Germany
Kreisfreie Stadt Koblenz

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    • Day 23

      We are Going Sailing

      September 9, 2023 in Germany ⋅ 🌙 25 °C

      In the short space of time we had been in Koblenz, we had learnt our way around the city centre, and also learned to appreciate the attraction of living in a modest sized city of 115.000 inhabitants. It would have been nice to spend some more time there, however the biggest challenge we faced was the uncomfortably hot weather.

      Each day, by the middle of the afternoon, it was a challenge to be outside in the sun. Even though it was not so hot by Australian standards, it was apparently a little unusual to experience such hot weather in Germany this late in the season. At least we did not have to worry about getting wet.

      We did not have an ambitious schedule for the day, as we all knew that we would be boarding our boat at 3 pm. Hearing that some of the others had discovered a bike shop of biblical proportions, not far from our hotel, that seemed like a pretty good place to have a look around.

      The shop certainly was impressive, both in its dimensions, and in the quality and number of its bikes and accessories. It is worth noting that although there was a huge range of ebikes, touring bikes and mountain bikes, I could not even find a single light weight road bike ! Maybe this says a lot about the difference between cycling in Europe and Australia.

      The bike shop even had a test track, where prospective bike buyers could take bikes for a test ride. Now, I haven't seen that in Australia.

      Maggie experienced something of an epiphany at that moment, when she saw a lovely green Cube ebike, and experienced love at first sight. Although she loves her Gazelle bike back in Australia, in Europe I think she could be tempted to be unfaithful. I remembered back to the old days (over 50 years ago) when she used to gaze at me with that look in her eyes.

      After enjoying a nice coffee and a cool rest in the cafe in the magnificent new library building, we wandered back to the hotel to wait for the rest of the group. While some had decided that 400 metres downhill was definitely too far to walk, there were several of us who were made of stronger stuff.

      At about 2.30pm we gathered our luggage and set off on the 10 minute walk down to the docks where the MS Olympia was moored. This boat will be our home for the next week as we make our way along the Moselle River to Saarburg.

      While David and I found our way to the boat, when we turned around the women had gone missing in action. We could have gone back looking for them, but it was hot outside, and the boat WAS air conditioned. It did not take us long to decide that they would probably eventually make it (they usually do). David and Iq settled down in airconditioned comfort.

      The MS Olympia is certainly larger and more luxurious than any other vessel we have used on our previous bike and barge adventures. Not only does it accommodate 96 passengers and 21 crew members, all the cabins feature full air-conditioning, TVs and fridges. You can even fit in the bathroom in reasonable comfort. It was almost a genuine "pyjama boat".

      While the comfort was very welcome, it was a little difficult to share our boat with so many other people, many of whom were chain smokers. Although they are not allowed to smoke indoors, they waste no time lighting up as soon as they take the first step out the door. Maybe I will bring my own gas mask on the next voyage.

      After a welcome and introductions of the various crew members, we were subjected to an almost interminable briefing session, which would have been a great cure for anyone's insomnia. It seemed to go on for hours.

      Then we moved downstairs to the impressive dining room. The service and food was excellent, but it was amazing just how much noise 96 passengers can make when they have had too much to drink and have too much to say. In fact the noise level was so high that I struggled to hear anything that was being discussed at our table.

      It had been a long day, and we were all very keen to finish the final course and retreat to the quiet of the upper desk. Too late, the smokers had already polluted the air up there with clouds of noxious smoke. Perhaps the best place to be is sleeping in our own cabin after all.

      Tomorrow we get on the bikes for the first time. The weather forecast ? Another day with a temperature in the low 30s.
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    • Day 21

      This Apple Juice Tastes Funny

      September 7, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

      Following our enjoyable time in Maastricht, the time had come for our travelling circus to move to its next performance. When faced with the problem of getting 19 Ghostriders and a veritable mountain of luggage from Maastricht in the Netherlands to Koblenz in Germany, I examined several options.

      The obvious choice would have been to travel by train. That sounds simple, however it would have required all of us to travel to Maastricht Station (with all our luggage), then negotiate a sequence of three trains (with all our luggage) and finally to get from Koblenz Station to our respective hotels (with all our luggage). That was not an option that had any appeal at all.

