Canada Slim and the Love of Landscape

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Monday 20 July 2020

Think of this blog as a prologue.

It is named “Building Everest“, for it is here where I practice building something impressive (hopefully), my writing career.

Everest kalapatthar.jpg

Above: Mount Everest

On Monday (13 July) I phoned an old friend in Gatineau, Québec, Canada and we got to talking about our literary passions and ambitions.

Both of us in our 50s we have come to the realization that there are probably more years behind us than ahead of us, and there is no guarantee that the years that remain will necessarily be healthy years.

Happily, our creative projects do not conflict.

Gatineau downtown area

Above: Gatineau, Québec, Canada

He would like to write science fiction and fantasy similar to C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.

Monochrome head-and-left-shoulder photo portrait of 50-year-old Lewis

Above: C(live) S(taples) Lewis (1898 – 1963)

Tolkien as a second lieutenant in the Lancashire Fusiliers (in 1916, aged 24)

Above: J(ohn) R(onald) R(euel) Tolkien (1892 – 1973)

I want to write novels and travel books similar to Charles Dickens and Paul Theroux.

Charles Dickens

Above: Charles Dickens (1812 – 1870)

Theroux in 2008

Above: Paul Theroux (b. 1941)

I miss my friend and Ottawa where our sporadic reunions usually take place and I wish we lived closer to one another and we could be like his literary heroes.

Centre Block on Parliament Hill, the Government House, Downtown Ottawa, the Château Laurier, the National Gallery of Canada and the Rideau Canal

Above: Images of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (across the river from Gatineau)

Lewis, Tolkien and their friends were a regular feature of the Oxford scenery in the years during and after the Second World War.

From top left to bottom right: Oxford skyline panorama from St Mary's Church; Radcliffe Camera; High Street from above looking east; University College, main quadrangle; High Street by night; Natural History Museum and Pitt Rivers Museum

Above: Images of Oxford, England

They drank beer on Tuesday at “the Bird and Baby” (The Eagle and Child Pub) and on Thursday nights they met in Lewis’s Magdalen College rooms to read aloud from the books they were writing, jokingly calling themselves “the Inklings“.

The Eagle and Child.jpg

Above: The Eagle and Child, Oxford

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Above: Magdalen (pronounced Maud-lin) College, Oxford

Above: The corner of the Eagle and Child where the Inklings regularly met

Lewis and Tolkien first introduced the former’s The Screwtape Letters and the latter’s The Lord of the Rings to an audience in this company.

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First Single Volume Edition of The Lord of the Rings.gif

As a English Canadian living in Deutschschweiz, I long for some sort of local creative writing club where I could share my writing worries and hopes in a way much like Lewis, in a letter to his friend A(lfred) K(enneth) Hamilton Jenkin (1900 – 1980), described the idyllic setting of his college rooms:

Above: Linguistic map (German, French, Italian, Rumansh) of Switzerland

The Story of Cornwall: A.K. Hamilton Jenkin: Amazon.com: Books

I wish there was anyone here childish enough (or permanent enough, not the slave of his particular and outward age) to share it with me.

Is it that no man makes real friends after he has passed the undergraduate age?

Because I have got no forr’arder, since the old days.

I go to Barfield (Owen Barfield) for sheer wisdom and a sort of richness of spirit.

Owen Barfield – AnthroWiki

Above: Arthur Owen Barfield (1898 – 1997)

I go to you for some smaller and yet more intimate connexion with the feel of things.

But the question I am asking is why I meet no such men now.

Is it that I am blind?

Some of the older men are delightful:

The younger fellows are none of them men of understanding.

Oh, for the people who speak one’s own language!

I guess this blog must serve this capacity.

So many ideas float through my mind and are captured in my chapbook.

(Normally, a chapbook refers to a small publication of about 40 pages, but I use this word in the context of a portable notebook where ideas are recorded as they spontaneously occur.)

Above: Chapbook frontispiece of Voltaire’s The Extraordinary Tragical Fate of Calas, showing a man being tortured on a breaking wheel, late 18th century

Just a sample:

  • Scaling the Fish: Travels around Lake Constance

Bodensee satellit.jpg

  • Mellow Yellow: Switzerland Discovered in Slow Motion

  • The Coffeehouse Chronicles (an older man in love with a much younger woman)

Above: Café de Flore in Paris is one of the oldest coffeehouses in the city.

It is celebrated for its famous clientele, which in the past included high-profile writers and philosophers

  • America 47 (think 47 Ronin meets Trumpian times)

Flag of the United States

  • 20th Century Man (think time travel)

The Time Machine (H. G. Wells, William Heinemann, 1895) title page.jpg

  • Lover’s Cross (a Beta male escapes his Alpha wife)

Jim Croce - Lover's Cross (1985, Vinyl) | Discogs

  • Alicia in Switzerland (Alice in Wonderland meets Gulliver’s Travels in Switzerland)

Alice in Wonderland (1951 film) poster.jpg

  • Love in the Time of Corona (though the title is reminiscent of Love in the Time of Cholera, the story is more about the virtues of faith, family and hope in periods of plague)

LoveInTheTimeOfCholera.jpg

  • Gone Mad (what is sanity and how is the world seen by those judged ill in this regard)

Above: Engraving of the eighth print of A Rake’s Progress, depicting inmates at Bedlam Asylum, by William Hogarth.

  • The Forest of Shadows (sci-fi that asks the question what if the past never dies?)

Above: Conifer forest, Swiss National Park

I have the ideas.

I believe I have the talent.

What is lacking is the ability to market myself and the discipline to be a prolific writer.

Still I believe that each day I am getting closer to the realization of my ambitions.

Doug And The Slugs - Day By Day (1985, Vinyl) | Discogs

One thing that inspires my creativity is my travels and sometimes even a drive through the country can be the spark that ignites my imagination.

Landschlacht to Flims (Part One), Thursday 28 May 2020

Transport of the mails, transport of the human voice, transport of flickering pictures – in this century, as in others, our highest accomplishments still have the single aim of bringing men together.” (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry)

Saint-Exupéry in Toulouse, 1933

Above: Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (1900 – 1944)

He and She

In a sense, it is travelling together that can make (or break) a relationship.

My wife and I don’t always live together harmoniously, but, generally, we travel well together.

Like any relationship with two (or more) people, harmony is possible once an understanding of who the other person is and what they like becomes clearer.

He said she said.jpg

My wife is an efficient German doctor who sets a goal and will not stop until it is realized, and for this she does have my respect.

I am the “life is a journey, not a destination dreamer in the relationship.

Life Is a Highway Tom Cochrane.jpg

I recall a bitter battle of poorly chosen words between us when on a journey between Freiburg im Breisgau (Black Forest of southwestern Germany) and Bretagne (on the Atlantic coast of France) we argued over efficiency over effectiveness.

I wanted to explore the regions between the Black Forest and Bretagne instead of simply rushing through them.

She, the driver, found driving through towns far more exhausting than sticking to motorways.

I, the passenger, wanted to see more than concrete rest stops where we wouldn’t stop and far-off fields we would never walk.

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Over the years we have come to an unspoken compromise.

We travel slowly to our travel destination and zoom home after our time there was complete.

Above: The Tortoise and the Hare“, from an edition of Caleb’s Fables illustrated by Arthur Rackham, 1912

On this day our journey in Switzerland (as of this day the borders around Switzerland were not yet open) wasn’t far by Canadian driving standards: a little over an hour and an half if we followed Highway 13 and Expressway 62 from Landschlacht in Canton Thurgau to Flims in Canton Graubünden.

Instead we opted to take the scenic route, avoiding as much as humanly possible heavily trafficked Autobahns, extending the journey at least another hour if we did not stop on the way.

Flag of Switzerland

I’ve no use for statements in which something is kept back, ” he added.  “And that is why I shall not furnish information in supprt of yours.

The journalist smiled.

You talk the language of St. Just.

Without raising his voice Rieux said he knew nothing about that.

The language he used was that of a man who was sick and tired of the world he lived in – though he had much liking for his fellow men – and had resolved, for his part, to have no truck with injustice and compromises with the truth.

His shoulders hunched, Rambert gazed at the doctor for some Moments without speaking.

Then, “I think I understand you,” he said, getting up from his chair.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

La Peste book cover.jpg

The Private Secret Language of Altnau

What I do know for certain is that what is regarded as success in a rational materialistic society only impresses superficial minds. 

It amounts to nothing and will not help us rout the destructive forces threatening us today. 

What may be our salvation is the discovery of the identity hidden deep in any one of us, and which may be found in even the most desperate individual, if he cares to search the spiritual womb which contains the embryo of what can be one’s personal contribution to truth and life.

(Patrick White)

White in Sydney, 1973

Above: Patrick White (1912 – 1990)

Heading east along Highway 13 from Landschlacht, the Traveller comes to Altnau (population: 2,244).

During the Lockdown (16 March to 10 May 2020) I often followed the walking path that hugs the shore of Lake Constance, north of both the Lake Road (Highway #13) and the Thurbo rail line, from Landschlacht to Altnau.

Visitors that zoom past Landschlacht often zoom past Altnau as well, as both Highway #13 and the railroad lie north of the town centre, so neither connection to Altnau is a boon to tourism or the economy as a whole.

Altnau remains for most people only a deliberate distant choice, which is a shame as the town entire has been designated as part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites, with a special focus on the town’s Reformed and Catholic churches and the Apfelweg (apple path).

Oberdorf Altnau

Above: Upper town, Altnau, Canton Thurgau, Switzerland

The Apfelweg, the first fruit educational path in Switzerland, is a nine-kilometre long circular route which explains with 16 signs everything you didn’t know you wanted to know about apples and apple production.

Understandably the Apfelweg is best done in the spring when the blossoms are on the orchards or late summer when the apples are ready to be harvested.

Apfelweg Altnau - Thurgau Tourismus

What can be seen by the lakeside visitor, even viewed from the highway or the train, is the Altnau Pier (Schiffsanlegesteg Altnau).

Completed in 2010, at a length of 270 metres, because of the wide shallow water zone, the Pier is the longest jetty on Lake Constance.

Altnauers call this jetty the Eiffel Tower of Lake Constance because the length of the jetty is the same as the height of the Tower.

Above: Altnau Pier

Notable people have formed the fabric of Altnau.

Hans Baumgartner (1911 – 1996), a famous (by Swiss standards) photographer was born here.

He studied in Kreuzlingen and Zürich and would later teach in Steckborn and Frauenfeld.

He would later sell his photographs to magazines and newspapers.

In 1937, Baumgartner met the Berlingen artist Adolf Dietrich who would feature in many of Baumgartner’s future photographs.

Adolf Dietrich.jpg

Above: Adolf Dietrich (1877 – 1957)

Baumgartner travelled and photographed Paris, Italy, the Balkans, southern France, North Africa and the Sahara, Croatia and the Dalmatian Coast, Burgundy, Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Finland, the US, Mexico, Belgium and Germany.

He also visited Bombay, Colombo, Saigon, Hong Kong and Yokohama.

He even photographed his spa visits in Davos.

Der Chronist mit der Kamera | Journal21

Above: Hans Baumgartner (1911 – 1996)

Altnau attracted the likes of composer-poetess Olga Diener (1890 – 1963).

Born in St. Gallen, Olga lived in Altnau from 1933 to 1943.

Diener, Olga Nachlass Olga Diener

Above: Olga Diener

In a letter to Hans Reinhart in June 1934, Hermann Hesse wrote about Olga’s work:

“I like Olga’s dreams very much.

I also love many of her pictures and their rhythms, but I see them enclosed in a glasshouse that separates her and her poems from the world.

That miracle must come about in poetry, that one speaks his own language and his pictures, be it only associative, that others can understand – that distinguishes the dream from poetry.

Olga’s verses are, for me at least, far too much dream and far too little poetry.

She has her personal secret language not being able to approximate the general language in such a way that the sender and recipient correspond to each other.

So I am privately a genuine friend of Olga’s and her books, but as a writer I am not able to classify them.

Hermann Hesse 2.jpg

Above: Hermann Hesse (1877 – 1962)

Besides Hesse, of the visitors Olga Diener had in her Altnau home, of interest is fellow poet Hans Reinhart (1880 – 1963).

Reinhart came from a Winterthur trading family, which allowed him the opportunity to lead a financially independent poet’s life.

During a spa stay in Karlovy Vary in the late summer of 1889, Reinhart read Hans Christian Andersen‘s fairy tales for the first time.

Andersen in 1869

Above: Hans Christian Andersen (1805 – 1875)

They deeply impressed Reinhart and he later transformed them into stage plays.

After his secondary studies, “Müggli” studied philosophy, psychology, German, art, theatre and music history in Heidelberg, Berlin, Zürich, Paris, Leipzig and Munich.

After completing his studies, he met Rudolf Steiner for the first time in 1905, whom he recognized as a spiritual teacher.

Reinhart later helped Steiner build the first Goetheanum and made friends with other anthroposophists.

In 1941 Reinhart brought his friend Alfred Mombert and his sister from the French internment camp Gurs to Winterthur.

Reinhart Hans, 1880-1963, Dichter - Winterthur Glossar

Above: Hans Reinhart (1880 – 1963)

Another of Olga’s Altnau guests was writer / poet Emanuel von Bodman (1874 – 1946).

Bodman lived in Kreuzlingen as a child and attended high school in Konstanz.

After studying in Zürich, Munich and Berlin, he chose Switzerland’s Gottlieben as his adopted home.

His home, like Olga’s, was the meeting point for many artists, including the famous Rainer Maria Rilke and Hermann Hesse.

Bodman wrote several dramas, short stories and hundreds of poems.

He was seen as a poet, storyteller and playwright in the neo-romantic, neo-classical tradition.

Emanuel von Bodman - Liebesgedichte und Biographie

Above: Emanuel von Bodman

I write about these members of a long-departed Dead Poets Society, whose works we have not read and might never read, to inspire us.

If writers, poets, artists and musicians can come from Here and their works be loved (at least in their times) then perhaps we too can rise above our humblest of origins and find such luck to inspire others.

Dead poets society.jpg

All of these wordsmiths and miracle scribes seem, without exception, all thick and heavy with each other.

And herein lies my weakness.

By temperament, I am more like the Americans Charles Bukowski and Eric Hoffer than I am like those one might call the litterati.

Charles Bukowski smoking.jpg

Above: Charles Bukowski (1920 – 1994)

Eric Hoffer in 1967, in the Oval Office, visiting President Lyndon Baines Johnson

Above: Eric Hoffer (1898 – 1983)

But there is the Internet – a potential tool I have yet to master.

Visualization of Internet routing paths

Above: Visualization of Internet routing paths

Today, hardly anyone knows the poet Olga Diener.

It almost seems as if her existence was as unreal as the tone of her poems.

