Sunday, June 5, 2022

2022.04 EasterWkd Celtic Ringwall, Trier, Saarburg, Saarschleife

Intinerary and comments:

Note: we have seen Pompeii, so didn't feel moved to do a real tour of the roman stuff in Trier, in particular all of the preserved baths. There are also nearby reconstructed roman villas, which I'd like to come back and check out. Trier and similar "roman ruins/reconstructions" could eat a full day or two. 

  • Day 1: Mannheim to Trier
    • Celtic Ringwall and Hilfort of Otzenhausen (1C BC, largest surviving celtic ringwall. Currently 20m tall, originally probably 40!)
    • Trier: Porta Nigra, Dom, etc 
  • Day 2: Drive south along the Saar before heading back 
    • Saarburg
    • Pretty view
    • Klause bei Kastel-Stadt: Mountaintop settlement, continuously settled since the Celts, with sandstone outcroppings and temple/church atop 
    • Tree-top-path, Saarschleife views

a shareable google map of everything is here

Day 1: Getting to Trier, Celts along the way

Celtic Ringwall and Hilfort 

Location via googlemaps. Honestly, pretty easy to route over this when heading to Trier from Mannheim. I hadn't heard of it from anyone, I'd found it by my tried and true method (used for everything on this trip outside of Trier) of zooming out, then in, and clicking on things that looked interesting. 

Hiking up to the TWO walls (there's an outer wall on the hillfort, then the inner ringwall around the old settlement, which is currently 20m tall) is free. There's a little reconstructed celtic settlement at the start of the path that you have to pay something to enter, and we decided to skip. Details here.  They have a virtual tour of the ringwall, even, here

After enough exposure, I realize now that often a "Felsenmeer" (sea of stones/bolders) is the remains of an old celtic settlement. 

View towards the modern reservoir, from atop the first ringwall: 



Walking a bit further up the hill, you come to the inner settlement. They've tried excavating the wall in some areas to understand how it was constructed, but it has no mortar, and the stones shift and fall --- it's basically impossible. 


This thing is so massive. It is really hard to photograph. It's hard imagining it used to be twice as large. In the 1800s, the local ruler petitioned the grand poobah -- the Czar/Kaiser/whatever to make a law forbidding the locals from carting off the stones to reinforce their own houses (see: why is everything ancient in ruins? Because people are too lazy or lack the know how to dig stones, so they go pillage the old structures).  For his visit, they built some stairs into this wall (kind of visible in the first picture) 



And next, the view from the top: 



Day 1: Trier

Trier is an old Roman town, located at the confluence of the Moselle/Mosel and Saar Rivers. It's quite close to the western border of Germany, kind of close to Luxembourg. 

We arrived, found parking, and had an absolutely lovely lunch at this French place with a German name, the Kraemerei

Then we walked around Trier, loosely inspired by this route.  The Basilica is nuts. Dates back to 310, giant, Roman, imposing. And then someone slapped a...baroque? Roccoco? Palace front on the side. Utterly bizarre, but, well, Prince-Bishops and their tastes. 


Pictures from all sides. As you approach from the Basilica side, walking around towards the palace front glommed on: 




Not far away from the Basilica is another Franken-Building, the Dom, which was built in 4 different Eras. They seem to like models of things around here, and placed a helpful one in front of it.  I was totally amused that the Bishop's winery had a wine garden (like a beergarden, but wine) across the street from the church. 







And of course, the building to see: Porta Nigra. Famous Roman ruin. 


We made some dinner in the flat, then went around the corner for turkish desserts at Tatlim Benim. 

Day 2: Drive south along the Saar before heading back 

Saarburg: 30 Minutes from Trier along the Saar

So, I was steering us to some places labeled as being great views, then I saw this town and declared we had to stop. With 1 Euro all day parking, a win. 

What I saw: 



Saarburg has a castle and church up on a ridge, then the old town center is kind of westish of that ... and IT CONTAINS A WATERFALL. 

But, back to the castle and ridge, as that's where we started exploring. 
If you don't know this about me, I adore crenelations. The zig zag things that kids draw on towers when you ask them to draw a castle. 



We climbed up to the highest part of the castle (the crenelated thing was a tiny turret, this was in the other direction) and had this great view down the ridge to the Church, and the old town tucked behind it. 



Heading over to the oldtown, I was skeptical of the thing labeled waterfall...but I could hear it. Nah, can't really be. WAIT WHAT? 



In the 13th Century, the local ruler decided to reroute a local river/stream (smaller than the adjacent Saar) to run through town. The 18m drop let it then power a mill. This mill was later swapped out for a turbine (now housed in that building on the left, the Aemuseum (wordplay/portmanteau on 'amuse' and 'museum'), letting Saarburg be one of the first cities in what is now Germany with electricity. 



[Optional: Beautiful View of the Saarschleife from the East bank] 

Optional because it's kind of a pain to get back across the river (if your car swims, that would make this easier). 

This is the view. Verra nice. 