      About 9 months ago, I started researching the possibility of chartering a bus for the journey. I contacted several companies for quotes and waited for their replies. While most of them were ridiculously expensive, there was one company (called A1 Service) that provided a realistic quote at about 50 Euro per person.

      I started a dialogue with the company, but they were somewhat difficult to contact at times. When they asked for a substantial deposit in advance, I started to get a little nervous. I had no idea who I was really dealing with, and could not help but fear that I was kissing goodbye to a stack of Euros.

      Of all the arrangements for this trip, the one that gave me the most concern was this bus transfer. What would I do if the promised bus did not turn up ? In the final email from A1 Service, they promised that the bus would be at the Hotel Valk at 9 am. I arranged for the group to be checked out and waiting with their luggage at 8.30 am. I started looking for the bus.

      The clock marched on to 8.45 am. No bus. 8.55 am. No bus. I tried to look confident, but I had butterflies in my stomach. The group started to look at me. I walked out into the street and looked either way. No bus. 9.00 am came and went. Still no bus. The team were starting to look mutinous.

      "What are we going to do?", some of the more cynical members asked.

      "Pass me your phone", I said to Maggie.

      I dialed the number, half expecting to get the dreaded "That number is no longer connected" message (or whatever that is in Dutch). You could imagine my relief when the driver answered, and explained that he had been delayed 45 minutes by an accident on the highway. He promised that he was only 5 minutes away. And he was.

      When he arrived he was at the wheel of a very large, and very modern bus. Everything would be OK after all. My reputation was intact, and I even started to breathe again. About 10 minutes later, we were loaded onto the bus and underway.

      The drive to Koblenz should have only taken about 2 hours, and it probably would have if there had not been a huge traffic jam on the German side of the border. At first we thought there must have been a big accident, but apparently the road was blocked while they cleaned and polished the line markings. I think that was the story anyway. Germans are sticklers for order and cleanliness after all.

      We also learned that the Germans have very strict codes for how long drivers can drive without a break. The traffic jam had delayed us so much that the driver had to stop the bus and wait for 45 minutes, before we could resume the journey.

      I think we finally arrived in Koblenz about 1.30 pm, and found Sue Rainsford standing outside the hotel, waving to us. It was a lovely welcome to see a friendly, familiar face so far away from home.

      After checking into the hotel and having a rest, Maggie and I went for walk around the city. Koblenz is an old city, situated in an idyllic location at the confluence of the Rhine and Moselle Rivers. Our initial impressions were very favourable.

      Not wanting to have another restaurant meal, we decided to get some provisions from the supermarket and have a picnic in our hotel room. Shopping in a foreign supermarket can be a challenging exercise, but fortunately most items have informative pictures on the outside.

      I found some bottles of apple juice and thought they would be a nice way to quench my thirst. We also added grapes, oranges and yoghurt, before heading back to our room for a little feast.

      Since the heat was still around 30C, I could not wait to enjoy the apple juice, and poured myself a large glass. It smelt and tasted awful. Perhaps it is an acquired taste, I wondered. I took another sip. It tasted even worse. I felt like I was sucking the toxic sweat from a pair of old cycling socks.

      Just what was this foul muck that I had purchased ? I searched on Google for the solution and discovered that I had just purchased two large bottles of apple cider vinegar. I had been drinking almost pure acetic acid! No wonder it did not quench my thirst. So, down the sink with that toxic swill. I suspect that my throat is still seared from the unfortunate experience.
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    • Day 19

      Koblenz

      August 30, 2019 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

      Koblenz räknas som Tysklands vackraste stad. Kanske det, speciellt är i alla fall att precis här rinner Mosel ut i Rhen. Udden kallas Das Deutsche Ecke. Många åker hit bara för att fotograferas längst ut på udden. Denna helg är det dock musikfestival på udden och man har ställt 50 toaletter runt hela udden så den är helt blockerad, otroligt!
      Från udden går linbanan över Rhen upp till Ehrenbreitstein, ett av Europas största fort. Överraskande fina utställningar och en fantastisk utsikt över stan.
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    • Day 7

      7. Tag Koblenz

      August 26, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

      Morgens starteten wir den Ausflug mit der Marktfrau Lisbeth. Als echte Koblenzerin konnte sie uns vieles über die Historik der Stadt erzählen. Jedoch machte sie dies nicht einfach „langweilig“ als normale Stadtführerin, sondern in der Rolle der Marktfrau.