She was once a very real phenomenon on Lake Constance where she had her permanent residence during the 1930s.

She had an exchange of letters with Hermann Hesse.

The poets Hans Reinhart and Emanuel von Bodman were among the guests at her annual anniversary celebrations (4 January) by candlelight.

Pin by Rine Ling on bokeh art photography | Candles photography ...

Otherwise she avoided the company of people with their too many disappointments and losses.

Her house “Belrepeire“, which she had planned herself, was a little bit away from the village.

Belrepeire” is the name of a city in Wolfram von Eschenbach’s poem “Parzival“.

Above: Statue of Wolfram von Eschenbach (1160 – 1220), Abenburg Castle, Bavaria, Germany

The poet was under the spell of the Grail myth.

Above: The Holy Grail depicted on a stained glass window at Quimper Cathedral, France

Olga found in the silence of her seclusion, the voice of her poems, which bore fairytale titles like “The Golden Castle” or “The White Deer“.

In this mystery game, a character named Blaniseflur sings the verses:

All the gardens have woken up. 

Dew fell from the stars and

Venus Maria walked through them with her light feet. 

Now flowers breathe the sky

And the Earth fulfills the dream

Received from spring night.

How a blackbird sings! 

The longing carries the swans

Swinging across the lake. 

The sun rises red from the water.

Light is everything.

Sunrise on the Lake Constance | Bodensee, in German. Konstan… | Flickr

The images Olga saw on long walks on the shores of the Lake, as she would have said, condensed into dreamlike structures, the form of which was often difficult to understand.

Even Hans Rheinhart, who made the only attempt for decades to critically appreciate Olga in the Bodenseebuch (the Book of Lake Constance) in 1935, did not understand her “private secret language“.

jahrgaenge 1935 - ZVAB

Olga was actually a musician.

For her there was no creative difference between writing and composing.

How musical her language was can immediately be heard when her poetry is read out loud.

Her words are full of sound relationships far beyond the usual measure, which Hesse described:

In your newer verses there is often such a beautiful sound.”

Music notes set musical note treble clef Vector Image

Olga wrote notes like other people speak words.

In the guestbook of Julie and Jakobus Weidenmann, she immortalized herself with a song instead of verses.

She was often a guest at the Weidenmanns.

Julie shared Olga’s natural mystical worldview, which was coloured Christian, while Olga tended to esotericism.

Julie’s first volume of poems is entitled Tree Songs, while Olga wrote a cycle called Rose Songs in Altnau.

Jakobus Weidenmann – Personenlexikon BL

Above: Jakobus and Julie Weidenmann

The seventh poem of Olga’s cycle contains her lyrical confession:

Leave me in the innermost garden

Faithfully my roses wait:

Fertilize, cut, bind,

Cut hands from thorns.

The blooming light, awake moonlight

Enter the flower goblets.

The winds pull gently over it,

And rain roars in some nights.

I am earthbound like her

And once again disappeared.

Unlike Olga, Golo Mann (1909 – 1994) was anything but a mystic.

As the son of Thomas Mann, Golo belonged to one of the most famous literary families in the world.

Not only his father, but also his uncle Heinrich and his siblings Erika, Klaus, Monika, Elisabeth and Michael worked as writers.

Writing was in Golo’s blood.

Above: Golo Mann (1909 – 1994)

This does not mean that writing was always easy for him.

On the contrary, like all of Thomas Mann’s children, Golo was overshadowed by his father and did not feel privileged to be the son of a Nobel laureate in literature.

Golo saw himself primarily as a historian and thus distinguished himself from the novelist who was his father.

Above: Thomas Mann (1875 – 1955)

Nevertheless, Golo used a thoroughly literary approach to history.

Two of his books are titled History and Stories and Historiography as Literature.

The fact that Golo cultivated a narrative style that earned him condescending reviews and the derisive ridicule of fellow historians, but this did not stop the general public from enthusiastically reading his books.

Deutsche Geschichte des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts - Golo Mann ...

Golo Mann’s first bestseller was largely created in Thurgau.

Again and again Golo retired to Altnau for several weeks in the Zur Krone Inn, for the first time in summer 1949.

His memories of Lake Constance were published in 1984 in the anthology Mein Bodensee: Liebeserklärung an eine Landschaft (My Lake Constance: Declaration of Love for a Landscape), under the title “Mit wehmütigen Vergnügen” (with wistful pleasure).

There he writes about the Krone:

There was an inn on the ground floor, the owner’s family had set up an apartment on the first floor, and on the second floor a few small rooms connected by a forecourt were available to friends of the Pfisters, the bookseller Emil Oprecht and his wife Emmi.

Thanks to my friend Emmi, they became my asylum, my work and retirement home.

Emmi and Emil Oprecht belonged to the circle of friends of Julie and Jakobus Weidenmann in Kesswil.

The Oprecht home in Zürich was a meeting point for all opponents of the Hitler regime during the war.

Ziviler Ungehorsam gegen Hitler: Wie Emil und Emmie Oprecht auch ...

Above: Emil and Emmi Oprecht

Europa Verlag (Europa Publishing) was committed to the same democratic and social spirit as that of the Weidenmann guests in the 1920s, including Golo’s siblings Erika and Klaus.

Above: Erika Mann (1905 – 1969) and Klaus Mann (1906 – 1949)

Golo’s father was good friends with Emil Oprecht and published the magazine Mass und Wert (Measure and Value) together with Konrad Falke (1880 – 1942).

It is ultimately thanks to these diverse relationships that Golo Mann put his Deutsche Geschichte des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts (German History of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries) in paper in 1956 and 1957, primarily in Altnau.

The success of this book made it possible for Golo Mann, who had gone into American exile like his father, to finally return to Europe.

It looked like nothing stood in the way of his academic career.

When his appointment to the University of Frankfurt did not come about, Golo retired from teaching and lived from then on a freelance writer in his parents’ home in Kilchberg on Lake Zürich and in Berzona in Canton Ticino, where fellow writers Alfred Andersch (1914 – 1980) and Max Frisch were his neighbours.

Above: Max Frisch (1911 – 1981)

In Kilchberg, Berzona, and again in Altnau, Golo wrote his opus magnum, Wallenstein – Sein Leben erzählt von Golo Mann (Wallenstein: His Life Told by Golo Mann).

Telling history was completely frowned upon by academic historians in 1971, the year this monumental biography was published, but Golo didn’t care nor did the thousands of his readers.

Wallenstein“ (Golo Mann) – Buch gebraucht kaufen – A02lgtja01ZZ4

Despite hostility from university critics, Golo was awarded two honorary doctorates, in France and England, but not in the German-speaking world.

In addition, he was awarded a number of literary prizes for his books: the Schiller Prize, the Lessner Ring, the Georg Büchner Prize, the Goethe Prize and the Bodensee Literature Prize.

Große Kreisstadt Überlingen: Bodensee-Literaturpreis

The last will have particularly pleased him, because the Lake smiled at the beginning of his literary fame.

(For more on the entire Thomas Mann family, please see Canada Slim and the Family of Mann in my other blog, The Chronicles of Canada Slimhttps://canadaslim.wordpress.com)

The Lake seemed to be smiling at the beginning of our journey as we left Highway #13 in the direction of Sommeri.

Summery Sommeri Summary

The word ‘plague’ had just been uttered for the first time….

Everybody knows that pestilences have a way of recurring in the world.

Yet somehow we find it hard to believe in ones that crash down on our heads from a blue sky.

There have been as many plagues as wars in history.

Yet always plagues and wars take people equally by surprise.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Above: The plague, Marseille, France, 1720, Michel Serré

Sommeri (population: 591) is first mentioned in 905 as Sumbrinaro.

Between 1474 and 1798, the villages of Niedersommeri and Obersommeri formed a court of the PrinceAbbot of St. Gall.

In 1474 the Church of St. Mauritius was dedicated.

It was renovated to its current appearance in the first half of the 15th century.

After the Protestant Reformation reached Sommeri in 1528, the church became a shared church for both faiths in 1534.

Originally the major economic activities in Sommeri were predominantly grain production and forestry.

Wappen von Sommeri

Above: Coat-of-arms of Sommeri

It was nearly obliterated by the Black Death in 1629.

In the second half of the 19th century, fruit production, hay production, cattle and dairy farming were added.

A cheese factory was opened in 1852.

In the last third of the 20th century, some industrial plants moved into the villages, especially embroidery and furniture manufacturing.

At the beginning of the 21st century there were companies in the HVAC industry, precision engineering and manufacturing school furniture in Sommeri.

Sommeri

Above: Sommeri, Canton Thurgau, Switzerland

To be frank, there is no reason to linger in Sommeri, except to say that it was the birthplace of the writer Maria Dutli-Rutlishauser (1903 – 1995) of whom I have previously written.

Alt- Steckborn

Above: Maria Dutli-Rutlishauser

(For more on Maria, please see Canada Slim and the Immunity Wall of this blog.)

Onwards.

From Sommeri, Google Maps leads her hapless wanderers onwards to Langrickenbach.

Google Maps Logo.svg

Query:

How contrive not to waste time?

Answer:

By being fully aware of it all the while.

Ways in which this can be done:

By spending one’s days on an uneasy chair in a dentist’s waiting room, by remaining on one’s balcony all Sunday afternoon, by listening to lectures in a language one doesn’t know, by travelling by the longest and least convenient train routes, and, of course, standing all the way, by queuing at the box office of theatres and then not booking a seat. 

And so forth.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Longing for Langrickenbach

Langrickenbach (population: 1,291) was first mentioned in 889 as “Rihchinbahc“.

It is a place for crops and fruit, cattle breeding and dairy farming, general goods, timber and cattle trading.

Again, not much to see.

Hit the road.

Above: Langrickenbach, Canton Thurgau

Watching cows and calves playing, grooming one another or being assertive, takes on a whole new dimension if you know that those taking part are siblings, cousins, friends or sworn enemies.

If you know animals as individuals you notice how often older brothers are kind to younger ones, how sisters seek or avoid each other’s company, and which families always get together at night to sleep and which never do so.

Cows are as varied as people.

They can be highly intelligent or slow to understand, friendly, considerate, aggressive, docile, inventive, dull, proud or shy.

All these characteristics are present in a large enough herd.”

(Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows)

The Secret Life of Cows: Amazon.co.uk: Young, Rosamund ...

The Birwinken Bulletin

Makes me think of Bullwinkle, the cartoon moose and his squirrel friend Rocky.

No moose or squirrels spotted.

Above from left to right: Rocky, Bullwinkle, and Captain Peter “Wrongway” Peachfuzz

Birwinken (population: 1,319) was first mentioned in 822 as “Wirinchova“.

In the 19th century, the village economy added animal husbandry….

Cattle feedlot

(My wife is an animal?)

….to the traditional agriculture and fruit growing.

In 1878, a weaving firm and three embroidery factories provided 165 jobs.

However the decline of the textile industry in the 20th century and the village’s remoteness from Anywhere led to high levels of emigration.

As a result, the village never developed much industry and has remained a farmer’s hamlet.

In 1990, for example, 63% of the population worked in agriculture.

Birwinken

Above: Birwinken, Canton Thurgau

It was only a matter of lucidly recognizing what had to be recognized, of dispelling extraneous shadows and doing what needed to be done….

There lay certitude.

There, in the daily round.

All the rest hung on mere threads and trivial contingencies.

You couldn’t waste your time on it.

The thing was to do your job as it should be done.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

The Doctor Luke Fildes crop.jpg

Above: The Doctor, Luke Fildes, 1891

What is an extremely interesting product of the village is native son Stefan Keller (b. 1958), a writer, journalist and historian.

Rotpunktverlag

Above: Stefan Keller

Keller is best known for:

  • Die Rückkehr: Joseph Springs Geschichte (The Return: Joseph Spring’s Story)

The Berlin youth Joseph Sprung was chased through half of Europe by the Nazis.

He lived in Brussels, Montpellier and Bordeaux with false papers and worked as an interpreter without being recognized.

He survived invasions and rail disasters, but never kissed a girl when he fell into the hands of the Swiss border authorities in November 1943.

At the age of 16, the fugitive was handed over to the Gestapo by the Swiss border guards and denounced as a Jew.

He was transferred to the Auschwitz concentration camp via the Drancy collective warehouse near Paris.

Sixty years later, Joseph Sprung returned to Switzerland.

Today his name is Joseph Spring, he lives in Australia and demands the justice he deserves.

He accused the Swiss government of aiding and abetting genocide.

In a sensational trial, the Swiss federal court decided in 2000 that the extradition of a Jewish youth to the National Socialists can no longer be judged.

Joseph Spring had at least asked for symbolic reparation.

In November 2003, he returned to Switzerland to tell his story:

The story of a survivor who sued an entire country, went through a process to demand justice, lost it, and still has the last word.

Die Rückkehr: Joseph Springs Geschichte (Hörbuch-Download): Amazon ...

  • Die Zeit der Fabriken (The Age of Factories)

The worker Emil Baumann was already dead when his former superior Hippolyt Saurer died unexpectedly.

The whole of Arbon mourned the truck manufacturer Saurer.

At that time, almost all of Arbon mourned Baumann, for whom the workers in Saurer’s factory were responsible for his death.

Emil Baumann died shortly after an argument with his boss Saurer.

It is 1935 when everything starts with two deaths.

The young lathe operator Emil Baumann dies from suicide because his master harasses him and because he cannot cope with the new working conditions.

The college immediately went on strike.

Then the entrepreneur and engineer Hippolyt Saurer dies.

He choked on his own blood after an tonsil operation.

Based on the death of these two men, Stefan Keller tells the story of a small town in eastern Switzerland, its conflicts, triumphs and defeats.

The city of Arbon on the Swiss shore of Lake Constance is ruled by the “Reds” (by the Social Democrats, the left).

The Adolph Saurer AG factory was and still is legendary for its (military) trucks.

Above: Memorial to Franz, Adolph und Hippolyt Saurer, Arbon

Arbon is an example of many places in Switzerland:

The time of the factories is also a history of the Swiss industry and workers’ movement.

Starting with the motor carriages of the Wilhelminian era to the Saurer gasification trucks of the National Socialists, from the big strikes after 1918 to the dismantling of almost all jobs in the 1990s and from the resistance of an editor against censors in the Second World War to the union’s «fight against» against foreign colleagues.

Die Zeit der Fabriken: Amazon.de: Stefan Keller: Bücher

  • Grüningers Fall (The Grüninger Case)

A historical report about the St. Gallen police captain Paul Grüninger, who in the 1930s, according to his conscience and not in accordance with the law, saved the lives of numerous Jews.

The facts:

In 1938/1939, Grüninger saved the lives of hundreds, if not thousands, of Austrian, Jewish refugees by providing them with the wrong papers and thus enabling them to enter Switzerland legally.

