• mary louise adams

Jakobsweg x 2

A 22-day adventure by mary louise Read more
  • Trip start
    October 8, 2025

    Arrival day

    October 8 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    I am finally doing the German Camino - Jakobsweg or Saint James way - that I had planned for April 2020. At that point, I had decided to follow a route from a town called Wurzburg, about two hours south east from Frankfurt by train, to Strasbourg in France. It was to be about 21 days walking and to be squeezed in right after classes finished that year. I had booked the plane tickets and started to plan the route. And then all that went kaput, like everything else that year (including the planned and booked Tour de Mont Blanc).

    After years of meeting Germans and walking with Germans in Spain and France, this will be my first long walk in Germany. The number of walking routes here, including Jakobswegs, is astounding. I thought I might choose to walk someplace completely different than what I had planned, but it was overwhelming to make a different decision. So while I am here, I will do nine days of the route I had originally planned and then I will take a train and do an eight day route a little further north. I have also never broken a route up before! So radical!

    Two relatively easy travel days — Kingston to Montreal to Frankfurt. And then three trains to get to the very pretty Bavarian town of Rothenburg ob der Tauber. Painted, timbered houses, cobbled streets, gold hanging signs over shop doors. I am taking as omens that no one at the airport mentioned my poles (folded up in my pack, which was carry-on), that I got a whole centre row to myself on the plane, that the plane was early enough for me to get a train 90 minutes earlier than the one I had booked, for which I later got many notifications about how its lateness would not allow me to make one of my connections. The only travel glitch - which felt very stressy - happened about 30 minutes before he was coming to pick me up for the train. When I put on my pack to see how much it weighed, I somehow broke the buckle on the waist belt. Safety pins to the rescue, along with an extra buckle E had at home! So far they are all working great!

    I spent the afternoon wandering the streets in Rothenburg. Stopped in at the Jakobskirche to get a stamp (but, honestly, I would have forgotten to do so if the woman in the tourist office had not told me that the church was around the corner. ) There’s a very cool modern statue of Santiago beside the main door. And a metal (what kind of metal is it???? ) relief map of the town a few metres away. I spent a long time in a book shop making all the inevitable comparisons to book shops at home (books in other languages, lots of books for studying various things, fantastic map/travel section, etc.). I bought the smallest German-for-second-language-learners book I could find so I’d have something to practice reading. We’ll see how that goes!

    Lots of good views from the town walls out over the valley where the Jakobsweg goes. I had excellent goulash soup and a “mixed” salad (a plate with potato salad, carrot salad, and beet salad on top of salad greens) for dinner. That was followed by ice cream and a mint tea in an ice cream and prosecco (!) shop, and I was back in my room by 8 pm and in bed by about 9:30.
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  • Day 1 Rothenburg to Schrozberg (19 km)

    October 9 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    It was an easy, relaxed day. Beautiful landscapes and - surprise! - good company!

    A fantastic breakfast was included with the room at the hotel. Decent coffee, tons of choice. Except for fruit and yoghurt, everything else is brought to your table , with options raging from vegan to seriously carnivorous. 4 different kinds of bread. Sliced and soft cheeses. Various unknown to me meats, three different kinds of vegan pate. A few vegetables. Eggs were a possibility. I had muesli and fruit and yoghurt and cheese and bread and jam. It was all so good. And about three times more than I would normally eat when I walk.

    I stopped at the bakery on the way out of town and got a sandwich for later and a pastry for second breakfast. No coffee stops on the way today.

    It took me about 45 minutes to go the first kilometre and a half. So many pictures. The route starts at the church and passes through a tower in the town walls then out through the castle gardens, which at that point are fruit orchards and grape vines. Down a narrow path to a small river - the Tauber. Past and then over a weird double bridge and then up into the woods. European woods! Open and full of ivies (that word looks weird) and other ground covers that we would put in a garden.

    After the town the marking of the route was excellent. The same yellow shell on a blue background you would see in Spain. The path comes out of the woods to agricultural fields. Lots of apple trees around their edges. At one farm there was a little farm store with an honesty box for paying. Yoghurt, cheese, meat, ice cream. Everything too big for a knapsack.

    When I came out of the store there was another woman with a pack! A pilgrim! She lives about 80 km from here. We are both walking the same route, which is not a popular route and is one of three that follow the same path for the first day. You’re from Canada!!!???? How did you find out about this? As she went into the store, she said, don’t go yet! I have so many questions!

    We walked together off and on for the rest of the day and we are both staying in the same place tonight, which is the only place to stay in this town. Her name is Angelica, but apparently her nickname is Marie Louise, which is just funny. And we are both the same age. We have been mostly speaking English but she is also making me practice German, which is great.

    The walking was super easy. Everything feels great. The day was short. Lots of tracks in the woods. Clearly there is a lot of hunting here. There were lots different stands or blinds for hunters. I sat on one to have second breakfast (a delicious hazelnut ‘snail’).

    The place we are staying in is an old hospital that has been converted into a kind of big guest house. It seems like there are people staying here who are working in the area, and then the two of us, and later two other women pilgrims came in. They are also from somewhere very close by and just walking for two days. I think Angelica is only walking until Sunday or Monday. If you live close, you can do these things on the weekends. They are so lucky.

    Schrozberg is small and there is not a lot here. We tried to go to a café, which seemed quite chic and urban, but they were closed for a private party. So for dinner I had the sandwich I bought this morning and an apple and some cookies from home and there will be a big breakfast here in the morning. No one is going hungry.

    So far walking in Germany is good!
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  • Day 2 Schrozberg to Langenburg, 19 km

    October 10 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 7 °C

    Another very un-Camino-like breakfast. Three kinds of bread. 4 kinds of cheese. Lots of butter. Good coffee. And we were encouraged to make sandwiches for lunch with the leftovers. The white rolls were shaped like scallop shells for the pilgrims. Cute.

    I walked all day with Angelika. The other two women walk slower than we do but do not dawdle. So they ended up a ways ahead of us. Our last stop in town was at a gas station after a man came out and yelled across the street to us: Do you want a stamp? We did. Our first stop after leaving Schrozberg was in the middle of a wet field when I saw that Erich - a German man I had walked with on the chemin from Le Puy to St Jean in 2015 (I think) - had tried to call me. I called him back, and then Angelika did the talking, and we all made plans for him and his wife to come meet us in the afternoon. I had written to him last week and was a bit nervous about how we might work in a visit. But it was so easy!

    The walking itself was uneventful today. But lots of nice moments. The stand selling pumpkins and other squash at the side of the road (with signs giving tasting notes for the different squash!). Another table later on with walnuts. A covered table and round bench that had been built with a lot of tiny details in the wood. We met the man whose son and grandson built it. They are both carpenters. The grandson had done a traditional 3 year and one day stint as a “wandering journeyman,” a medieval tradition that you can still follow in some trades. If you look up “wandering journeymen,” Wikipedia will tell you all about it and show you photos of clothes they wear. The grandson had also learned to build cabins from logs in Canada and indeed there was a small one right behind us.

