Food, drink, travel and everything inbetween.

Month: July 2018

We love you Jess…!

WEEK 6: Lorelei, Germany to Home, UK – 594 miles

Saturday 14th July 2018 Lorelei – Day 2

The band and crew have finally arrived, late. The bus bringing them here had a few problems along the way. They were supposed to be here before we arrived more than 12 hours ago, but they had fan belt and AC issues, so when they did arrive they were not in the best of moods.

Plus it was so hot that instead of using the normal AC generator, which was also broken, the engine had to be used to power the AC which meant the engine had to be all day and night, and the back of the bus was right next to us… Great. All we can hear all day and all night is the band bus engine…

Some of the crew come and admire Jess, taking turns to come on board to look at how we live, poke their noses into the toilet and shower, and bounce up and down trying out the seating arrangements. They are all very complementary so we set off in search of some lunch and a break from the bus engine.

After lunch and beer, we sit and watch the afternoon music but it’s far too hot. We find another toboggan run a small one. It’s ok but again nowhere near as good as the 3km one in Todtnau.

It’s late afternoon and Camel are not on stage until 10:30 tonight, so we go back to the van and try to relax, but the engine noise is driving us mad. Sometimes it goes off once the AC has reached temperature, but it soon starts up again. The back of the bus’s engine bay is also open to help with the cooling. It’s so loud.

Time for dinner. The day seems so long, it seems hours away yet before the band are on. We have a great dinner at the side of the van with the trees next to us.

It’s nice with a glass of red wine in the shade and the Volvo diesel engine from the bus next door!

Del goes back to work to do some more focusing in-between bands. Finally, Camel are on stage for a long 2-hour set. It goes down very well. The audience love them. The band are now in better spirits after such a bad journey here.

We help them pack up and get back to the bus and say goodbye. It seems to take forever for them to attach the trailer to the bus but finally they are done and they leave. Finally, peace at last. Bliss… We get 8 hours of Peace and quiet before it’s our turn to leave.


Sunday 15th July 2018 Lorelei, Germany – Landgraaf, Holland. 129 miles

Today is the day that we have to turn around and start to make our way back home. We have been away for 5 weeks and we have a week to get back home, de-prep Jess and put her back into storage until the next time. We love Jess. She has performed well on her first trip out, exceeded expectations, and given us no problems or issues at all. We are very pleased with our purchase.

Our return journey will take us up north to Holland and to the town of Landgraaf which used to be a large coal mining town. It’s not only the UK that’s had pit closures. It will also be a long journey today, we haven’t done a long drive for a while, 2 and a bit hours. We get packed up and do a full van service and a diesel and LPG top-up. We are ready for our last week. It’s been a nice couple of days, noisy, but nice.

Our stop in Holland is a campsite on a farm but when we arrive there is only one space left and it’s not in the best position, right by the gate, some old caravans and piles of bricks, so instead we head for an aire.

It’s a nice clean place, barriered entrance and nice pitches that we can choose from, but we are plagued with flies, loads of them. It’s hot, very hot, and we are still a bit tired from our noisy nights in Lorelei so we have bit of lay down. It’s too hot.

We watch the World Cup final. France wins… Well deserved we feel. Dinner was another one of Hayley’s paellas. It was absolutely delicious. Feeling a bit more revived and cooler, we take a walk into town. There is another festival on making a right racket. It’s the Neverland Festival. A bit more of a dance festival than prog rock.

Back at the van, where it’s now a little cooler, we find that we are plagued with flies in the van, 7 of them buzzing around. Oh well that’s camping for you.


Monday 16th July 2018 Langsraaf, Holland – Felleries, France. 123 miles

Del can’t stand the flies any longer and is up early. It’s hot already. We have a fabulous full breakfast before setting off. Today we are crossing another border into France and to the town of Felleries. Another 2-hour drive of mainly motorways to a lovely municipal campsite with lovely friendly French welcome from the staff.