He was suspended from duty due to breach of official duties and falsification of documents.

He was severely fined for his conduct and sentenced to prison.

The book aims to make it clear that today it was not Grüninger who would have to sit on the dock, but the inhumane refugee policy of the Swiss government during the Nazi era.

The book was made into a film in 1997 based on a screenplay by Stefan Keller and directed by Richard Dindo with Keller’s expert advice.

Grüningers Fall

  • Maria Theresia Wilhelm: Spurlos verschwunden (Maria Theresia Wilhelm: Disappeared without a trace)

In the mid-1930s Maria Theresia Wilhelm met the Swiss mountain farmer and gamekeeper Ulrich Gantenbein, who subsequently left his first wife.

From the beginning Maria and Ulrich’s marriage suffered from official regulations.

Ulrich is admitted to a psychiatric clinic shortly after their marriage.

Maria is barely tolerated by the neighbourhood.

Eventually she too comes to a psychiatric clinic and there experiences inhumane therapy methods from today’s perspective.

Her seven children are torn away, placed in orphanages and put to work.

Maria is finally released in June 1960.

On the way to buy shoes, she disappears without a trace….

Maria Theresia Wilhelm - spurlos verschwunden - Stefan Keller ...

Rieux asked Grand if he was doing extra work for the Municipality.

Grand said No.

He was working on his own account.

“Really?”, Rieux said, to keep the conversation going.

“And are you getting on well with it?”

“Considering I’ve been at it for years, it would be surprising if I wasn’t.

Though, in one sense, there hasn’t been much progress.”

“May one know” – the doctor halted – “what it is that you’re engaged on?”

Grand put a hand up to his hat and tugged it down upon his big, protruding ears, then murmured some half-inaudible remark from which Rieux seemed to gather that Grand’s work was connected with “the growth of a personality”.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Bürglen Bound

Next town Google leads us to is Bürglen (population: 3,841), first mentioned in 1282 as “Burgelon“.

Even though the village was fortified around 1300, it was never considered a city, due to the decline of its owner, the Baron of Sax-Hohensax, and from other neighbouring villages.

After the disastrous fire of 1528, the villagers went into debt for the reconstruction of Bürglen.

To help pay off their debt, in 1540 they granted the nobility rights to St. Gallen.

Under St. Gallen, Bürglen lost most of its autonomy.

St. Gallen appointed the bailiff and the chairman of the Lower Court, promoted the settlement of its citizens to form a local elite and change the succession order of inheritances.

Despite this, the local farmers enjoyed a certain independence.

In the 17th century, they promoted the expansion of the Castle as well as the creation of new businesses.

This relative prosperity was followed in the 18th century by a government practice that hindered the formation of viable village government and led to general impoverishment.

Reformierte Kirche und Schloss Bürglen

Above: Bürglen, Canton Thurgau

Power mattered more than people.

A problem eternal and universal.

Worth seeing is the Bürgeln Castle, the old quarter and the Reformed Church.

Above: Bürglen Castle

Of notable personalities connected to Bürgeln, it was home to artists Gottlieb Bion (1804 – 1876), Fritz Gilsi (1878 – 1961) and Jacques Schedler (1927 – 1989) as well as the writer Elisabeth Binder (b. 1951).

I haven’t read Ms. Binder’s work as yet, but the titles sound appealing…..

  • Der Nachtblaue (The Night Blue)
  • Sommergeschicht (Summer Story)
  • Orfeo
  • Der Wintergast (The Winter Guest)
  • Ein kleiner und kleiner werdender Reiter: Spurren einer Kindheit (A rider getting smaller and smaller: Traces of a childhood)

Above: Elisabeth Binder

Ever south and east the long and winding road continues….

The long and winding road.png

Cottard was a silent, secretive man, with something about him that made Grand think of a wild boar.

His bedroom, meals at a cheap restaurant, some rather mysterious comings and goings . these were the sum of Cottard’s days.

He described himself as a traveller in wines and spirits.

Now and again he was visited by two or three men, presumably customers.

Sometimes in the evening he would go to a cinema across the way.

In this connection Grand mentioned a detail he had noticed – that Cottard seemed to have a preference for gangster films.

But the thing that had struck him most about the man was his aloofness, not to say his mistrust of everyone he met.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Nighthawks by Edward Hopper 1942.jpg

Above: Nighthawks, Edward Hopper, 1942

Few Words for Wuppenau

Wuppenau (population: 1,111) was first mentioned in 820 as “Wabbinauwa” and is primarily an agricultural community.

Wuppenau

Above: Wuppenau, Canton Thurgau

(It is funny how so many of the original names seem similar to those of the Original Peoples of the Americas.

Or akin to something Elmer Fudd might say about wascally wabbits.)

ElmerFudd.gif

….and that’s all I have to say about that.

Film poster with a white background and a park bench (facing away from the viewer) near the bottom. A man wearing a white suit is sitting on the right side of the bench and is looking to his left while resting his hands on both sides of him on the bench. A suitcase is sitting on the ground, and the man is wearing tennis shoes. At the top left of the image is the film's tagline and title and at the bottom is the release date and production credits.

We are now in Canton St. Gallen and the city of Wil (pronounced “ville”).

Wappen von Wil

Above: Coat of arms of Wil, Canton St. Gallen

The Word Pump and the Swan Song of Wil

“I have the same idea with all my books: an attempt to come close to the core of reality, the structure of reality, as opposed to the merely superficial. 

The realistic novel is remote from art. 

A novel should heighten life, should give one an illuminating experience. 

It shouldn’t set out what you know already. 

I just muddle away at it. 

One gets flashes here and there, which help. 

I am not a philosopher or an intellectual. 

Practically anything I have done of any worth I feel I have done through my intuition, not my mind.”  (Patrick White)

There are times in a man’s life when he simply must ask for assistance and my trying to convey to you an accurate mental image of Wil may require the services of an expert.

Above: Wil Castle

Ask Fred.

Fred Mast, excuse me, Professor Dr. Mast.

Born and raised in Wil, Fred is a full professor at the University of Bern, specialized in mental imagery, sensory motor processing and visual perception.

Perhaps he is one of the few folks who can truly answer the question:

Do you see what I see?

Über uns: Prof. Dr. Fred Mast - Kognitive Psychologie, Wahrnehmung ...

Above: Dr. Fred Mast

I mean, Fred should know, he has been educated and worked at universities esteemable, such as Zürich, the Federal Institute of Technology (ETHZ)(Switzerland’s equivalent to MIT), Harvard, MIT, Lausanne and Bern.

Some of his published papers suggest he does know what he is talking about:

  • Visual mental imagery interferes with allocentric orientation judgments
  • Visual mental images can be ambiguous
  • Mental images: always present, never there

Black Mamba oder die Macht der Imagination: Wie unser Gehirn die ...

Thanks, Dr. Fred, for demystifying the fuzzification.

Let me say for the record that as a place to visit I have always liked Wil….

But as a place to work….not as much.

Wil (population: 23,955), today the 3rd biggest city in Canton St. Gallen, was founded around 1200 and was handed over by the Counts of Toggenburg to the Abbey of St. Gallen in 1226.

(Look, Ma!  Look at what I founded!)

Disputes between the Abbey and Habsburg King Rudolf I (1218 – 1291) led to the destruction of Wil in 1292.

(If Rudolf couldn’t have Wil, then no one will?)

Above: Statue of Rudolf I, Speyer Cathederal, Germany

Wil was again besieged in the Old Zürich War in 1445 and yet again in the Toggenburg War in 1712.

On 1 January 2013, Susanne Hartmann became the first female mayor, not only of Wil-Bronschhofen, but in the entire canton of St. Gallen.

Hartmann announced her candidacy in April 2012.

Despite all forecasts the result of the elections was a landslide victory for Susanne Hartmann.

Despite (or perhaps because) the bus being driven by a woman, Will carries on.

Susanne Hartmann :: CVP Kanton St. Gallen

Above: Her Honour Wil Mayor Susanne Hartmann

In addition to many small and medium-sized enterprises, Wil is also home to a number of large, some international, industrial firms, including Stihl, Larag, Camion Transport, Brändle, Heimgartner Fahnen, Schmolz & Bickenbach, Kindlemann….

So it stands to reason that a city of industry may attract schools to teach those in these industries.

Such was the Wil school (now defunct) where I taught.

It was, what we in the business of freelance teaching refer to as a “cowboy school“, an institution more interested in the school’s acquisition of money than in the students’ acquisition of an education.

It was one of those schools where parents sent their children who lacked either the capacity or the desire to learn.

A paid education in all senses of the word.

It was a nightmare to teach there.

Blackboard Jungle (1955 poster).jpg

The students, best defined as juvenile deliquents or little criminal bastards, would not do their assignments, stay off their damn phones, bring their textbooks to class, listen in class or stop talking to one another.

The worst of them brought out the worst in me, so it was to everyone’s mutual relief when we parted company.

Above: Student – Teacher Monument, Rostock, Germany

As for the city of Wil itself, putting aside my feelings towards my ex-employer now extinct, there is much that is positive to relate.

Wil is considered to be the best preserved city in Eastern Switzerland and best seen from afar standing atop the Stadtweiher (a hill with a pond overlooking Wil) overlooking the silhouette of the old quarter.

The pedestrian promenade from Schwanenkreisel (Swan Circle) towards the old quarter is the place where most of the shops are, including a farmer’s market every Saturday.

On 8 July 2006, the 37-metre high Wiler Tower was inaugurated on the Hofberg (the mountain above Wil).

It is a wooden structure with a double spiral staircase and three X supports.

It is worth the climb for the view, if not for the exercise.

Around 180 kilometres of hiking trails are signposted around Wil.

The almost 33 kilometres long Wilerrundweg (Wil Circle Path)….

(Safer than a cycle path?)

….was established in 2013.

Kussbänkli: Kantonsrat Sennhauser hat es hergestellt – und ...

Above: The Kissing Bench

The 87-kilometre Toggenburger Höhenweg (high road) starts in Wil and leads to Wildhaus via Mühlrüti, Atzmännig and Arvenbüel.

Toggenburger Höhenweg - Ferienregion Toggenburg - Ostschweiz

The Thurweg passes near Wil at Schwarzenbach (black creek), following the Thur River from Wildhaus to Rüdlingen where it meets the Rhine River in Canton Schaffhausen.

Thurweg von Stein nach Ebnat- Kappel - MeinToggenburg.ch

Worth seeing in Wil are the Maria Hilf Wallfahrtskirche (Mary of Charity Pilgrim Church), the Abbey Castle, the St. Katarina Dominican and the Capuchin Cloisters, the Courthouse, Ruddenzburg (Ruddenz Castle), St. Niklaus and St. Peter Catholic Churches, the old Guardhouse, the City Archive, the Schnetztor gate, the City Museum (open on weekends from 2 to 5 pm), the psychiatric clinic (ask, in vain, for Dr. Fred) and the former Hurlimann tractor factory.

Wil has the Challer Theatre, the Kunsthalle (art hall), the Tonhalle (concert hall) and the Remise (for more modern music), but excepting these cultural remnants the young generally don’t party here if they can get away to Zürich.

The room was in almost complete darkness.

Outside, the street was growing noisier and a sort of murmur of relief greeted the moment when all the street lamps lit up, all together.

Rieux went out on to the balcony and Cottard followed him.

From the outlying districts – as happens every evening in our town – a gentle breeze wafted a murmur of voices, smells of roasting meat, a gay perfumed tide of freedom sounding on its ways, as the streets filled up with noisy young people released from shops and offices.

Nightfall with its deep remote baying of unseen ships, the rumour rising from the sea and the happy tumult of the crowd – that first hour of darkness which in the past had always had a special charm for Rieux – seemed today charged with menace, because of all he knew.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Mediterranean side – Oran

Above: Oran, Algeria

Of the many famous people native to Wil, noteworthy (by Swiss standards) are the filmmaker Max Peter Ammann (b. 1929) and the TV star Kurt Felix (1941 – 2012).

LESE-THEATER-STÜCK VON MAX PETER AMMANN IM HOF ZU WIL – wil24.ch

Above: Max Peter Ammann

Kurt Felix

Above: “When I must go, I will leave a happy man.

Daniel Imhof (b. 1977), the Swiss son of a Smithers (British Columbia) bush pilot, is a retired footballer from Canada’s national soccer team and now resides in Wil.

Canada Soccer

I think to myself:

I have finally gotten so impossible and unpleasant that they will really have to do something to make me better….

They have no idea what a bottomless pit of misery I am….

They do not know that this is not some practice fire drill meant to prepare them for the real inferno, because the real thing is happening right now.

All the bells say:

Too late.

It’s much too late and I’m so sure that they are still not listening.

(Elizabeth Wurtzel, Prozac Nation)

ProzacNationBook.jpg

Of human interest is the story of Wil native, the opera singer Anna Sutter (1871 – 1910).

Her brief affair with royal Württemberg court conductor Aloys Obrist proved to be fatal.

After she ended their two-year relationship in 1909, Obrist entered her Stuttgart apartment on 29 June 1910 and killed her with two pistol shots before taking his own life.

Sadly, Anna is best remembered for how she died than for how she lived.

Cows are individuals, as are sheep, pigs and hens, and, I dare say, all the creatures on the planet however unnoticed, unstudied or unsung.

Certainly, few would dispute that this is true of cats and dogs and horses.

When we have had occasion to treat a farm animal as a pet, because of illness, accident or bereavement, it has exhibited great intelligence, a huge capacity for affection and an ability to fit in with an unusual routine.

Perhaps everything boils down to the amount of time spent with any one animal – and perhaps that is true of humans too.

(Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows)

CH cow 2 cropped.jpg

Also worth mentioning is the writer René Oberholzer (b. 1963), who has been teaching in Wil (in a non-cowboy school it is hoped) since 1987.

He began writing poetry in 1986 and prose in 1991.

(I must confess my rural roots and prejudices appear when I find myself asking:

Do real men write (or even read) poetry?

I believe they do, but whether the fine folks in Argenteuil County in Canada feel that way is debatable.)

Shakespeare.jpg

Above: William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)

Oberholzer founded the Höhenhöhe (higher heights) writers group in 1991.

As founding can be addictive, the following year he then founded the literary experimental group Die Wortpumpe (the Word Pump) together with his colleagues (co-conspirators?) Aglaja Veteranyi and Gabriele Leist.

He is a member of several author associations.

His work has been mainly published in anthologies, literary and online magazines.

He is best known for:

  • Wenn sein Herz nicht mehr geht, dann repariert man es und gibt es den Kühen weiter: 39 schwarze Geschichten (When his heart stops beating, repair it and give it to the cows: 39 dark tales)
  • Ich drehe den Hals um – Gedichte (I turn my stiff neck: Poems)
  • Die Liebe würde an einem Dienstag erfunden (Love was invented on a Tuesday)
  • Kein Grund zur Beunruhigung – Geschichten (No reason to panic: Stories)

Die Liebe wurde an einem Dienstag erfunden: 120 Geschichten | René ...

