GPX files), sauna and airport transfers (we're 2hrs 45 from Gothenburg).
I know this area incredibly well, and can provide different and varied routes every day. You'd experience a broad variety of gravel, allowing you to brush up on skills ahead of the upcoming season. You'd hardly spend any time on asphalt and you'd likely be able to count the number of moving vehicles on one hand for each ride. 86km and over 3hrs is my personal record for not seeing a car.
I would aim to keep everything really affordable. Cycling is an expensive sport, so every saving is a bonus.
I can accommodate groups of any size, and I have experienced friends I can call on to make sure that a training camp is as tough or as easy as you want it to be.
Is this of interest to anyone?
For reference, here are two videos that (retired pro, two times Giro stage winner and former 1hr record holder) Alex Dowsett made when he was here last May:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tp6bBbuVTp8&t=2s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTkXFCpeRJg&t=1s
And a very typical Swedish gravel road:
![Image](https://dgtzuqphqg23d.cloudfront.net/WVqT0ew-ABBM1GIv3URH9WkbDeO8MFroAS6I9uRqCmI-1152x2048.jpg)