Once we are installed and comfortable in our fly-free pitch we head off into town. It’s a Monday today and as is the way in France, most of it is closed. There is a nice old water mill here so we have a look around it. We are spotted by the curator and he very kindly invites us in for a personal tour of the mill. He starts up the mill and gives us a demonstration of the equipment, especially the foot operated lathe, which Hayley likes. It’s all very interesting and very nice of the guy to take the time and show us around. What a nice man.

There is a cycle track here that runs where there was once a train line. We thought that we would give it a go but it starts to rain.

We have a nice simple dinner and then back into the town. There is a jazz festival on and tonight it’s a 5-piece swing band.

It’s all very charming with festoon lights and small stalls selling crepes. Lovely.


Tuesday 17th July 2018 Felleries – Herlies. 81 miles

We have a nice long sleep in this morning. After breakfast, we are in search of a van wash. Jess hasn’t been cleaned for three weeks, she is filthy and covered in bugs. After a bit of internet searching and driving around we finally find one. Its a strange arrangement though. It look new, the wash itself is on a hill, and to get to it, and to be inside the wash area properly, the drive into it is a steep, almost 30 degree hill. It was a bit scary as Jess is side-on to go up and round into the wash area. Gulp! She’s in and washed. She looks lovely when she has had a bath.

We are running out of food so we need to find a good supermarket to stock up. We end up down a wrong street and faced with a hight restricted bridge of 2.7m, fortunately we find a side street to go down to avoid that. Very lucky. We could have been unpopular if we had to reverse all the way back up the street. Finally an Auchan supermarket. That’s a no go also as there is a height restriction there. Not doing well, until finally we find a huge Lidl with lots of space and everything that we need..

We arrive at the campsite in Herlies which is ok. Lots of static full-time caravans, some look like they have not been used for ages. The pitches are ok and private with high hedges surrounding your pitch. Too many noisy kids here, so noisy we move to another pitch.

We finally get settled. It was worth it

We finally get settled in and go for a walk around the very nice town, which is open!


Wednesday 18th July 2018 Herlies, France – Poperinge, Belgium. 37 miles

Back at Poperinge.

It’s a lovely morning this morning. Peaceful as well, glad we moved. We have a smashing breakfast outside in the morning sun. We pack up and set off along the French/Belgian border and dive into Belgium and into Poperinge, the place where our first European adventure in our van started.

We do like it here. There are only a couple of other vans here so it’s nice and quiet. There are lots of forest walks around here so we set off. We stumble into a relic from the war, a V1 rocket launch site.

50-odd meters of angled ramp was pointed towards London which is only 250 km from where we are standing. It’s all very interesting as it is buried deep in the forest, and this one is not the only one.

We have a lovely dinner back at Jess with a few beers and walk along the road where we watch a fantastic sunset through the cornfields.

A lovely last night for our first European tour. Most enjoyable and most memorable. That’s what it’s all about after all!


Thursday 19th July Poperinge, Belgium – Home, UK 230 miles

Up early today, at 7 am. Today we are going home, but first, we have to stop at a wine warehouse to pick up our order, an order that Hayley placed a few days ago. We are picking up 10 boxes of wine, 6 in each box… That’s a lot of wine.

We are at the shop by 9 am, we have to pick up the order and then get to the Calais ferry port for check-in. The order is ready and waiting for us, so we get loaded up and get to the Port of Calais with plenty of time to spare, enough time to have coffee and croissants.

Other people have the same idea as one family has set up a full table and chairs outside their van and sit down to a full breakfast. Well why not?

The crossing was uneventful, calmer than our outbound journey 6 weeks ago. We are soon on the rough roads of the UK’s M25, and it is rough, very rough. A couple of hours later we are in Portsmouth for the final ferry to the Isle of Wight and home.

Jess is unloaded, and there is so much stuff in the van, when Hayley drives Jess back to the storage place she notices the difference, she feels lighter and easier to drive. Not surprised with all our stuff and an extra 60 bottles of wine!

Finally, at the storage park, we de-prep the last bits and pieces, drag her cover on and secure her safe from the elements.

