Typed in
Redcliffe on 26 July 2014
| Kenny with a German-sized beer |
Well we are home and so I have to backtrack to catch you all up on the
last week or so of the trip.
When I left off we were about to go celebrate the Helle Nacht festival
in Bad Bergzabern
. All the people that
stayed in the night before turned out to celebrate White Night (the longest
night - the summer solstice). The
weather was not brilliant. It was
drizzling until I walked back to the van to get the umbrellas - after that
there was not a drop!! People everywhere
and booze up the ying yang. We had a
glass/stein or two of the local drop. We
were bemused because all the drinks were served in real glass and one could
wander throughout the town, glass in hand.
When you returned the glass you got a €2 refund - consequently everyone
returned their glasses - great system. There was street entertainment here and there
and a wonderful festive atmosphere. Those
who know me well will be amused to know that we actually watched native dancing
as some of the locals got into their traditional dress and performed local folk
dances - it is not something that I usually expose myself to for more than ten
minutes at a time! And there were some
colourful characters.
| Minstrels wandering to open the festival |
| Native dancing |
| Colourful characters of Bad Bergzabern |
Having stayed in Bad Bergzabern so that we could participate in the
festival, we moved off the next day sorry to see the end of our first small German
town. What do you know - down the road
5kms there is another cute little German town, and 5kms after that and 2kms
after that. This area of the State of
Rhineland-Pfalz is very pretty as far as the towns and villages are concerned. A lot of them are called ‘Bad’
something. This does not mean that they
are awful, but that there is a spa or a spring that the town has been named
after - amazing how many ‘Bad’ towns there are when you are looking at an
alphabetised list!
Passing through one nice little town after another, we made our way to
Karlsruhe and travelled to Neckarsulm where we stayed for the night poised to
move on to Sinsheim the next day to revisit the wonderful Auto Technik Museum
that we enjoyed so much on our first trip to Germany. Neckarsulm was quite a big town but we had no
interest in exploring it as the weather was not wonderful and the camping park
was a ways out of town. That night we
had a big thunderstorm and had to run the heater next morning to dry out our
cupboard as the rain had blown in through the heater vent. Dried out very quickly - love that gas heater
- and we were good to go.
Off to Sinsheim where we parked at the Auto Technik Museum (http://www.technik-museum.de) and
spent a couple of hours wandering through the exhibitions.
| Concorde and Tupelov at Sinsheim |
| Replica of the world's first car |
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| Something for the girls at Sinsheim |
Having done our thing at the museum, we then went searching for the
Stellplatz for Wohnmobiles in Sinsheim. This
was tricky as there was a great deal of roadwork going on around the museum
precinct and it was by a very roundabout way that we eventually found our spot
for the night - one of our fellow campers told us that we could have walked to
the museum from the stelleplatz! Well we
walked to the shops instead, and actually had some luck in the great hunt for
the Mother Of The Bride’s dress - I now have two options at this stage. Kenny is very pleased as he is a bit over the
hunt. Apart from the shopping success,
we quite liked Sinsheim which was a bustling vibrant city with nice treed
streets and lots of those wonderful cosmopolitan al fresco wining/dining/coffee
venues.
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| Kenny and half a cheesecake! |
From Sinsheim we travelled northeast the next day to Eberbach, a picturesque
village (town really) on the banks of the Neckar River. Whilst the Stellplatz was on the opposite
side of the river to the centre of the town, we drove over the bridge and had a
stroll through town in a light rain. We tested
the skill of the local pastry cook and enjoyed some local tasty delights. The servings were so huge we couldn’t eat it
all and the price was a fraction of what a smaller serve at home would have
cost - tasty and a bargain too!!
Because
of the weather we didn’t linger in town too long ad retired to the Stellplatz
where we stayed for two nights and I caught up with the book-keeping which was
well overdue. This Stellplatz did not
have water as advertised, but hey - we had power for 24 hours for €1 and a very
quiet neighbourhood
.
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| Riverside village near Eberbach |
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| The loyal wives of Weinsberg |
Leaving Eberbach, we meandered beside the river for quite a few miles
and spent the next night at Weinsberg. Our
Stellplatz in Weinsberg was across the road from a school and a five minute
walk to the centre of town. This spot
had power, water and a toilet dump all for €1 for the 24 hours - not bad. We checked out the town which was quite nice
and in the Office of Tourisme we learnt all about the loyal wives of Wiensberg. (“When
King Conrad III defeated the Duke of Welf (in the year 1140) and placed
Weinsberg under siege, the wives of the besieged castle negotiated a surrender
which granted them the right to leave with whatever they could carry on their
shoulders. The king allowed them that much. Leaving everything else aside, each
woman took her own husband on her shoulders and carried him out. When the
king's people saw what was happening, many of them said that that was not what
had been meant and wanted to put a stop to it. But the king laughed and
accepted the women's clever trick. "A king" he said, "should
always stand by his word."- Wikipedia)
lots of paintings, statues, etc. commemorating this legend. Kenny spotted a Chinese restaurant offering a
menu de jour all you can eat buffet for €6 so we gave it a try and had a lovely
Chinese lunch. I mention this because we
had an interesting experience with a Chinese restaurant in Hungary (they’re
everywhere!!) and vowed thereafter “when in Hungary - eat Hungarian!” which has
proved to be a good rule. Weinsberg
Chinese was the exception.
