The
Cristall Hotel was really nice little 3-star hotel in a great
location. Perfect for people passing through Frankfurt by train.
Certainly not cheap but, then again, neither was anything else in the
area. The price of convenience. The breakfast, included in the price,
was back up to par again. We had a room on the opposite side to the
station which was completely silent. Past patrons on Booking.com has
commented about the noise but could have heard a pin drop.
We
checked out straight after breakfast and took the five minute walk to
the station, bought a ticket to Langen (a town about 25kms south of
Frankfurt) where we were to pickup the car. The Renault Eurodrive
office was an easy 10 minute walk from the station. It was really the
local Sixt car rental office.
The
chap who met us was very friendly and helpful. We respectfully nodded
and expressed understanding as he pointed out all the features of all
three Renaults we own at home. We’d booked a Renault Clio
but had delivered, instead, a Renault Captur. It’s essentially a
Clio presented in SUV form. Like in 2103 it’s black. :( . Just down
the road was a Shell petrol station so we filled her up and went in
search of a coffee. After we’d filled up we set the SatNav for
Bacharach on the Rhine. This is castle-country where we’ll spend
five days exploring the region.
Most
of the drive was on the autobahn. The chap at Renault Eurodrive was
not exaggerating when he said that Germans drive fast! The little
Renault got up to 130kms a few times just to keep out of the way!
Before long we turned off the autobahn onto the quieter roads running
alongside the western bank of the Rhine. Over
just a few kilometres we had moved from the anonymity of the motorway
to the beauty of the Rhine valley and it’s little villages.
Bacharach is one of those villages. With a population of about 2,000
people it’s very small and quiet. Separated from the river by just
the railway line and the arterial road Bacharach picture-postcard
Rhine village. The houses, business premises and public buildings are
classic Rhineland. Narrow cobble-stoned streets and lanes separate
the buildings with just about every one of them sporting a
magnificent display of annuals from their respective balconies.
Our
Pension is on Oberstrasse, the main street of the village
conveniently located next door to a bakery. Actually, everything in a
village this small is conveniently located!. Our host is Hans
Dettmar, a dear old 78 year-old and his wife. He very proudly showed
us to our room on the first floor, complete with a full kitchen and a
balcony of our own.
The
village is overlooked by an ancient castle which has been turned into
a youth hostel so we decided to drive up the hill for a look at it.
The narrow, winding road full of tight hairpin bends provided an
opportunity for a very steep
learning curve. It took quite a few kms before I started to a better
idea of how to drive this car. Hey, don’t forget I’m sitting on
the left-hand side of the car, changing gears with my right hand and
instinctively always looking in the wrong direction. The view up and
down the Rhine was magical from that high vantage point. We took too
many photos and could have stayed there in the warm sun for ages.
But
we pushed on determined to begin our exploration of the mid-Rhine.
GPS-girl was back to her old tricks and sent us deeper into to hills
rather than back to the river where we were planning to go. We drove
for 20-odd kms in a big circle and wound up in the next village
upstream of Bacharach rather that the next one down stream. Along the
way
we passed a huge castle ruin sitting atop a little village. A side
road looked like it might take us there so we ventured up it. After
10 minutes we arrived at the base of Fürstenberg Castle. The
castle dates back to the Middle Ages –
1219 in fact! We were able to wander freely around the extensive,
vegetation-covered ruins at will. There was no-one else there, no
gates, no locks, no fences just a giant castle standing on the top of
a hill. The only sign that anyone had been there since it was
abandoned centuries ago was a ladder installed to help explorers like
us get up a difficult part of the ruin. It was truly one of those
events in life that will always be remembered clearly.
After
the castle exploration we found our way back to to the river and
thence onto the town we had planned to visit. We drove on downstream
past the famous Lorelei Rock on to St. Goar. A massive dump of rain
hit us there (we never got out of the car) so we u-turned and headed
back home. Pre-dinner drinks on our balcony was splendid way to end a
great day.
Great read this morning, Greg! I enjoy waking up each morning looking forward to reading about " our" "overnight" travels while eating breakfast! I particularly enjoyed this mornings! Could almost make me late for work! So picturesque! What a fantastic opportunity to be able to venture around an abandoned castle. King and Queen of your own castle........if only for a few minutes! Xx
ReplyDeleteWhat a great day with great experiences and photos. We will have to take note of them so we can visit them in 2020! No photo of your car yet??
ReplyDeleteMust have been more than a little bit exciting driving on the wrong side of the road, changing gears with your wrong hand & still working out where to go. The European castles make everything back here seem so new!!
ReplyDeleteThis is such a beautiful area - your pictures are amazing. Driving a manual car in Europe (although I know you've done it before) sounds extremely challenging
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