Years
ago my first trip to Europe was an “If it’s Monday you’re in Belgium, Tuesday
you’re in Italy.” At that time I thought that would be my only trip overseas,
never dreaming how many more times I’d
be going across the pond.
Each
of my experiences in the Alps took me to different places and mountains. My
first left me with wonderful tender
memories at 6000-feet. The first cable car took us about half way up to a
platform where we changed into another car to reach the top of Strasserhorn. On
a gorgeous sunny day the panoramic views at the top were awesome. We walked a
short path to admire the wildflowers in bloom.
From
the large plaza we entered the gift shop/café where I spotted a hot plate with
a carafe of coffee and another with hot water. I hadn’t had a cup of coffee for
ten days or so as my palate finds European coffee way too strong.
I
asked the young man behind the counter for a ½ cup of coffee and then to fill
it with hot water. Appalled he said, “No, no, this coffee we make to put
liqueur in. It is good”
I
was insistent and finally he relented and did as I asked. Today, over twenty
years later, I smile remembering carrying that cup of coffee out onto the
patio, sitting in the sun and listening to the serenade of the cow bells
tinkling in the meadow below. What a memory!
A few years later I made a hiking trip to
Switzerland where we rode cog trains, lots of gondolas, cable cars and other
conveyances. Our first hike on a drizzly
day was to Mt. Pilatus where the mountain was named after a
holy man who had slayed a dragon living on the mountain.
The cog railway, built in 1889, with
a 48% incline, is the world’s steepest. When we exited at 7000-feet we were
completely fogged in. The original plan was to start down the path and eat
along the way. Charlie didn’t want his ‘angels’ to eat in the rain so he
approached the empty restaurant and talked the management into letting us eat
our picnic lunch inside.
They were most accommodating and
most of us ordered soup or a hot drink. We also were very careful to take all
our mess with us while offering heartfelt thanks.
As we headed down the path 2-3
people popped up umbrellas. I started to giggle as the last thing I would have
put in my pack was an umbrella and it seemed so crazy to me to hike with an
umbrella. As it turned out the canopy in the wonderful scenery kept us from getting
very wet plus we did have raingear. That was the only rainy day we had the entire two weeks.
On another day we took a train to
Grindlewald; then it was a ten-minute walk to the gondola station. This gondola
is Europe’s longest and it was a half-hour ride for the 6 kilometer 300 meter
ride to deposit us at 7317 feet. My travel companion and I shared our gondola
with a young Japanese couple on their honeymoon. We conversed some, but we all
wanted to listen to the cow bells as we passed over the meadows.
It was a gorgeous warm sunny day. We
stopped part way down at Kleine Scheidegg for a typical Swiss lunch. After
lunch we continued our hike to Wegan and somehow as we started a cute little goat
was determined to find what was in my pocket. He was not convinced there was no
food. It was some time before I could shake him loose. Iit was awesome to be
walking in the shadow of the famous Eiger, Monch and Jungfrau.
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