We enjoyed our first European van trip in Europe. We saw a lot and learnt a lot. We look forward to our next trip. Whenever and wherever that might be…

We love you Jess!

Thanks Jess…

Visited 28 places in 6 Countries.

Germany… Who’d have thought.

WEEK 5: Lahr to Lorelei. 321 miles

Saturday 7th July 2018 Lahr – Henridorff. 63 miles

Full Jess service in Lahr

Finally, the weather has changed, it’s lovely. So nice we shall have our typical German breakfast outside, just like everyone else. All the other vans, who are mostly German, are doing the same thing. A table with a tablecloth, a basket of bread, a plate of meat and cheese with a pot of coffee.

All the same, all very neat. We have only been in Germany for a few days and so far we really like it. Who’d have thought?

Back into France today though, and we will come back to Germany on another trip, maybe the next one, but for now, we have really had a nice time in Germany.

Hayley at the wheel in France again

We are going to a campsite called Camping les Huttes, Wangenbourg however when we arrive the site is closed until 2pm, however we get told that the owner will not be back until tonight.

Odd, it’s a Saturday and the site is closed until tonight, We wait until 2pm but nobody turns up so we decide to move on, we are not getting in here today. Hayley is very good on the planning and finding places to stay and soon finds us another site, Camping-Piscine du Plan Incliné. It’s only 35 minutes away so off we go. We have washing that needs doing!

There is something very interesting here, only a 1km walk away. The Plan incliné de Saint-Louis/Arzviller. It was built to avoid 17 locks. It’s basically a lift for boats. A box 41m long travels up and down 45m high and is counter-weighted by 2 weights of 450 tonnes each!

We watch it going up and down a few times from a distance, it’s quite something. We check the opening times and decide to visit it tomorrow.

We are getting through the laundry which is helped along with a cold beer. We would like a BBQ so we make sure that it’s okay with the camp to go ahead.

We set up the bricks etc and light the BBQ tray and within seconds we have smoked out half of the campsite. We make our apologies to our neighbours who just tell us not to worry about it and to carry on. It soon settles down and we have a nice feed.


Sunday 8th July 2018 Henridorff – Pont a Mousson. 84 miles

It’s a lovely sunny, warm morning. we have a nice shady spot and have a full breakfast outside in the dappled sunlight. Nice. We take our time and clean up and pack up and do the short drive to the boat lift carpark.

We make our way up to the lift house and watch the whole thing, it’s much higher up here. Very impressive. A box full of water, with a boat sitting in it, is pulled up and down a hill. Amazing.

We visit the engine room and find the whole thing mind-boggling. We also find a toboggan up here, similar to the one in Todtnau, Germany, but it’s nowhere near as good. It was worth trying out though for 3.50 euros.

It’s getting hot, time for an ice-cream before we try another France Passion site, a chicken farm but en route we decide it’s far too hot to be just sitting in the van so we change our minds and find a campsite so we can get our chairs out and sit in some shade. Hayley finds us a paid for aire that is able to take up to 40 vans. We may not get in there but we try for it and we are lucky yo get the last spot right by the river in this very popular aire.

There is a lovely little town here with a massive imposing church. We walk around with another ice cream, before heading back and getting ourselves settled in, awning out and chairs.

Dinner tonight is Hayley’s paella, always a winner. It’s delicious.


Monday 9th July 2018 Pont a Mousson, France – Bon Accueil Alzingen, Luxembourg. 55 miles

We wake up to another nice, sunny morning this morning in the motorhome car park by the river. It’s nice really. Hayley goes off to the local bakery to grab some pastries for breakfast. She returns with rather more than she thought she had bought. 5 pastries in total, no idea how that happened.

Today we are setting off for another new country, Luxembourg. Neither of us has been there before so we are keen to see it. We plan to drive to a nice campsite just south of the city. Once we get settled in we get the bus to the centre of town and just wander around with no plan in mind.

We do get to see the important bits however, the impressive Notre Dame cathedral with its impressive stained glass windows. We just get the tail end of an organ recital, and of course there is the usual array of expensive shops. There is a fabulous view from the walled area of an unusual viaduct and all the houses below.

