Friday, September 10, 2010

August 16 - 20. Back in Germany for beer tasting and bike riding

Once we were settled back into the flat, all washed and laundered I set out to continue my sampling of as many of Munich's breweries as possible as well as planning my foray into Eastern Europe.  I was considering buying a bike and doing it that way but time constraints mean it's not the best option.  Next time.  We took one evening to visit a couple of the local biergartens and sampled the rest in bottles.  All I can say is for less than €1 a bottle this stuff's got to be the best in the world...until I make it to Belgium at least.  At the end of the week Chris had to go down to the town of Friedrichshafen on Lake Constance for work so I went down too. I did a bit of a bike tour around the towns of Lindau, Friedrichshafen, Meersburg and Konstanz, as well as a 5 minute visit to Switzerland.  The scenery around the lake is very pleasant and the small old towns very quaint.  Meersburg has a very large and imposing castle that looks worth exploring one day when €10 to get in doesn't seem like a big hurdle.  Take a look at some of the pics.

Beer by the litre and bretzel (pretzel).  A Munich classic
The research continues...

Lindau waterfront.  Nice.


Lindau

A modest lakeside summer home set on 40 acres.
Old school farmer with apples for sale on the side of the road
Church with cool towers, Friedrichshafen
Weird but cool viewing platform over Lake Constance (Bodensee)
Dinner by the lake
Friedrichshafen is famous for zeppelins so I had to take this photo

Meersburg - a ton of cool old buildings

Meersburg
Meersburg from the lake
Meersburg castle
Konstanz seen over the Rhine
Konstanz
Switzerland.  Even 5 minutes almost bankrupted me.

August 3-15 - GR20 Hiking Trail, Corsica, France

We flew from Cologne to the town of Bastia, arriving in the early evening.  Failing to procure a ride to the other side of the island as the sun went down we dined at a local pizzeria, sampled some of the cheap local red wine and retired to "Camp Carrefour" - our free-camping home for the evening in a vacant field beside the local Carrefour.  We had a team of cows to watch over us for the night and actually slept pretty well.  Who says you can't free camp in Europe?  You can in Corsica at least!  Next day we got a series of hitches across the island and eventually up the hill to the small town of Calenzana for a very late start to the day of hiking.  Only 11 or 12 days and 180km (ish) to go.  We fairly blitzed the timing specified in the guidebook and arrived at the first camp long before sun down for a well deserved beer, dinner and a bottle of coarse local red wine.  Wine you say?  In the mountains?  Yep!  This is hiking and camping Corsica-style - wine, beer and cheese are available enroute.  Could be worse I suppose - certainly a bit different and a lot less of a logistical challenge than long distance hiking in NZ or the States, that's for sure.

Over the next 10 days we completed about 165km of the 180km trail, bowing out on the last day due to a forest fire, lack of motivation and desire to eat real food (ie not pasta) again.  The weather was almost perfect - bright and the most of the time with only a hint of rain on 2 occasions.  The terrain is amazingly varied for such a small island and in the middle, stunningly rugged.  For most of the trail we had spectacular views of the coastline either to the east or the west.  The more difficult days saw us conquer the dreaded Cirque de la Solitude (not a problem!) and follow rocky ridgelines and clamber up and down rocky faces for hour after hour, mile after mile.  I was surprised how little trail work has ever been carried out on this track - it's mostly just a case of "let's walk that way, mark it with little red and white stripes on the rocks and trees and call it a trail" rather than actually building anything.  There was some pretty serious scrambling and rock hopping involved over several of the harder days.  It was fun and kept you awake, but physically tiring for sure - certainly much more interesting than walking on the hiking equivalent of a 4 lane highway though!  On may of the days we had the chance to swim in some of the  I have included some of the nicer photos below as a joint effort between Chris and me. 

Having completed the bulk of the track we walked out to a small town and took a series of buses back to Bastia in the rain - we were so lucky with the weather and had almost no rain during the entire hike, with the torrential downpours holding off until we were on the bus back to the city.  That night we free camped again - this time probably 200m from the main airport terminal (again, no worries) - and flew back to Stuttgart and took a rideshare back to Munich.  Washing ourselves and our clothes properly and sleeping in real beds for the first time in 2 weeks was no small pleasure.

Stunning coastline on the western side of the island, not to far from the hike's starting point
Getting ready to hit the trail - the start of the GR20
We gained elevation pretty quickly on the first day and got some panoramic views of the coastline.

Red wine and pasta - camping in style!

Sunset on the first evening in the mountains
Rugged terrain on the second or third day

Looking down into the Cirque de la Solitude - it's a rough piece of the trail

Steep down into the Cirque
And steep up - lucky we were able to skirt around the traffic jam coming downhill by creating our own route to the left of the official path
Lake and pasture land - very different terrain than the rugged mountains we'd come over
Playing with a cool, huge dog
See what I mean about the trail being rugged and involving a lot of rock-hopping at times
GR20 trail markers - we must have passed 100,000 of these over the 165km, they're everywhere!
Taking a dip in clear cold meltwater
Free camping again, this time in Ajaccio, (right next to the train station) midway through the hike on an ATM run for cash.  Corsica is expensive, so we saved a bit of money on accommodation!
Cool abandoned hotel in Vizzavona at the mid-point of the trail
Typical county cabin undergoing a do-up
Real wine in real glasses - now that's camping in style!
The dividing range of Corsica - cloudy on one side, clear the other
In the cloud
Almost there, emerging from the clouds
Big landscape for a small island
Not far to go now, highest point on the second-to-last day
Local fauna - these little guys were everywhere.  This one was tamer than most and let me get really close.
Out of the mountains, almost at the end
The torrential rain as we were on our way out...good timing
Arsonist Chris flaring off the last of the stove fuel so we can legally fly back to Germany

July 29 - Aug 2, 2010 - Goodbye China, Hello Germany

July 29 was my last day in China.  Frankly I was ready to go by the time my 3.5 months were complete - a lot of the little things that make China China, like the crazy traffic, the spitting, the lack of personal space and the special levels of pollution, dirt, heat and humidity were starting to wear me thin - but I truly had an amazing time there and one day I will be back to see more of what I missed.  I'm almost an expert now!  Germany was to prove the ideal medicine for a mild case of China-itis.  Clean, green, cool, organized, polite, English-speaking, it is almost the complete opposite of China.  10 hours on a comfy Lufthansa jet with food served and movies on demand seemed nothing compared to 11 hours on a bumpy hot bus on China's back roads and before I knew it Chris was greeting me at the airport, a bottle of the local Munich brew in hand of course (and even one for me!)  After a couple of days in Munich and around with Chris kindly putting me up in his flat, including ample sampling of the local beer we headed to Cologne to connect with our flight to Corsica to attempt the famed 180km GR20 trail.  Below are a few pics from the first few days in Germany.  The GR20 deserves its own post.

Of course the first photo of Munich is the inside of a beer hall - the famous Hofbrauhaus in the middle of the city.  We didn't drink there - way too many people, but it was very interesting to take a peek inside and see the tourists and locals alike gathering over a pint or 10.



Beer beer beer!  This is what Germany is all about - good, cheap beer by the crate-load.  (In all fairness this photo is taken in Erlangen, not too far from Munich)
Tourist shot of Munich - just to show that I wasn't drinking the whole time I was there (even though it felt like it)
Enjoying some of Munich's finest in a local bar.  You can tell that the smoking ban in bars and restaurants is working well by the fact that everybody just ignores it.  Das ist Deutchland, as they say.

Cologne cathedral - bloody hell are these Germans serious about religion!  This thing is truly mammoth (I apologise for the crap photo).