Gransnet forums

Chat

Swiss finishing schools, mysterious mountain trains and white-knuckle driving!

(23 Posts)
petallus Mon 30-Sept-13 16:27:24

Sounds great! smile

gracesmum Mon 30-Sept-13 11:38:58

envyenvy but actually really smilesmile that you both had such a wonderful time!

Greatnan Mon 30-Sept-13 11:37:19

Stop trying to put off my potential visitors! smile

MiceElf Mon 30-Sept-13 11:34:28

They were probably paramedics in disguise.

Greatnan Mon 30-Sept-13 11:31:09

The station buffet appeared to be a part of the Swiss Hotel Management school, so the food would probably be very good. We wondered why there were about five waitresses in a tiny station buffet. I don't think I will be taking that particular mountain road downhill again!

annodomini Mon 30-Sept-13 11:29:36

I'll bear that in mind, Greatnan!

Greatnan Mon 30-Sept-13 11:28:18

Probably June, anno, before the tourists arrive! Spring in the mountains - it has a nice ring to it!

annodomini Mon 30-Sept-13 11:20:01

That train trip sounds inviting, Greatnan. What would be the best month?

glammanana Mon 30-Sept-13 10:58:35

Respect greatnan a wee bit different from the New Brighton to West Kirby line I might add grin so glad you enjoyed your time away when.

whenim64 Mon 30-Sept-13 10:53:49

Yes, that's the one, Greatnan. So.....4,000 feet, then....(faints, out cold on the floor!)

Greatnan Mon 30-Sept-13 10:48:58

I googled the map of Montreux, When, and enlarged it. I think the village where we started going downhill was Sonchaux, and it is situated at about 1200 metres, i.e. almost 4,000 feet! The little station is shown too, but there are others even higher up. I would love to go up to Caux in summer and take that train.

annodomini Mon 30-Sept-13 10:30:13

I knew very well that you couldn't see the edge of the road, but I had complete confidence in you. I'll be a member of your very exclusive club, when. grin

whenim64 Mon 30-Sept-13 10:23:52

I am starting a club for Gransnetters who have been Greatnan-ed i.e. driven through fog on single-track, precipitous mountain passes, at 2,000 feet above sea level. Wanna join anno? grin

Greatnan Mon 30-Sept-13 10:18:40

Oh, yes, When - anno can tell you that not all lanes/paths are as well surfaced as the one we took yesterday! She sat very quietly while we bounced over broken bricks and logs. Mind you, she was very, very quiet when we came over one of the higher local roads in a pea-soup fog. She probably thought I could see the edge of the road and I saw no point in scaring her!

whenim64 Mon 30-Sept-13 10:14:28

You mean there are even scarier mountain roads, Greatnan? (shakes head in disbelief) grin

I won't mention the climb across the sheer rock face that you casually pointed out to me, and described how you got acoss by hanging on to a metal cord and the tips of your feet! #issheincrediblybraveorabsolutelybonkers? grin

MiceElf brillant!

Greatnan Mon 30-Sept-13 10:12:35

Thank you, jingle - you should hear my daughter's views on my 'escapades'. Not much respect there! She won't be happy until she has me safely under her gaze in New Zealand. (Tee hee, plenty of mountains in the Nelson Lakes and as it is a national park you can wander freely - she will be busy with her new horse much of the time.)

j08 Mon 30-Sept-13 10:00:01

Greatnan really does command a lot of respect.

Greatnan Mon 30-Sept-13 09:57:35

Very good, Micelf - you are just going to have to desert your OH and take the challenge next year!

Greatnan Mon 30-Sept-13 09:56:31

I had a wonderful week - it is great to see the views I love being appreciated and we were so lucky with the weather. I tried to avoid the scariest mountain roads, but the one down from the mountain above Montreux was an unknown. It wouldn't have bothered me on my own, but I did feel sorry for When. I didn't tell her, but I would have been a bit worried if we had met somebody coming the other way, as there were very few passing places and I would have had to reverse round those bends with a very steep drop at the side!
I hope to welcome both anno and When again next year - and who knows who else might be willing to risk it?

MiceElf Mon 30-Sept-13 09:50:45

Who's the fearless mountain hiker
Braver far than any hiker?

Greatnan

Who discovers mountain passes
And ups the bar for rambling lasses?

Greatnan

Who can drive round twists and turns
While still admiring roadside ferns?

Greatnan

Who keeps currencies galore
Both French and Swiss and many more?

Greatnan

Who finds solace in the hills
And left behind the busy mills

Of Lancashire?

Greatnan

Who entertained Imsixtyfour
Who's certain to return for more?

Greatnan

annodomini Mon 30-Sept-13 09:22:01

That sounds even hairier than usual, when! Glad you survived enjoyed yourself.

vegasmags Mon 30-Sept-13 09:18:18

What an experience when! As a bit of a nervous Nellie myself, I was hanging onto that door handle with you.

whenim64 Mon 30-Sept-13 09:03:31

Just returned from a week in the life of Greatnan grin. What an adventurer! Yesterday, we 'pootled' through Evian, Villeneuve and Montreux, then took off up a mountain to discover a Swiss Finishing School, followed by a train station half-way up a very steep mountain pass. Emerging from the thick fog came, Hogwarts Express-style, a mysterious train which stopped by a station buffet - then it disappeared into the mist. We ordered coffees and as they only took the Swiss francs that Greatnan keeps as change in her car, she left me as surety that the bill would be paid, then returned with money and car, which she then pointed down a steep one-track path. I clung to her door handle in fear as she chatted merrily and indulged my barely hidden panic by taking the path an inch at a time. I looked on the Google map at the Col de Chaude, Montreux, and discovered that the hairpin bends and steep drops are described by professional cyclists (note Greatnan - cyclists!! Not wide-load articulated lorries who favour normal roads grin) as 'very steep - not for the faint-hearted!

What a week! Thanks, Greatnan. Your mountains (she says they're hers), lakes, waterfalls and ski slopes are magnificent. You should be a rally driver, having watched your adept way of navigating the highest, scariest mountain passes with such aplomb grin