Day 36 - [R]hine River Cruise (Strasbourg, Alsace region), France
Suddenly French after all this German
Back to busy touring today. The morning was a highlights walking tour of Strasbourg and the afternoon, a wine tasting in the Alsace district. Fr the morning tour, we were driven around to Strasbourg city from our docking location in Keln, Germany (the other side of the Rhine). We were then led into Strasbourg through an old defence bridge/dam structure that spanned one of four branches of the River Ill that run through Strasbourg.
|
|
|
Walking into the old town of Strasbourg was a delight. Like all the medieval cities that we’ve visited, I just love the feel of the place, the ‘human-sized’ scale of the buildings and the jumbled but appealing (to me) architecture. Also, the autumn colours were more striking in Strasbourg today, so that made it even more charming.
Strasbourg has preserved a lot of its oldest residential area. Apparently, it was not troubled by the two world wars. The houses shown here were built in the late 16th century in this typical timber framed style. I think that it was this tour that explained that the steeply pitched roofs of these houses were built that way to create a storage space (for hay in farmhouses) because the water table is so high next to the river, that cellars were untenable. (In the hills, cellars were too difficult to cut into the rock.)
Of course, the central element in the walking tour was the cathedral. It was Cathedral Notre Dame, one of at least three in France. I think this one was claimed to be the third-largest cathedral in France (but I may have mis-remembered this claim). It was certainly huge. However, I’m becoming accustomed to huge cathedrals now, so it was only impressive, not overwhelming.
|
|
|
Inside was very impressive (a little bit as usual). The stained glass windows were amazing and told the stories of Christ’s life. The rosette window over the main entrance is apparently the largest of its type. I was flabbergasted by the organ, suspended on one wall about 1/4 down the nave. The modern stained glass windows that were added in tribute relatively recently (this century, I think our guide said) were magnificent, especially that Christ’s face was made up of photographic images of local people taken specially for the project.
The most fascinating thing in this cathedral was the astronomical clock. We only had a short time before this mechanical marvel, but I could have been there for hours. It was built in the middle ages (I will look up the details later) and is a wonderland of mechanical marvel. While we were there, it rang 10 am, which was a clockwork delight. (I should have videoed it but didn’t really understand what was going to happen until it did.) This one piece was a definite highlight of cathedral tours!
|
|
|
|
After visiting the cathedral, we were ‘set free’ by our guide to roam around Strasbourg as we wished, with shuttle bus times clearly articulated. I was obliged to meet her back under the Guttenberg statue at 11:55 am because I was committed to the 2:00 pm wine tasting tour and the next shuttle after 11:55 am was 2:10 pm. I wandered off on a bit of a random walk through Strasbourg. It didn’t take long to walk out of the old town. Streets quickly became lined with more modern buildings, and the shops were all high-end brands. I’m not sure if I’d walked into the ritzy shopping district, or just that most high-end brands in my mind are European, and so of course they show up in shopping strips.
This is happening everywhere in Europe at the moment. They take Christmas pretty seriously here, it seems.
|
|
|
| Street scenes in Strasbourg | ||
The walk to the bus was through a different, more modern part of Strasbourg (like 18th-19th century, ‘more modern’) and offered some further lovely scenes.
|
|
Need to find out what this is about |
After lunch back on the Sigrun, I joined a small group who were to be driven out to a winery in the Alsace region to sample their wines.I’ve picked these sort of tours deliberately as I think that I’ll most appreciate my European visit through its gastronomy. The bus ride was unremarkable, except that we passed into lots of flat lands, which has been unusual for most of the cruise. It was clearly a wine growing region. However, it still had the characteristic of fortified places on ridgelines and hill tops. They are called ‘chateau’ in France.
|
|
|
The Achillee winery is a modern installation on an 12th generation vineyard operation. (The 13th generation is apparently already born, but only 9 months old, so can’t really be counted as part of the operation, yet.) We were given a tour of the facilities, which are largely very modern, partly because the whole vineyard is biodynamic and organic, a transition that’s happened over the last 10 years. There are still remnants of the old ways. The huge white oak barrels are still used. Indeed, they cannot be replaced. Apparently, making them is now a lost art! In the middle picture, the closest barrel is a cremant (sparkling) blend that they started in 2016 and, after the first five years of maturation, each year they remove one third for bottling and top up with more of the latest vintage.
|
|
Note the Disney cartoon characters distinguishing the contents of each cask |
The primary objective of the tour was to taste the local wines. The schedule said four wines, but the sommelier who hosted us generously managed to get six wines into the tasting. I’ll update the post later with my notes (they’re packed while I’m travelling and writing this). However, a summary is that there were four really nice wines in the set and the other two were pretty good, just not AS good on my palate.If I’d had a practical way of buying some of it, I would have. Unfortunately, my very favourite, the cremant from the big white oak barrel that we tasted was the last of that batch of bottles! They will draw more wine for bottling in coming weeks.
The sun was setting by the time we left. The bus trip home was uneventful (and mostly in the dark). Dinner on board was a German-themed buffet with many traditional German offerings. Like all the food on board, it was lovely, but not perhaps as exciting as the chef wanted us to believe.
| Daily facts: Location: [R]hine River (Strasbourg, Alsace region), France Temp: 16 Weather: Sunny, patches of cloud |

















































Tim, your canal photos are stunning - I can imagine being there; it just reinforces my “bucket list” wish to experience it in reality
ReplyDeleteThe altstadt of Strasbourg really was gorgeous, just like Utrecht. The whole town-on-a-canal vibe appeals to me a lot.
Delete