Leaving Köln was interesting for another reason - a football match! The path passed near the football stadium and so I walked with, and then against, the throngs heading to the stadium. I had to cross a street where there were police in droves and dozens of paddy wagons lined up. A man told me that they were there because a train from Frankfurt was expected full of "hooligans"! I could hear them singing (the tune was Loch Lomond) for miles!
I met several lovely people along the way. A couple of women in the park decided I was the wrong colour for an Australian - no suntan! Interestingly an English man who had visited Australia later made the comment that he was surprised how Australian women covered up, and he noticed how our women protected themselves against the sun!
Later this day I met another delightful woman who shouted me a coffee and spent a lovely hour chatting with her. Indeed, I spent the day chatting to people the whole way, and those who know me will say - with a touch of sarcaam- " what a surprise"! It was such a lovely day people were out in droves - cycling, walking the dog, or just ambling along the many paths.
My hotel in Köln (on left) and the spires of the cathedral in the background.
The Rhine at night.
Leaving Köln and the start of the park.
The police, cars, supporters in Müngeradorf.
Brauweiler (above and below)
Heading to Kerpen I met this traveller. He didn't like my bright red back pack!
I had to invent the route I was to travel through the Königsdorfer forest. I lost the markers, but found this along the way.
The crocus were flowering on the banks of the moat at the Schloss at Burgerhausen.
A sign in Spanish on the way into Golzheim.
More power plants!
The ruins of a monastery in the forest heading to Schevenhütte, on my way to Vicht (pronounced Fisht!)
This not so little granite character was reclining in a garden in Vicht.
Leaving Vicht I climbed up onto a lovely plateau, a nature park, which I was told later used to be an army training base and also, at some point, a dump.
The village of Breinig. Here the buildings are made of bluestone, a change from the half timbered buildings.
The beautiful village of Kornelimünster.
The Benedictine Kornelimünster Abbey built in 814.
Aachen was a big surprise to me. It was, for me, a surprise to come across some historical characters I had met on other parts of this journey. The big character was Charlemagne. I had no idea that Aachen was his capital. There are references to him everywhere - a Charlemagne centre, a Charlemagne museum, the town hall has portraits of him as this was the place that began life as his palace. I could go on but will stop at that. Interestingly all the portraits and statues of him are different as there is no surviving pictorial record of what he looked like, and only a brief description by his friend and biographer which could fit many of you reading this!
The other surprise character was Napoleon. Charlemagne was a role model of his and he visited Aachen, along with Josephine, several times.
The other surprise, and it shouldn't have been, was the Roman heritage of the town. A lot of the Roman evidence has been recycled, the walls for one being demolished over time and the stones being reused in other buildings. This was a spa town, with hot springs coming from the ground around which the town was built. In the garden in the centre of the town a structure has been built over archeological remains of a former Roman temple and hostel. They would have made use of these springs back then just as the locals turned this into a very fashionable place of therapy and healing in the 1800's. I watched people coming to the spring, around which a fancy building has been built, to fill bottles with the warm water pouring from the fountain. I could also smell the sulphur in the air around it, reminiscent of Rotorua in NZ, but not as strong.
The Aachen cathedral (above and below). It was part of Charlemagne's palace and the entrance is an ocatagonal shape.
A modern stained glass window in the cathedral.
Below is a little chapel, recently built on the way. Inside was a stake of the pilgrim St James (or in German - St Jakob)
Just one of the many churches on the way into Aachen
The Elisenbrunnen. It was built in 1827, badly damaged during the war and rebuilt and restored to its former glory. The Cathedral is in the distance.
A lady fills her water bottles at the fountain.
In the centre of the Elisengarten stands the protected Roman archeological dig, with the Elisenbrunnen in the background.
Inside the Coronation Hall in the Rathaus (town hall), venue for the crowning of 32 German kings.
There were some gorgeous statues in Aachen, but generally speaking the fountains are still not working, presumably in case there is more icy weather.
Heading towards Gulpen. The village in the distance is Vijlen and somewhere between there and where I'm standing I crossed the border into the Nederland's. I have no idea where, the only way I knew I was in another country was that the signs were in Dutch instead of German.
The village of Gulpen, my first stop in the Netherland's.
The path in the Netherlands was sometimes lacking in signs, and needed a lot of interpretation. Eventually I figured that I was to follow the direction the little bloke on the left is headed.
I missed the heather in flower in Scotland but have seen plenty in flower here in recent days.
Heading into Maastricht.
Like Aachen, Maastricht was a surprise. A truly lovely city. Cobbled streets, old buildings, lovely churches and a river on which the barges travel up and down stream. It is a very outdoor living city with many, many bars and cafes complete with chairs and tables on the pavements.
The river around which Maastricht is built. The barges are frequent and fast.
One of the churches in Maastricht.
Vrijthof square lined with bike racks and bars. This is the square where Andre Rieu holds his concerts in July.
This is the view of St. Servaas Basilica from the square.
The portico in St Servaas Basilica.
The Markt square in Maastricht.
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