This is our new friend, Renate. We met her in a supermarket cafe three days ago - we were stopping for a few supplies and a light lunch (and to grab some strawberries from the strawberry van out the front) - and she nearly tripped on our backpack. She heard us speaking English and we started talking. She had holidayed in Australia 20 years ago and loved it, her English was fantastic and she was curious about us. We spent over an hour chatting - Renate is from Lübeck, a very old and historically important city in northern Germany, and about 70km from where we were sitting in the cafe. Renate raved about the city, and highly recommended a visit, and promised to give us a tour of the city if we came. We had no plans to head there, our route was taking us north, rather than heading East. It was so weird though, as we said our goodbyes and swapped phone numbers, and headed off again on the bikes, I told Mike I wanted to go to Lübeck. I was strangely emotional about it. And quite adamant. I didn't really know why, and after a while I realised that I haven't really clicked with Germany - we'd been there almost 2 weeks by this time, and I still felt removed from it, just transitioning through to Denmark - I didn't feel a part of it in any way, yes the cakes and pastries are fabulous, and the scenery is breathtaking, and the people have been friendly enough, but I just hadn't connected. Until we talked with Renate. She talked about herself, gave us some history, her experiences, her opinions, and finally in that little supermarket cafe Germany had come to life for me - she's funny, and smart, wise, and generous of spirit, she's curious and tolerant, and she answered all the questions I threw at her with good grace. So, we changed our plans and put Lübeck on the map.
I'm writing this from our charmingly romantic Kaiserhof Hotel on our rest day in Lübeck, I've got some AMAZING orange, dark chocolate marzipan (the perfect combo of life) next to me which I'm munching on while I type - it's my fave brand of marzipan, and I didn't even know it's made here in Lübeck - what a delicious coincidence!
We cycled in yesterday from Bad Segeberg after an INSANE 34km - 34km? Only 34km? Yes, only 34km with wonderful sun, t-shirts out and about and HILLS AND HEADWINDS. Not short steep hills, no no no, loooooooong slow hills 1-3%, going on for ages and ages and ages, then when you finally get a downhill the headwind was so strong there was no giggly joy, just more hard core pedalling. The thighs were screaming, the sun was beating down, the dairy farms and fields were stinky, the bug tornados plentiful, and the swearing was intense, but the scenery was AMAZING and we rolled into Lubeck via the river front which was so beautiful and hit our hotel completely exhausted and with big smiles and huge relief (even though the lift wasn't working and we're on the third floor!).
It's been 5 days of cycling without a break, and I think we're generally weary, so two nights here is heaven. And today has been just wonderful. We had a yum breakfast at a bakery, then met Renate for the promised tour - we were expecting a 30 min tour of St Marien church, where she volunteers as a tour guide, but instead we were treated to 4 hours of getting to know the old town of Lübeck from a local's perspective - she knows all the history, and is so proud of her city, it was just magical . We walked all over, laughed and explored, she told stories, answered all our questions, and we had a great time, she showed us places we would never have found, and added little local things in we would never read about. We ended our tour with drinks and a spot of lunch - and I was sad to say goodbye - Renate has changed my connection with Germany, she made it come alive for me, made it real, gave me new perspectives, deeper understanding, and really, it's just nice to be with warm, funny, kind people. We were all laughing today about meeting in a dinky supermarket cafe, and what luck it was. People are just great.
So, there we have the most important thing on my mind I wanted to share - the joy and luck of connection. I'm also aware that I want to share our last 5 days - not just for you, sportsfans, but for us to remember. Like I said, it's been 5 days straight on the bike, and I've been too knackered at the end of each day to blog - it seems that rest days are where it's at for having the energy to put things together. So here I go...
Last time I left you, we were leaving our gasthaus and eating lots of berliners (donuts).
Public Holiday Monday 9th June
It was supposed to not rain, and it didn't - for a while. We rolled off enjoying the cool air and glorious scenery - we were relaxed and happy after our rest day and cute little gasthaus, the wildflowers were glorious - red poppies and cornflowers, bees buzzing, all so idyllic - we stopped for lunch at the only place we saw open, and shared a schnitzel (with pepper sauce), then kept on rolling to our campsite - a 55km day. It was all going swimmingly until we felt the spits of rain that turned into real rain. FARK - and Google took us through a mud path for the final 1km. Knackered. And wet.
Thursday 11th June - Bad Bemstadt to Bad Segeberg
Our second rain free day in Germany - woohoo! We had our usual healthy breakfast at a local bakery - YUM YUM! Then packed up the bikes and headed off on a gourmet feast.
What a wonderful few days. Thank you for sharing your thoughts.I’m travelling with you in spirit. The food looks delicious.Yes people make the world better if they are able.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful long update! Thank you for sharing. Your new friend sounds very special.
ReplyDeleteI have a big smile after reading where you 2 are up to. I’m glad sally and Phil are getting along and it is so special when you unexpectedly meet people like Renata. I bet you made her day as well. Happy travels ❤️
ReplyDeleteSo much good stuff to unpack. I think the ice cream sundee's are my fave! Yom 😋 love the unscheduled stop! Random awesomeness is what makes life so special!
ReplyDeleteSo glad you met up with Renate, its meetings like that bring extra magic to your adventure. Thanks for keeping up the blog, we are loving every day!
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