A quiet night then off to the town with the fabulous name of Schwäbisch
Hall - we really only went there because I liked the name!. But what a quirk of fate. Schwäbisch Hall turned out to be an
absolutely beautiful town full of 16th century buildings set in a
deep valley bestriding the river. It is
known for its musical productions, and in fact, one was in (public) rehearsal
on the steps of the Cathedral whilst we were there. We sat and watched for a while before
strolling through the narrow streets taking in the atmosphere of this gorgeous
place. As Fiona (the van, don’t forget)
came down the very steep road into the town I was having a fit because I thought
“we will never get back up this hill”, but she took it in her stride and got us
up, up and away with no problem.
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| Beautiful old buildings in Schwabisch Hall |
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| 16th century fountain in Schwabisch Hall |
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| Lovely street in Schwabisch Hall |
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| Old buildings by the bridge in Schwabisch Hall |
From Schwäbisch Hall we turned south to Schwäbisch Gmund - again a
destination picked because of its name - all of 30-50kms away. This town did not come close to its similarly
named predecessor. The Stellplatz was
large with all facilities, but full and very close to a road used (all day, all
night) by heavy, noisy trucks and also close to the railway line. It was full of motorhomes because, as we
discovered from chatting to neighbours, Schwäbisch Gmund was host that weekend
to a Blumenfest - a gardening Expo. We thought
that could be interesting until we also discovered that they wanted €16 each to
get in - pass Tony, we were not that interested. Managed to get a good night’s sleep though
despite the surrounding noise. On our
way out of town we saw great evidence of the popularity of the Blumenfest as
there were people everywhere. This was
not really surprising as Europeans are wonderful gardeners and every home has a
great veggie garden and the streets and public spaces are aglow with floral
displays - really lovely.
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| Enclosed mobility scooter - loved it!!! |
This was to be our last night on the road as our next and final stop
was Filderstadt (to Stuttgart as Redcliffe is to Brisbane). This is where Manfred and Marianne live. They are the parents of Bea who was to take
over ownership of our van - the (not so) lovely Fiona. Bea, a friend from home, lives in Australia
where she married an Aussie guy - now amicably divorced. As we approached Filderstadt we realised that
we would miss her and the leisurely, stress-free (well almost) wandering of the
past four months. This trip has been the
most relaxed of any we have done and we have enjoyed it more than any other I think.’
When we arrived we were made very welcome and next day joined in the
Christening celebrations for two of the family’s children - Levi and
Leonie. We walked to the local church
(whose bells had already made an impression) and enjoyed the experience of a
robust service in German that we didn’t really understand word for word, but
got the gist, and listened to the locals sings familiar hymns with foreign
words. Then we all retired to a nearby
restaurant where we were treated to a lovely lunch of traditional Schwäbian
food of the region. Lots of sausage,
pork and turkey schnitzels, lentils, and spetzle (spelled something like that) (sort of homemade noodles but more like
omelette strips rather than pasta) with lots and lots of salad. Lots of wine was consumed, after which we
repaired to Bea’s brother Dominic’s home for more wine and desserts. We left earlier than most as we are getting
old and finding it hard to hack the pace.
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| Kenny gone native |
Over the next few days we cleaned Fiona and handed her over. Only hiccup was the gas cylinders. We had a English cylinder that we inherited
when we bought the van, and a French gas cylinder - we had to buy it when our
English cylinder ran out, because in France you MUST use a French cylinder. The day after we arrived in Filderstadt our
gas ran out and we discovered that the German system was different
again!!! And all the gas plumbing in the
van, legal in the UK, was verboten in
Germany and had to be redone. I bit of a
nuisance but we got a gas fitter to fix it for us and got a German compliance certificate. We can’t believe that in an area as small as
Europe, that there are so many different systems - can’t the EU make everything standard
across the board?
Anyway Bea and Peter (her boyfriend) were very pleased with their new
little touring home, and Bea’s family are all lining up for a turn. It was lovely to see that they were all so
excited about our ugly little Fiona.
So after almost a week in Filderstadt, Bea drove us to Frankfurt to
catch our flight and escort her little boy, Levi (8 years old) home to his Dad
in Australia. She and Peter will stay on
for a few more weeks.
Levi is a very bright little boy and kept us on our toes for the trip
home (we are out of practice at looking after kids for any length of time) but
was very good and easy to manage. The flight,
in three stages - Frankfurt to Dubai, Dubai
to Singapore, Singapore to Brisbane was long and boring, but we arrived home in
one piece and 5.15am last Sunday morning, handed Levi over to his Dad and caught
a taxi home from the airport.
Our cat was enraptured to see us, although he made it very clear he was
unimpressed by our extended absence.
It is lovely to be home where one has guaranteed good internet (good
old Telstra), a piping hot shower in a good sized area with a shower rose that
has lots of holes in the right places and good pressure, guaranteed toilet seat and paper - aaah the simple
pleasures! Now all we have to do is get
over the jet lag. A week later we still have
not gotten our sleeping patterns back to normal and are dropping off at odd
hours during the day and waking up at 2am.
Got to get some more sleeping pills!
Well, this is the end of the blog for this trip, and I can’t say that I
am sorry. Mum is going to have to talk
real hard to get me to do it on the next trip - whenever that may be. Thank you to all who have followed us and
paid us some lovely compliments on the blog - Kenneth actually read it once and
was surprised and impressed, apart from that his main contribution has been to
say “have we updated our blog yet?”
Thanks heaps.
As Bugs Bunny says “Duh, That’s All Folks!!!”
Wendy Griggs Over and Out.










Welcome home guys. Always enjoy reading your 'blog'. We are away up north at present and will catch up sometime when we get home.
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