Categories
Travel

Jagerhaus Balcony Blues

Short ride today, just 34km or so, but a bit of a slow ride, both because we stopped quite a bit and because a lot of the riding was up and down on gravel paths, gradually climbing into the hills where the Donau starts.

We’re spending the night at an old hunting lodge turned guesthouse about 8km upriver from Beuron, Germany, about 20km east of Tuttlingen.

The Donau abandons all pretence of being a navigable river just outside Siegmaringen, where we started this morning, and quickly enters much more rugged and hilly country, with limestone bluffs along the sides of the valley and a couple of dramatic schlosses up on the bluffs.

At the Jagerhaus we’re spending the night at, the Donau is only about four metres wide, you can wade across it and only be wet to the knees, and if you don’t want to get wet a nice line of big rocks has been arranged as stepping stones.

Quite a change from the massive river we started biking alongside in Vienna just over two weeks ago!

The one minor downside to this Jagerhaus is that they’re not really equipped for groups as large as hours, so four or five of us are sleeping out on the balconies. It’s actually quite comfortable, I have a good sleeping bag, and there’s even a plug to charge my phone at overnight!

We depart from the Donau tomorrow at Tuttlingen and head south to the Bodensee (Lake Constance) to spend the night at Unterlingen before heading into Switzerland for a few days.

Categories
Travel

Burg auf einem Berg (Ubermarchtal to Siegmaringen)

Nice ride today, warm but not hot and through a good mix of small town, forest and farmland.

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Castle on a hill, turned up to eleven.

Siegmaringen Schloss is what happens when you take the fairly standard German castle-onna-big-rock and turn it all the way up to eleven. Start with a dramatic rocky bluff, add castle, keep adding castle, then start renovating castle right up to the opening years of the 20th C and you get Schloss Siegmaringen. The plaque at the door calls the current architectural style “Historisch”, which as far as I can tell is a polite way to say “made to look as romantic as possible”. It looks like the Hollywood version of a German castle onna rock because it’s supposed to look that way.

Incidentally, this photo was taken from a side of the schloss only visible to cyclists, pedestrians and possibly train passengers. Car users need not apply.

Off into the edge of the Black Forest tomorrow to spend the night at a guesthouse that used to be a Jagerhaus, a hunter’s lodge. It’s supposed to be spectacular and all by itself on a hill beside the Donau, so WiFi seems unlikely!

Categories
Travel

Cloistered (Ulm to Ubermarchtal)

Reasonable ride of fifty or so clicks today from Ulm to the village of Ubermarchtal. Cool and overcast most of the day, which made for very pleasant riding weather.

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View from the front door of our guest house. It has knobs on.

We’re staying in a spectacular Catholic Church-owned monestary complex, the Ubermarchtal Kloster. Parts of the buildings apparently date back to about 800 AD, the guest rooms are freshly renovated and well equipped, and the food was really, really good. The place is also some sort of Church school/education centre, but also provides lodging for modern pilgrims and, apparently, random groups of sweaty pagan touring cyclists!

I might have to revise my opinion of the Catholic Church up one or two notches if they always run such lavish and reasonably priced accommodation…

Off down the Danube to Siegmaringen tomorrow, another easy and fairly short stage.

Categories
Travel

Down to the River (Blaubeuren to Ulm)

Very short ride today, just down the valley from Blaubeuren back to Ulm and the Danube.

Nice riding weather, slightly overcast and comfortable.

Ulm is a nice city with a great bike path setup. The central Munster (cathedral) is a grand Gothic spiky pile, and I can see it from my cafe chair as I write this…

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View from my cafe seat, of the Ulm Munster. Not bad.

The cafe is related to one of the annoyances of no longer being in Bavaria – the hostel here charges for WiFi. Steep rates, too – €2/hr. Highway robbery, in 2014. Apparently hostels in Bavaria, if they offer WiFi, are forbidden from charging for it. Wish Baden-Wurtemburg would adopt the same rule.

Off down the Danube tomorrow and staying at a monestary at Obermarchtal, so who knows if they’ll gave WiFi!