It’s time for lunch and we are now walking around looking for a menu of the day. All European cities have a menu of the day, but not here, we cant find one anywhere.

The local brew

The normal menu is probably the most expensive we have ever seen so far. It’s very expensive. Down hearted and feeling poor, we make our way to the McDonalds in the hope that it will be cheaper there. Nope it’s just as expensive. We end up sharing a McDonalds meal. How sad is that? We are on a budget and even McDonalds is too expensive for us here. Now we feel even poorer!

We get back to the van and get the bikes off.

Local brew being sampled!

We are told that there is a very pretty route that goes into the town as well, so we thought that we would give that a try. We both consider ourselves as intelligent people, we have a van that we drive around Europe, good responsible jobs etc., but every 100m that we peddle we come across a sign telling us to go one way to the town only to find another sign saying the opposite. This goes on for quite a while. We could not find our way out of the campsite and onto the cycle track, so we just gave up!

We try a takeaway Flammkuchen or an Alsace pizza-style thing with cream and bacon. Not bad. We walk for a while and find a supermarket where we buy some beer and while there we manage to find a cheap bottle of Pastis that we take back and enjoy back at the van in the evening sun. We are visited by a grey tabby cat who gets a fuss while we are packing away for the night.

Tomorrow we are going back to Germany. Who’d have thought?


Tuesday 10th July 2018 Bon Accueil Alzingen, Luxembourg – Weinbau Otto, Schleich, Germany. 46 miles

We didn’t think it would be so soon, but today we are going back into Germany for a bit of a look around, so after a simple breakfast we get cracking. We want to go to the Mosel river and try some white German wine. Our first stop is a stellplatz belonging to a winery.

This motorway bridge is grown over, just for the wildlife to cross over.

It’s another grey day but that doesn’t stop us enjoy the drive through the beautiful Mosel valley with its steep hills of vineyards. Some are very steep, 65 degrees. It would be interesting to see how they harvest the grapes in those conditions.

We are near a large dam and a hydroelectric power plant and there is good cycling to be had here, so again the bikes are released form the back of Jess and we are off on a 5km bike ride to the town of Mehring, where we have a drink before heading back. At a nearby winery we try three wines and buy a bottle of dry white wine. The wineries here are different to France. They are either very modern and new or traditionally beautiful, in this one the two owners are having a sausage BBQ in Hawaiian shirts.

The weather has turned a little cool now, so we stay in the van for the evening and watch some ‘telly’ on the iPad. France are in the World Cup final.


Wednesday 11th July 2018 Schleich – Ellenz Poltersdorf. 43 miles

Good sleep last night. So good we are up quite late, 9am. Today we will stay at our first German campsite, so far all of our stops in Germany have been paid for aires, which has been very nice, but we are due a good campsite. We are heading to Beilstein, ‘The sleeping beauty of the Mosel‘. The drive is spectacular again, better than yesterday as the sun is now out and the steep Mosel valley vineyards just look amazing!

Jess in her new spot by the river

We arrive at the riverside campsite and the description is not wrong. As you look across the river towards Beilstein the scene is just as they say, The sleeping beauty of the Mosel. It looks unreal.

We are given a pitch right at the river’s edge, the whole place is a bit rustic in parts, not quite what we expected, full of potholes. If it rains it might be tricky. We have to pay extra for electricity, which is quite expensive. No matter we are only here for one night and we have the budget.

We take the tethered ferry across the Mosel and into the steep quaint town of Beilstein.

After walking around for a while and getting an ice cream we slog up the hill to the castle where we are rewarded with spectacular views of the Mosel Valley winding through the steep vineyards.

Back at the campsite we visit the on-site restaurant for a couple of giant schnitzels and beer – delicious.