    By the time we finished chatting with the man (by which I mean that I mostly listened and Angelika talked with him; I could not understand a word he said ), it was drizzling a bit. We passed lots of good rest stops but it was a bit too wet to stop moving . Only one village today, and there was no cafe. It was clear there had once been two. We had our lunch in a very large covered bus shelter that had a little book exchange cabin, which I forgot to take a picture of. And then we went back out to more woods and fields and eventually a wind farm. At some point in the middle of the wind farm, we heard from Erich and sent him a screen shot of the map. Less than an hour later he was standing on the side of the path waiting for us.

    So fun to see him. My German, such as it is, is better than his English and we managed some conversation. This evening he is going to go do a workshop new pilgrims on ways to use your smart phone on the Camino- I assume he was going to be teaching them about using map apps, but I could be wrong.

    Three days in and I finally got kaffee und kuchen. Plum kuchen that was worth the wait. After that Christa and Erich went home, and Anjelica and I went to the places we are staying. I am staying is at Metzgerei und Pension Wolz. A metzgerei is a butcher. I assumed that the name meant that the pension was in an old building that used to have a butcher shop in it. Apparently that is true, but the not so long ago butcher was the uncle of the man who now runs the pension with his wife. And the younger man, in addition to the pension and whatever his other day job is, does butchering for local farmers in the evenings and on the weekends. And you can buy the things that he makes from a vending machine outside the building. And beside the vending machine, you can see a picture of him, with his family alongside him, winning an award for his work.

    It was a two castle day. One in Schrozburg and one here. The one here is well know (closed by the time I got to it) and is somehow related to the relatives of the now departed Queen.

    Langenburg is a pretty village with few services. No supermarket or pharmacy. Three restaurants: Vietnamese, Italian and Italian. There is a dining room in the place where Angelika is staying, and if it were open it would serve local food, but it’s not open. We chose Italian place #2. It was ok. But it was not until the end of the meal, which was not expensive, but certainly was not cheap either, that the guy told us, oh, we only take cash. We both managed to find enough - but don’t you tell people that when they walk in? And then we noticed, after we left that the one ATM on the street was not working!

    An easy day with wet feet that has ended in a small super clean room with a working radiator!
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  • Day 3 Langenburg-Schwäbish Hall, 22 km

    October 11 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

    No breakfast report today, though it was good and I got to take the leftovers for lunch - which was lucky because nothing was open!

    The day started with the stamp. I had a very long conversation with the woman who owns the pension about pilgrims and stamps. She thought she needed a special
    Jakobsweg stamp, but, of course, she can just use the stamp for her business, and so that’s what we did. And it was a good game for her kids. I got one stamp and they got about half a dozen each.

    So when I met up with Angelika a few minute ms later, I asked her if she had been able to get a stamp. No she hadn’t. And it was too bad, because the Rathaus (where you could get one during the week) would be closed on Saturday. But then we looked across the street, and this big magnificent house, which we thought was the Rathaus, had its front door open. And so we go up the stairs, and what we can see inside is this big long table, like for meetings. And there is an older woman and a man at the table. I honestly thought they were getting ready for some kind of community event. And then Angelika says, we are here to get stamps for the Jakobsweg. And then there is this long conversation, and some laughing, and I am trying to follow what they are saying, and it turns out that we are not standing in the Rathaus, we are in the woman’s home!!! And yet they invited us to sit down, offered us something to drink, and, well, she did have a stamp! It’s a circle of leaves, and she draws little pictures inside it when she sends postcards. Anyway, the whole thing was hilarious. And super sweet. So we now have stamps from Langenburg.

    The way out of the village is a descent. And it only takes a few minutes along a path to get to Bächlingen. We looked inside the very beautiful old Protestant church. Apparently it’s one of the oldest in the region. Painted ceiling over the alter. Super simple room. And then we went across (through?) a covered bridge that had a little book exchange library and some cool Madonna sculptures that were at least partly made out of fungus!

    The rest of the morning included a sweaty uphill, some big open agricultural fields, a cemetery, more apples, and a very muddy wet path along a stream. We lost the path three times today!!!!!!! All of them were places where the markers were not super visible and we were not being vigilant. Yay to gps for sorting us out.

    We passed four lost things waiting to be found: a pair of glasses, two small toy cars, a hat, and one of those scarves that is like a loose tube that you pull over your head.

    We’d been hoping to go to a little supermarket bakery half way along today. But, like many things in Germany on a Saturday, the bakery closed at noon and we walked down the hill into the village at 12:05. But then, when we walked by the little supermarket, which was closed, we saw a sign on the door that said: if the store is closed, you can use your credit card to let yourself in and then you can buy stuff and check yourself out. So that’s what we did. Wild.

    Lunch (aka leftovers from breakfast and a banana and quark [why can’t we get it at home?]) was eaten on a bench outside a kind of municipal hall where a woman and (maybe) her daughter were hauling in baskets and boxes of flowers and other fall things to decorate a huge room for a party for the woman and her husband who were celebrating both of their 66th birthdays.

    And then a few kilometres along an asphalt bike path, and a few more through the woods. In the last village we went through before Schwäbish Hall (we missed one on one of our wrong turnings!!! Yup. We missed a whole village!) we walked by today’s castle, which seems to be a private home. And then we walked by a sign that said “schnapps tasting. “ Neither of us would have gone on our own, but we did. At first it seemed like no one was there, but then a man came out. And no they no longer do schnapps tastings, that was his mother-in-law. But, they do have schnapps that they made themselves and maybe we would like to taste it? Oh, and you are from Canada? I worked in Mississauga a few weeks a year for a few years. I love Canada! He and his wife showed us the still (which is locked by the government with a little tag, and if they want to use the still, they have to tell the government, who will then come and close it again when they are finished. And that way they can get taxes on the alcohol that people make.). We each had a glass of their excellent apple pear schnapps. It was fantastic and super fun. And maybe that’s why we lost the path about a kilometer on?

    We sorted ourselves out and walked down a big hill into Schwäbish Hall. The “hall” here refers to salt - salt mines, trade? Like Hallstatt in Austria. Swabian salt something or other.

    We stopped for a radler at a cafe. The town is super quiet. Not surprising with almost all of the stores closed. After dropping my stuff at the apartment where I am staying, I went to a free concert in the humongous St Michael’s church. And then out for dinner at a vegetarian Turkish restaurant. A German dinner still eludes me!

    Today was supposed to be 22 km but my always under-counting phone called it 25. I am guessing it was more than that. Weather was overcast, between about 8 and 14. Perfect!
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  • Day 4 Schäbisch Hall to Murrhardt, 26 km

    October 12 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

    Another day of perfect walking weather. Overcast, temperature somewhere between 8 and 14.

    Nothing spectacular today in terms of landscape, but a really nice day, with some great views and lots of turning leaves. Felt appropriate for Thanksgiving weekend. I am very sorry to be missing dinner with the friends!

