Monthly Archives: July 2014

Wales in numbers (and pictures)

Last summer I spent just under a week driving around Wales.

  • To get it out of the way… Number of times it rained (during the day): 1, lightly, and I was driving at the time
Sunshine!!!

Sunshine!!!

  • Number of times I got sunburnt: 1
This was on a walk I did - as I went past of my way out, it was warm and sunny and I thought "on the way back, I'll swim". On the way back it was cold and grey. I swam anyway.

This was on a walk I did – as I went past of my way out, it was warm and sunny and I thought “on the way back, I’ll swim”. On the way back it was cold and grey. I swam anyway.

  • Number of times swum in the sea: 3
  • Number of other people seen swimming in the sea, per occasion: 2; a dozen; 0.
  • Number of people commenting on my insistence on swimming: 2 plus an estimated 10 odd looks.
The air was never all that warm, but the water was lovely.

The air was never all that warm, but the water was lovely.

  • Number of times I loitered next to a Barclay’s bank to use the free wifi: 9
  • Number of towns I passed through whose names I cannot pronounce: at least 20
  • Number of metres altitude gained going up Mt Snowdon on the Llanberis Path: 975
Coming back down Mt Snowdon.

Coming back down Mt Snowdon.

  • Number of coffees drunk during the trip: 4
  • Number of cups of tea: 10
  • Number of packets of paracetamol bought at a fraction of what they’d cost in Italy: 8
  • Number of items bought at a charity shop in Cardigan: 2 (1 book, 1 tshirt)
Snowdonia...

Snowdonia… round the corner from my hostel. Not bad, eh?

  • Number of days I wish I’d spent in Wales: at the minimum, an extra week. Next time!

How to get to Schloss Lichtenstein without a car

A few weeks ago, I spent a weekend in Tuebingen, Germany, with my sister visiting a friend who is currently living there. By Saturday evening, we’d seen most of the sights in town, and while spending a Sunday afternoon sitting on the river banks watching tipsy Germans go punting and get sunburnt sounded like a pleasant option, we decided since we’d already done that Friday we should find something else to do, maybe get out of town.

Some googling and vague memories of the suggestions in a guidebook lead us to decide on Lichtenstein Castle (Schloss Lichtenstien), because even as someone who normally says “ugh, castles”, I had to admit this looked pretty nice:

Schloss Lichtenstein 04-2010.jpg

But… how to get there? The internet is surprisingly unhelpful on this point, with most information about the castle describing the conveniently-located car park, and a few ominous mentions of 90-minute uphill treks. The good news is, 90 minutes is a massive over-estimate and the castle is really not that hard to get to (though it would still be much easier with a car and there is some uphill walking involved). Here’s what we did, based on searching google maps and rome2rio, neither of which were totally accurate but by their powers combined…

  1. Get to Reutlingen, which is easy to do by train. If you miss your bus connection (we did), it’s not a terrible place to wander around for an hour but it’s not exactly thrilling either, especially on a Sunday at lunch time.
  2. Get a bus to Honau. We caught the no. 400, it leaves ~hourly (at least on Sundays, maybe it’s more frequent during the week?) from the bus stands which are to your left as you leave the station – basically, there’s a carpark near the taxi rank with some bus stops in it. You might want to ask the driver to let you know when you get to Honau. Bahn.de has bus info.
  3. At Honau, you get off the bus pretty much at the bottom of the trail to the castle – it starts on the side street just behind you. Follow the signs, through the field next to the hedge and then into the woods. The trail in the woods is very clear, not especially steep, and in the shade the whole way up. To give you an idea, I walked it in crocs (don’t judge me). It took us around 45 minutes to get to the top and we’re not especially fit, although we are young and without knee problems etc.
  4. The bus back to Reutlingen leaves from a stop just down the road from where you get off the bus. You’ll probably want to know the timetable so you don’t hike down the hill and then have to wait an hour for a bus.

Photo credit: “Schloss Lichtenstein 04-2010” by -donald-Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons.

Ten things you should know about hiking

A post about something recent! Some friends and I went hiking last weekend.

  1. Everything feels like more of an adventure if you get up early for it. Even if you’re only up early because you woke up an hour before your alarm, and you decided to get out of bed and clean your apartment.
  2. If your plans involve Italian trains running on time, they will be delayed, pushing everything back until your hike is an after-lunch hike.
  3. Which isn’t a problem, because a picnic lunch in a village in the Alps is pretty great in its own right. Especially with fresh bread and cheese and sausage and fruit.
  4. It turns out the haze you always thought was air pollution must be partly just humidity, because even in this valley, it’s there. You won’t get the crystal-clear mountain air you’d been daydreaming of during the week, but the haze does make the landscape rather painterly.
  5. When the trail mostly follows the road, you can go fast, even when the clouds come in and visibility is low. This will seem like a good idea at the time. Your stiff muscles and awkward-baby-giraffe gait 3 days after the hike will disagree.
  6. Cows and calves are almost as cute as sheep and lambs; cowbells are useful for warning you there are cows on the road when walking through clouds; it is impossible to resist mooing loudly as you pass a herd of cows, even if you’ve passed 4 already.
  7. A woman with grey hair and wellies will pass you as you pause for a drink, and wish you a pleasant hike. One minute later, she will be nowhere to be seen on the road, even though there are no side paths. Probably she is a farmer and has gone into a field. Maybe she is a witch.
  8. In the end, even going fast, you won’t reach the lake the signposts were vague about the location of. You will however witness the clouds lifting and the sun coming out over a meadow of wildflowers, complete with a mountain stream and views to higher hills beyond.
  9. Nettles are real, and they do look just like on the box of nettle tea you used to drink in Australia. You’re only going to realize this after you walk through a patch of them.
  10. Homemade fruit cake you weren’t convinced about while in the city will taste amazing when you’ve just walked from 1400 to 2000 metres above sea level. (You need to go hiking again – you’ve got nearly a quarter of the fruitcake still in your fridge.)

