Sunday, 20 October 2019

An invite to afternoon tea!

Our German friends Frankia. It looks similar to ours but has a different layout
I’d just got in the shower when I heard voices, our Frankia friends were back and he’d come to invite us for a cup of tea, so after the blog, off we went. We had a lovely time, it can be isolated in Ted, and we’ve seen no Brits, even to say hi to, since Ypres which was all Brits. So to actually have a chat was great. However we don’t know the etiquette, how long do you stay etc? I think we were ok though. It also made Brian’s day, they have no solar panel, had all the lights on and were down to 90% and weren’t worried at all.... just me then?!


Afternoon tea with Arthur and Anna
The Rhine at Remagen
A short drive, down the river, once we’d escaped more roadworks in Bonn to Remagen (campsite location: 50°34'38.8"N 7°14'53.1"E). Why is everywhere being dug up, all at once? It’s madness. All we knew about Remagen was “the Bridge” from some old war movie. Turns out it was the last bridge across the Rhine, captured by the Americans in March 1945, as the Allies dashed across France and Belgium to Germany the Wehrmacht tried to stave off defeat by destroying all the bridges across the Rhine. 
The remains of the bridge at Remagen
That this one was captured threw Hitler into a paddy as he had four hi-ranking officers executed. The bridge was eventually destroyed, but not before the Allies crossed it contributing significantly to the collapse of Hitlers western front. It was an interesting enough place, but €12 for a muddy pitch, with not quite a Rhine view and extra for electric and water meant we only stayed one night. On the plus side I’d only read one of the two English books they had in the book exchange, so I could swap for the other!


The Peace Museum was closed but this information board was outside
The two bridge towers on opposite sides of the Rhine
We moved on, another half an hour to Andernach (campsite location: 50°26'29.7"N 7°24'25.7"E). We don’t quite know why we are here, though we are very pleased we are. The lure may have been WiFi at the other site, but on reading the descriptions in the book we decided not to go there, but to go to the one on the river front anyway. We managed a riverfront view as someone left about 5 minutes after we arrived. It’s a great river, huge and fast flowing with huge barges just making for staring out of the window entertainment!


We parked Big Ted at the end of the row, near the tunnel, looking out over the river on the right
Some of the old town walls
The town however is lovely some great city walls which explained the really weird route Doris brought us in on, but that’s what she’s employed for! If we’d just followed the map it could all have gone horribly wrong! What else is there to see, we asked tourist information? Well there’s the geyser....! €15 well spent, an interesting exhibition explaining all about cold water geysers which we’d never heard of caused by
Andernach is a fabulous old town
carbon dioxide dissolving in the water in the cold water under high pressure underground, that like a ‘normal ‘ geyser explodes every two hours, like a pop bottle as the bubbles of carbon dioxide expand and come out of suspension. This was followed by a boat ride down river to the geyser itself. We all stood, staring, not knowing what to expect, when gently at first, before getting up to 60m high and lasting a lot longer than expected, there it was! It had been discovered while looking for mineral water, though I have to say it wasn’t to my taste!




Here's a short Youtube of the Cold Water Geyser
Motorway on stilts to avoid the old walled town of Andernach

Today, it’s raining, so we’ve stayed put, managed to get a smidge of free electricity, someone was leaving and encouraged me to plug in in their place, so Ted is charged, the laptop is charged and we are going to watch a movie, before nipping out for cake and WiFi!

We can’t believe it’s two weeks since we got the ferry, it seems like ages, perhaps it was time for a chilling day. We are thoroughly enjoying ourselves though and the people are all so friendly, and so very helpful. Everyone seems to speak some English from the cashier in Aldi who told me how to cook the cordon bleu I’d bought, to the lady recycling her water bottles in Aldi who hadn’t done it before either who came to find me to tell me what to do when she’d worked it out! Any bottle, plastic or glass, or can with the right symbol on and you get a voucher for money back, 25c on a 1.5l plastic water bottle! Got to be worth doing then!

Arriving by boat at the dock for the Cold Water Geyser
And it was just a pile of rocks when we got there. A man-made borehole but a natural phenomenon
But it soon started spouting and got bigger and bigger...
Until it was really quite high. There's a lot of CO2 in there and quite cool to touch (and drink!)
Jackie feeding the ducks outside Big Ted this morning

Thursday, 17 October 2019

And finally to Germany

At Drachensberg castle ruins
We left Rekem in Belgium, for not much more than an hours drive to Aachen, alphabetically as well as geographically our first stop in Germany. LPG seemed cheap in Belgium, 32c/l as opposed to 67p/l in the U.K. we knew we didn’t need much, and we didn’t know how much it was in Germany, but even so. €1.24 later, having been laughed at by the man in the garage, though I got the feeling it happens quite often we set off. Through the Netherlands, and there we were. Not often you do three countries before lunch.
We didn't know such places existed!
Aarchen Dom in the distance

It was warm and sunny, t shirt only weather as we walked into Aachen (campsite location: 50°45'41.8"N 6°06'08.9"E), most surprising. The town seemed to be full of a huge fleamarket and food stalls, so, sausage in a bun it is then, before a ridiculous piece of Black Forest gateau. The Dom, or cathedral seemed to be the thing, that and Charlemagne who made Aachen centre of his vast Frankish empire in 974. If I’d felt Napoleon was getting too far removed, this was really beyond me, but it did have some interesting medieval streets and the Dom, Charlemagne’s burial place was stunning. 
Charlemagne's marble throne 
We’ve been in many cathedrals now, and for me this is top three. The gold mosaics on the 16 sided ambulatory, around the octagonal dome were beautiful. We’d paid for an English guided tour and he was very interesting, plus we got to see the gothic choir, and Charlemagne’s marble throne, which I could quite happily have lived without except we got closer to the ceilings and had a better view of the stained glass windows. The other ‘claim to fame’ the cathedral has are its relics, Christ’s crucifixion loincloth, Mary’s cloak, the cloth John the Baptist’s decapitated head was wrapped in and swaddling clothes from when Jesus was an infant. These however only come out every 7 years, next in 2021 so we didn’t wait!
The Aarchen Dom ceiling
the casket that holds Charlemagne's bones