Klause bei Kastel-Stadt

This was really cool. Continuously settled hiltop village, celts, romans, goths, etc. 
Celts and Romans from 2ndC BCE to 4thC CE. The first picture/map gives you a sense of scale, and suggests some hiking paths in the area (would be good for a return trip, or if you have an extra day)


This next one is an "Ehrenfriedhof". For soldiers. The headstones and whole thing were planned in one go, possible in the post-WWII situation. 


A handy scale model. The darker/bronze looking thing is the chapel on the cliff that was originally a celtic worship area (maybe just inside the adjacent caves):





And after all this and the amazing views, the last stop in our adventure, the tree-top path. 

Tree-top-path (Baumwipfelpfad), Saarschleife views

So, apparently there is a whole...chain? family? of these constructions, and not just in Germany. People found places with nice views, built a giant ramp thing following a "path through the treetops" and people pay admission for it. Definitely worth it. 

The website for this one is here

As you enter, pictures of various other ones: 


Then you walk up the path/ramp and through a large, nice park area along the height of the rather tall tree tops: 


Finally the view. I have no idea how to translate this to English. This form on a river ('bend' seems insufficient) is called a "Schleife", or "Loop". So this is a "Saarschleife", and it has more than one of them as it snakes around: 




It was windy that day, and it was super duper windy at the top of the thing: 



Hope this inspires you to check some of these things out if you make it to this corner of the world. 

Thursday, September 12, 2019

2019.09.06-09.10 around the Savoy Alps - Chambéry, Lyon, Gorges du Fier, Annecy

Looking into places to stay in the French Alps, I had been attracted by nice pictures from a hike around Annecy some friends had posted on FB, but the remaining hotels didn't convince me, and nothing was located that well relative to the hikes. Looking around, I came across Chambéry, which is not hard to reach by train and which is about an hour from Lyon and from Annecy, so one could easily adapt to changing weather -- and the forecast was for rain at least on Sunday.

CAVEAT FOR OTHERS: restaurants in this region (even in Lyon!) are largely closed on Sunday (and often Monday as well!) 
  • Friday:  Short stop in Aix-les-Bains, walking around Chambéry
  • Saturday: Hike from Col du Granier, south of Chambéry in the Chartreuse mountains 
  • Sunday: day trip to Lyon for food ("Gourmet Capital of France") and the old town
  • Monday: visit to Gorges du Fier and very short stop in Annecy for lunch and to look around, finished with bouldering and a drink in Lausanne 

Regional map for context:



Friday:  Short stop in Aix-les-Bains, walking around Chambéry

For what it's worth, I made good use of my French (asking where the machines for TER tickets were, how to stamp my ticket, how this girl had managed to stamp hers, and telling the conductor that I had tried to stamp it and it had failed) up until Aix-les-Bains, where I was asked a question I wasn't sure how I'd answer even in English ("Are you here for the tour?"  In my head -- what tour? Does it cost anything? Do I want to go on a tour of Aix-les-Bains?). 

Aix-les-Bains

Since I have time off, I went down early on Friday and stopped first in Aix-les-Bains, which feels  like a French Alpine version of Baden-Baden...which makes sense, as that is roughly what it is. A spa town, full of old people seeking treatments for rheumatism. Lots of clinics and rehab and some schools for "thermal medicine".



Chambéry

On to Chambéry to wander around. It is a cute town, very alive, lots of industry around it and a cute old/center town. Saw the "famous" elephant fountain. The savoy region flag reminds a bit of the Swiss flag (or the Danish flag).  



Stayed in a very solidly-constructed hotel in Chambéry, the Kyriad centre. Very thick walls, door to the hall and door between the sleeping area and separated toilet and shower, which made it incredibly soundproofed. Very new, good mattresses. Suprisingly well thought-out kitchen nook, with cleaning supplies and an obvious place to let dishes dry, enough dishes and utensils and pots and pans, and a water cooker for tea/coffee.

Saturday: Hike from Col du Granier, south of Chambéry in the Chartreuse mountains 

This hike was...demanding. I was really glad to have bought hiking poles right before this trip. Didn't see the giant fossil, maybe that was the point of the first small detour. Took at least an hour break, and with that in mind, actually kept the pace suggested by the hiking guide.  I highly recommend these hiking guides --- by Rother Wanderfuhrer, they have GPX coordinates for all tours and  hikes in three grades (this was "intermediate" (red)) and many regions. This is from the book for the Savoy Alps. Not all tiles are available in English. 


Pictures semi-chronological. Is a loop starting and ending at Col du Granier, here seen from roughly halfway, in the back right of the picture.