Thursday 12th July 2018 Ellenz Poltersdorf – Burgen. 13 miles

Normally not much happens on a Thursday but this Thursday is different, we need to empty our grey tank as the one here is not usable so after we do a rather chaotic supermarket stop we drive around looking for somewhere to service the van. There are lots of pretty towns and we find two aires but non of them have the facilities that we need.

Today we are going to the town of Burgen and to a hotel called Hotel Schmause Muhle where they offer overnight parking for a small fee. It is located next to a small stream, you can use the hotel facilities, they have fresh water and hopefully a place to empty the grey water. Oh, and they have a shower.

It’s very nice here, we get a nice spot right next to the stream after we empty the grey water tank and fill up with fresh.

We are now all set for a comfortable overnight stay. The local town is very nice and we stop at a coffee shop for coffee and cake, and apple pie. A big piece of apple pie, but very big…

Across the road from Jess is the local restaurant which offers an all you can eat buffet or menu. It’s a very strange place. It’s the usual dark wood, red & white check table cloths and the heavy wooden chairs with a heart cut out of the back! While eating you are being stared at by an enormous collection of owls, from large wooden carvings to tiny ceramic figurines.

Very odd but charming all the same. We’ve never seen so many owls in one place before. We have a nice dinner there before heading back to Jess, hopefully for a good night’s sleep.

We are not alone, there is a very nice dutch couple staying in the carpark with us.


Friday 13th July 2018 Burgen – Lorelei – 24 miles

Del works on occasion for a band and this weekend they are in concert at the Lorelei Festival they are appearing on Saturday night as a headline act and Del is going to stop by, do the lights for them, paid of course, and then move on to our next stop on Sunday. So today we are not in a rush as we have a space reserved for us backstage, with power with all the other tour buses. Should be good.

As we are in no rush today, are we ever, we do a 38km detour to the longest suspended pedestrian bridge. No doubt that will be broken in the future. It’s the called the The Geierlay Suspension Bridge is 360m long and spans right across a valley. It’s high. We park up and it’s a short walk to the bridge, we pay the fee and off we go. Yes it’s long and yes it’s high and when you get to the middle it bounces quite a lot.

We liked the bridge. German engineering at its finest. We get back to the van and make the short drive to Lorelei and the Night of Prog 2018 festival. To get there we have to cross the Rhine which means a ferry, a very expensive ferry, but that’s the way we have to go.

On the way to the ferry we must have taken a wrong turn because we end up on a steep 18%, incline, downhill, we are warned at the top not to go down if you are over 2.8 tonne, but we did, and we survived! We are 3 and two bottles of wine tonnes!

Finally we arrive at the festival and we are shown where to go for the next two nights. It’s a nice spot amongst the trees to our door side so it’s very private, the tour buses and trucks are on the other side.

Once we introduce ourselves we are given a handful of beer and food tokens. We enter the festival and the afternoon music has already started so we use our tokens to get a beer and sit and have a listen in the glorious sunshine before having a walk around the site. The view from the perimeter fence at the other end of the park is amazing. Our location is very high up, and the view is of the Rhine twisting and turning through the valley with spectacular vineyards each side.

What a view, what a place to have a show! Hayley likes the band Antimatter from Liverpool.

We have dinner at the catering tent, it’s all very simple but nice. Back at the van Hayley settles in for the night while Del has to go to work at midnight to program up the show for his band who are headlining tomorrow night.

Goodbye France, For now!

WEEK 4: St – Hirtzbach, France – Lahr, Germany. 106 miles

Saturday 30th June 2018 Hirtzbach to Hunigue. 27 miles

Saturday morning and a race is on to get to the local bakery just in time to grab the last two pastries! It’s a very short drive today, all 21 miles of it. Today we are going to Basel. Basel has three borders, France, Germany and Switzerland. Could be interesting. We are also staying there for 4 nights and Hayley booked it many weeks ago. It’s an ideal jump point, Del has to fly back to the UK for a meeting, the flight is tomorrow, so Hayley will be holding the fort until Monday night.

We arrive at the campsite but our first impressions are not great. It’s a little bit scruffy, expensive, no wifi and it has a bit of a “hippy commune” feel about it, nothing wrong with hippies except the tie dye trousers.

