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Travelling to Germany was to be a first for the husband, and given our fondness for road trips, we pretty quickly decided that our four-week trip to Germany would include some sort of road trip at some point. Then began the exciting time of researching how, when and where. In the end we settled on hiring a campervan through Paul Camper , an awesome service that allows you to hire private campervans and RVs in Germany. What a find that was!! We hired trusty Campervan Siegfried , planned a very ambitious itinerary through the South of Germany, and set off on our two-week Germany road trip in mid-June. And a couple of times we just found ourselves a quiet car park in the woods and camped there. We set out from Beelitz, some 50 km south of Berlin, where we picked up Siegfried on a sunny Thursday. After some left-hand driving practice for the husband on country roads, we jumped onto the Autobahn towards the South. A few hours later, we emerged in Regensburg , our first little stopover. We could have easily spent more time there but we had plans to get as far south as practical that night. We ended up camping at lovely little Campground Soyensee , a campground at Lake Soyen in the middle of nowhere. I think we just followed some random road signs. In mid-June, it was still out of season so the campground was pretty quiet and cheap, and for our one night stay, it was perfect. The weather was absolutely glorious, possibly a bit hot for wandering around the gardens for too long but thankfully there was plenty of shade. Following our excursion to the grand palace, we made our way back onto the Autobahn , turned off at Bad Reichenhall and eventually pulled into the Campground Winkl-Landthal near Bischofswiesen, some 8 kilometres north of Berchtesgaden. We had no reservation and so were super happy to score a spot right along a creek with views of the Berchtesgaden Alps. Like Soyensee, Winkl-Landthal was fairly quiet though it certainly had stacks more campers. But they all seemed to be quiet Dutch people whose main staple was white bread and coke — for breakfast and dinner. Since it was so beautiful and we had plenty to explore in the area, we stayed put for three nights. Whilst it was a little sad to say good-bye to the Berchtesgaden area, the weather had started to turn on Day 4. Despite the no-show of the Alps though, I happily continued to announce the mountain peaks en route to the husband. But it was getting late and I just wanted to have a hot shower, eat and crawl into bed. And so we stayed despite it being expensive and somewhat unappealing. Instead, we cut through Austria and arrived in Schwangau around noon to visit the fairytale castle of Neuschwanstein. The rest of the day was spent queuing up for tickets, having a bite to eat, and then visiting Hohenschwangau Castle , followed by a self-guided tour of Neuschwanstein and a race up the mountain to the viewing bridge before sunset. Our plans had been upended a bit so we were making things up on the go. We ended up outside a campground in Lindau , Lake Constance , close to midnight. Of course, the campground had long been shut for the night and with boom gates fully closing it off, we decided to join a row of campervans and RVs who had simply parked outside the campground. Since we were parked somewhat illegally outside the campground, we decided to make an early start and left Lindau just before 6 am. With the weather looking much more inviting, we meandered north along the shores of Lake Constance with stopovers in medieval Meersburg and Birnau. We bought some absolutely amazing apricots there! After meandering along deserted back roads, we enjoyed a bit of a relax and play break at some random playground — with awesome sun chairs! From there, we leisurely twisted our way around to the spa town of St. Blasien , then onto Todtnau and Triberg what a miss! The campground was nothing to shout about but, being out of season, it was nice and quiet. The next morning we were back to rain and overcast skies but nonetheless decided to have a look around Freiburg. My highlight in Freiburg was most certainly buying some amazing gluten-free pastry dessert cake-y thing! The rest of the day was pretty unexciting with hours and hours spent on the Autobahn and secondary roads, attempting to outsmart the weather we failed miserably and heading further west towards the Moselle River near the Luxembourg border. Both the Amphitheatre and the Imperial Baths offered more than meets the eye on first glance: Underground tunnel systems! The husband quickly turned into Little Explorer again. Having driven past the gorgeous looking town of Saarburg on our way to Trier the previous day, the husband was keen to have a look around before we made our way to the Moselle River. So we spent part of the morning ambling up to the castle ruins overlooking Saarburg, wandering the quiet streets and following our feet wherever they took their fancy. From there we joined the road along the Western shores of the Moselle River , a famous wine region, and followed the river all the way to a teeny tiny campground at Moselkern , close to Eltz Castle. En route, we briefly stopped at ridiculously touristy Bernkastel-Kues and much nicer Cochem. After spending the morning hiking to and touring around Eltz Castle , we jumped back into good old Siegfried and set off towards Koblenz. After days of solid cloud cover, we finally saw the sun emerge again in Koblenz. We crossed the Rhine and then followed it upstream, taking a quick detour to the Dreiburgenblick Three Castles View and passing by the unimpressive Loreley. The next morning we hopped on the ferry to cross the Rhine and began the journey along the downriver side. This day turned out to be spectacular with stops in charmingly medieval Bacharach and at Rheinfels Castle , one of the highlights of our trip. So the fact that our Alpine plans were foiled turned out to be a blessing in medieval armour…. We then zipped back up to Koblenz and spent the next few hours on the Autobahn heading north east. We spent that night at some random truck stop on the