    We only goofed up two turns today. The first was on the way out of town and was resolved quickly. The second, later on, added maybe half a kilometer. Not the end of the world, but I I don’t think I have ever lost the trail this many times! For the most part, the route is really well marked. But every so often finding the mussel shell is a bit challenging. I’ll put a photo here of the marker we missed at our first wrong turn. Can you see the Camino sign?

    There was a nice path out of the town. It took us quickly into the first village and to a beautiful small church with a stamp. Then out into fields until village number 2, which actually had an open bakery! Because we are pilgrims on the jakobsweg, we were sent on our way with free pretzels, which were delicious.

    More fields, another small village with a church. When we got there people were leaving the service. Some were hanging around inside. Others were on their way down to the hall to prepare the lunch. Any Canadian Protestant minister would have been thrilled with the crowd!

    The church was very pilgrim friendly. Water, chocolates (!), a stamp, a basket of small message cards that had been written by I’m not sure who. And the people there were also really welcoming. One man invited us to join them for lunch. If the day had been shorter we might have.

    Next stop: Nature Park Schwäbischer-Frankischer Wald, the Swabian Franconian Forest. Most of the rest of the day was in and out of the woods. Huge trees. Spectacular leaves (though there is very little red). Lots of evergreens. Mushrooms.

    At one point, we came to a sign saying there was a diversion on the Jakobsweg. We hummed and haaaaaaed and decided to ignore it. It was the right call. If I had been on my own, I probably would’ve followed the sign. But it didn’t say what the diversion was for. Or where it would go or where it would come out or anything. So both options seemed a little dicey. The path we took was definitely muddy and overgrown, some trees had come down in a storm, and there were brambles everywhere. But we had thought a bridge might’ve been out further down or that it would be impossible to get through. In Ontario, it would just be considered a kind of sketchy trail. Nobody would suggest you go around it.

    We had lunch at a rest area with many tables, some playground equipment for children, and a roof for shade. There are so many benches and places to sit everywhere. After lunch we were back into the forest where, at some point, we missed a turn. But then we fixed it.

    The day’s big disappointment: we passed a small café that is only open on Sunday afternoons for cake and coffee. And it was too full for us to go in. Very sad. But about 50 m down the road we passed a house where they had a little shelf outside the front door with a stamp for pilgrims, a little guest book, and a deck of cards that had messages on them. So we shuffled the deck and both pulled purple cards. Mine said something along the lines of: you manifest the things that happen to you or something like that. Which is all well and good when those things are nice, but, really, no sociologist buys that!

    We got to Murrhardt about 4:30. So it was a long day. But really pleasant walking. A few hills, some mud, the brambles, but mostly easy.

    Angelika and I are both staying in the same gasthof. For dinner I finally got to eat local food. We went to a small place that is like a pub. We had excellent local white wine that is made from some kind of grape, the name of which I am forgetting, that usually is made into red wine. For dinner I had Maultaschen, a very typical Swabian meal — little pasta pockets (taschen) filled with meat. It was really good. And then, schnapps. Ice cold. Perfect.

    Angelika goes home tomorrow afternoon. I have a 30 km day. Everything feels fine, so it will be ok. It looks like there will be smaller hills but more asphalt. So, not so great for the feet, but hopefully I will be done in decent time.
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  • Day 5 Murrhardt to Winnenden, 31 km +

    October 13 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

    A pretty uneventful day, apart from the fact that Angelika went back home. It was so amazing to meet her on the first day! The first morning! And apart from the other two women we met that same evening - who were only out for one night — there have been no other pilgrims . There have barely been any walkers at all. This is not a busy route. So it was excellent to have good company. We had a lot of fun. I’m going to miss her! How amazing to be able to just go for a long walk every so often and be home again in a few hours on the train.

    Nice walk out of Murrhardt just as children were going to school. They do good playgrounds here, with climbing structures that would be seen as too risky at home. Some of the small parks have had zip lines.
    And also good design. Lots of them are beautiful. As are some of the schools.

    After Murrhardt we went up into the woods for a good while. There was a bit of climbing but nothing too bad. The forests have been a mix of evergreen and deciduous trees, so kind of shady. Lots of mushrooms but not much undergrowth. The forest paths are sometimes wider tracks and sometimes single file trails over dirt or grass. And despite the fact that there is cut wood stacked here and there, it doesn’t feel like the forests are primarily a source of wood.

    The place is littered with routes! Every intersection shows a stunning number of walking and cycling routes. Lots of markers everywhere. Still, we managed to loose the route again today (!) by taking the most obvious path out of the woods to a bench with a view (today’s castle off in the distance). And then we just kept going straight along a path into a huge field. At some point, I checked my phone and saw that we should still have been in the trees. So we crossed the field to where the map showed some small trails that joined up with the Jakobsweg. But what’s on the map was not on the ground. We spent about 10 minutes crashing around trying to find a way through, but no luck. So back up to the bench and back into the woods and about 5 metres behind the bench was a Camino marker on a tree over a barely perceptible path through some small shrubs and long grass.

    The villages were closer together and more numerous today. I think they are maybe bedroom communities for Stuttgart. The smaller ones are really pretty, with lots of things still blooming in gardens - asters in huge clumps, roses, sunflowers.

    At one point we were walking down a path in a place that wasn’t really a park but was some kind of public recreation area. Orange spray paint on the path: “The forest path is closed.” Was that the path we were supposed to be going on? We didn’t know? Is there only one forest path? So we kept going. And then eventually we got to a big unmissable sign, sort of like a banner people would use in a large demonstration, tied to trees to block the path. “The path is closed. Tree work. Life danger!” But we could see another path about 5 metres in. So we went past the sign and then squeezed by a huge tractor and down the side path. A few metres along it also had a big sign across it, but it was for people coming the other direction. So we figured if we got on the other side of that sign that we would be out of the “life danger.” We could hear people working in the forest and at least one big tree coming down. The new path took us down along the river (the Murr as in Murrhardt), one of the only fast moving rivers I’ve seen so far. A lot of the others (and every day there are rivers) are murky and slow At the end of the river path we came out to a road and then Angelika and I went in different directions. She went west to get a bus to take her to the train, and I went east to the village of Steinbach where I had my first coffee en route.

    The rest of the afternoon went through alternating fields and orchards and villages. The villages were getting bigger - with new housing around their edges and bigger roads. In Weissach I went to the church to get a stamp. But it was hard to tell which side was the front. So just started trying doors, working my way around. By the time I got all the way around to what was the front, a man was calling me from the other direction - wait, I saw you, I have the key! He let me in, chatted for a bit, and then left. There was a stamp, a guest book, water, and post cards set out for pilgrims. Really sweet. Again it was a Protestant church. They seem totally into the Camino!

    I had lunch on a bench at the side of a soccer field. I bought the “snail” pastry I had been looking for for days in the next village. Then up again, past a lot of apple trees, and then the last down, through a couple more villages, past vey small children having riding lessons, and what is the fourth or fifth gravestone carving place over the past few days.

