Part 1 here. It’s just about food. The castle hotel we stayed at had GREAT food.
For the first leg of our trip, the Norwegian husband-type-boyfriend hauled us to the Rhine Valley, inspired by memories of his childhood vacations. Trains, he told us. Trains everywhere! And barges! But so many trains. Oh and also there are a couple of castles.
Did you know Germany has like 25,000 castles? As an American, I sure didn’t.
I also didn’t know that the Rhine Valley has wine, cuz I don’t drink. Wine from grapes grown on dramatic, near-vertical terraces on mountainsides. Here’s a picture of a vineyard and a castle, contriving to look beautiful despite being taken from a moving car. (The boyfriend was driving us around while he looked for trains.)

I did not experience culture shock in Germany. Mostly my reaction was, “Oh! That’s neat. I wish we did that.” Vis-à-vis fresh produce everywhere; bus stops, even in the countryside; protected bike paths; houses in dense towns sharing walls; public bathrooms, for 0.50 € or less; trains(!); no passing allowed on the right; cars that display the current speed limit on the dashboard; cafes attached to tourist attractions–including castles–that have actually good food; coffee machines you’re allowed to operate yourself; bakeries absolutely everywhere; circular electrical outlets sunk into the wall, so it’s easier to plug things in; floating toilets, lacking that awkwardly shaped base that always gets dusty; water pitchers brought for the table (though I could do without carbonated water, cuz it’s awful); you can get a cheap gas station meal plus vegetables and sans food poisoning.
It was fun. I had a good time. We saw the Rhine Valley, then Cologne and Hamburg. I liked Cologne because of the awesome touristy area around the Kölner Dom. Hamburg was also pretty neat, because a local friend took me on an elaborate walking tour, so I got to see the non-touristy areas of the city. My friend’s barometer for sketchiness is about 10x more sensitive than mine. Sketchy in Hamburg is just what all of Chicago looks like, and therefore considerably nicer than what I grew up with in Texas.
Here are some pictures from the Rhine Valley, in chronological order starting from June 25, 2023:






















I guess the Marksburg and Kölner Dom photos should go in a separate post. We took a lot of photos. Alright, more later. I have writing to do.