Autobahn but packed up around 2 am since the refrigeration system in one of the parked trucks continued to roar all night, making sleep impossible to obtain. Now on the home stretch, we visited Buchenwald Concentration Camp after having a nap in the woods to recover from our interrupted sleep the previous night. It was freezing at the concentration camp on top of Ettersberg Mountain and given how sombre visiting a concentration camp is, I was glad to be back inside Siegfried and to be heading towards warmer weather. Since there are nowhere near as many campgrounds around this area of Germany than there are in the Alps, around Lake Constance or along the great rivers, we just set up camp in a lovely car park next to walking trails. Our last day. Being in Europe at a time close to the summer solstice meant wonderfully long daylight! I think if the sun had not set at all, we would have continued to run around all night. The weather was pretty crazy at times and we spent way more time in our rain jackets than we had expected, especially since we had cracking weather in Berlin before we set out on our road trip. Having our own set of wheels and being able to cook our own meals, stop for a cup of tea and put down for the night where and when we wanted was definitely the best way for us to explore Germany. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Road Trips. Written by Kati. Waking up at Lake Soyen. Schloss Herrenchiemsee Royal Palace of Herrenchiemsee with its magnificently synchronised fountains. Hiking down Mount Jenner in the Berchtesgaden Alps. There are supposed to be high mountain ranges there…. Mittenwald, famous for its violin makers. Meersburg Castle on the shores of Lake Constance. For once, the weather was fabulous. Coconut Raspberry Scrumptiliciousness from Freiburg. Exploring the ancient Roman ruins of the Imperial Baths in Trier. Vineyard slopes along the Moselle River. Looking towards Katz Castle atop the Rhine. Overlooking the Rhine and the town of Bacharach along the remains of the old town wall. Half-timbered houses in Stolberg, Harz Mountains. Further Reading Update from the road: Vancouver to Prince Rupert Day Quick dash through Wongi State Forest and a visit to Maryborough. No Comments. Leave a Reply Cancel Reply. Previous Post Tops and flops from our Southern Germany road trip. Next Post Quick stopover in Gothic Regensburg. Sunrise clouds at Undara Volcanic National Park a. Along the Savannah Way I thought it might be a. The lava tube system at Undara Volcanic National P. I'm a bit behind with my photos but this June we h. Gorgeous, wind-swept Hanson Bay Beach on Day 4 of. Early morning along the Kangaroo Island Wilderness. Views of the wild Southern Ocean along the Kangaro.
Road tripping around Southern Germany
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Registration's totally free, of course, and makes snowHeads easier to use and to understand, gives better searching, filtering etc. When you register, you get our free weekly -ish snow report by email. It's rather good and not made up by tourist offices or people that love the tourist office and want to marry it either We don't share your email address with anyone and we never send out any of those cheesy 'message from our partners' emails either. Anyway, snowHeads really is MUCH better when you're logged in - not least because you get to post your own messages complaining about things that annoy you like perhaps this banner which, incidentally, disappears when you log in Username:- Password:. Or: Register to be a proper snow-head, all official-like! Prev topic :: Next topic. Poster: A snowHead. Really interesting article. Lots of ideas for post-covid jaunts for who are that way inclined Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person. Did you know that there's a ski resort in Morocco? Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see? Not Europe, but for unusual destinations I think there's at least a couple of snowHeads who have skied in Iran. You need to Login to know who's really who. Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do. There are lots of countries and resorts not mentioned in that article. For example Slovakia or Yad Moss. It always amuses me what is or is not considered Europe. I was judging the European Gymnastics Championships a few years ago and was shocked to discover Israel, Iceland, Turkey including the non european part , Armenia and Azerbaijan are all in Europe. You'll need to Register first of course. I had a chuckle when the 'Dolomites' featured at the end of the article Then you can post your own questions or snow reports Albania would be great if it gets the infrastructure in the future. The food is great, people are very friendly, and there's a lot to see. After all it is free. Surely Iceland has to be part of Europe? Turkey is a difficult one as it crosses between Europe and Asia. Armenia and Azerbaijan are geographically Asia but culturally more like Europe than Asia. Israel is just entered I to Europe stuff as it would never be allowed in its regional equivalent event. As for interesting places to ski outside Europe - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, currently Uzbekistan is starting to grow too. You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net. I saw the title of this thread. When you mention exotic skiing, I can't help thinking about the king of exotic skiing His pseudo name on the german forum is Starli. Just look at these extreme roadtrips, trying to maximise the number of exotic resorts skied in a few weeks time per year. Sometimes clocking up to km 10K miles per trip. Ski the Net with snowHeads. A photo from the website of the tiny Cyprus ski area on the other Mount Olympus, in the Troodos Mountains skicyprus. I walked around there in October and should have photographed the lifts for Snowheads but didn't.. That's the sea top left. Stunning place. And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports. Cyprus after a heavy snowfall in December Lebanon - Mzaar On a clear day which is somewhat rare due to the pollution and humidity not only can you see beirut it's close - telephoto lens used here but you can also see Cyprus. So if you're just off somewhere snowy come back and post a snow report of your own and we'll all love you very much. Fantastic Lebanon shot. You know it makes sense. Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:. Fabulous photos! Here's a trailer from a short film about the ski resort of Kopaonik, Serbia. Only missing Greece and Armenia to complete the list including Cyprus! Google flights next. Yes, I'd recommend it as somewhere unusual to ski that's near Europe. Plus Iran in general was a great experience as a tourist. When I went in and it wasn't a requirement. It also invalidates the US ESTA, so you have to apply for a proper tourist visa if you want to visit the USA subsequently, which requires a trip to the embassy and lots of waiting around! Skied Rocarraso, Campo Felice and Ovindoli when we lived in Rome, all good fun but my Italian colleague compared them to skiing Scotland, weather wise. Rocarasso was great, varied terrain and good infrastructure. Had the opportunity to ski in Iran for a day a few years back. Mucked up my planning by having what turned out to be a 15 minute meeting on a Saturday on the wrong side of Tehran which meant I didn't have time to get to the ski hill. Doubt I will ever get a chance to go back again, and TBH I wouldn't want to under the current regime. Worth going as a tourist let alone to ski, fantastic country. Quote: Doubt I will ever get a chance to go back again, and TBH I wouldn't want to under the current regime Unless you were there pre not much could have changed since you last went. Anyone that's been to Iran will tell you judge the country by the people not their government. Also nobody has mentioned Afghanistan yet. Bamyan is pretty safe and has the annual Afghan ski race. The problem was that officialdom was always on pace behind. I think it is an amazing place and would love to go back as a tourist but not with the current regime in place and certainly wouldn't ask my wife to go. Both times I went was for work, given the sanctions in place since I last went I can't see me going back for work. The people who were in their twenties that we spoke to were just bored, their view was that regime basically clamps down on anything at any time with little logic as to why certain things may or may not contravene the regimes views. The regime I think have been clever in commercialising the leadership of the republican guard who have many interests in day to day Iranian companies. Its not in their economic interest, regardless of their belief in the doctrine to let the theocracy fail. Anyway sorry for the thread drift. Quote: I think it is an amazing place and would love to go back as a tourist but not with the current regime in place and certainly wouldn't ask my wife to go Never mind Iran, there'll be a few who no doubt apply the same thinking to The Alps. Jasna is the most exotic place I have been to. Really enjoyed the trip but some of the pubs in the surrounding villages where a little sketchy. Typical Brit so no language skills and zero English spoken in most of the bars and all the huts on the slopes. I thought Vodka and Coke in English was universally understood but apparently not The shot of coke cost more than the Vodka too! Skis on beside the platform and ski through a tunnel under the railway line to cable car station. Cable car to top. Then combo piste and off-piste down to start of Wendelsteinbahn funicular railway. Train back up to summit. Great that JuanPlank. Is that you on the video? Is it a rarity to have enough snow to ski on Tenerife? Excellent Mike Pow and dublin2. JuanPlan is more of an attempt at a joke on me being a snowboarder one plank as opposed to two. As for skiing, it's possible but unpredictable. You have to time it right though, it usually only lasts for a few days before it all melts again. JuanPlank I get it now that it's rather obvious! Couloir and steep from 4m 30s in. Travelled Corsica a lot but only summer, for sampling GRs and beaches. Favourite in Europe. Yeah, only been in summer, a couple of years back. There are more interesting areas which are easier to get to in winter a bit further along the road like Masella. In summer the mountainside has a lot of graded trails. Up from the base on the opposite side from the lifts there was evidence of significant forest-damaging avalanche activity. I stayed in the village at the bottom, then walked to the train which takes you up to the base. The base itself was a bit charmless close up: I wasn't sorry not to stay there. It's a bit like those large Canadian hotel places. There's one big complex in the bottom of a bowl. The food available was basic. Overall it didn't look shabby, but not as upmarket as the Chateaux in Canada. There's a nursery slope area near the complex, and then a gondola and another lift serving the ridge above the Funicular arrival point. Possibly a good place for novice families; you couldn't really get lost or out of sight there. New Topic Post Reply. Snow Snow Snow! Solo Skiers v Groups - Orga Archives Lost and Found Ski Club of Great Britain To one side secret Mountain Hideout snowShops You cannot post to forums until you login You cannot read some forums until you login Read about snow conditions : snow conditions And leave your own snow report : snow report Find advice to help plan your ski holidays : ski holidays The snowHeads Ski Club : Ski Club 2. Terms and conditions Privacy Policy. Snow Reports. After all it is free After all it is free. Last edited by Ski the Net with snowHeads on Tue ; edited 6 times in total. So if you're just off somewhere snowy come back and post a snow report of your own and we'll all love you very much So if you're just off somewhere snowy come back and post a snow report of your own and we'll all love you very much. Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name: Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:. Mike Pow , Quote:. Val De Nuria, Catalonia Very small ski area, 20km perhaps What is unique about is is the funicular journey to reach it
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