As my wife and I are married (no reason to panic) and it was a Thursday (as love only visits Wil on Tuesdays), we faithfully follow fatalistic Google Maps, and continue on to….

Why is it that one can look at a lion or a planet or an owl or at someone’s finger as long as one pleases, but looking into the eyes of another person is, if prolonged past a second, a perilous affair?

(Walker Percy)

Percy in 1987

Above: Walker Percy (1916 – 1990)

Restful Rickenbach

Rickenbach (population: 2,774), first mentioned in 754 as “Richinbach“.

After the end of the crop rotation system in the 19th century livestock and dairy farming became the major sources of income.

A mill, built in the 13th century, was expanded in 1919 to become Eberle Mills, which operated until 2000.

The Eschmann Bell Foundry existed until 1972.

After the construction of the A1 motorway and the growth of Wil, by 1990 the population of Rickenbach had doubled.

Langrickenbach

Above: Rickenbach

A bridged Lütisburg

When a war breaks out people say:

It’s too stupid.  It can’t last long.”

But though a war may well be ‘too stupid’, that doesn’t prevent its lasting.

Stupidity has a knack of getting its way.

As we should see if we were not always so much wrapped in ourselves.

In this respect our townsfolk were like everybody else, wrapped up in themselves.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Duns cup helps with concentration

Lütisburg (population: 1,576), though smaller than Rickenbach, is far more interesting to the casual visitor.

It is first mentioned on 1214 as “Luitinsburch“.

Wappen von Lütisburg

Above: Lütisburg coat of arms

The Castle, built in 1078 by the Abbey of St. Gallen, was abandoned by the Abbey a short time later, but due to the Castle’s strategically important location, it became the headquarters of the Counts of Toggenburg from the 13th to the 15th centuries.

After the Abbey acquired the County of Toggenburg in 1468, the Castle served as a bailiwick.

In the 19th century, alongside agriculture, ironworks, copper hammering and manufacturing dominated.

The train station has existed since 1870.

Above: Lütisburg, 1700

Lütisburg’s townscape is characterized by bridges and footbridges, including the Letzi Bridge (1853), the Guggenloch Railway Viaduct (1870) and the “new” Thur Bridge (1997).

The covered wooden bridge (1790) over the Thur River, on the cantonal road to Flawil, was used for car traffic until 1997.

Upon the wooden Letzi Bridge, the hiking trail to Ganterschwil crosses the Neckar River.

The nearby hamlet of Winzenburg with its Winzenberger Höhe (heights) (836 m) is a popular destination with local lovers of landscape.

B&B Winzenberg (Schweiz Lütisburg) - Booking.com

Lütisburg’s claim to fame, beside its bridges, lies with the two brothers Germann….

War of any kind is abhorrent. 

Remember that since the end of World War II, over 40 million people have been killed by conventional weapons. 

So, if we should succeed in averting nuclear war, we must not let ourselves be sold the alternative of conventional weapons for killing our fellow man. 

We must cure ourselves of the habit of war.

(Patrick White)

Modern warfare: Into the Jaws of Death, 1944

Kilian Germann (1485 – 1530) was the son of Johannes Germann, the Chief bailiff of Lütisburg, and brother of the mercenary leader (and later bailiff) Hans Germann (also known as the Batzenhammer) and Gallus Germann (also chief bailiff of Lütisburg).

Kilian was governor in Roschach (1523 – 1528) and in Wil (1528 -1529).

In 1529, Kilian was elected to be the next Prince-Abbot of St. Gallen in Rapperswil.

After his confirmation by Pope Clement VII (1478 – 1534), Kilian was also proposed for this position to Emperor Charles V (1500 – 1558) who confirmed him in February 1530.

Above: Coat of arms of Kilian Germann

But life often thwarts the best-laid plans….

What I am interested in is the relationship between the blundering human being and God.

I belong to no church, but I have a religious faith.

It is an attempt to express that, among other things, that I try to do.

Whether he confesses to being religious or not, everyone has a religious faith of a kind.

I myself am a blundering human being with a belief in God who made us and we got out of hand, a kind of Frankenstein monster.

Everyone can make mistakes, including God.

I believe that God does intervene.

I think there is a Divine Power, a Creator, who has an influence on human beings if they are willing to be open to Him.

(Patrick White)

Michelangelo - Creation of Adam (cropped).jpg

Above: Creation of Adam, Michelangelo, Sistine Chapel, Vatican City

Prince-Abbot Kilian fled to Meersburg (on the German side of Lake Constance) in 1529 after the outbreak of the First Kappel War.

From February 1530, Kilian lived at Wolfurt Castle near Bregenz (on the Austrian part of Lake Constance).

Above: Wolfurt Castle

In exile, Kilian nonetheless cultivated his social network with the southern German nobility in order to secure political pressure on the reformed movement on the Prince-Abbot’s lands, which did not escape the attention of his enemy, the reformer Vadian.

Above: Vadian statue, St. Gallen

In 1530, Kilian represented the Abbey of St. Gallen at the Council of Basel.

In July, he visited the Augsburg Reichstag (government).

It looked like Kilian’s fading star was beginning to shine once more.

That same year of his visits to Basel and Augsburg, returning to Bregenz after a visit to the Earl of Montfort, Kilian drowned when his horse fell into the Bregenz Ach (stream).

He was buried in the Mehrerau Monastery near Bregenz.

Abtei Mehrerau – Blick vom Gebhardsberg

Discipline is the soul of an army.

It makes small numbers formidable, procures success to the weak and success to all.

(George Washington)

Gilbert Stuart Williamstown Portrait of George Washington.jpg

Above: George Washington (1730 – 1799)

Hans Germann (1500 – 1550), Kilian’s younger brother, was an officer in the service of the French Crown for many years.

After returning home, Hans supported his brother Kilian during the turmoil of the Reformation.

Contemporaries described Hans as “a firm, brave, but rough, frivolous journeyman, who had sold many of his fellow countrymen to France for boring gold.”

Above: Coat of arms of Captain Hans Germann, Kreuzenstein Castle, Austria

I guess we find both sinners and saints in every family and in every community.

The socially disadvantaged of Ganterschwil

In my books I have lifted bits from various religions in trying to come to a better understanding.

I have made use of religious themes and symbols.

Now, as the world becomes more pagan, one has to lead people in the same direction in a different way.

(Patrick White)

Down the road (so to speak) is the village of Ganterschwil (population: 1,186).

It is first mentioned in 779 as “Cantrichesuilare“.

(Try saying that five times fast….)

Pfarrkirche von Ganterschwil

Above:  Parish church, Ganterschwil, Canton St. Gallen

Grain and oats were grown and processed in three mills here.

From the 18th century, contract weaving became important.

Small textile factories developed from family businesses.

In the 19th century, the livestock and dairy indutries replaced grain cultivation.

After the crash in the textile industry in 1918, only smaller companies could be built.

In 2000, around half of the working population was employed in the service sector.

Wappen von Ganterschwil

Above: Coat of arms of Ganterschwil

The Home for Socially Disadvantaged Children, founded in 1913 by Reformer Pastor Alfred Lauchener, developed into the Centre for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Sonnenhof.

Klinik Sonnenhof Ganterschwil

Above: Centre for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Sonnenhof, Ganterschwil

In Ganterschwil, there are many small businesses that offer jobs.

The best-known is the Berlinger Company, which was active in tape production.

Today it plays a leading role in the production of doping control systems, in the form of counterfeit-proof sample glasses.

Temperature Monitoring / Doping Control Equipment- Berlinger & Co. AG

In the parish church there are frescoes from the Middle Ages discovered and restored in 1941 and now under the protection of the Swiss Confederation.

Ganterschwil is a place difficult to define.

Is it the past?

The future?

What is it now?

The Beautiful Minds of Lichtensteig

Lichtensteig (population: 1,870) is first mentioned in 1228 and was founded by the Counts of Toggenburg as “Liehtunsteige“.

A market is mentioned in 1374 and the right to hold markets was confirmed in 1400.

A letter of privileges issued by the Lords of Raron (1439) confirms the existence of 12 burghers and the appointment of judges by the burghers and the Lords.

After the acquisition of the Toggenburg by St. Gallen Abbey in 1468, Lichtensteig became the seat of the Abbot’s reeve.

The council declared Lichtensteig’s support for the Reformation in 1528.

The sole church at this time was shared by both Reformed and Catholic believers, while their schools were kept separate until 1868.

Lichtensteig’s importance as a market town increased in the 19th century with the development of the textile home working industry in the Toggenburg.

In the early 20th century, there were six yearly markets and a weekly livestock market.

Lichtensteig’s connection to the railroad dates to 1870.

Lichtensteig

Above: Lichtensteig, Canton St. Gallen

I don’t quite know how to say this politely, so I will say it directly.

It seems the further south one travels in Deutschschweiz, the smarter people seem to be.

Thurgau is blood, sweat, tears and toil.

Thurgau is always in the middle of things, between two places but belonging to neither.

Wars of religion and between nations have been fought here for centuries.

Tourists do not linger in Thurgau but traverse it en route to places deemed more interesting.

This is farm country, a land of labour and pragmatism, where poets party in private homes but never parade themselves in political protest processions.

Coat of arms of Kanton Thurgau

Above: Coat of arms of Canton Thurgau

St. Gallen, both city and canton especially the City itself, bears the scent of incense, the stains on a faithful shroud, the remnants of religious rule.

Coat of arms of Kanton St. Gallen

Above: Coat of arms of Canton St. Gallen

St. Gallen is reminiscent of (Giovanni Bocaccio’s Decameron) Ceppello of Prato, who after a lifetime of evil, hoodwinks a holy friar with a deathbed confession and comes to be venerated as St. Ciappelletto, except in reverse with the holy friar hoodwinking the world into venerating it as holier than it could have been.

Decameron, The (unabridged) – Naxos AudioBooks

Granted that the St. Gallen Abbey Library is truly worthy of its UNESCO designation as “an outstanding example of a large Carolingian monastery and was, since the 8th century until its secularisation in 1805, one of the most important cultural centres in Europe”.

The library collection is the oldest in Switzerland, and one of earliest and most important monastic libraries in the world.

The library holds almost 160,000 volumes, with most available for public use.

In addition to older printed books, the collection includes 1,650 incunabula (books printed before 1500), and 2,100 manuscripts dating back to the 8th through 15th centuries – among the most notable of the latter are items of Irish, Carolingian, and Ottonian production.

These codices are held inside glass cases, each of which is topped by a carved cherub offering a visual clue as to the contents of the shelves below – for instance, the case of astronomy-related materials bears a cherub observing the books through a telescope.

Books published before 1900 are to be read in a special reading room.

The manuscript B of the Nibelungenlied (The Song of the Nibelungs, an epic poem written around 1200, the first heroic epic put into writing in Germany, helping to found a larger genre of written heroic poetry) is kept here.

Above: St. Gallen Abbey Library

Granted that the University of St. Gallen (“from insight to impact“) is, according to international rankings,  considered among the world’s leading business schools.

University of St. Gallen logo english.svg

But, my view of the city of St. Gallen is coloured by my experience, which has meant a working man’s life split between teaching at private schools similar to the cowboy outfit of Wil and formerly working as a Starbucks barista.

Neither side seems reflective of St. Gallen’s intellectual potential.

Above: Old houses, St. Gallen

(To be fair, people don’t actually hate places.

They hate their experiences of places.)

The two half-cantons of Appenzell Innerrhoden and Appenzell Ausserrhoden have, over time, perhaps without justification, become the butt of many a joke from the rest of Switzerland when one seeks a place to label as backwards.

Coat of arms of Appenzell

Above: Coat of arms of the half-cantons of Appenzell

To be fair to the comedians, Appenzell still has elections where folks line up in the town square to cast their votes by raising their arms to show their assent and it was the last place in the nation to give women the right to vote.

Farmers still lead their cattle in great processions through towns to Alpine pastures in springtime and back again when winter threatens.

As one travels from Thurgau south towards Ticino one senses a change in spirit.

Swiss cantons

Already we have encountered a village that fostered the growth of a Pulitzer Prize-deserving journalist and we have traversed towns of castles and artists, of epic tales and bridges over troubled waters.

But it is here in Lichtensteig where the air becomes rarified, where farmers think and plowmen wax poetic.

The time has come when scientific truth must cease to be the property of the few, when it must be woven into the common life of the world.” (Louis Agassiz)

Louis Agassiz H6.jpg

Above: Louis Agassiz (1807 – 1873)

Jost Bürgi (1552 – 1632) is probably the kind of man Agassiz had in mind.

Lichtensteiger Bürgi was a Swiss clockmaker, a maker of astronomical instruments and a mathematician.

Although an autodidact (he taught himself), Bürgi was already during his lifetime considered one of the most excellent mechanical engineers of his generation (think of a Da Vinci or an Edison).

Bürgi’s employer, William IV (1532 – 1592), the Landgrave of Hesse-Kessel, in a letter to Tycho Brahe (1542 – 1601)(Denmark’s greatest astronomer) praised Bürgi as “a second Archimedes” (287 – 212 BC).

The lunar crater Byrgius (the Latin form of Bürgi) is named in this Lichtensteiger’s honour.

Above: Portrait of Jost Bürgi

Another thinking man from Lichtensteig was Augustine Reding (1625 – 1692), a Benedictine, the Prince-Abbot of Einsiedeln Abbey and a respected theological writer.

At Einsiedeln, Reding organized the construction of the Abbey’s choir, confessional and the Chapel of St. Magdalena.

In 1675, Einsiedeln took charge of the college at Bellinzona, which was conducted by the monks of the Abbey until their suppression in 1852.

Reding watched carefully over discipline of Abbey affairs and insisted on a thorough intellectual training of his monks.

Above: Einsiedeln Cloister, Canton Schwyz

Lichtenberger Johann Ulrich Giezendanner (1686 – 1738) learned the profession of goldsmithing in Toggenburg.

Through his parish priest Niklaus Scherrer and his friend August Hermann Francke in Halle, Giezendanner began to practice pietism.

Giezendanner was banished from Toggenburg on suspicion of pietism, because he threatened the authorities with the criminal judgment of God.

His threats led to an investigation by a pietist commission set up by the Council, in which the secular side had the majority.

As a result, Giezendanner was expelled without a trial in 1710.

And so he went to Zürich.

In 1714, Giezendanner began studying theology at the University of Marburg, heard lectures from Johann Heinrich Hottinger (1681 – 1750) and worked as a teacher in the Marburg orphanage.

