Friday, July 2, 2010

Day 21 - Cross back over the Alps to Home

Another long day in the saddle .... starting with 300 kms on those autobahns ... at our self-limited 160 kph ... hoping that we would meet traffic jams like we could see in the other lane ... it took us 10 minutes at 160 kph to pass the tailback ...


Eventually, we crossed through a little corner of Austria (only about 10 kms) and then into Switzerland, heading for Chur (which is the area where some folk still speak Romansch, the 4th official language in Switzerland).  Just after Chur, we turned South so that we could cross the Alps via the Splügenpass and the Madessimo pass. 

This looks like what we're used to ...


And this is what it's like getting up there ...






This took us into Italy, through the high altitude village of Monte Spluga (1955m and one of my favourites) ...




 A view from my favourite cafe in Monte Spluga (and it has a spectacular cellar next door ... really amazing for a village that's only accessible for 3-4 months of the year) ...




From there, we took the nerve-wracking downhill section ... see the hairpin turns above and below ...





... to Lake Como, along its Western Shore ...



... then over a small hill to Lake Lugano ... and home.




















After a quick shower ... the obligatory bottle of bubbles ... courtesy of Andrew and Pam ... complete with home made ribbon ...

and of course, a sunset, something that doesn't really exist up where we'd been in late June ...




Tips for Elise Travel # 4


Baby Wipes :

Actually, this tip must be attributed to my good friend and fellow Elise Co driver, Cecilia. Ces provided me with this tip before we embarked on the 2008 Roma-Italia Ralley, which Clive and Ces won in their Larry Lotus!! And we came 8th out of 40 something cars. Anyway, again, I digress…..

Baby wipes are very useful and can be stored neatly in the glove tray under the dashboard. The many uses include:

1. Wiping up after a spillage or leakage, ie coffee or leaky strawberry punnet

2. On very wet days, as we had when driving from Lofoten Island to Tromoso, wiping up the door sills due to rain leakage. Elie does leak quite a bit in heavy downpours. And once the door is opened, water will come in.

3. On very hot days, such as our last 2 days from Stockholm to Nueremburg, and Nueremburg to Lugano, wiping your hands after applying copious amounts of sunscreen. Also they can be quite cooling when applied to the face, neck, chest etc on these hot days.

4. Generally keeping the door sills and dashboard clean and shiny…….just like the driver & codriver!!

End of Tips for Elise Travel #4 and final tip.

 
And we have a properly animated itinerary from everytrail.com again ... since I've created it on the home computer, the earlier difficulty must relate to a revised setting on the travelling netbook.   Must try to create a single trip display for the full 9,000 kms!!


The final tally:

For those of you who must have the statistics, here's the total mileage ...


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Postscript:
I'll post one more blog later this evening, which will talk about the likely next blogs, and when they might be ... but that's all for this particular post.



Final Day - Alps to Arctic


Plan your trips with EveryTrail iPhone Travel Guides

2 comments:

  1. Oh No I don't want your holiday to be over - I have so enjoyed reading your blog and taking myself away from my life as it is now SAP Payroll the Germans have a lot to answer for. Having read the book..I look forward to the movie of A2A coming out ;o)

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  2. You can at least look forward to the blog of the Peking to Paris coming up in Sept/Oct ... the storyline might not be mine ... but the phraseology might be recognisable!!!
    (Mind you, the P2P are using Skytags which is far more advanced than my little assembly on the dash of the Elise).
    Glad you enjoyed the blog ... and did you notice the Laverton CanTeen footage in the BlackHumour sidebar?

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