Anyway, we get settled in our spot and we set off for a walk and to walk on the “Three Countries Bridge“.

We walk over to Germany and then over the border to Switzerland (it’s H’s first time there) which is a little bit on the industrial side, so we don’t stay too long.

Back to Germany for a beer on the banks of the Rhine then back to Jess, in France.

It’s hot. Very hot, too hot. We don’t have much shade where we are. Not today.


Sunday 1st July 2018 Hunigue. Day 2

Del is picked up by the owner of the campsite, who, on the side, runs a cab service to the airport which is only 5km away but charges 20 euros for the privilege. It’s an early departure, the meeting is in the afternoon and he will be back tomorrow, ready for our departure on Tuesday.

Hayley is left alone and decides to walk before it gets too hot. She has downloaded an app for the local transport, has worked out how the trams work, and makes her way into Basel town centre, which is deserted, well it is a Sunday. The Rathaus (town hall) is quite unusual. Basel Munster is a spectacular red stone church and the town itself is very pretty.

She needs money, but can’t find an ATM. Unusually they won’t dispense less than £70! It’s so expensive here that you’ll need that and more to get by. She has no currency, getting hungry ad thirsty so heads back to France and to Jess. It’s starting to heat up. Back in Germany, there is an ‘all you can eat‘ Chinese restaurant, very disappointing. It’s hot… 35 degrees.

Back at Jess, a large motorhome has parked next door which offers a little bit of shade. An ice cream van has turned up, the roof has to hinge open so the guy selling can stand up to serve you. Very cute.

In the evening it’s still hot, still 35 degrees!

In the evening it’s still hot, still 35 degrees!


Monday 2nd July 2018 Hunigue. Day 3

In the middle of the night Hayley is woken up by Del back in the UK. He’s supposed to be coming back today but has to visit the doctor. She re-books the flight to Tuesday morning and confirms another hotel room for him tonight.

At 11 am it’s already unbearably hot. She goes to Germany to do some shopping and on return picks up the laundry from the lady at the campsite. Handy, quick little service.

It’s far too hot to do anything, so Hayley gets the awning and chairs out and tries to grab some shade and stays with Jess, feeding the friendly birds who are also probably feeling the heat too.

The only good thing is that now the weekend is over the camp is peaceful and quiet. The site was packed over the weekend including a motorbike club. She is missing the countryside. It is a bit noisy, busy and expensive.

Hopefully Del will be back tomorrow.


Tuesday 3rd July 2018 Hunigue. Day 4

No more phone calls overnight and none this morning. Del will be back today. Hayley wakes up to a rather miserable day with grey skies, rain and thunder. A respite from the heat which is welcome.

It’s confirmed, Del will be back but not until 6 pm tonight. No matter, that’s good, so she has a nice big breakfast of eggs, bacon and hash browns.

By midday the weather has cleared up a little so she takes a walk to the German town of Weil am Rhine. Not much to it so she jumps on a tram to Basel which is very different, there is life here today, it’s busy, a quick look at the ‘Middle Bridge’ and off to the Marketplatz where she buys a pair of new boots! It’s starting to heat up again and she is in jeans.

On the river, on the Swiss side, there is the famous ‘Four Ferries‘, which is well worth a look. It’s a motorless boat so to get across the river the boat is tethered to a wire that stretches across the river which pulls the boat across. It’s very tranquil, all you can hear is the sound of the river rushing by. Nice.

She gets the tram back to Germany the takes the short walk back to France and Jess. Del is due back at 6 pm. The manager picks him up and delivers him back safely, at last, a day late…! We have a beer and dinner and chat for ages until late. It’s a nice evening.


Wednesday 4th July 2018 Hunigue, France to Todtnau, Germany 33 miles

We are leaving today. Thank god, as far as Hayley is concerned. She has been there for 4 nights, it was friendly and interesting enough but it was too long. Time to move on, before she goes mad! Today we are going to Germany. Goodbye France, but not for long, we will be back.