Because Giezendanner preached on his own initiative in Marburg, he was expelled from the state of Hesse.

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After a short stay in Heidelberg, he returned to eastern Switzerland and began to hold secret meetings in Bottinghoffen near Scherzingen, less than 10 klicks (Canadian for kilometres) from my Landschlacht driveway.

Above: Bottighofen Harbour

As a representative of the radical pietism in German-speaking Switzerland, he returned to Zürich until he was expelled from there for his preaching.

On 29 June 1716, Giezendanner’s most memorable sermon of inspiration was given at the country estate of Johann Kaspar Schneeberger in Engstringen (just outside Zürich), in which Giezendanner said:

Hear now, my word, you stupid sticky clods of earth, where is your lie?

And so, hear, hear, heads of this place, you enter as gods and lords, but what kind of god you have for your rule, is it not with you all that you bring your belly to God?

With great arrogance to exclaim sins on the streets, when you walk on the streets, sin will take place and all of you will find it.

Unterengstringen, im Vordergrund das Kloster Fahr

Above: Engstringen, Canton Zürich

Unable to win friends and influence people in Switzerland, Giezendanner emigrated to America in 1734, working as a goldsmith in Charleston.

In 1736, he founded the first church of Toggenburger, Rhine Valley and Appenzell pietists in South Carolina’s Orangeburg County.

Above: Historic houses, Charleston, South Carolina, USA

It is a pity that those trained in the uncertainties of faith couldn’t be made responsible for the training of those who lead nations.

Perhaps a rigorous examination of our leaders’ intellectual and moral training might prevent the rise of demagogues and populists whose only qualification for power is their desire to dominate others.

Another man whose mind was a beautiful thing to behold was Max Rychner.

Max Rychner (1897 – 1965) was a writer, journalist, translator and literary critic.

Hannah Arendt (1906 – 1975), widely considered to be one of the most important political philosophers of the 20th century, called Rychner “one of the most educated and subtle figures in the intellectual life of the era“.

Rychner is considered, among other things, to be the discoverer of the poet Paul Celan (1920 – 1970), the publisher of the memoirs of Walter Benjamin (1892 – 1940), the editor-translator of philosopher-poet Paul Valéry (1871 – 1945), as well as being himself a poet, novelist and essayist.

Rychner is best known for:

  • Freundeswort (Word of a friend)
  • Die Ersten: Ein Epyllion (The first: an epyllion)(not sure what an epyllion is)
  • Unter anderem zur europäischen Literatur zwischen zwei Weltkriegen (On European literature between two world wars)
  • Arachne
  • Bedelte und testierte Welt (Affirmed and certified world)

Bei mir laufen Fäden zusammen - Max Rychner | Wallstein Verlag

According to Wikipedia, Rycher’s “method of literary admiration, based on hermeneutic models, raised formal aesthetic criteria far beyond questions of content and meaning.”

I have no idea of what that means, but it sure sounds impressive.

An incomplete sphere made of large, white, jigsaw puzzle pieces. Each puzzle piece contains one glyph from a different writing system, with each glyph written in black.

Wikivoyage (German version only) recommends Lichtensteig for:

  • the alleys and houses in the old quarter of the town

  • the Toggenburger Museum (Sundays 1 – 5 pm)

  • Fredy’s Mechanical Music Museum (last weekend of the months April to December at 3 pm / guided tours only / five-person minimum / CHF 14 per person)

Fredy's Mechanical Music Museum | Switzerland Tourism

  • Erlebniswelt Toggenburg (Adventure World Toggenburg)(Wednesdays and weekends: 1030 to 1630)

(It’s a small world, after all.)

Erlebniswelt Toggenburg - BESUCHER

  • Various sports facilities, including a climbing wall and an outdoor pool
  • the Thurweg which wends through the town

Datei:Thurweg..jpg

  • Jazz Days, with international jazz greats, annually

Jazztage Lichtensteig | Erlebnisregion Ostschweiz & Bodensee

Travel as a Political Act

Now you may be wondering why I bother telling you all of this, explaining in painful prose what lies beneath the surface of places.

Travel guide writer Rick Steves said it best:

Travel connects people with people.

It helps us fit more comfortably and compatibly into a shrinking world.

It inspires creative new solutions to persistent problems facing our nation.

We can’t understand our world without experiencing it.

There is more to travel than good-value hotels, great art and tasty cuisine.

Travel as a political act means the Traveller can have the time of his life and come home smarter – with a better understanding of the interconnectedness of today’s world and just how we fit in.”

Travel as a Political Act (Rick Steves): Steves, Rick ...

Steves sees the travel writer of the 21st century like a court jester of the Middle Ages.

Rick Steves cropped.jpg

Above: Rick Steves

While thought of as a comedian, the jester was in a unique position to tell truth to power without being punished.

Back then, kings were absolute rulers – detached from the lives of their subjects.

The court jester’s job was to mix it up with people that the King would never meet.

The jester would play in the gutter with the riffraff.

Then, having fingered the gritty pulse of society, the true lifeblood of the Kingdom, the jester would come back into the court and tell the King the truth.

Above: “Keying Up” – The Court Jester, by William Merritt Chase, 1875.

Your Highness, the people are angered by the cost of mead. 

They are offended by the Queen’s parties. 

The Pope has more influence than you. 

Everybody is reading the heretics’ pamphlets. 

Your stutter is the butt of many rude jokes.

Is there not a parallel here between America and this Kingdom?

Comedians like Seth Meyers, Stephen Colbert and Trevor Noah are listened to more by the average American than the actual news these comedians parody.

For these jesters of 21st century television know the pulse of the nation far more accurately than do the mandarins of power in Washington.

Seth Meyers by Gage Skidmore.jpg

Above: Seth Meyers

Stephen Colbert December 2019.jpg

Above: Stephen Colbert

Trevor Noah 2017.jpg

Above: Trevor Noah

Trump is the butt of many rude jokes, because he deserves to be.

Trump has leaders from around the world openly laughing at him at ...

Meyers, Colbert and Noah are graffiti writers on the walls of sacred institutions, watching rich riffraff ride roughshod over the rest of those whose sole hopes from the gutter is that their only direction from their perspective is up.

File:Who Watches the Watchmen.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

In the Kingdom, the King did not kill the jester.

In order to rule more wisely, the King needed the jester’s insights.

In America, the President would love to kill his critics.

He is not interested in ruling wisely, only perpetually.

Official Keep America Great 45th President Hat – Trump Make ...

Many of today’s elected leaders have no better connection with real people (especially beyond their borders) than those divinely ordained monarchs did centuries ago.

Any Traveller, including your humble blogger and you my patient readers, can play jester in your own communities.

Sometimes a jackass won’t move unless a gesturing mosquito is biting its behind.

Mosquito 2007-2.jpg

Consider countries like El Salvador (where people don’t dream of having two cars in every garage) or Denmark (where they pay high taxes with high expectations and are satisfied doing so) or Iran (where many compromise their freedom for their fidelity to their faith).

Travellers can bring back valuable insights and, just like those insights were needed in the Middle Ages, this understanding is desperately needed in our age of anxiety.

Ideally, travel broadens our perspectives personally, culturally and politically.

Suddenly, the palette with which we paint the parameters of our personalities has more colour, more vibrancy.

We realize that there are exciting alternatives to the social and community norms that our less-travelled neighbours may never consider.

It is like discovering there are other delicacies off the menu, that there is more than one genre of music available on the radio, that there is an upstairs alcove above the library yet to be discovered, that you haven’t yet tasted all 31 flavours.

1970s Baskin Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream logo

That there are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy.

I will never be against tourists who travel to escape their workaday lives and simply wish to relax in as uncomplicated a fashion as humanly possible.

Sometimes this is needed.

Kokomo song cover.jpg

No, I am referring to Travellers who travel with a purpose on purpose.

People who try to connect with other people.

People who take history seriously.

Yesterday’s history informs today’s news, which becomes all our tomorrows.

Those with a knowledge (or at least a curiosity) of history can understand current events in a broader context and respond to them more thoughtfully.

As you travel, opportunities to enjoy history are everywhere.

Work on cultivating a general grasp of the sweep of history and you will be able to infuse your travels with more meaning.

Even if, in this time of corona, our travels are local.

Above: History by Frederick Dielman (1896)

I digress.

The Warriors of Wattwil

The long and winding road leads us to Wattwil (population: 8,740), first documented in 897 as “Wattinurlare” (which sounds exotic but only means “Watto’s village“).

Wattwil Gesamtansicht Yburg.jpg

Above: Wattwil, Canton St. Gallen

Around 1230, Heinrich von Iberg had Iberg Castle built here.

It was destroyed during the Appenzell Wars (1401 – 1429) and rebuilt.

It served as the seat of the bailiffs until 1805.

Above: Iberg Castle, Wattwil

In 1468, the entire Toggenburg County (the last Toggenburg Count, Friedrich VII died without heirs) was bought by St. Gallen Abbey.

The Pfaffenweise (place of assembly) (today a cemetery) served as a community and war gathering point and as a place to demonstrate hommage to the Prince-Abbots of St. Gallen.

Above: Wattwil station

In 1529, Pastor Mauriz Miles from Lichtensteig introduced the Reformation to Wattwil.

The population, which supported the religious innovations by a large majority, was able to prevail against the Catholic abbots.

Catholic Services were only reintroduced in 1593.

The Wattwil church was used by both faiths until a new Catholic church was built in 1968.

Above: Wattwil Reformed Church

Above: Wattwil Catholic Church

In 1621, the Capuchin Convent of St. Mary the Angel was built on the slope called the Wenkenürti (I have no idea what this translates to.) after a devastating fire at their previous location on Pfanneregg (a hill where the Vitaparcours – think “outdoor gym path” – is practiced).

The Convent is an excellently preserved complex with a highly baroque church.

Sadly, the Sisters left the monastery in 2010.

Above: St. Mary the Angel Convent

In the 17th century, St. Gallen Abbey wanted to expand the road known as Karrenweg via Rickenpass, in order to ensure a better connection between St. Gallen and Catholic Central Switzerland.

The majority of the Reformed Wattwil populace refused to work on it or contribute to it, tirggering the Toggenburg Turmoil (1699 – 1712), which led to the Second Villmerger War of 1712.

The road was only realized in 1786.

Wattwil’s traditional linen weaving mill was replaced by a cotton factory in 1750.

In the 19th century, more than a dozen companies started operating in the town.

In 1881, the Toggenburg weaving school was founded, from which the Swiss Textile Technical School later emerged.

The spirit of intelligence, the thirst for knowledge, the expression of wisdom can also be found in Wattwil.

Ulrich Bräker (1735 – 1798) was an autodidact, writer and diarist, known for his autobiography, widely received at the time as the voice of an unspoiled “natural man” of the lower classes, based on the title which Bräker became known “der arme Mann im Toggenburg” (the poor man of Toggenburg).

Bräker was born the oldest of eight siblings.

Above: Bräker’s birth house in Näppis near Wattwil

Bräker was educated in literacy and basic arithmetic during ten weeks each winter, working as a goatherd for the rest of the year.

In 1754, the family moved to Wattwil, where Bräker worked various jobs.

In 1755, he entered the service of a Prussian recruiting officer.

Against Bräker’s wishes, he was pressed into military duty in the 13th infantry regiment of the Prussian army in 1756, but he managed to escape later that same year in the midst of the Battle of Lobositz.

War Ensign of Prussia (1816).svg

Above: War flag of Prussia

Returning to his native Toggenburg, Bräker married Salome Ambühl (1735 – 1822) of Wattwil in 1761 and had several children.

Bräker built a house “auf der Hochsteig” (on the high slope) outside of Wattwil and traded in cotton for the local home industry.

Above: Bräker’s house auf der Hochsteig, contemporary drawing (c. 1794; the house was destroyed in 1836)

He began writing a diary.

Der arme Mann im Tockenburg - Ulrich Bräker - Buch kaufen | Ex Libris

Bräker’s writing talent was discovered by local writer and intellectual Johann Ludwig Ambühl.

Bräker published some texts in Ambühl’s Brieftasche aus den Alpen (Letter Bag from the Alps).

Bräker’s writing is based on the pietistic outlook and reflects familiarity with the Bible as well as a keen observation of nature and an enthusiastic interest in the translated works of Shakespeare.

9781166984809: Die Brieftasche Aus Den Alpen (1780) (German ...

Bräker’s diary is a touching human document containing Lebensweisheit (pearls of pure pramatic wisdom).

Sämtliche Schriften, 5 Bde., Bd.1, Tagebücher 1768-1778: Amazon.de ...

Bräker lived to see, and was perturbed by, the French invasion of Switzerland in the spring of 1798.

He died in September that same year.

Johann Ludwig Ambühl (1750 – 1800) was a civil servant and a writer – much like my aforementioned Canadian friend at the beginning of this post.

Ambühl was the son of the schoolmaster of Wattwil, Hans Jacob Ambühl (1699 – 1773).

At the age of 23, Johann became his father’s successor in 1733, for he had helped Hans, increasingly blind, with seven hours of instruction every day since he was 12.

In his free time, Johann mainly devoted himself to studying geometry, music, reading, drawing and collecting natural objects.

In Wattwil, Ambühl was considered a Stölzling (nerd), because of his always strict and serious appearance in public.

9781120610225: Die Brieftasche Aus Den Alpen (1780) (German ...

In 1783, on the recommendation of Gregorius Grob, Ambühl was hired as a court master by the rich Rheineck merchant Jacob Laurenz Custer.

In this function, he accompanied one of his students to Strasbourg in 1786, to Geneva (1788 – 1789) and in 1790 on a study trip through Italy.

The majority of Ambühl’s literary work consists of plays of extremely patriotic content.

It was like sawdust, the unhappiness.

It infiltrated everything.

Everything was a problem, everything made her cry….but it was so hard to say exactly what the problem was in the first place.” 

(Melanie Thernstrom, The Dead Girl)

The Dead Girl by Melanie Thernstrom

Hans Adolf Pestalozzi (1929 – 2004) was a social critic of late 20th century capitalism, which eventually led to his becoming a bestselling author.

Hans A Pestalozzi - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

Born in Zürich, Pestalozzi, after his studies at the University of St. Gallen, started working for Migros.

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In the 1960s he built up the Gottlieb Duttweiler Institut, a think tank named ater the Migros founder, in Rüschlikon (on Lake Zürich).

The Institute was established to investigate the range of possible shortcomings and negative effects of capitalism, in particular within Western consumer society, so that they could be combated more effectively.

Pestalozzi fulfilled that task very thoroughly, too thoroughly, especially in his lectures, so much so that in 1977 he was fired by Migros.

Rather than looking for a new job, he became a freelance writer and self-proclaimed “autonomous agitator” who sided with the fledging European youth, peace and ecological movements.