    It’s a fairly long walk into Winnenden, and I made the rookie mistake that I continue to make at least once a trip of booking a place way off the path. Today, after 32 or 33 kilometres, it was probably about a kilometer further than I needed to go. A charmless but perfectly fine hotel on the ring road. Apparently there is a very good Greek restaurant downstairs but Monday is rest day, So I just went next door to the Lidl supermarket and got some food.

    Tomorrow’s a shorter day. It looks like the route is a little less rural than it’s been. I’m hoping for good coffee!
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  • Day 6 Winnenden to Esslingen 21 km+

    October 14 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 9 °C

    Today was a shorter day (by about 10 km) that somehow took longer than yesterday! Shoes to tie, stamps to stamp, and so many pictures to take! It was a gorgeous, gorgeous day. After a foggy start, the sun came out and then wow. Impossible not to trip over the clichés. Stunning sky and robins singing and the smell of apples. About 80% of the day was astoundingly good.

    Great exit from Winnenden along a paved cycle path surrounded by green. In the city it passes some big modern institutional buildings where the place that lawns once were have been given over to biodiversity projects. It seems like the walking/cycling paths are cleaned in the winter. Good public service.

    The exit from the town opens into fields full of apples and plums and quince. And these gave way to a forest, similar to yesterday’s but with sun! And so very different. So bright with all the yellow leaves. I came out of the woods to the really fun sound of a little kids’ ‘play group doing some kind of forest art.

    And then after the forest, the vineyards. Foggy vineyards at first, but then they were spectacular. And they carried on for the rest of the day. I have never seen anything like it. Big block patterns of colour sweeping up steep hillsides, making them all the better to see. I guess I have really only seen grapes in the spring!

    The jakobsweg passed through four or five villages of varying sizes. Churches were all open - and several had sandwich board signs on the sidewalk to let you know. I got a couple of stamps. I stopped for a coffee.

    The walking today was pretty easy. Nothing too high or too muddy. I managed not to lose the route. The only annoyance was another “life danger” sign blocking off the path - with no other information. You could hear the chainsaws in the distance, so I made a big circle around them to the left, but I probably should have gone to the right. A big chunk of the alternative path I took was overgrown and super steep. I was hot and cranky by the end of it. But then I came out to a sunny road and a jaeger hut — hunter’s hut, but really a restaurant — with a good terrace and spectacular view. I was too late for lunch but a radler in the sun definitely helped!

    From there it was pretty much straight down paved narrow paths into Esslingen. I’m staying in an Airbnb, a room in someone’s flat. It is a beautiful little town - a river, a canal, great views of the vineyards. Lots of really old buildings. This flat is in a house from the 1700s. The buildings in another part of town are even older.

    All the restaurants the woman I am staying with recommended were having their rest day (again). I ended up at a place with a fall pumpkin menu. Pumpkin soup, pumpkin risotto, baked pumpkin with Gorgonzola and some other things I forget. I had the pumpkin maultaschen- the big ravioli-like things I had the other day.

    The room I am in has no heating - so that’s it for me tonight. I need blankets!
    [Edited to add: I just found a warm hot water bottle in my bed!]

    Tomorrow’s distance is a bit of a mystery. I had to go off the jakobsweg to find a place to stay. The Camino goes up through the hills -and I could get to the place by going that way and then dropping down into the village or I could take a different route along the Neckar river. We’ll see! Tonight’s town is Esslingen am Neckar. Tomorrow’s village is Neckartenzlingen. The town that some people suggest you stay in on tomorrow’s route is Neckartailfingen. A different guidebook suggests Neckarhausen. It’s confusing! But clearly the river itself is important!
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  • Day 7 Esslingen to Neckartenzlingen 25 k

    October 15 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    It was a quiet, pretty uneventful day. The weather was back to overcast, the path was fine, easy walking, with pleasant but not spectacular scenery. The way out of Esslingen passed through the middle of a street market and then circled the edge of town before crossing the Neckar. It’s a decent sized river. Fast moving.

    Vegetables at the market were incredible. Chard leaves you coukd use to swaddle a baby. Heads of cabbage bigger than soccerballs. Sweet potatoes that were so huge I had to look at the sign to see what they were. Also tons of different mushrooms, including pfefferlinge - cool new word. A few days ago we met someone in the forest who was looking for them.

    A few hundred metres after crossing the river, the path goes straight up into the woods, past a children’s farm (maybe a place for parties or school groups or ???). It was probably less than an hour to the first village. An older woman stopped to chat on the street. She said, I’m so happy to see you! But then I could not understand the rest of what she said, so I’m not really sure why! The entrance to that village is the first and only place I’ve seen houses that need painting. Granted I am only in smaller places, but it’s still striking to me how tidy this part of the world is.

    Several leaf blowers today. Seems like people just blow the leaves into the street. Then what happens to them?

    I passed a bunch of dog walkers on the way through big vegetables fields and into Denkdorf, village number 2. I still have not quite got the coffee thing down in the bakery cafés, which are the only places to get coffee in small villages. They tend to use a preset coffee machine, and I’m not sure which button I want them to press. Cappuccino had way too much milk today. Tomorrow I’ll ask for something different. Although tomorrow, I will end up in Tübingen, a university town, so there might be fancy coffee there!

    Nice little pilgrim corner in the church in Denkdorf. There was also a stamp in a little box on a post in a sign on the road about 500 metres on. And then a very short ugly stretch under a highway overpass. They always put me in mind of the too many mystery novels I’ve read.

    A big chunk of today’s woods had so many paths in so many different directions that someone painted yellow (Camino) stripes on the trees to show where to go. I was very glad of them! It was like a maze.

    Past some biodiversity art (bugs!). Another small farm store where everything was too big for a person with a backpack. Lunch on a bench beside a well in the centre of a village. Beside the well a statue of a man playing a flute. Past an alpaca farm. And then eventually on to a bike path with fab views out over the Neckar valley and some huge hills beyond (wondering if they are in my future).

    I wasn’t sure exactly how to get where I needed to be tonight. I’m off the Jakobsweg at an Airbnb, a big room that a young couple rent in their house. It’s in Neckartenzlingen, the third of 3 Neckar towns in a row. Neckarhausen and Neckartailfingen were the first two

    I gave up the good views and walked down to the river in Neckartailfingen, where there was a bike path that I could take to get here. Neckartailfingen is the normal end of the stage and is definitely the better place to stay (based on my short walks through both towns).

    Tge dinner choices tonight were Italian, burgers, or Greek. I went with Greek.

    Clothes are drying on the very good rads! Tomorrow morning I will do some more rejigging to get back on the Jakobsweg. I am not really sure but I think tomorrow is about 24 or 25.
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  • Day 8 Neckartenzlingen to Tübingen 25 km

    October 16 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    Foggy, foggy morning! When I booked the accommodation for last night, I was a bit disappointed that I would be in the river valley, missing a few kilometres on the Jakobsweg up the hill. Both guide books talk about the great views up there. Well, there were no views this morning!!!

    I have not been doing well at leaving early this trip. Sometimes that’s because of when breakfast is served, but today it was just because I was not moving very quickly! I managed to get out by 8:20. The plan was to try to get to the city before it was too late to get a good coffee! And I was not exactly sure how far I had to go.