Feeling we’d seen Aachen we stayed only one night before heading off to Cologne and another cathedral. This building is Germany’s largest cathedral and until the building of the Eiffel Tower was Europe’s tallest building. Quite liked it, huge stained glass windows, and a richly bejewelled and gilded sarcophagus that holds the remains of the Magi, but not as good as yesterday!







More of the gold mosaics along with the stained glass windows beyond in Aarchen Dom 
One more photo from Aarchen, this is the Rathaus
Pleasant wander and first German beer before the best part of an hour back to the motorhome parking, no facilities, no security and €12 we did manage to get a great view of the Rhine though. Watching the cargo barges with a glass of wine made for good viewing. Campsite location: 50°57'44.5"N 6°59'10.3"E

We finally thought we’d start on our driving tour of the ‘Romantic Rhine’ but due to roadworks we went for the easy option and drove down the motorway to Bonn. Yes, another city, but the parking is free and we will stay for more than one night! 
Cologne cathedral, the largest in Europe
On arriving we decided it was probably ok, but a bit strange, walked to Aldi, had a good walk round the park and spoke to a couple in their Frankia, also a 2011 vintage with the same livery and same soft furnishings. Good to have a chat, though really they had just come the half hour from home to provide lunch for their daughter and her two friends. How very sweet. Parking location: 50°42'34.8"N 7°08'20.9"E

A day in Bonn then, we got the tram in which was very easy, bought a ticket that lasts 24 hours and paid for itself in the Beethoven museum, the Arithmeum and the tram back. No cathedral here, it’s having work done, the Beethoven house was open, but that was all, the other exhibitions are being changed for next year, to mark 250 years since his birth. That was a bit disappointing, the “spacey, interactive 3D multimedia tour” as described in the Lonely Planet was no more! 
Inside the immense Cologne cathedral that was quite severely damaged by bombs in WWII
The remains of the Magi in the gilded sarcophagus in Cologne cathedral


On to the Arithmeum then, adding machines through the ages. It was interesting, and some of them were beautiful, but how they all worked was beyond me. So far, Bonn’s not doing so well, one last chance, the Haus der Geschichte, free, and on our way home. Described as a smart, fun romp through recent German history, and it was, though interestingly it opened with a temporary exhibition “Thoroughly British” starting with Brexit and moving through the 1966 World Cup, via Fawlty Towers and whether the Royal Family are really German! This was before we got onto German history. I’m just grateful only a small proportion was in English otherwise we’d still be there! He was happy though.
The Japanese Gardens in the park by our motorhome parking area in Bonn
Beethoven's statue in Bonn

Got back to Ted, and he’d let us down, only slightly under trees, but he’d not managed to recharge his batteries at all. Ok, we’ll stay one more night, but we may have to move on after our morning out tomorrow! Our morning out was to Konigswinter, also on our tram line and included in our 24 hour pass, along with 20% off the cog railway to the top of the mountain for a fabulous view from the ruins of Drachensberg castle (location: 50°39'54.9"N 7°12'36.1"E). Great little trip out, back to Ted who had redeemed himself, we’d changed sides of the road and he’d grabbed enough sun before it all went in to recharge to 100%, so blog and shower it is then before moving on tomorrow.

Bonn's Munster Basilica, currently closed for refurbishment. Our Lonely Planet guide says it will be closed until at least 2019. Well, they're right!
Bonn's Altas Rathaus. Apparently Charles de Gaulle and John F Kennedy have waved to crowds from the top of that staircase
The house in which Beethoven was born in 1770, now a museum
An manuscript on view in the Beethoven museum on which the great man worked. Those are his notes and alterations
The 'Thoroughly British' exhibition in the Haus der Geschichte museum in Bonn, complete with Brexit countdown ticking away the seconds remaining. It was interesting to see a German view of the British and they certainly seem to appreciate our humour. They had a re-run of the Carling advert featuring a holidaymaker hurling his towel from a hotel balcony to bounce across the pool and land on a poolside deckchair before the Germans could get there. The 'Don't mention the war' sketch from Fawlty Towers was there along with the disputed third England goal in the 1966 world cup final. Did it cross the line or not? Slow motion replays from all angles. England said 'yes', Germany said 'no', but the accepted the result
The cog railway to the top of the Drachenfel mountain. Yes, I know we could have walked up and many people did, but we took the easy option
Panorama from the top - a splendid view of the river Rhine! Right, on the far bank is Bonn and further right, in the very distance is Cologne and they reckon you could see the cathedral on a clear day - we couldn't 
However, at the half way station we think we might be able to see the cathedral. It might be the bit on the horizon to the right of the right hand pole. Not sure though
The remains of the Drachensberg castle on the summit
The view from the other side of forested mountains. The houses by the Rhine are the town of Konigswinter
Dragons are aplenty in Konigswinter. After all Drachenfels translates as dragon mountains. Near the summit is a man-made cave and, as you pass by you can hear a dragon snoring. Put €1 in and the dragon wakes up - a puppet dragon walks out of his cave and starts waving his arms and chatting away in German. Kids seem to love it and it didn't seem fierce judging by the tone of its voice (not that I could understand anything)