He preached “positive subversion” and tried to convince people that using their own intelligence was the right thing to do.

HANS A. PESTALOZZI | Autor, Positiv

Above: Pestalozzi (centre), After us the future, from positive subversion (left) and Off the trees of the apes (right)

Moreover, Pestalozzi demanded a guaranteed minimum income for everybody.

Pestalozzi died a recluse by suicide in his home near Wattwil.

Einsamer Tod eines wirtschaftskritischen Managers

Wikivoyage recommends the Cloister, the Castle and the Kubli Church in Wattwil.

The current Wikivoyage logo

The Wattwil area is great for hiking and mountain biking.

And somewhere down the highway….

The Afterglow of Ebnat- Kappel

Perhaps the easiest way of making a town’s acquaintance is to ascertain how the people in it work, how they love and how they die. 

In our little town (is this, one wonders, an effect of the climate?) all three are done on much the same lines, with the same feverish yet casual air. 

The truth is that everyone is bored and devotes himself to cultivating habits.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

The Plague (1992 film).jpg

Ebnat-Kappel (population: 5,031) was first mentioned in 1218 as “Capelle“.

On 26 July 1854, a fire almost completely destroyed the village.

In 1847, Johann Gerhard Oncken founded the first Swiss Baptist church here in E-K.

Ebnat-Kappel Vilagxo kun preghejo 611.jpg

People visit Ebnat-Kappel primarily to ski or to follow the 60-kilometre Thurweg.

Worth viewing are:

  • the Reformed Church in the centre of Ebnat along with the church hall with its front tower

  • the Steinfels House (a Gothic building with Baroque decor)

  • the Ackerhaus (built for Albert Edelmann who donated the house to serve as the local museum)

Museum Hauskultur Toggenburg Ackerhaus, Ebnat-Kappel

  • Typical wooden Toggenburg houses preserved in nearby Eich

Bäuerliches Toggenburger Haus in Ebnat-Kappel Foto & Bild ...

  • the Felsenstein House in Kappel with Gothic windows and cross-vaulted rooms
  • the willow wood figures near the station depicting a chapel and an unicorn

Wappen von Ebnat-Kappel

Above: Coat of arms of Ebnat – Kappel

  • the Sinnepark (a sensory park) just south of the village

Der Sinnepark - Verkehrsverein Ebnat-Kappel

Above: Ebnat-Kappel station

Notable people of Ebnat-Kappel are:

  • Albert Edelmann (1886 – 1963) was a teacher, painter and sponsor of local folk and cultural assets.

His Ackerhaus museum shows objects of Toggenburg culture from four centuries.

In addition to household items and equipment from the Toggenburg, the collection contains rural paintings, pictures by Babeli Giezendammer and other painters, seven house organs and neck zithers.

By the end of the 19th century, the neck zither game in Toggenburg was forgotten.

Thanks to Edelmann this tradition was revived.

There is a room dedicated to the Biedermeier period (1815 – 1848) in Toggenburg.

Edelmann’s former studio shows his CV and his work.

While the Museum offers encounters with the past, the culture of Now is everpresent.

Above: Albert Edelmann

I enjoy decoration. 

By accumulating this mass of detail you throw light on things in a longer sense. 

In the long run it all adds up. 

It creates a texture – how shall I put it – a background, a period, which makes everything you write that much more convincing. 

Of course, all artists are terrible egoists. 

Unconsciously you are largely writing about yourself. 

I could never write anything factual. 

I only have confidence in myself when I am another character. 

All the characters in my books are myself, but they are a kind of disguise.

(Patrick White)

  • Babeli Giezendanner (1831 – 1905) was a painter, representative of Appenzeller / Toggenburger peasant painting.

She was born the third of nine children.

In 1861, she married master shoemaker Ulrich Remisegger.

In 1873, he died in an accident.

As a widow with three children, Babeli supported her family through weaving, drawing and painting.

In 1904, she moved to the Hemberg poorhouse and lived there until she died in her 74th year.

Possibly all art flowers more readily in silence. 

Certainly the state of simplicity and humility is the only desirable one for artist or for man. 

While to reach it may be impossible, to attempt to do so is imperative.

(Patrick White)

Babeli Giezendanner learned to draw from her father, which meant that she had a good knowledge of perspective drawing that characterizes her work.

Furthermore, she worked temporarily in Lichtensteig for the lithographer Johan Georg Schmied.

Stylistic relationships to the work of the Swiss peasant painter Johannes Müller from Stein (AR) can be proven.

He may have been one of her role models.

The artist’s oeuvre is diverse and extensive, the inventory includes around 100 works.

They include the depiction of houses and villages, alpine lifts and cattle shows.

She created numerous livery paintings and memorial sheets for birth, baptism, wedding and death.

For commemorative albums, she painted pictures and wrote poems.

The painting of umbrellas and dials of clocks has been handed down in the vernacular, but cannot be proven.

Today, many of her paintings and drawings are exhibited in the Toggenburg Museum in Lichtensteig and in the Museum Ackerhus in Ebnat-Kappel.

Very early in my life it was too late.

(Marguerite Duras, The Lover)

OnFiction: Marguerite Duras The Lover

I start to get the feeling that something is really wrong.

Like all the drugs put together – the lithium, the Prozac, the desipramine and the Desyrel that I take to sleep at night – can no longer combat whatever it is that was wrong with me in the first place. 

I feel like a defective model, like I came off the assembly line flat-out f….d and my parents should have taken me back for repairs before the warranty ran out. 

But that was so long ago.

I start to think there really is no cure for depression, that happiness is an ongoing battle, and I wonder if it isn’t one I’ll have to fight for as long as I live. 

I wonder if it’s worth it.

I start to feel like I can’t maintain the facade any longer, that I may just start to show through. 

And I wish I knew what was wrong.

Maybe something about how stupid my whole life is.

I don’t know.

(Elizabeth Wurzel, Prozac Nation)

Prozac Nation film.jpg

  • Guido Looser (1892 – 1937) was a writer.

Looser attended high school in Zürich and then studied history, German and geography at universities in Zürich and Berlin.

He then worked as a teacher in Zürich.

From 1922, he suffered increasingly from depression which led to long hospital stays in Kreuzlingen and Oetiwil.

In 1937, Looser committed suicide, given the impossibility of continuing to fund adequate hospitalization.

Guido Looser

Looser wrote novels, essays and poems, strongly influenced by his psychological suffering and revolving around illness, melancholy and death.

Looser is known for:

  • Nachglanz (Afterglow)
  • Josuas Hingabe (Joshua’s dedication)
  • Die Würde (Dignity)
  • Nur nie jemandem sagen, wohin man reist (Just never tell anyone where you are going)

Nur nie jemandem sagen, wohin man reist. Prosa - Guido Looser ...

“You only live twice: once when you are born and once when you look death in the face.”

(Ian Fleming)

Above: Ian Fleming (1908 – 1964)

Bridges over troubled waters

Bridge Over Troubled Water single.jpg

When I think of all the things he did because he loved me – what people visit on each other out of something like love. 

It is enough for all the world’s woe. 

You don’t need hate to have a perfectly miserable time.

(Richard Bausch, Mr. Field’s Daughter)

Mr. Field's Daughter: Bausch, Richard: 9780671640514: Amazon.com ...

Stein (population: 1,429) has a few sites worth viewing:

In the village centre, the 18th century church and the Appenzeller Folklore Museum with, among other things, looms and embroidery machines from the 19th century.

Wappen von Stein

Above: Coat of arms, Stein, Canton Appenzell

Between the hamlet of Störgel and the St. Gallen suburb of Haggen lies the Haggen Bridge, the highest pedestrian footbridge in Europe, which spans the 355-metre wide gorge of the Sitter at a height of 99 metres.

The structure called “Ganggelibrugg” (wobbly bridge) was actually planned for traffic between Stein and St. Gallen, but due to serious structural defects it could never be handed over to its intended purpose.

For a long time it was the most used bridge for suicide in Switzerland.

Since 2010, the bridge has been secured with nets that help prevent such tragedies.

Nearby are the Kubelbrücke (the Talking Bridge, a covered wooden bridge over the Urnäsch River in the hamlet of Kubel), the Abtebrücke (the Abbey Bridge, a covered wooden bridge over the River Sitter in the hamlet of Kubel, built by the St. Gallen Monastery) and the Hüsli covered wooden bridges across the Sitter and the Wattbach beneath the Ganggelibrugg in the hamlets of Blatten and Zweibruggen.

Also worth visiting in Stein is the Appenzeller Show Dairy, where you can watch the production of Appenzeller cheese.

(Open: 0900 – 1800 / Guided tours: Wednesday and Sundays, 1400 and 1700)

Everybody is interested (or should be) in Switzerland.

No other country in Europe offers a richer return to the Traveller for his time and effort.

To revisit Switzerland is for the old to renew one’s youth, while for the young it is to gain a lifelong sense of the inspiring grandeurs of this wonderworld.

Above: The Matterhorn

The Traveller goes to Switzerland chiefly to look at mountains, the Swiss Alps are as effectively displayed as the treasures in a well-arranged museum, but the mountains are not the only things in Switzerland.

There are the towns and cities and the people, those admirable Swiss people, who have made their land in many respects the model country of the world.

Above: Lake Lucerne, view from Pilatus

(If you are not sure about this, just ask the Swiss.)

Coat of arms of Switzerland

The sad thing is that while Switzerland may be the playground of Europe, it is not the playground of the Swiss.

Switzerland is their workshop, where they toil at many industries and practice many useful arts of which the outside world knows little.

The world knows of music boxes, cheese and watches and that the Swiss are born hotel keepers with comfort and courtesy as their watchwords.

Non-Swiss tend to dismiss Switzerland as an irrelevance in the broader sweep of European history.

Because the country is peaceful today, the assumption is that it has always been somehow inherently tranquil, but this is an illusion.

Until the middle of the 19th century, Switzerland was the most unstable country in Europe.

The Alpine calm of today came at the price of a millennium of war.

The Swiss may no longer be an offensive force, but they are defensively armed to the teeth.

The Reformation, which began in Germany in the early 16th century, was sparked in Switzerland by a native of the next town down the road….

Above: Map of the Old Swiss Confederacy 1536 showing the religious division

Within a few days I will go to the Papal Legate [Pucci], and if he shall open a conversation on the subject as he did before, I will urge him to warn the Pope not to issue an excommunication [against Luther], for which I think would be greatly against him [the Pope].

For if it be issued I believe the Germans will equally despise the Pope and the excommunication.

But do you be of good cheer, for our day will not lack those who will teach Christ faithfully, and who will give up their lives for Him willingly, even though among men their names shall not be in good repute after this life…

So far as I am concerned I look for all evil from all of them: I mean both ecclesiastics and laymen.

I beseech Christ for this one thing only, that He will enable me to endure all things courageously, and that He break me as a potter’s vessel or make me strong, as it pleased Him.

If I be excommunicated I shall think of the learned and holy Hilary, who was exiled from France to Africa, and of Lucius, who though driven from his seat at Rome returned again with great honour.

Not that I compare myself with them: for as they were better than I so they suffered what was a greater ignominy.

And yet if it were good to flourish I would rejoice to suffer insult for the name of Christ.

But let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.

Lately I have read scarcely any thing of Luther’s, but what I have seen of his hitherto does not seem to me to stray from gospel teaching.

You know – if you remember – that what I have always spoken of in terms of the highest commendation in him is that he supports his position with authoritative witness.”

(Huldrych Zwingli)

Ulrich-Zwingli-1.jpg

Above: Portrait of Ulrich Zwingli (1484 – 1531)

Swiss city after city overthrew ecclesiastical overlords in favour of the new Protestantism, with city authorities gaining new power over the countryside in the process.

Zwingli’s attempts in 1531 to reorganize the Confederation under the urban leadership of Zürich and Bern led to armed conflict and the eventual loss of his life in battle.

The Reformation continued to spread, with Geneva – at the time not Swiss – emerging as a major centre for Protestantism, thanks to the zealotry of French priest and Reformer Jean Calvin.

Increasingly the Catholic cantons nurtured an inferiority complex towards the Protestant cities, which held a grip on political authority.

Above: Religious division of the Old Confederacy during the 17th and 18th century

Only shared economic interests keep the Swiss Confederation together.

I have mentioned the textile industry as crucial to the towns we passed through, for it was textiles, among other industries, where merchants in the cities (generally Protestant) supplied raw materials to peasants in the countryside (generally Catholic) who worked up finished products and returned them for trading on.

Wildhaus (population: 1,205) is first mentioned in 1344 as “Wildenhuss“.

In addition to tourism, agriculture and forestry from the economic focus.

The birthplace of the Reformer Huldrych Zwingli, built in 1449, is one of the oldest wooden houses in Switzerland.

(For more on Zwingli and travels following his life, please see:

Canada Slim… 

  • and the Road to Reformation
  • and the Wild Child of Toggenburg
  • and the Thundering Hollows
  • and the Battle for Switzerland’s Soul
  • and the Monks of the Dark Forest
  • and the Battlefield Brotherhood
  • and the Lakeside Pilgrimage

….of my other blog, The Chronicles of Canada Slim at https://canadaslim.wordpress.com.)

Wildhaus is both a summer and winter sports resort.

Two chair lifts and several ski lifts lead to the Gamsalp and the Gamserrugg.

The Obertoggenburg and the Churfirsten ski area, which Wildhaus operated together with Unterwasser and Alt St. Johann until separated by the Cablecar Conflict of 2019.

The 87-kilometre Toggenburger Höhenweg begins in Wildhaus and ends in Will, as does the 60-kilometre long Thurweg.

Wildhaus SG

Above: Wildhaus, Canton St. Gallen

Wildhaus is a place my wife and I have together and apart have repeatedly visited.

I have followed both the Höhenweg and the Thurweg from start to finish.

We have driven to and through Wildhaus.

On this trip we do not tarry but continue swiftly onwards.

Coat of arms of Wildhaus

Above: Coat of arms of Wildhaus

What follows is a place so seductive that an afternoon seems to stand still….

(To be continued….)

Wildhaus SG

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Wikiquote / Wikivoyage / Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron / Albert Camus, The Plague / Humphrey Carpenter, The Inklings / Albert M. Debrunner, Literaturführer Thurgau / Rick Steves, Travel as a Political Act / Elizabeth Wurzel, Prozac Nation / Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows

Canada Slim and the Path of Seven Sorrows Maria

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Wednesday 24 June 2020

To walk abroad is, not with eyes,

But thoughts, the fields to see and prize.

Else may the silent feet,

Like logs of wood,

Move up and down, and see no good

Nor joy nor glory meet.

 

Even carts and wheels their place do change,

But cannot see, though very strange

The glory that is by.

Dead puppets may

Move in the bright and glorious day,

Yet not behold the sky.