      Dir Führung war grandios, sie sang uns alte Lieder vor und konnte uns mit ihrer Art in eine andere Zeit versetzen.

      Als Abschluss tranken wir zusammen einen Kräuterlikör und durften ein traditionelles Gebäck kosten, welches sie selbst für uns gebacken hat.

      Am Nachmittag passierten wir die Loreley Strecke. Eine Moderatorin erzählte uns, während der Fahrt viele spannende Fakten über die Gegend.

      Nun machen wir uns bereit für das Galadinner, wir sind gespannt.
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    • Day 24

      Koblenz - riverfront walk

      November 6, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

      An eclectic mix of old and new along the riverfronts at Koblenz. Not much time to explore as the night descends quickly.
      A very poignant memorial to a divided Germany - 3 remnant slabs from the Berlin Wall. Built and divided on the 17 June 1953; torn down and unified on 9 November 1989.Read more

    • Day 7

      Koblenz - Lorelei

      April 2, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

      Bei Regen spazierten wir durch die im 2. Weltkrieg zu 80% zerstörte Stadt Koblenz. Die Altstadt muss man etwas suchen aber für einen gemütlichen Rundgang ist es genau richtig. Wer mag fährt mit der Seilbahn über den Rhein hoch zur Festung Ehrenbreitstein, von dort hat man einen schönen Blick über die Stadt Koblenz. Am Mittag ging es weiter auf dem Rhein in Richtung Süden. Unsere Mädels wurden heute von Oma und Opa abgeholt und genießen die restlichen Ferien mit ihnen zusammen.Read more

    • Day 9

      Deutsche Eck

      August 21, 2019 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      On a point where the Rhine and Mosel Rivers meet, there sits a park and giant statue honoring Wilhelm I, the first Emperor (Kaiser) of the modern German state.

      If you imagine our Mt Rushmore and Liberty Bell, you'll have a sense of what the Deutsche Eck (German Corner) means to many Germans.Read more

    • Day 11

      Sep 30 - Ehrenbreitstein Fortress

      September 30, 2019 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      After lunch back at the ship, we had a couple of hours of free time so we decided to do more exploring. Across the Rhine River is the mighty Ehrenbreitstein Fortress. The medieval castle on this site was razed to the ground by the French in 1799. What is there now was begun in 1817, when the Prussian government made Koblenz into a garrison town. We took a cable car over the river to get to the fortress. This cable car was built for the 2011 National Garden Festival that brought millions of visitors to Koblenz. The UNESCO authorities were aghast that such a structure had been built smack dab in the middle of one of its world heritage sites and they threatened to rescind the area’s designation. After much negotiation, UNESCO backed down and the cable car and the designation can live in harmony - but only until 2026. We’ll see what happens after that.

      The fortress is a huge, maze-like collection of buildings, with a layout designed to discombobulate invaders, and now, visitors. It sits 120 metres above the Rhine and is the second-largest preserved fortress in all of Europe. The views over the river are breathtaking. We could actually see where the water from the Moselle meets the Rhine and creates an eddy of two different colours of water.

      Dinner tonight will be special. We received an invitation to dine in the fancy-schmancy on-board restaurant called Portobellos. (Everyone eventually gets an invitation, so we are NOT special.) As I recall from last time, this will be a 7-course dinner and will likely take almost three hours!! Such decadence.
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    • Day 35

      Koblenz, Deutsches Eck

      May 10, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Beeindrucken, der Zusammenfluss von Rhein und Mosel, Wahnsinn, wieviel Wasser hier zusammenkommt und dann als riesiger Rhein weiter Richtung Holland fliesst. Wir sehen uns die Stadt etwas an, fahren dann aber bald weiter zum Drachenfels, da auch hier aktuell das Wetter nicht gerade sehr sonnig ist.
      Wieder haben wir Glück, unsere Wanderung auf den Drachenfels mit dem tollen Blick auf den Rhein bleibt trocken und es beginnt erst am späteren Abend in Strömen zu giessen.
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    • Day 24

      Ehrenbreitstein Fortress

      November 6, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

      The Rhine and the Moselle Rivers converge below the formidable fortress built by the Prussians which was once the strongest in Europe.
      The village below the fortress is Ehrenbreitstein. Across the Rhine is Koblenz.Read more

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    Kreisfreie Stadt Koblenz

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