Tag Archives: travel

Switzerland and the Black Forest (8-15 June)

We left France late on the 8th June and entered Switzerland at Basel. We didn’t linger and continued through the city and into Germany and then began to look for somewhere to camp. Our plan the following day was to follow the Rhine, which forms the Swiss-German border and switch between the two countries. Our first crossing was over the barrage of the first of several hydroelectric plants along the Rhine. There are identical turbines on both the Swiss and German sides, which is unusual as the other plants have the turbines on one side or the other but share the electricity between the two countries. Our luck was in and one of the Swiss engineers was strolling around and kindly told us a bit about the plants as our German is too poor to understand the information signs. I was surprised to learn that the combined output of all 12 hydroelectric plants along the Rhine is only half the output of the nuclear station we would see later that day at Tiengen.

Returning to the Swiss side of the river we were frustrated to find the cycle path led us away from the water, and so after a few km we said goodbye to Switzerland and crossed back to Germany, where we spotted the best and most unusual gate-post adornments so far: a pair of lazily smirking creatures that appeared to be half-dragon, half-dog. Speaking of dogs, our trailer, which had already broken once and had the frame replaced in Roscoff, had continued to wag like an unruly Labrador. In frustration we’d arranged, whilst still in France, to have a complete new one sent ahead to Donaueschingen Post Office for us to pick up on arrival on 10th June. This was not a moment too soon as the constant wagging eventually broke the replacement frame just outside the town of Bad Sackingen. We emptied all our kit from the trailer panniers and hung it all off the bike and limped on to Tiengen, in the foothills of the Black Forest. In light of our troubles, and because we were under the impression that the new trailer would arrive in Donaueschingen on the 10th, we cut short our Rhine journey and instead of going to see the Schaffhausen Falls we headed straight up through the Black Forest to Donaueschingen. Annoyingly, when we got to Donaueschingen the trailer wasn’t there, nor did it arrive the following day (Saturday). The post office was closed on Sunday, and also on Monday which turned out to be a bank holiday, so, on Tuesday afternoon, after several nights in a rather expensive campsite and two fruitless visits to the post office that day alone, we were not best pleased to learn that the parcel had arrived in Donaueschingen that morning but had then, for some reason, been returned to sender. Several frustrated phone calls later, by both Keith and a helpful lady in the post office, and we were told that the parcel ‘might’ arrive the next day (15th June)…if not then it will have to go all the way back to where it started in Poland before being re-sent to us. If that is the case then we’ll carry on as best we can and make arrangements for it to be sent ahead to a campsite rather than a post office, but we’ll need to get an idea of how long the redirection might take so we can work out where we’re likely to have got to. Looking on the bright side, there was a festival at the local Furstenberg brewery so we spent Saturday drinking beer, eating sausages and listening to wind bands in the afternoon and then a highly entertaining outfit in the evening who covered everything from Neil Diamond to Bob Marley via Tight Fit, Boney M, Cyndi Lauper and the Beach Boys. We also caught up with labelling our photos and writing this blog, and enjoying the company of a diverse and interesting bunch at the campsite. Herman from Bavaria and Al from Australia have been excellent company, and today we were delighted when Stephanie and Fabrice, who we met in Digoin, rolled into camp.

Canal du Centre, the Saône & Doubs Rivers and Canal du Rhone au Rhin 2- 8 June 2011

We left the Loire in a pensive spirit and headed alongside the Canal du Centre into Burgundy territory where we were looking forward to expanding our palates with more “degustation” sessions. The wide, sandy flood plain & golden arable land of the Loire became a greener and more rolling landscape. We approached Beaune, in the heart of the Bourgogne wine region, and every inch of land was devoted to the vine, far more exclusively than in any of the Loire wine regions we’ve cycled through.

Sadly our limited wine knowledge left us a little embarrassed when we strolled into the first vineyard and discovered most of their bottles cost the same as our entire day’s budget for food, accommodation and everything. We explained our limited means and the lady of the house kindly gave us a guided tour of her cellars and a couple of tastings. She had wines dating back to 1917 and which cost over €400 a bottle. The condition of a wine of such vintage can’t be guaranteed, so if anyone wants to buy a bottle the lady lays on a sumptuous meal for them at her house and the bottle is then opened. If it has spoiled then she has recourse to her cellar to open a different bottle. We were taken aback initially at the condition of the cellar….mould draped the ceiling and covered the bottles to a depth of a centimetre or more….but apparently this is because wines should be stored in damp places to stop the corks drying out. We’d known that the corks shouldn’t be allowed to dry out, but hadn’t appreciated just how damp and dank the ideal cellar would look.