    No places to stop today, so I bought a sandwich and a pastry in Neckartenzlingen. Then I crossed a bridge over a small river and, like yesterday, started straight uphill. There were about 150 steps and then a paved path rising very steeply to catch up with the Jakobsweg in Altenriet. On a not foggy day, the views must be really amazing.

    After leaving Altenriet, the path followed the usual series of tracks through forests and fields. Today’s novelties: fields of sunflowers, and fields with horses. Someone told me the other day that if you see an apple tree with a yellow band around it, it means the owner is not going to harvest the apples and so you can pick them. I saw a bunch of them today. And they had no apples left.

    Today’s major sightseeing spot: the kloster and schloss at Bebenhausen. Beautiful, impressive buildings, courtyards, and walkways. I can tell you nothing about them except that it was cool to walk through them and fun that the camino wound around the whole precinct.

    The last big hill before Tübingen felt about 5 times longer than it was! Lots of people out walking and cycling as you get closer to the city. And by then it was a gorgeous sunny day and who would not want to be out in it!

    I made it into the city before it was too late to have coffee (barely). Beautiful small city. Little streams and tiny canals - that’s maybe not the right word - but there is lots of water in the city centre. Lots of bookstores. I went to several looking for the guidebook for Jakobsweg part 2. But no luck, I’ll have to find it in Koblenz tomorrow. Bookstores here make me envious! A whole wall of language learning materials, a whole section of guidebooks for German long distance walks, divided by region.

    I’m staying tonight in a single room in the youth hostel. There are about 3 million children here. Or so it sounded when I came back from dinner. I’m very happy to be at the very end if a very long hallway where I can’t hear them!

    Short day tomorrow into Rottenburg and then this part of this camino is done!
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  • Day 9 Tübingen to Rottenburg, 13 km

    October 17 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

    Thirteen kilometers from Tübingen to Rottenburg to finish this small piece of the huge network of German Jakobswegs. Going further you’d have a choice between turning more west to Strasbourg and then probably on to the Vezelay route in France. Or you could go more south and enter France further down and make your way to Le Puy.

    I got up early to avoid the many many children at breakfast in the youth hostel. Turns out one of the biggest groups was Italian kids there to study German.

    I left around 7:45. A triumph! Though it is not really light until 7:30.

    Every morning walking through these hilly towns I think of the Blue Zones series on Netflix, about particular groups of people with a higher than expected number of people older than 100. The first thing the host talks about is hills! Some of the groups he’s talking about live in hilly places where people walk to get around. Going uphill is good for us. But likely way better if you do it everyday and not just a few times a year.

    This morning didn’t have quite the shocking steepness of the last couple of days but there were stairs. The path leaves the city through a schloss that sits above Tübingen with views over all the surroundings. The Jakobsweg goes right through the building- through a kind of long archway and then down some stairs and through a tunnel. When I was looking for the way markings, a woman walked by and said, “do you want a noble apple? They come from up there (some higher level of the castle).” I did.

    After the castle the Camino shells follow the route —and poetry — of Ludwig Uhland. A 19thc poet, whose work was put to music. He was apparently a champion of liberal causes and was also involved in politics.

    Another nice walk through a forest until the Camino goes sharply up to visit a small chapel that wasn’t open. Spectacular views in all directions. And a very odd super heavy duty unstealable stamp. From there it was just an hour to Rottenburg where I got a stamp from the tourist office (in exchange for answering questions about, for lack of better words, consumer satisfaction of pilgrims. What would you like to see changed? What was missing? Well, nothing, really!

    Coffee in Rottenburg and then an interesting afternoon with Deutsche Bahn. I’ve spent the evening in Koblenz. I’m staying at a very recently renovated hotel
    Right by the train station that still smells a bit of paint. So the windows are open and a fan is going, and it’s ok and just for one night. I managed to get the guidebook for the Mosel-Camino (another copy of which has been en route to my house since the beginning of September), and I will start it tomorrow. The elevation profiles are sobering!
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  • Day 10 Koblenz-Stolzenfels to Alken 17km

    October 18 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

    Fantastic day! Such good walking. Such good walking culture. Imagine getting up on a Saturday morning and having dozens of places to choose from for a walk!

    Took the bus from the centre of Koblenz a little bit south to Stolzenfels, the start of the Mosel-Camino. It’s only 6 or 7 km, and so I had thought I would walk, but then I thought I would make an easier day. And it was nice to just get right onto the route! Mosel-Camino is what they call it. The marked route is less than 20 years old. My guess is that calling it a Camino rather than a Jakobsweg is a bit of marketing.

    It was a short day, just 17 km. The start is on the Rhine. And then up to a small church with a lot of statues of the tortured Jesus — arrows, blood, the whole thing. I met Alex and Yvonne, pilgrims from somewhere in the north of Germany, while I was eating my breakfast (quark — why can we not get quark at home? - and a banana) in the church garden. This route is much more popular than the last one, and the Mosel valley is a touristy place. So I am guessing I will see some more pilgrims.

    Lots of elevation right off the bat and for a good while, but the grade was gentler than the paths last week. 15 minutes in, there is a humongous castle, looking out over the Rhine at another humongous castle across the river. This one is Schloss Stolenzfels. Very impressive- but it was not open yet, so no visiting.

    Unlike last weekend, there were a lot of people out walking today. Well, maybe not a lot, but some! A walking group with a lot of very noisy poles. And a few mountain bikers. A man pushing a stroller up a very steep rocky track. And a good number of people just out for a stroll. Busiest place all day was the recycling drop off and the place to drop off yard waste.

    After the castle the path stays in the woods for a good while. I caught up to Yvonne and Alex (I was trying not to) and walked with them for a bit. But then I went for coffee and a raisin bun at a bakery just off the path, and so I didn’t see them again until much later.

    It was mostly overcast but every so often the sun came out. I’m trying to manage my own temperature better. My main complaint has just been over heating going up hill. So more stops to take my jacket off and put it back on!

    One of the cool things on this Camino is that a lot of the markings are on bird or bat boxes or insect hotels. There is some kind of biodiversity project at work here.

    I apparently missed at least two stamps today, though I got one just before coming down into Alken. After a super long period of descending, the trail, annoyingly,
    goes up again and then comes out of the woods to, finally, views where you can see the Mosel - valley and river - and another castle. There’s a small beautiful church and benches and signs for about 20 options of how to descend. A group of people were having a picnic , with wine, outside the church. It was so European.

    I got a stamp inside the church. Had the sandwich I’d been carrying around all day and then did the last super steep bit down into the village. So steep that there is a sign at the top advising you to have proper footwear ! Along the path were - the guidebook says, I would never have know - seven (not 12!) stations of the cross!

    The path goes through grape vines and there were little signs telling you which ‘weingut’ they belong to.

    Alken is a long narrow town along the river, with not much in terms of everyday services but a lot of wineries and wine tasting rooms. And a lot of tourists.

    I’m staying in rooms over top of a bakery. It was clearly the place to be today around 4:00, but, incredibly, I did not feel like kaffee and kuchen today!

