Today
we say good-bye to the famous wine-growing regions of Germany and
head way down south to another famous region – the Black Forest, or
as the Germans say “der
Schwarzwald“.
The
cloud was low over the Mosel when we left town at about 9:30am.
Climbing up the hill we were soon in glorious sunshine and clear blue
skies, save for the vapour trails be left by jets flying across
Germany. It is actually quite a spectacle in itself. The vapour trail
go every which way across the sky. Without a word of exaggeration
there would be 12-15 trails kin the sky at any time one looked,
including three or four new ones being created in real-time. It’s
something one would never see in Australia. Another thing one would
never see is the HUGE wind turbines one sees in every direction.
There are literally dozens and dozens od them. I know I’ve
commented on this before but the number of them is almost
overwhelming. As
much as I’m a supported of renewable energy seeing so many of these
in one place could quite easily tip a borderline supporter over the
edge. There are just too many of them. The hills and valleys are
gone. All that one sees is the turbines.
It
was all about getting a pretty long distance from A – B today.
According
to Google Maps the journey of 360kms was going to take 3hr48m. It
took longer than that due to roadworks, unexplained detours through
towns here and there and a stop about halfway for petrol, coffee and
a change of driver.
The
little Renault zipped along very well, able to keep its place in the
traffic without any trouble. Although the posted speed limit is never
higher than 130kph plenty of drivers pay no heed to that. Apparently
exceeding the speed limit by 20kph will attract a massive fine of EUR
40.00. I’ve not seen one person stopped on the autobahn, or
anywhere for that matter, by a police officer. So, with that
knowledge,
Kerry Ricciardo could frequently be seen travelling above 130kph,
often over 140kph and when her spirit was up she even got the Captur
up to 150kph.
We
struck more roadworks about 100kms from Sankt Margen that slowed us
up by about `5 minutes. Not bad at all compared to the drivers going
the other way. They were at a standstill for about 6-7 kilometres.
Two policemen were letting one vehicle through at a time.
Soon
after we turned off the autobahn and headed towards the hills. Up we
climbed in lovely sunshine on increasingly winding roads until we
reached the village of Sankt Margen. With a population of about 2000
people the town sits in the rolling foothills of the mountains
further on. As we approached the village the vistas around each bend
became more and more stunning. The country-side reminds me of South
Gippsland around Leongatha and Wonthaggi – luscious green, steep
hills, cows, woods here and there framed by distant mountain ranges.
Our host Christian Apel was there to greet us on arrival. We were
only about 15 minutes behind the arrival time I’d told him when I
rang him from the autobahn (just before we hit the roadworks).
Incidentally, because the SIM I bought only supports data (no voice)
I called him via Skype (using Skype credit I had) and sent an SMS to
his mobile phone as a backup because the phone call was a bit dodgy.
He got the SMS.
The
one bedroom apartment is very well appointed and comfortable. It’s
like a nana-flat under the same roof-line as his house but with its
own entrance on one side. The view over town from the balcony is
great. We’ve got off-street parking as well. When we’d unloaded
to car we drove in to to town for a beer and mineral water and a
Black Forest cake. Then we continued on to the next village, Sankt
Peter, to stock up at the supermarket. Back at home we sat in the
balcony with a drink and watched the shadows creep across the valley.
White walls, red roofs, green hills and valleys. Absolutely beautiful!
ReplyDeleteYes. Pic #4 does have that Leongatha look about. Lush, green rolling hills. Kerry that cake looks yum! Bring some home to share??
ReplyDeleteThose vapour trails remind me of when I was last in England. Being under the holding pattern for Heathrow, we saw huge numbers of trails. Makes you wonder how they all get around up there without bumping into each other. Did you ever feel unsafe at the autobahn speeds? We thought it was great, covering vast distances in a shorter time frame :)
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