YUROP

Hugh_Jeggs , in Provence Kitsch

You can almost smell this picture. Pine, lavender, dust, garlic, rosé wine and pétanque

AchtungDrempels OP ,

Don't forget the pastis ;)

I was on my way with the plan to recreate this photo i took in septmeber some years ago, just with flowering lavender this time:

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ee56735f-1e38-4846-a44f-4cac15dbb671.jpeg

When i got there, turns out at this spot the lavender field is no more, haha. Photos taken at Col de Soubeyrand.

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/4ae05386-03cc-4e7f-8cd4-74a426ff4bf1.jpeg

There was a lavender field a bit higher up, but it was not flowering much yet, i guess too high up.

I am in La Motte Chalancon now, heading north, barkeeper tells me if i cycle past the next mountain, i will have left the Provence.

Servais ,
@Servais@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

pastis

Someone of culture

Hugh_Jeggs ,

Lovely pics! Did you do the Ventoux on your bike? I hear it's a legend amongst cyclists

AchtungDrempels OP ,

Yes, i actually rode it yesterday.

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/d60aa709-622b-40ea-a9ca-e5725b70c1e0.jpeg

And hundreds of road cyclists too, busiest mountain i have ridden.

Hugh_Jeggs ,

Bravo ! The reviews on Google maps are a hilarious read. As many angry angry cyclists as there are angry angry drivers 😂

Bon voyage !

AchtungDrempels OP ,

Oh that sounds funny, gonna read those now with my breakfast :)

AchtungDrempels , in Germany’s unique suspension monorail is a must-visit for train lovers

There's a cool video from this train in 1902:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Ud1aZFE0fU

MelastSB , in Prague

What a strange building in the background

passepartout ,
@passepartout@feddit.org avatar
MelastSB ,

Thank you!

JubilantJaguar , in Germany’s unique suspension monorail is a must-visit for train lovers

I once spent a night in Wuppertal just to ride this thing. Rode it from end to end, and then again the next morning. What was unexpected was how modern it is. You might expect a rickety historic tourist contraption, but in fact it's a modern metro with great views and an unusual ride.

As I understand it, in most countries the railway would be completely uneconomical since it has no off-the-shelf parts and there are no tourists in Wuppertal, but in Germany it makes some sense since it can be used as a sort of training bed for local engineering students and industry.

poVoq OP ,
@poVoq@slrpnk.net avatar

It probably isn't the best use of the city's funds, but given the specific geography of the city, using the space above the river that runs along the entire narrow valley that makes up most of Wuppertal, it does make some sense.

Eldritch , in Germany’s unique suspension monorail is a must-visit for train lovers
@Eldritch@lemmy.world avatar

For anyone that is intrigued here is a 10 hour loop of the train.

AllNewTypeFace , in Germany’s unique suspension monorail is a must-visit for train lovers
@AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space avatar

Ride the Iron Sloth

ValenThyme , in Germany’s unique suspension monorail is a must-visit for train lovers

Seattle has a weird suspension monorail but it literally only goes a few blocks. I lived there for years and never knew anyone who ever took it it was so useless!

Servais , in Germany’s unique suspension monorail is a must-visit for train lovers
@Servais@dormi.zone avatar

Thank you for posting here! Have you ever taken it?

lettruthout ,

I have and it's awesome. The best place to ride is at the very back of the cars - there's a huge window back there.

poVoq OP ,
@poVoq@slrpnk.net avatar

Yeah, it's fun and quite convenient.

autotldr Bot , in Germany’s unique suspension monorail is a must-visit for train lovers

This is the best summary I could come up with:


We spent a month Interrailing around the Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Belgium and France, so my family of five felt like we'd experienced everything that train travel had to offer.

Unlike lots of city transport systems that are a bit tucked away, such as the London Underground, this one's very visible, given the huge green frames that hold the rail above the road and river.

It took another 80 years before construction work began on the electric system we see today, with the upside-down monorail offered to big cities like Berlin and Munich before being installed in what is now known as Wuppertal.

But there’s still plenty of ticket options, including buying the €49 monthly DeutschlandTicket that covers all local transport like buses, subways, trams, S-Bahns and regional trains throughout Germany.

As well as its unique train system beloved by both tourists and commuters, Wuppertal also lays claim to being the greenest town in Germany, as you’re never more than 10 minutes’ walk from one of its many green spaces.

There's plenty of fascinating stories over its 125 years in existence, including the time that a circus elephant was being transported in one of the carriages as a publicity stunt in 1950, before panicking, smashing through a window and falling into the river below.


The original article contains 867 words, the summary contains 214 words. Saved 75%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

viking , in [Meta] Updated the sidebar with relevant countries communities, feel free to comment if I missed any
@viking@infosec.pub avatar

!germany (deutschland@feddit.org is German only).

BoozeOrWater OP Mod ,
@BoozeOrWater@lemm.ee avatar

Thanks, added!

Servais , in Tax The Rich
@Servais@dormi.zone avatar

Well done France

phneutral OP ,

They know quite well how to step up to the rich and powerful. It’s tradition. We should take them as an example!

Wizard_Pope , in The first time I went to Spain I learned that they used a different set of playing cards
@Wizard_Pope@lemmy.world avatar

I meannot really entirely correct. Slovenia does not use mainly german suits. Yes the southeast does often play briškula using the italian suits, but the res of the country uses the french ones. I have never even seen anyone have a deck of german playing cards. In fact I have never even seen such cards in a store anywhere.

spirinolas , in The first time I went to Spain I learned that they used a different set of playing cards

In Portugal, while we use the French/English cards, we still called them by the old names (Spanish/Italian).

We call clovers paus (sticks, clubs), pikes are called espadas (swords), diamonds is ouros (gold, coins) and hearts are called copas (cups).

I always found weird how the names had nothing to do with the symbols themselves. Now I understand.

volvoxvsmarla , in The first time I went to Spain I learned that they used a different set of playing cards

Thank God, I always assumed Germany was the only country with a weird ass set of playing cards

FiniteBanjo , in The first time I went to Spain I learned that they used a different set of playing cards

Everything is fine except for the Itallians.

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