Sunday, 23 July 2023

Salzburg by road

 

I may have mentioned once or twice my love of road travel. No crowded airports, dependence on schedules or faff about luggage and weight restrictions. Just throw all you like in the back of the car and drive to your own tune.


In Schengen Europe sans frontières, country borders tend to whizz past quite frequently, and with nothing more to mark them than a discreet sign on the roadside; blink and you've missed it.

So taking in eight countries in eight days was less frantic than it sounds, involving a leisurely, unhurried pace by car.


Remich, Luxembourg, in the wine-making Moselle valley


Leaving London at lunchtime on Saturday, we were in Luxembourg, via France and Belgium, by late afternoon, for a night stop-over in picture-pretty Remich, on the bank of the Moselle river and vineyards.

The next morning we were in Germany in under 5 minutes, driving south-east ... bypassing industrial Karlsrühe and Stuttgart ... taking the ring road around Munich  ... to Salzburg - only about 10 kms across the border of Bavaria. We'd crossed the Moselle, Saar, Rhine and Danube in one day.

First impressions: entering the city in a summer rain shower through this extraordinary archway cut into the rockface was my first indication that Salzburg would not disappoint.




The setting is rather fairytale: there's the Salzach river (the old transport route for the salt that was the source of the city's wealth) with the domes and spires of the Altstadt ...


View of Salzburg: Altstadt, river and fortress from the Mönchsberg


below a 900 year old fortress, the Hohensalzburg, and a circle of Alps as the backdrop.




 There are the expected tourist icons: Mozart everywhere (fair enough, it is his hometown), fiakers with pretty ponies, baroque palaces and fountains, dirndls in every shade and style in shop windows ...




but no tackiness, an authenticity preserved.




The Getreidegasse, smart shopping street, with original shop fronts




leads to the DomQuartier, home of princes and archbishops, where Mozart played some of his first concerts as a child prodigy




and from where we had a birds-eye view from the roof

to the Residenzplatz circled by palaces




the Altermarkt with outdoor cafés 




and a fleet of waiting fiakers.




At the cathedral around the corner is the font where baby Mozart was baptised. Later he served as organist here.




Hills and mountains are the backdrop everywhere you look


View to Hohensalzburg fortress from the Grosses Festspielhaus - both concert venues

Love locks on the pedestrian Makartsteg bridge


Fiaker on Residenzplatz


And parts of the city are built theatrically into rockface




like here at the Mönchsberg, where a lift whizzed us way up to the top, to the Museum der Moderne




with the most fantastic views of the city





Back down in the Alter Markt there was the Café Tomaselli, supposedly a favoured haunt of Mozart back in the 1700s and von Karajan (also a native Salzburger) some two centuries later  




for coffee and sachertorte.




Following Mozart's haunts definitely gets you brownie points here, one feels. He is after all the city's most famous and favoured son




But don't mention the Sound of Music - 



Warning in a fragment of an installation in the DomQuartier, part of an exhibition exploring Austrian identity (Raum, Zeit, Identität). 



Salzburg, Austria, July 2016
Salzburg, Slovenia, Trieste trip




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