    I had a fab dinner with wine from the hill I had walked down! A few hundred metres from the table! Some other people came into the restaurant carrying packs with hiking poles. Maybe there will be other pilgrims tomorrow.
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  • Day 11 Alken to Treis-Karden, 18 km

    October 19 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

    I’m lying on my bed in a very simple gasthaus in Treis-Karden. Orange walks. Just had dinner downstairs. An old school local pub (ish). Smoking room! A group at the bar. A table of men playing cards. The overnight guests were the only ones eating.

    I am loving the “mixed” salads - they are all different. Tonight’s had cucumber salad, cabbage salad, carrot salad, bean salad,and some dressed lettuce leaves. Really really really good.

    The theme today was views. Walk way up and look out ! The Mosel River is not that big but is very busy. Tour boats. Working boats. But no canoes or kayaks, even today, a Sunday. Tons of people out walking though.

    Today I had my first (after 10 days!) “are you walking alone?” discussion. The person asking was a woman, probably my age.

    Apart from the views, the guidebook highlight of today’s walk was the Burg Eltz. Burg means fortress but this looked like a castle to me! It’s been in the same family for 900 years. You can look them up and see wedding photos of the newest Count.

    It’s apparently one of the most famous castle -like things in Germany, and once upon a time was the image on the 500 deutsch mark bill. And today it was VERY popular. The path was full of people and there was a huge long line to get in, so we kept going.

    I walked for a while this afternoon with Yvonne and Alex, whom I met yesterday. Nice to have company. It’s hard in this moment not to talk about political things. And a relief when the people you are talking with feel similarly. Their son has just started a sociology degree. I think they were happy to tell him they were walking with a real (more or less) sociologist.

    The real highlight of the day came just before we started the very steep down to the last town. We came to the edge of the woods, and there was a bit of a clearing and a generator! You don’t really expect to see a generator somewhere up high in the forest. But then there was a path and we could see that it went out to where there was a great view, and then there was stuff that you would see in a kids’ play area. And then there was a kind of hut and then we could see all these people sitting around, in front of a spectacular view, drinking wine! Wine that probably came from grapes grown within 500 metres!

    You could buy the wine in the hut. Or rather, you could donate for the wine in the hut - they were not allowed to sell it. So so so good. The wine. The people. The view. And the sun was actually out!!!! This is why a person buys a plane ticket to go for a walk.

    I’m not sure that wine and steep downhills are a good combination but we got down okay. Alex and Yvonne’s guest house was the first place we came to. I walked about a half hour further through the village of Karden, across the river to Treis Karden and this gasthaus.

    Tomorrow is 29 km with some serious elevation- and there will be rain. The dry was good while it lasted!
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  • Day 12 Treis-Karden to Bullay, 28 km

    October 20 in Germany ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    Some big ups and big downs today. 795 metres up and 754 down. But the rain was less than predicted. It was a typical Scottish or Galician day! Jacket on, jacket off. Wait as long as possible to put on the rain pants. Mostly I was walking in mist in the morning. There was real rain for about 20 minutes, and then this afternoon it was mostly just cloudy, and the sun even managed to come out a couple of times.

    The Mosel is a very windy river. Today’s route went well inland, up over some sizeable hills, and then back down to the river after having missed a few oxbows. And then it did the same thing once again to get to where I’m staying tonight.

    Most of the day was in the woods. There were a few cool huts along the way. The sightseeing highlight was an 800 year old cloister - Kloster Maria Engleport - that sits in a beautiful valley, with its own walking paths and gardens. The cafe was closed but the public restrooms were open - always welcome in a walk! I dropped my pack and pushed open the door. A young nun in full habit was doing the cleaning! Upstairs a beautiful simple church that actually had women in the murals on the walls.

    After the cloister, the path was right back into the woods, following a small book for a good ways uphill, and then a wide forest track for a few kilometres. A long gradual climb that came out into fields just as it started to rain. Five minutes later I was at the first of 3 huts where I finally put on my rain pants and ate the sandwich I had made at breakfast.

    The descent into Beilstein around mid day was spectacular. You start getting views when you are still way way up high. The river, a couple of villages, the patchwork vineyards, a ruined castle. It took ages to get down.

    Beilstein is a very pretty, full of wine places and guest houses and restaurants and cafes, almost all of the latter two being closed because it’s Monday. Easy to buy a bottle of wine though! Coffee was more challenging. I ended up on a crowded terrace looking over the river, with an $8 cappuccino and an exceptionally good view. I’d hoped to sit inside but that was asking a bit too much.

    I did not see a soul today on the Camino. There was a lot of out-loud German practice, some singing, and some osteoporosis prevention (jumping). After the coffee, there was one more very long up, which included a few hundred metres plastered to the edge of a road where cars were blasting by. The turn off from the road was surprisingly subtle - a small painted arrow on the pavement pointing to the other side where there was a barely perceptible overgrown path. Were they not allowed to put markers on the guardrails on the road (the obvious place)? Who is looking down at the road when they are worried about cars? I’d checked the track on my phone at just the right time. And only then did I see the arrow.

    Another solid hour of climbing, then a bit of a reprieve and then a very muddy path along the edge of a field, rising slightly and then finally the very top. The view back from where I had come went on forever. And for a few minutes the sun came out.

    And then the long long long descent to Bullay. About 8 kilometres of going down. More fantastic views. Still no people. Lots of falling acorns and other nuts. Every so often a small cyclone of leaves.

    Bullay is tiny. I have a good room with good rads (my washed socks are already dry!). This room, like lots of others, has no shampoo. Of course I usually carry a tiny thing of shampoo and almost never need it and so this time I left it at home.

    Dinner in the restaurant of a place that sells wine. Flammküchen. Sort of a pizza flatbread thing with paper thin crust and some kind cream under the cheese. And a glass of very nice grauburgunder - aka Pinot Gris. The wine has been between 4 and 6 euros a glass and is very very good.

    The guidebook says the elevation tomorrow is 1600 metres. It has to be a mistake. Wikiloc and Komoot say 800. Hopefully the relief of it not being twice that much will make the 800 feel not that bad!
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  • Day 13 Bullay to Traben-Trarbach, 24 km

    October 21 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    Another day of spectacular views and steep climbs. Special additions today: a really plain (but excellent) apple cake from a street stall; a long stop on the terrace of a bakery for lunch (a kind of onion tart, almost quiche-like thing - zwiebelkuchen - and the best snail Danish so far; and two ‘this trail is closed and you are putting your life in danger if you use it’ signs. The last came right at the end of the day. I did what it said for the first one (go back up and around), and ignored the second one. All I could see that would justify the closure were too extremely short sections, maybe 2 m long each one, where there were some loose rocks that you needed to be very careful on. A bit dicey but definitely not what I’d put in the category of life threatening

    The day was definitely made possible by KY tape. After the super steep paths of the last couple of days, my Achilles was really talking to me this morning. I put on KT tape and it was WAY better. One of today’s paths was so steep I was afraid to put my heel down!