There are tins of beer in there!

We service the van with fresh water and set off for a supermarket so we stock up with food and drink. Germany are out of the World Cup, shame, so the Lidl is selling off World Cup branded beer cheap.

An hour later, having driven through the very picturesque German schwarzwald, we arrive at the charming town of Todtnau and find the ‘stellplatz’ which is already occupied by a couple of Spanish vans. It’s very nice, surrounded by trees. It does have the main road behind us but it’s not too bad. Once settled in we set off for a walk. Hayley is very happy to be in a new place after her unscheduled extra day in Basel, and she is back in the countryside.

This is a skiing town. It’s very pretty with a large two-spire church dominating the charming town square.

We are going to take a walk to a nearby waterfall that is popular with visitors. On the way we get distracted by a shiny metal track weaving down a hill, it looks very odd and we can’t figure out quite what it is. As we get closer we soon discover that it’s an alpine toboggan track! A massive 3km toboggan, and to get to it there is a chairlift. This we have to try.

For a very reasonable 10 euros you can take the chairlift up with the amazing views of the surrounding hills and the town of Todtnau getting smaller behind you, very small though, the lift goes high and a long way.

The return back down the hill is on the toboggan. Bargain. It’s fast, very fast. Hayley is off and away and has to stop on occasion as she is catching up with people ahead of her. She’s quick.

We really enjoyed the Hasenhorn Toboggan Run. Brilliant and such great value.

We carry on with our walk to the waterfall, 2km.

It’s very impressive but the walk has worn us out so when we finally get back to Jess we crack open a cold beer and paddle in the cold water pool which has been installed by the council where we are parked for walkers looking to cool off their feet.


Thursday 5th July 2018 Todtnau. Day 2

The rain is hammering down hard on the van this morning. Finally it eases off so we make our way in to the town for breakfast which was delicious. A good German breakfast of bread, cheese and cold cuts of meat with coffee. Excellent. The rain is about to start again so we head back to the van. It’s supposed to ease off later so we just stay in doors until then.

At 2 pm the rain finally stopped so we set off for the toboggan run again. It didn’t fail to impress again. It was strange going up in the chair lift today, it’s still cloudy so it feels odd to be going up and entering the clouds when it is suddenly misty and quiet.

No time wasted and soon we are bombing down the hill on the toboggan run, out of the clouds and into a partly sunny day.

We find a supermarket, a Penny. Similar to an Aldi, so we pop in and buy a few essentials. Back to the van to get the boots on and go off for a hike. Hayley is still a bit achy from yesterday but we manage a small walk which is good. It’s still cloudy but back home we manage a small beer outside just in time for dinner. We like it here in Todtnau. Shame we are moving on tomorrow.


Friday 6th July 2018 Todtnau to Lahr 55 miles

We wake up to heavy rain again this morning. Seems to be the thing here, rain. We need some good weather, the rain on the roof can send you a bit mad after a while. We have a good hearty breakfast, service jess with fresh water, change the toilet and drop the grey water. It’s been a great stay here, very enjoyable. Toboggans, waterfalls, quaint little towns and good walks. What more could you ask for. We were going to a campsite, but the weather is not great so it might be better to just find an aire. They do have them in Germany but unlike France, they charge a small fee for them.

After 2 hours we arrive at the town of Lahr. It costs 6 euros for a spot which is well maintained, hard standing and very clean. It’s already busy so we are lucky to get a space.

It’s a bit like a car park for vans but it is very nice. Finally better weather, it’s hot so we get the bikes down and set off for a bike ride.

We do the 7km ride to the nearest town called Seelbach, a very pretty town. We find a local bakery or konditorei for coffee and cake (cafe und kuchen), well when in Rome. Black forest gateau is the local cake. Not Hayley’s favourite.

The skies are filling again with clouds, dark clouds. We pre-empt the coming rain and get back in the van just in time for it to pour down with rain with the odd rumble of thunder.

The couple opposite us have popped their swimwear on and are having a free shower in the rain! Well, why not?

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