 

And are not men than they more blind,

Who having eyes yet never find

The bliss in which they move.

Like statues dead,

They up and down are carried,

Yet never see nor love.

 

To walk is by a thought to go,

To move in spirit to and fro.

To mind the good we see,

To taste the sweet.

Observing all the things we meet,

How choice and rich they be.

 

To note the beauty of the day

And golden fields of corn survey.

Admire each pretty flower

With its sweet smell,

To praise their Maker and to tell

The marks of his great power.

 

To fly abroad like active bees

Among the hedges and the trees.

To cull the dew that lies

On every blade,

From every blossom, till we lade

Our minds, as they their thighs.

 

Observe those rich and glorious things,

The rivers, meadows, woods and springs,

The fructifying sun.

To note from far

The rising of each twinkling star,

For us his race to run.

 

A little child these well perceives,

Who, tumbling in green grass and leaves,

May rich as kings be thought,

But there’s a sight

Which perfect manhood may delight,

To which we shall be brought.

 

While in those pleasant paths we talk,

‘Tis that towards which at last we walk,

For we may by degrees

Wisely proceed.

Pleasures of love and praise to heed,

From viewing herbs and trees.”

 

Stained glass in the cathedral - geograph.org.uk - 615756.jpg

Above: Stained glass window portrait of poet Thomas Traherne (1636 – 1674)

 

Are not our lives improving?

 

Swiss people who love their sofas have finally left them.

 

 

Those who wish to publicly declare their commitment to each other can now buy wedding rings in open jewellery shops across open borders.

 

 

It is astonishing that the rational Swiss who have wisely locked down the nation and safely eased the restrictions that protected the nation, a land where soldiers donate food to the hungry, this is a country where every third Swiss believes that the corona virus was manufactured in a Chinese laboratory.

 

 

Sales have multiplied and demonstrators are strongly discouraged from exercising their right to assemble.

 

 

Freedom fights fear and fear is a foe fought futilely.

 

Flickr - USCapitol - Franklin D. Roosevelt's First Inauguration.jpg

Above: Inauguration ceremony of US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882 – 1945) on 4 March 1933, wherein he said: “The only thing to fear is fear itself.

 

 

Ladies of the evening are encouraged to offer their pleasures for profit, while Koreans see sex dolls acting as surrogate spectators in games they cannot attend.

 

Prostitution knallhart: Frauen bieten sich in Zürich für 20 Franken an

 

Are not our lives improving?

 

The World Health Organization warns Europe of a second corona virus wave, while no vaccine has been developed to successfully bury the first wave.

 

World Health Organization Logo.svg

 

Party people are tired of being in quarantine and regardless of distance rules and assembly bans, the night is calling and the streets seduce with nuanced neon of normalcy.

 

Das sagt die Polizei zur Basler Partynacht

 

Borders are raised like skirts of lady hitchhikers seeking travellers to improve their situations.

 

Above: Claudette Colbert (1903 – 1996) and Clark Gable (1901 – 1960) hitchhiking in the 1934 film It Happened One Night

 

 

At least we in Switzerland admit that people have died here from Covina-19, but in Russia and in lands that end with “-stan” the mere acknowledgement of this invisible enemy is to suggest that those with power may be powerless against a pandemic.

 

COVID-19 Outbreak World Map per Capita.svg

Above: Map of the COVID-19 verified number of infected per capita as of 23 June 2020. Since this is a rapidly evolving situation, new cases may not be immediately represented visually. Refer to the primary article 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic or the World Health Organization’s situation reports for most recent reported case information. Every country larger than 3 million km² or with a bigger population than 200 million people has been split up into its first level administrative division for better visualization of the spread of the epidemic.  The darker the area, the more cases therein.

 

 

Here in Switzerland we have learned to conceal the poor and the homeless to the point that they are easy to ignore, while in Spain, where the pain is quite plain, the corona crisis has driven many people into poverty and lines as long as snakes wait outside soup kitchens and homeless shelters.

 

Coronavirus fallout: Hunger queues in Madrid in wake of COVID-19 ...

 

The Americans blame everyone but themselves, including the WHO, the organization best suited to assist them.

 

Flag of the United States

 

Planes fly again, though not so full, not so frequent.

 

 

In Japan, stay-at-home quarantined men are finally beginning to understand the stark inequalities between men and women in domestic chore sharing, while in England men mourn the inability to drown their maritality misery in a pint at the pub.

 

How Do You Say Dad In Japanese? Many Ways! - Japanese Tactics

 

For some, husbands at home are a horrible hell, while for others the silver lining of being at home with family has made observing life as a richer and deeper spiritual experience than they had ever imagined.

 

Norm Peterson Cheers Motion Picture.png

Above: George Wendt (Norm Peterson), Cheers

 

But here in this alpine Arcadia, this Swiss symphony sees concrete bunkers filled with poetry and empty tombs of eternal art.

Art, poetry, music and literature outlive and outshine the sheen, the contentious political veneer that is cast over everything.

 

 

Civilized life, you know, is based on a huge number of illusions in which we all collaborate willingly.

The trouble is we forget after a while that they are illusions and so we are deeply shocked when reality is torn down around us.

 

Ballard in 1993

Above: Writer J.G. (James Graham) Ballard (1930 – 2009)

 

We have once again become collectors of the commonplace, enthusiasts of the everyday.

We fool ourselves into believing that those who hunger for a return to normal must have had normalcy at sometime in the past, must have believed that what they had was “normal“.

 

abnormal is the new normal - Post by january_zn on Boldomatic

 

 

Are not our lives improving?

 

 

But how is returning to the status quo an improvement?

Unless we start afresh with things, we can certainly do nothing effective.

Our real voyage of discovery is not in seeking new landscapes, but rather in having new eyes for the familar.

Perhaps our desire to escape the confines of home has made us too presumptious in our easing of restrictions, too unwise and untimely.

We are all so eager to return back to “normal” that we have no true appreciation of the “normal” just outside our doors.

 

 

Mammern to Eschenz, Switzerland, Tuesday 19 May 2020

Imagine a lake shaped like a fish, and like a fish’s body imagine that lake divide itself into two halves: an upper fin and a lower fin.

Such is the shape of the Bodensee (Lake of Constance).

 

Bodensee satellit.jpg

 

Lake Constance (German: Bodensee) refers to three bodies of water on the Rhine River at the northern foot of the Alps: the Obersee or Upper Lake Constance, the Untersee or Lower Lake Constance, and a connecting stretch of the Rhine, called the Seerhein.

These waterbodies lie within the Lake Constance Basin (Bodenseebecken), which is part of the Alpine Foreland and through which the Rhine flows.

The lake is situated where Germany, Switzerland and Austria meet.

Its shorelines lie in the German states of Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg, the Swiss cantons of St. Gallen, Thurgau and Schaffhausen, and the Austrian state of Vorarlberg.

The Rhine flows into the lake from the south, with its original course forming the Austro-Swiss border, and has its outflow on the Lower Lake where — except for Schaffhausen — it forms the German-Swiss border until the city of Basel.

The most populous cities on the lake are Constance (German: Konstanz), Friedrichshafen, Radolfzell, Bregenz and Lindau.

The largest islands are Reichenau in the Lower Lake, and Lindau and Mainau in the Upper Lake.

 

Karte Bodensee.png

 

Above the bay of the heavenly Untersee I went walking….

 

 

There are many colleagues and companions of mine who avoid the practice of walking whenever possible.

They argue that if the Lord Almighty had meant us to walk, surely He would have kept us down on all fours, with well-padded paws.

And He sure as Hell would not have made mountains.

An argument similar to….

If God had meant us to fly, He would have given us wings.

 

Michelangelo - Creation of Adam (cropped).jpg

Above: The Creation of Adam, Sistine Chapel, Vatican City by Michelangelo (1475 – 1564)

 

 

Folks tell me how unnatural it is to walk.

Why walk when you can drive?

As if surrounding yourself in a metal box and hurtling yourself down a highway is somehow natural.

 

Three-wide multiple row back.JPG

 

People say I’m crazy, doing what I’m doing.

Walking uphill?

It’s not only unnatural, it’s unnecessary.

Hop in a car, ride the cables, fly over them.

That iron tug of gravitation should be all the reminder we need that in walking uphill we are violating a basic law of nature.

 

9 Tips for How to Walk Uphill

 

Yet I persist in defying gravity under my own power.

Fatigue and blisters, be damned.

 

 

Why climb a mountain when we could simply level it?

 

China flattens mountains in a bid to make room for its growing ...

 

But my common sense continues to lag behind modern technology.

 

A friend tells me the tale of a scenic train ride she took in Sri Lanka and I find myself thinking of how much more scenic walking that route would have been.

 

An intercity train, the Udarata Menike, runs through the scenic Sri Lankan hill country

 

We sacrifice our freedom and wonder in the name of speed and convenience.

Love letters lie unwritten in a world where emojis excite.

We endure cramped conditions and frightening speeds and call ourselves civilized.

Our bodies rush through life leaving our souls behind.

And thus life can teach us nothing, for in our haste to reach our destination we have forgotten that there are lessons of experience that only journeys reveal.

 

Life is a journey, not a destination." quote | Life is a journey ...

 

As Edward Abbey so aptly puts it:

The longest journey begins with a single step, not with the turn of an ignition key.

That’s the best thing about walking, the journey itself.

It doesn’t much matter if you get where you’re going or not.

You’ll get there anyway.

 

Edward Abbey.jpg

Above: Edward Abbey (1927 – 1989)

 

During my “walking days” when I would try and explain to occasional journalists why I was walking, they all asked about goals and when I expected to reach that distant destination.

 

 

 

Was I someone kind of Terry Fox, seeking to raise money and awareness of some noteworthy cause?

I am not worthy to even tie Terry’s shoes.

 

A young man with short, curly hair and an artificial right leg runs down a street. He wears shorts and a T-shirt that reads "Marathon of Hope"

Above: Terry Fox (1958 – 1981)

 

Was I trying to set some sort of a record?

 

Guinness World Records logo.svg

 

Why?

Did I have to prove myself to others, as if the journey had to meet others’ standards?

 

ISO Logo (Red square).svg

 

What did it matter if I never set foot on Middle Island?

I experienced Pelee Island without needing to seek permission from a private landowner to set foot on his Island, a spot on the map significant only for being arbitrarily the southernmost point of Canada.

 

 

I walked to discover the country.

I walked to discover myself.

I may not have reached where I was aiming for, but I experienced where I was.

And I was always somewhere.

 

A projection of North America with Canada highlighted in green

 

As William Hazlitt writes:

The soul of a journey is liberty, perfect liberty, to think, to feel, to do just as one pleases.

We go on a journey chiefly to be free of all impediments and of all inconveniences.

To leave ourselves behind, much more to get rid of others.

 

A self-portrait from about 1802

Above: Self-portrait of William Hazlitt (1778 – 1830)

 

I interpret Hazlitt’s “ourselves” as the selves others suggest we assume for their comfort, for their ease in assigning you to a pigeonhole they can comprehend.

 

 

But who are we?

By living our lives to others’ expectations….

 

Are not our lives improving?

 

How can we measure improvement if we do not even know who we are?

How can we know life if we haven’t lived?

 

Walking takes longer than any other form of locomotion except crawling.

And, truth be told, the more I age, the longer the journey takes to accomplish.

But because walking is slow, thus it stretches time, it gives a man peace to think and thus it prolongs life.

 

 

Life is too short to waste on speed.

We are in such a hurry to leave here to get there, that here and there could be anywhere.

And where we are is in transit, neither here nor there, we are nowhere.

 

Talking Heads - Road to Nowhere.jpg

 

Walking makes the world bigger and thus more interesting.

You have time to notice the miracle of life, the wonder of existence, the magic of place.

 

 

It is May when I do the walk which I now describe and spring has sprung.

 

 

The plan is to take a wonderous spring tour through the lush green Tobel Forest and over the lavish bloom of the Untersee fruit slopes in search of the intensity of experience.

 

 

 

And the pilgrimage chapel of Sieben Schmerzen Mariä (Seven Sorrows Maria) is particularly popular as a hiking destination, as the nearby Klingenzellerhof Restaurant by the Mammerner Hochwacht (high watch) is a grand viewpoint above the bay.

 

 

I make a late start as I am distracted by writing and reading at home, followed by a stop in Romanshorn to pick up my daily newspapers and another stop in Stein am Rhein to visit a much-beloved, once-a-year-visited bookshop that seems to be the only place I can pick up Swiss author Peter Stamm’s works translated into English.

I arrive, three trains later, at a Station too familiar, Mammern.

 

White two story building with arched roof and a wooden shelter

 

Two years ago I had an accident.

I fell down and shattered my left wrist and right elbow.

I spent two weeks in hospital in the City of St. Gallen where the accident had occurred.

But having both arms in slings meant I was fairly helpless fending for myself alone in our apartment while my wife, a doctor, was at work.

It was arranged that I would spend a month at the Mammern Clinic until I recovered sufficiently to be more independent at home.

 

 

 

Mammern, Switzerland, Friday 18 May 2018

Facebook entry:

Greetings from Mammern…

A castle, a resort and hospital directly by the Rhine River.

It serves the wealthy and average Thurgau patients….

And never the twain shall meet.

The place has everything a luxury hotel has, but the residents are too ill, too injured or too ancient to enjoy it.

There is even a deer park here!

It’s a pleasurable transition between hospital and home.

Here for next two to three weeks.

 

 

 

Mammern, Switzerland, Thursday 24 May 2018

Facebook entry:

Despite my accident I have already broken three records here at the Schloss Mammern Klinik:
1. I am the Klinik’s first Canadian patient.
2. I am the youngest patient here.
3. I am the first patient here to have broken both arms.
Hurrah?
Started Ergotherapy and Physiotherapy on Tuesday and I am already starting to see progress.
Wife bought hammock for our balcony, but I will have to lose 20 kilos to use it.
Damn clever girl knows how to manipulate this man!
Change is hard for a guy.
Sigh.

 

 

 

Visitors are given several opportunities on the hike from Mammern to Eschenz to find out what powerful effects pictures have on cultural sites and how controversial they are when the cult is changed.

 

 

 

Surrounded by orchards, the small spa and recreation resort of Mammern lies on a headland stretching into the Untersee.

Mammern was first mentioned in 909 as “Manburon” when it was acquired by St. Gallen Abbey, but Mammern excavation finds suggest that settlement was already here in the Neolithic Age, then by the Celts.

In 2009, the almost 600 citizens of Mammern celebrated the village’s 1,000th anniversary.

 

Gasthaus zum Adler und katholische Kirche

 

Sometime before 1275, St. Gallen Abbey built a church here.

Next to the church there are beautifully restored houses in the middle of this wee village.

 

 

Mammern over the centuries changed hands more than a high stakes poker game.

