Right, bit of a break there while I unsuccessfully combed the mini-bar in search of chocolate. On the plus side I found a couple of small fancy looking chocolates I had previously not noticed in the fruit bowl. Fortified by sugar and cocoa I will continue:
Day 2Whoa, that chocolate had a strawberry center, nice. Sorry, getting distracted.
So after an uneventful night I checked the GPS. I knew it would try to send us down some fast but boring (and toll-laden) autoroute. So I had already set a couple of intermediate waypoints for the day, the first being a nice picnic spot in the hills east of Champagne country that my friend Phil had recommended some years ago. The next was Vittel, where the bottled water came from.
One thing I do like about the GPS is its inability to accurately judge what would be a fast road from a slow one. It sees many rural roads as equal, and so it was as we pulled out of the village. I knew the fast route was to go straight on and turn right at the next roundabout, the GPS suggested turning right up a steep and narrow track. I think the GPS has a sense of adventure, so I followed it, and before long it came to a World War I allied cemetary; very appropriate since we were pretty much 100 years after the start of that particular war:
The route got even better, turning into a dirt track immediately after - that GPS really knows the stuff I like.
However, soon we were back on autoroute (divided highway, 2 lanes each way). Here we stopped for a toilet break. This highway rest stop is also called an aire, but these have a bad reputation for crime over night so aren't recommended for camping. Plus they are close to a noisy highway (80mph speed limit) and you may find yourself camped next to commercial rigs coming and going all night and running their diesel refrigerator units all night:
The look of a happy man going on vacation:
Come lunchtime and we arrived at the recommended picnic spot - we have used this spot before - I wonder if anyone ever boondocks here?
After a nice lunch of French bread and English cheese we head off east using Vittel as a waypoint to ensure we stayed off the bigger autoroutes. Note that Sally isn't really into navigating, hence I prefer to set some waypoints in the GPS and navigate myself with the aid of that to avoid falling out on route. I did drive around Vittel, but it was a bit disappointing, dominated predictably by a huge bottling plant.
It was also here we started noticing the large numbers of 3,5t signs indicating (with the European use of , as the decimal separator not .) that many roads were restricted to 3.5 metric tons Max gross weight vehicles. I asked Sally to make a note of how many of these we saw since I suspected this would be a big factor in our future vehicle decisions - i.e. do we move up to a much larger 7.5 metric ton vehicle? Jumping ahead we found these signs everywhere - they would clearly make navigating unenjoyable. Further we discovered that entering Austria with a 3.5 ton vehicle meant we paid about $8 for 1 month vignette for highway use, where-as with a vehicle over 3.5 tons we would have to buy some pay-as-you-go electronic box that could cost hundreds in road tolls (taxing you as if you were an 18-wheeler).
Sorry, another diversion there - so back on the road after a disappointing Vittel and we headed for the Vosges mountains. You may remember a trip we did there a couple of years ago. This time I picked a restaurant at a high mountain pass that offered free camping. On the way we climbed up one of the major hills we hadn't visited before - Sally inspects a status of Joan of Arc:
We drop into the tourist shop and Sally buys a load post cards and stamps. I have to point out to Sally that she'll be busy writing post cards tonight because we leave France tomorrow and the French stamps won't be any good in a Swiss mail box.
The campground is great. OK it is just a flat parking area with no facilities, but the views are fantastic:
We take a small walk and drop into the restaurant for a coffee and cake, or in Sally's case ice cream since she has learned she is wheat intolerant, so she has to watch me eat cake instead!
We slept well, disturbed only by another RV turning up about 2am! They shoudln't really have done that - the rules for these free campgrounds is that you turn up and go and say hello to your hosts and ask if they have camping available, rather than just driving to their camping area and setting up camp.
Stay tuned for day 3 (Saturday)...