    I did see other people out walking today. No one on the Jakobsweg though.

    There must have been a dozen little huts and a gazillion benches. No good view went without one.

    Down down down at the end of the day (on the closed “life danger” path). A Lebanese guy was standing at the bottom of the hill, trying to figure out the sign that had been posted at that end. I said that the dangerous part of the path was nothing that would’ve led to a trail closure where I’ve live, He said the same. He is living in Germany working for Telus. (Canadian cell company). They apparently do stuff for Meta that he suggested we would not be happy about.

    I am staying in a small hotel. It looks like it has a very nice cafe downstairs, but Tuesday is rest day. Of course. When I got here, the guy who had been waiting for me, brought me up to show me the room and then said, come down soon because I will have your complimentary drink for you. He’s Dutch and moved to small town Germany because housing is cheaper.

    Dinner tonight was at a very very good Vietnamese restaurant, which was one of only two that I saw that were open. At dinner I ran into the German couple I met the first day on this Camino. They are staying tonight at the one pilgrim hostel on this whole route. They said it was very, very nice, which I had read before. I can’t remember why I decided not to stay there.

    Tomorrow is really short! So there will be some dawdling in the morning.
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  • Day 14 Traben-Trarbach to Monzel, 17 km

    October 22 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    Grey day but the rain they’d been predicting all week had disappeared from the forecast when I got up this morning. I had breakfast in the hotel in my own private cafe. Definitely weird to be the only guest. Breakfast is pretty consistent across all the different kinds of lodgings. A basket with two or more different kinds of bread rolls - two today plus a croissant - a plate with sliced meat and cheese and maybe a few slices of cucumber or pepper. Today there were grapes. And then butter, jam, coffee and juice. Sometimes there is yoghurt (not today) and muesli. And they usually ask if you want a boiled egg. Today the egg just showed up. I forced myself to eat it, but normally I say no. When the breakfast is all laid out on your table — and not a buffet — I make a sandwich with the second roll to take for lunch.

    The morning started with a climb up over the vines. Not terrible. And then a gorgeous descent into the town or maybe two towns of Bernkastel-Kues. I stopped for a coffee in a square where men were building a small house/kiosk/something for the Christmas market that starts next month. Just as I was leaving the square, it started to rain. Not hard but more than a drizzle. I stopped in at the tourist office for a stamp. They have an entire wall devoted to pamphlets and guides to walking and cycling routes.

    Lots of people out walking today. Lots of dogs. Is this part more touristy? Was it because the town was a bit bigger? No idea. But as I was going down into the town, I passed a lot of people going up. And all day I saw people out with their dogs.

    After I got my stamp, I crossed the bridge to the other side of the river just as it started to pour. So much for the optimistic weather forecast. But I finally pulled out my umbrella! I had needed it badly in Portugal last spring, so I brought it this time. Today it got me to a second coffee without ne getting drenched. I hung out in the bakery until the rain calmed down. About half an hour after I left the bakery, it had stopped altogether. And at some point the sun came out for a few minutes.

    The afternoon was an easy walk that started along the river, went up into the vines, back down to the river, through another village, up to the vines and then into Monzel, where I am staying tonight at a very pilgrim-friendly room in someone’s house. There are guidebooks to all sorts of Camino routes, shells for sale, and her framed compostella is hanging in the hallway.

    Fantastic dinner at a very simple local guesthouse with the best wine so far (blanc de noir, a white wine from Pinot noire grapes - I did not know this was a thing) and a really interesting schnapps made from walnuts. Wine and digestive both from their own fruit.

    It is hard to describe just how much this area is defined by wine. Almost all of the businesses in the villages are wine stores or wine cafes or this afternoon I saw a Rieslinghotel (yup, all one word). There are huge, modern, style-y winery buildings and very old traditional ones. Most of the restaurants and guest houses seem to be attached to a winery or vineyard. When you walk through the villages and towns you pass wine stores and tasting rooms and displays of bottles. Of course I have no idea how the industry works, if these are small vineyards and companies in this area or big ones. Does all this wine find a home?

    Today was the first day I saw a lot of people working in the vineyards. Sometimes 5 or 6 people working near each other, playing music. They were pruning off this year’s growth. Do they have to do that to all the vines? Or do they just do it to some? And how do they work on such steep slopes?

    I just looked at the photos I took today. They are really all the same: big hill, some expanse of coloured vines, maybe the river. It is constantly spectacular.

    Tomorrow the forecast is for rain. And quite a lot of it! But only 19 km. And tomorrow night I stay at a winery!
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  • Day 15 Monzel to Klüsserath, 20 km

    Oct 23–25 in Germany ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    Speedy day. Trying to beat the rain. The weather app said it was supposed to rain all day, but when I walked out the door this morning, the sky was blue!

    Breakfast was laid out on a very pretty table this morning in “Zimmer am Weg” - room on the way. A candle! Homemade jam. Pear, apple, grapes, raspberries! It was maybe the best place so far. And a large part of the reason for that was the kettle!

    I have totally not been thinking about money. But this morning I realized I was very short on cash and would probably need to pay cash for tonight. I was more than lucky that there was a bank machine in Monzel, which is very tiny. Always have cash!

    The defining feature of today was the wind. The huge wind. It a little bit scary to be in the woods!The walk was also punctuated by the noise of what I assume were military jets.

    No coffee places en route but a super cute community shop where I got some cookies. They had coffee, but the sky was just starting to turn dark. So I kept moving. But I love those little shops. We have seen a few in the UK. And I remember a terrific one in Spain where I did get a coffee one morning.

    Partway up the day’s second and final big hill there was a tree down across the track. About ten seconds after I crawled under it, there was a huge noise behind me - a massive truck coming at speed up the hill. On the track. I assume it was there to cut and remove the fallen tree off the path. But it was a bit freaky. About 20 minutes later the path came out of the woods into some fields and the high point. I had thought I would sit down for a while, have my lunch, enjoy the view. But there wasn’t actually much of a view and the wind was wild. So I just ate as I walked. Sandwich made from breakfast things.

    After that m ore woods. And a gentle descent to a huge “grill hut”. A big covered hut with one open side and a huge grill and chimney in the middle. Bench that circled around the wall probably would have fit 40
    people. By that time it was spitting so I stopped to put on my rain pants. Then more downhill. Out of the woods onto big wet fields with better views. And around the edge of a wood where I really feared some trees would come down , the wind was so strong and so loud. There was a very short stretch of path through that wood that I raced down to get out from under the trees.

    The path comes out at a hang gliding launch place with a wind sock and further, along a weather station. Up until this point the scenery today was fine but nothing super special. This was definitely the spectacular part! A long wide view over an oxbow in the river. The coloured vines under the busy dramatic clouds. And a string of little villages.

    The path skirts the top of the top of the huge vineyards and zig zags down into Klüsserath. By the time I got to the bottom it was pouring. Quick stop at the church for a stamp. Then to the “vacation winery” where I am staying. It was just a little after 2:30 and so a bit early for a normal check in time. I had my fingers crossed for the 10 or 15 minutes it took to get to where I’m staying. Luckily the man was in!