A story about this peak (the Col du Granier):

This sharp side of the mountain was made in November of 1248, when a giant piece split off and rolled 7km in the direction of Chambéry, destroying several villages and killing at least 5000. (The Chartreuse Abbey is nearby, so maybe those are the chronicles from which these come, referenced in the hiking book)
From wikipedia:  "This event created the sheer 700 m north face of the mountain. Five villages were partly or completely destroyed by the avalanche...Two villages were partially destroyed"



Sunday: day trip to Lyon for food ("Gourmet Capital of France") and the old town


Lyon!  Things to know about Lyon (tourism website)
  • Famous for food (Les Halles, the big food market) 
  • Old town with medieval walkways 
  • Funiculars (covered by the metro day-ticket! (6 Euros))
  • 2nd largest city in France -- and it is not car-friendly 

Things learned: 
  • Toll roads expensive in France. Chambéry to Lyon was about 12 Euros each direction. 
  • Parking is difficult. There is a big lot under the Perrache station, for about 20 Eur/Day. Easy Metro or Tram to anywhere in the city. 
  • Day ticket (6 Eur) for transit is worth it, and includes the funiculars.

Food at Les Halles

First stop was lunch at Les Halles "Lyon’s mythic indoor food market with an international reputation for offering the very finest gourmet food." A video visit.  More pics on tripadvisor.

Lunch was fish and veggies at Maison Rousseau, because they had a tiny enclose salle where you could avoid some of the noise of the market. It was very light, which left lots of room for desserts. 

Half the desserts were from Bahadourian, mainly lebanese (e.g. Mafrouké Libanais aux Pistaches, seen here). The non-dessert part of their food included these rather adorable mini foie gras burgers.



Half the desserts were little amuse-bouche cakes from Maison Seve.

Impressions from the market: 






Old town with medieval walkways («traboules»)

After lunch, got a map from the tourist office and walked through the old town. Found one of the covered walkways by noticing a tour group clustered around a door. Timing was perfect, as there was a short rain shower, lasting the time it took us to walk through. 



Miscellaneous impressions of the old town: 



Found a custom-built retro E-Bike store. These are both E-Bikes:



Funiculars! There are 2 in town. We took the one up to the Church, then walked down. 

There is a funicular song. My very first experience coming across a funicular (in Switzerland, between Lausanne and Vevey) involved another math graduate student singing part of the funicular song. (ya pi ya pi ya funiculi funicula funiculi funicula!)



view looking down to Lyon from the Church

Ended our trip in Lyon with some tea to warm up by the river in the sun. 

great menu

the thing atop the hill is the destination of the second funicular
Dinner back in Chambéry was at Café des Inities. In part because almost nothing was open. They had a nice menu, good prices, and awesome wine. 

I had the Savoie Chardonnay (AOP Domaine Philippe Ravier) then the Bordeau Blanc (AOP Chateau Recougne). Both were really delicious. 


Monday: visit to Gorges du Fier & Annecy

Les Gorges du Fier 

Chateau de Montrottier: There is a story about one of the dukes of this castle, who ignored his wife to go hunting all the time and partying with his buddies. She was bored and lonely and went on long walks around the gorge with a faithful page (young guy) following her around. At some point she crossed paths with the duke one castle over, and then she started sneaking away to meet him. The page followed, saw them, reported it to the Duke of Montrottier. He laid a trap, caught them as well, but the other guy ran off on his horse. Supposedly the page caught at the horse's tail to try to stop him, guy cuts off horse's tail and escapes. Angry duke locks wife into a tower where she scratches lines to mark the days, waiting on her death. Said marks are still there. 

 


From another blog: "The Fier River runs through the Haute-Savoie and Savoie départements. It has its sources at Mount Charvin in the Aravis Range and flows 71.9 km before it empties into the Rhône at Seyssel.[...]The suspended footbridges were completed in July 1869. Workers were transported inside barrels moved via a system of pulleys to fix solid metallic consoles into the rock walls. The track is suspended some 20 to 30 metres above and stretches 252 metres over the stream"



Something really startling to learn was that the gorges flood regularly. Which is hard to comprehend because of how wide the river valley (or flood plain) is which feeds into the gorges. It has to be a LOT of water for the gorge to then be flooded up to (and sometimes past) the walkway. Last big flood was in 2015. Learned the word for flood(s) from context. At the end of the visit is a room showing video footage from the last flood, which is pretty incredible. 




the gorges is in Lovigny, to the west of Annecy

 


Lunch in Annecy 

Lunch was quick and delicious at Tête de Cochon



Followed by a little time to play tourist in the old town streets and walk to the lake (very large, very clear and clean). Took inspiration from tripadvisor and others' recommendations on things to see in one day. 

Palais de l'Isle (it is exactly the size of the island)
"Venice Street":




And wrapping up with the Lake of Annecy:



Bouldering and a drink in Lausanne 
Lausanne is 1.5 hours from Annecy. I stopped there overnight and went bouldering for the first time (used to climb semi-regularly back in grad school. Our gym got a climbing wall after renovation) at a relatively new bouldering gym. Day pass 13 CHF, shoe renal 5 CHF. Had a bar as well, which we didn't indulge in, went to another bar afterwards for a drink i(at swiss prices! Which seemed "reasonable" until you notice it is 5 CHF for 0,1 L (instead of the normal 0,2L)).

Headed home the next day, which was a pretty long train ride. à bientôt!