Throwback Thursday: going west by train.

The first time I ever travelled by myself was like this.

It was the first year of my PhD, and I was in Colorado for a summer school. I was able to take a week of holidays after the school, and I decided to go to San Francisco, because a) famous and well-loved city and b) it was on my way home anyway.

I decided that flying there wouldn’t be enough of an adventure, so I booked a train ticket. I can’t really remember now whether that decision was driven more by naive enthusiasm (“a 35-hour train trip, how romantic!”) or stubbornness (“I refuse to fly even if it’s the obvious solution”) or cheapness (pro tip: if you book far enough in advance and don’t mind sleeping in a seat, you can travel darn cheap on Amtrak. I think I paid something like $80 for Denver-SF).

Whatever my reasoning, everyone I spoke to clearly thought it was a bit odd. At the summer school, one of the other attendees tried to talk me out of it:

“How far even is it?” she asked.

“They reckon about 35 hours.”

“You know that trains here aren’t nice like the ones in Europe?”

“I’ve never been to Europe,” I said.


I’ve read enough travel writing to know that here is where I should be describing the characters I met on the train, the late nights spent playing cards and drinking smuggled-aboard cheap whiskey with my fellow travellers.

Real life isn’t so much like travel writing. I read some physics papers. I listened to the “USA” playlist my sister had put on my mp3 player. I ate a lot of bbq-flavour roast almonds. I walked up and down the train to stretch my legs, trying to hold my breath for the whole length of the carriage that smelled like a broken train toilet. I dozed. To be honest, I don’t have many tales to tell from the trip – turns out my sense of adventure only goes far enough to get me on a long-distance train, and once I’m on there I’m my usual quiet self.

(The closest I came to a memorable story was in the middle of the Rockies, we’d stopped at a tiny station for a smoke break, and I figured I had time to buy a postcard from the station shop. “You’d better hurry back on the train,” the lady at the counter told me, “They’re serious about it only being a 10 minute stop.” I made back on the train just in time.)

What kept my thoughts company was the view out the window. Seeing the train stretch behind my car as we wound back and forward on our way into the Rockies. Following streams through mountain valleys. Coming out the other side into Utah, with the sun setting over impossible rock formations. Waking up in Nevada and pulling into a station that was little more than a shelter to mark where the road and the railway briefly met. Watching the landscape slowly become more human-friendly as we made our way into forests and farmland in California. At some point in California we were re-routed due to track work, onto a line that was only ever used for freight. Seeing road-less sunny wooded valleys that only freight train crews got to see? Pretty special.


Would I do the trip again? In a heartbeat, although recent sofa-sleeping-induced neck pain makes me wonder if I’d spring for a sleeper these days. I also wonder if I’d be more out-going a second time around? I do regret not having struck up a conversation with the woman across the aisle from me, if nothing else because I’d love to know where she got her amazing knee-high lace up boots. Certainly I’d be sure to bring more varied snacks with me. But now I can say I’ve been on plenty of the nice trains in Europe, but I’ll never forget my ridiculous-stubborn-naive train trip across half a continent.

Funny "narrow street" warning sign

Cyclists of Torino

If you see all of these on a single commute, you should yell BINGO and wait to receive your prize:

  • The phone-talker. If someone calls you, of course you should answer and continue cycling one-handed on a main road during peak hour. It would be rude to just call back later.
  • The sms-writer. Fortunately for my tendencies to worry too much about other people, this one is rarer than the phone-talker. Possibly because how long are you going to survive anyway if you do as the phone-talker, except now you’re writing a text message with one hand and steering your way through traffic with the other.
  • The smoker. Usually cigarettes, but I did once see an older gentleman with a pipe, wearing a suit. He sailed past me going down via Nizza. He had quilted pannier bags. Even considering I live in Italy, this was a new pinnacle of me feeling comparatively un-stylish.
  • The umbrella-user. It’s raining. You need to get somewhere and the bus isn’t convenient. A rain jacket wouldn’t suit your outfit. So you cycle while carrying an umbrella. Obviously.
  • The “make do with this ToBike”-er. ToBike is Torino’s bike sharing scheme. Mostly it’s pretty amazing, but sometimes, thanks to vandals, you arrive at a station and the only bike left is missing a seat. Or pedals. Or both brakes. Or all of the above. If you don’t have time to walk to another station, it’s amazing how well you can ride on a bike with only one pedal.