    The bottom floor of the building has wine stuff - huge racks of empty bottles, and other paraphernalia - and maybe the family’s kitchen? And then there are more private rooms on the next floor and also a number of guest rooms. It’s not fancy but perfectly fine. I have a downstairs with a couch and a TV and the bathroom and then upstairs with the bed. It has good rads and heat so a lot of laundry was done. I have been trying to watch a little bit of German TV to see what I can understand. Took me about 20 minutes to get this one to work.

    Dinner at one of the only two options in the village, pizza place or restaurant, both about ten minutes walk away. I chose the restaurant. The village is so quiet!!!!

    I’m hoping the rain stops by morning. Tomorrow is really short - 14 km. I guess I could have combined Friday and Saturday’s walks but I am just following the etapes in the guide book. Shweich - the place I will end up tomorrow - is a bit bigger than some of the places on this route. So maybe there will be a proper lunch? And then Saturday is Trier and that’s the end of the Mosel-Camino!
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  • Day 16 Klüsserath to Schweich, 15 km

    October 24 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    Short, chilly, two jacket day. I think today was the end of the huge stretches of vineyards and the big steep climbs.

    There were two tables set in the breakfast room this morning. About a minute after I sat down, Alex and Yvonne, the only other pilgrims I have met, walked in - a nice surprise and it was funny we ended up in the same place and did not know it. They have met two other pilgrims - a guy who got ChatGPT to plan his walk for him and then realized that he maybe should have checked its work; and a young woman who passed them at some point. I also saw her but did not speak with her. But that’s it!

    This morning’s breakfast highlight was grape juice made from the grapes grown by the family we were staying with. Pale gold and only a little sweet and it tasted exactly like grapes!

    There is a big sign in the vineyards over top Küsserath: Küsserath Bruderschaft. I thought it meant “brotherhood” like a union or cooperative. But apparently it refers to (long ago) monks. And the name simply identifies the wine area not any special
    Communal approach to grape growing.

    The normal route out of the village went right away up into the hills, while an alternative went along the river into the next village and then up into the hills. I took the second option. It was pretty mucky and wet, but it was nice not to have to go up first thing. Both villages — almost all the villages, really — are stunningly quiet. I’ve barely even seen a cat. You could count the open businesses in both these villages on one hand. Would it be different in August? I’m assuming so. There are so many vacation rentals and guesthouses and wineries and tasting rooms. It must feel very different when these are all busy.

    The day’s single big climb was not terrible. Leaving Ensch, the second village, you follow paths up to a bird-protection-teach trail (something like that). But first you go by a number of small stone crosses, each with the same image of the crucified Jesus. And then a bigger cross as you get higher up. The woods are full of religion. But today they also had some beautiful signs about birds. And signs warning that climate change can lead to droughts which can damage trees and make the woods more dangerous.

    For the second day in a row there was a big field of solar panels at the very top.

    The rest of the morning was easy walking down into the small town/ big village of Schweich. There isn’t a lot of charm here but it is nice to be somewhere big enough to have a grocery store.

    I hung out at a cafe - soup, coffee, apple cake — until I could check into my room. I wandered around the town a bit this afternoon. It feels almost suburban in its spread outness - in comparison to the other places I have stayed. There is a big high school around the corner. Big sign on the fence: democracy lives from participation. And then signs with all of the German fundamental laws… Basic rights.

    There has been very little visible political stuff of any kind anywhere I’ve been, except for Koblenz. I am thinking of the kind of signs or stickers or graffiti or flags that you might see in Spain. I have mostly been in very, very small places. But still - a rainbow flag, a Palestinian flag, the kind of stickers against sexual violence you see all over Spain, or the posters for equity and inclusion messages in bus shelters?

    Dinner came from the supermarket. The rest of the evening has been spent moving wet things around on the radiators, reading, trying to watch German tv. Every so often I think, I am so glad I’m not in a tent!
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  • Day 17 Schweich to Trier, 22 km

    October 25 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

    Very nice last day of walking. The weather could have been better, but it was good to be out on a Saturday and see other people about. And where I did not see them, I saw their cars. Lots of busy small parking lots at several trailheads (for lack of a better word).

    The Camino stays on the north side of the river all the way to Trier. It gets a little bit of elevation - there are a few VERY steep bits surprisingly close to the end - but just enough for good views as you get closer to the city.

    Two stops today, both in Ehrang. A quick stop in St Peter’s church, which had some very cool modern sculptures and ceramic work on the floor. Yet, suspended from the ceiling, right over top of a very joyful and colourful mosaic on the floor, was Jesus on the cross. Somehow the pieces did not fit together for me.

    Second stop - to get out of the rain - was at the only place to get coffee in the village, a cafe inside a gas station/car wash. It was pretty nice. I did not expect to see candles on the tables!

    There was another Kreuzweg today, the stations of the cross path. So many crosses everywhere! There are so many other parts of the Christian story you could focus on.

    A few days ago someone said this stage wasn’t worth doing. But one of the great things about walking in Europe is that you get to walk into and out of cities. I really love that, even when the outskirts are boring or ugly or endless. But the route into Trier is exceptional. You are in the woods with excellent views over the city. And then you come maybe 200 metres down a hill, cross a bridge, and you are walking into the city centre. From the forest to streets with stores and cafes takes about 10 minutes. And then from there it was about another 15 minutes to get to the cathedral and the smaller (but not small) Lieblingsfraukirche next door, which was spectacular. There are windows all the way round that are on par with the ones in Leon. Really really beautiful.

    The Dom info centre had the pilgernstempel. And that’s this camino over!

    Apparently the official end of the Mosel Camino is at St Mathias church about 30 minutes walk south from here. I’m not sure why. I’ll go there tomorrow. Today I went to my hotel room instead! I’m staying at a hotel with no on site staff. The “front desk” is a check-in station on the wall beside the front door. But the room is fine. I’ll be staying here for 3 nights. When I booked it I thought I might just keep walking towards France along the river, but I’m thinking I might actually do tourist things here instead!

    I’ll try to make some notes on both these Jakobswegs to post in the forum. I’d definitely recommend them both, but I think the first one felt more Camino-y than this one. Maybe because this one is going through the wine region. And it’s very touristy. A gazillion people come here in the summer and so there is less interaction with people and also fewer things like supermarkets or bakeries. The first route was less spectacular in terms of scenery, but it goes through a region that feels, well, more normal. It was also easier in terms of elevation. I live in a flat place; I never remember to look at elevation charts. Just yesterday I noticed that there is one for the whole of this route inside the flap of the front cover of the guidebook. The walking felt like the chart looks!

    In any case I would definitely walk in Germany again. From where I am sitting now you could go on to Metz in France and to Vezelay or go more south and go to Le Puy. And where I stopped on the other route there are a couple of ways to continue into France or you could go down into Switzerland. All the options are appealing to me!

    Very grateful to have been able to do this. And happy that it all worked out!
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    Trip end
    October 29, 2025