Dole Church

Happy birthday to me, happy birthday to me! We celebrated my 39th birthday by treating ourselves to a night in a campsite (showers!!) and a meal out (our first non-campsite meal) in the well-preserved old town of Dole, birthplace of Louis Pasteur, which is dominated by a huge cathedral that imposes itself above the maze of 16th & 17th century streets that jumble up the steep slopes from the canal to foot of the cathedral. The weather had been overcast during the day and in the evening a huge storm descended. Luckily we just made it back to the tent after our night out when the storm broke, and we stayed cosy and dry listening to the rain clattering off the canvas and the cacophony of staccato calling from the frogs in the adjacent canal.

The scenery changed yet again as we made our way along the Doubs. Densely forested slopes rose immediately from the canalside with pretty brick villages and gaudily tiled ‘cloche’ bell-towers appearing magically from amidst the foliage.

Doubs Valley

The Doubs river and Rhone\Rhine canal seem to run adjacent to each other and often intermingle, with boats being directed to the most suitable waterway as required. We’d spotted some huge cargo barges and wondered how on earth they could get through the locks…the boats looked to be much bigger than the lock. We were both intrigued therefore when we saw one of these leviathans of the waterway entering into a diminutive lock. It was very impressive. The huge barge had to get absolutely lined up before inching forward with about 5 cm to spare on either side between his huge bulk and the walls of the lock. Once in with the gates shut, there was perhaps a metre to spare at either end. As the water rushed in the barge driver had to keep his engines ticking over to counter the rush of water into the small space remaining at the front, and inexorably the barge rose without hitting the side once. Very impressive. The couple working the barge accepted our admiration for their boat-control skills and told us they were carrying 180 tonnes of sunflower seeds to be turned into oil. We saw them a couple more times over the next few days and waved enthusiastically at each other, but didn’t find out where they’d come from or were going to at their sedate and frequently lock-interrupted pace.

The weather remained a little unfavourable and we arrived in Besancon dripping wet and took refuge in a warm cafe for an extravagant brunch. There’s a citadel up on a huge rocky outcrop and the canal goes underneath it in a tunnel. This pleased Keith, who enjoyed pedalling through it. I enjoyed the respite from the rain, which pools unpleasantly in your lap on the recumbent seat.

We’d hoped to go to the Peugeot museum in Montbeliard, but a more pressing need was to locate the Decathlon to buy gas, and then we noticed the black clouds rolling in so, as it was already after 6 and the museum most likely about to close, we started to head out of town in search of a suitable camping spot. The decision was made for us when the black clouds caught up with us and I just had time to sling the flysheet up whilst Keith put the covers on the panniers, and we then huddled in our hastily assembled shelter for an hour before there was sufficient lull to scamper out and retrieve some crisps and dip, and then later, in a more substantial lull, to reposition and assemble the tent properly and get some dinner cooked. It was still raining the next morning, but eased off by lunchtime when we reached Mulhouse and ate our bread and cheese in front of the hideous pink town hall.

Mulhouse Town Hall

Our last afternoon in France brought a real treat with it, as we pedalled along by the peaceful canal, I saw a large, sleek brown shape slip from the bank into the water. Presuming it to be an otter, we stopped and watched it swimming away from us, expecting it to disappear from view any moment. To our amazement, it then turned and swam towards us and came right over to where we stood on the shore. As it approached and raised its grizzled, whiskery face from the water, instead of the broad, flat skull and carnivorous teeth of an otter, we saw a rather large guinea-pig-like visage complete with rodent incisors. The tail was round in profile, not flattened like a beaver’s and I think it might have been a coypu as I believe there are some that were farmed for fur now living wild in France. There was a whole family of them, large and small, and we watched them for 10-15 minutes before continuing on our way to Basel.

Coypu?