In 1319, the Abbey pawned the village to the Lords of Kastell (nearby Tägerwilen) as a fief.

The imposing castle complex on the Seerücken that resulted still seems to rule over the village today.

 

Klinikansicht - SW!SS REHA - die Vereinigung der führender ...

 

In 1522, Hans Leonhard von Rorschach bought Mammern.

It was sold several times in the following century, until 1621 when Johann Friedrich Thumb passed the land onto the Rall brothers who rebuilt the Castle.

In 1667, Mammern was acquired by Wolf Rudolf Reding, who in turn sold it in 1687 to Rheinau Abbey.

Rheinau held Mammern until 1798.

Until 1992, Mammern was part of the municipality of nearby Steckborn.

Since then, Mammern has been its own municipality.

 

Wappen von Mammern

 

The economy of Mammern has been characterized by forestry, livestock and dairy farming and viticulture.

Other occupations have included fishing, taverns, mills, bricks and lime.

From 1878 until 1940 there was a furniture factory.

In 1865, a hydropathic (water cure) clinic was opened in the Castle.

In 1889, the Castle was acquired by Oscar Ullmann, who turned it into a clinic specializing (still) in the rehabilitation of patients with cardiovascular and metabolic conditions.

In 1910, a match factory opened in the Village, but I don’t know if it is still there.

Perhaps it burnt down?

 

 

My time in Mammern was not totally unpleasant, but Mammern represented a desire to recover from my wounds and return home as soon as it was permitted.

It was suggested that I remain on clinic grounds for my own benefit, for had I further injured myself off castle property my health insurance would not cover the expenses, but my mind was restless in rehabiliation so I fled the grounds when I could.

 

 

 

I read of the history of Mammern in the Clinic’s library, but the only character that caught my attention was that of August Bach (1869 – 1950).

Bach, the son of a farmer, was an educator who taught in primary and secondary schools in Kreuzlingen, Wagenhausen, Stein am Rhein and Müllheim.

From 1906, Bach, as a school inspector for the canton of Thurgau, tried to transfer the teaching methods that he had tested where he had taught to both private and state schools.

Bach developed teaching and visualization tools as well as experimental methods for independent learning, which were distributed in teacher training courses across the country.

Sometime after 1906, Bach acquired Kefikon Castle, on the border where Thurgau Canton meets Canton Zürich, where he and his Mrs., Rosalia, built a country educational home, and where they are both buried.

What Bach’s methods were, the Clinic’s library would not reveal.

 

Do You Know the Difference Between School and Education? —

 

So, I turned my attention elsewhere.

 

Stop worshipping all the Saints, of whom there is no word in the Bible.“, is what those who followed the teachings of the reformers Martin Luther (1483 – 1546) and Huldrych Zwingli (1484 – 1531) wanted.

And so they stormed the churches, tore images from the walls and figures of the Saints from the altars.

 

 

In Mammern, Reformers burned almost everything they had taken from St. Blaise’s Church on the street afterwards.

Only the wooden statue of Blaise dared not burn.

So the Protestants threw the figure of Blaise into the Lake.

 

Kirche Mammern ( Gotteshaus katholisch - Baujahr 1913 - Ge… | Flickr

 

Who would have imagined that those who continued to adhere to the Catholic fiath would fish the figure out of the water and later tell the story that Blaise swam across the Lake to the other bank of the Katterhorn?

That over there, the Catholic Lord of St. Blaise would even build a Chapel so that he could be worshipped in Katterhorn?

 

 

 

Just as Blaise reappeared in the dispute over the Reformation and Counter Reformation – surounded by miraculous legends – so new colourful images were needed to impress and motivate people to return to the traditional Catholic faith.

 

 

In order to achieve this, Abbot Bernhard II of Rheinau, ordered that a new Chapel be built at Mammern Castle and be equipped with three altars as huge and practical as those found in the Rheinau Monastery Church.

 

 

The dilemma was:

How should all of this fit into such a small Chapel that resulted?

I asked myself this as I approached, yet again, the Castle Chapel.

 

 

Step inside!

You will be amazed!

Everything is painted!

 

 

Of course, a master builder was involved.

None other than Johann Michael Beer von Bildstein (1696 – 1780), the famous Bregenzwälder Baroque master, who later also produced the striking double tower facade of the St. Gallen Monastery Church.

 

Convent of St Gall.jpg

 

In this simple church hall, expanded by two small cross arms, the three altars find little space, but despite this there is no feeling of crampedness within, for Franz Ludwig Herrmann picked up his brush, conjured escapes for the eyes and populated every tiny permissable crevice with countless figures.

 

 

Allow your eyes to explore, to indulge themselves, from shape to shape, to finally rest their focus on Maria, who hovers on the ceiling of the cross dome above everyone.

 

To those who hike around the Bodensee, the works of Herrmann are no stranger to our senses.

We encounter his work in the Franciscan Church in Überlingen, the parish church of Bernhardzell and the Church of St. Ulrich and St. Afra in Kreuzlingen.

 

 

I often visited the tiny baroque palace Chapel during my convalescence – a separate building behind the Castle, enlarged in 1749 and provided with a Marian picture program to put a finishing touch behind reforming efforts in Mammern – to hear concerts twice a week, but beyond that there seemed little to excite my attention in Mammern.

 

 

 

During this recovery exile, I rode the train to Steckborn, Berlingen and Stein am Rhein, I took the ferry across to Gaienhofen, Germany, all in the name of culture to see what these towns offered, but I was always consequent to never miss a therapy session or fail to return back before curfew.

The Clinic was a comfortable gilded cage, but a cage nonetheless.

I took a risk that I could injure myself exploring the local region, but I minimized the risks as much as I could.

For the cardio patients, the Clinic organized hikes up to the Sieben Schmerzen Mariä Church and, above the town, to the ruins of the Neuburg, once the largest castle on the Untersee, but I was not permitted to join them.

 

 

This day (19 May), the second anniversary of the day I entered Schloss Klinik Mammern to begin my rehab, I thought I would do a hike previously denied me.

 

 

 

From Mammern Station, I walk across the tracks and follow signs for “Amenhusen“.

Amenhusen Swiss Family Garden Flags A9 |Home Decor| 1sttheworld ...

(I am not certain whether Amenhusen refers to houses where “Amen” is said, for Swiss German is not as easy for me to decipher as High German, which is the German I learned.

For Swiss German can be deceiving.

Take, as an example, the name of the town from whence many of my blogs are written: Landschlacht.

In High German, “Landschlacht” would translate to “battlefield“, but in the local dialect, “Landschlacht” means “sheltering land“.)

 

 

At the end of the village of Mammern (now with a population of 654), I leave the road to follow a forest path to my right, a trail that caresses the banks of the Eggmülibach (Mill Slope Creek).

I begin to ascend from Mammern’s 410 metres above sea level towards Hochwacht at 590 metres.

The path traverses a shaded ravine.

From the Eggmüli estate, the trail is transformed from a traffic-free road, to an agricultural passage to the thinnest of paths leading to the Hochwacht (high watch) viewpoint.

Belonging to nearby Hohenklingen Castle, the High Watch served as both boundary post and fire guard.

Down below, the deep blue Untersee defines the foot of Schiener Mountain.

 

 

 

An old observation bunker (Artillery Observation Bunker A5600) remains semi-hidden in a small group of birch trees.

A5600 is part of the Border Line defences of Switzerland constructed in the late 1930s in response to increasing tensions between Switzerland and its Axis neighbours Germany and Italy.

 

Art Stel Rothenthurm - festung-oberland.ch

 

The Border Line was planned to slow or hold an invading force at the border.

It consisted of a series of bunkers spaced at short intervals along the Austrian, French and German borders.

They were spaced between 500 metres (1,600 ft) and 750 metres (2,460 ft) along the northern border of Switzerland.

A number were integrated into bridge crossings of the Rhine and other rivers.

 

 

The Alps themselves guarded the Italian frontier.

The bunkers were reinforced by larger multi-blockhouse forts at key points.

Most of the positions were within two or three kilometres of the borders.

 

 

The large forts were armed with 75mm artillery and anti-tank weapons, and were usually built into the forward slope of a hill.

The blockhouses were connected and supported by an underground gallery system giving access and shelter to underground barracks, ammunition magazines, comman posts and utility services.

 

 

Work on the Border Line began in 1937 and was completed by 1940.

However, with the German invasion of France in 1940, it became clear to the Swiss Armed Forces that the Border Line could not deter nor withstand a direct German attack.

Swiss priorities shifted to a policy of quick withdrawl to the National Redoubt in the Alps, there to maintain a government-in-hiding and to control the strategic crossings of the Alps for an extended time.

 

 

(The National Redoubt encompassed a widely distributed set of fortifications on a general east-west line through the Alps, centering on three major fortress complexes: Fortresses St. Maurice, St. Gotthard and Sargans.

These fortresses primarily defended the alpine crossings between Germany and Italy and were outside the industrialized and populated regions of Switzerland.

These regions were defended by the Border Line and the Army Position somewhat farther back.

 

 

While not intended as an impassable barrier, these lines contained significant fortifications, but the National Redoubt was planned as a nearly impregnable complex of fortifications that would deny an aggressor passage over or through the Alps by controlling the major mountain passes and railway tunnels running north-to-south through the region.

This strategy was intended to deter an invasion altogether by denying Switzerland’s crucial transportation infrastructure to an aggressor.

The National Redoubt has been the subject of debate in Swiss society, with many fortifications decommissioned by the early 21st century.)

 

 

While Germany’s Operation Tannenbaum set forth a plan to invade Switzerland, the Operation was never carried out.

 

Durchmarschpläne IMG 1701.JPG

 

So the Swiss war plan, devised by General Henri Guisan (1874 – 1960), envisioning the use of the Border Line as a delaying position, backed by a further hold line, the Army Position, allowing the bulk of Swiss forces time to retreat to the Redoubt, was never utilized.

 

Guisan Visp 1942 D2.8916.jpg

 

Once up, then down, the path descends towards Klingenzell, the distant town of Stein am Rhein beckons in the distance on a clear day.

On this ridge in Canton Thurgau, the path becomes a road and all of a sudden the Sieben Schmerzen Mariä is before me.

From up here there is a magnificent view of the Untersee, the water of which flows into the Rhine at Stein.

 

 

The priory was founded in the Middle Ages by the Lords of Hohenklingen (whose headquarters was Hohenklingen Castle above Stein am Rhein).

Klingenzell appears for the first time in written form in 1333, in a deed issued by two archbishops and 14 bishops from Avignon, then the seat of the Papacy.

 

Wallfahrtskapelle Klingenzell | Erlebnisregion Ostschweiz & Bodensee

 

Legend has it that Lord Walter von Klingen was attacked by a wounded wild boar while hunting in these woods above Mammern.

 

20160208054949!Wildschein, Nähe Pulverstampftor (cropped).jpg

 

In great pain and distress, Walter cried out: “Maria, help!

And he vowed to build a Chapel in gratitude for his salvation by the Blessed Mother.

This pilgrimage church was consecrated to the Mother of Sorrows Mary in 1705.

 

 

 

Her seven sorrows, for those not of the Catholic persuasion, are:

  • The prophecy of Simeon in the Temple

 

 

  • The flight to Egypt

 

 

  • The loss of the Child Jesus in the Temple of Jerusalem

 

 

 

 

  • Meeting her son Jesus on the Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem

 

 

  • The Crucifixion

 

Cristo crucificado.jpg

 

  • The piercing of Jesus with a spear and the lowering of his body from the cross

 

 

  • The burial of Jesus by Joseph of Aramathea

 

 

Her feast is celebrated on the Friday after the 5th Sunday of Lent.

 

Salamanca - Iglesia de la Vera Cruz 12.jpg

 

Walter, who built and equipped the Chapel handed it over to the St. Georgen Monastery in Stein am Rhein in 1336, assured that his soul had been saved by this foundation.

 

 

Isn’t it fortunate that believers today can conceive of a gracious God and that they can hike to this beautiful place for their edification?

 

In the small Chapel, rebuilt in 1705, there is a simple Gothic carving from the early 14th century.

It is a depiction of Mary holding her dead son on her lap.

This Gothic carved figure, which has received numerous requests since its installation, can still be found on the right side altar of the Chapel.

Pilgrims have witnessed this scene for centuries and not only prayed to Mary for her divine intercession with her Son for their salvation, but as well they sought her wisdom for more worldly worries.

 

Klingenzell Wallfahrtskirche Sieben Schmerzen Mariä (Innenansicht ...

 

Mourning Mary and her fallen son are flanked by two baroque figures.

 

On the right we find a local saint, Gebhard, the founder of the Petershausen Abbey, who is holding a model of this in his hand.

 

 

 

According to the legend, Gebhard (949 – 995) brought a precious relic to Konstanz:

 

 

The head of Pope Gregory the Great (540 – 604), who we find depicted on the left of the image of grace, recognizable by his papal headgear.

 

 

On the left side of the Chapel, the altar there also tells tales of the local history.

The Lady Kunigunde (980 – 1033), with a church in her hand, is identified as the founder, along with her husband Emperor Heinrich II (973 – 1024), of the St. Georgen Monastery in Stein am Rhein.

 

 

A look up at the altar’s coat of arms shows us the two owners of the Chapel: the St. Georgen Monastery symbolized by the dragon conqueror St. George and the Petershausen Monastery (from 1581 to 1597) symbolized by two fish.

 

Klingenzell, der Innenraum der Wallfahrtskirche "Sieben Schmerzen ...

 

The two figures on the main altar are worshipped far beyond the Lake Constance Region: Saint Scholastica (480 – 543) and her twin brother Saint Benedict (480 – 547).

 

 

Benedict is the more appreciated of the two and is remembered by many monks for his instructions on monastic life.

But lay people (those who have not given their lives in service to the Church) who have come to Klingenzell expect something completely different from Benedict.

They hope for the magic power of his words.

 

Benedict of Nursia.jpg

 

Would you like to learn them too?

To do this, you must leave the Chapel and look up at the sundial painted on the gable of the south facing wall.

Benedict’s Cross forms part of this sundial.

Vertically across the Cross is written the letters “CSSML”, which are the first letters of each word of the Latin sentence:

Crux sancta sit mihi vana” – “The Cross is my light.

Horizontally is written “NDSMP“:

Non draco sit mihi dux” – “You, devil, don’t seduce me.

Around the circle one reads “VRSN / SMV / SMQ / LIVB“.

Vade retro Satana. Non / suadeas mihi vana / Sunt mala quae / libas. Ipse venena bibas” – “Get behind me, Satan.  I will not follow your council. You are the worst. You are poison to me.

 

 

Below the Klingenzell Seven Sorrows Mariä Chapel, a 12-station Way of the Cross was built, which leads past a grotto descending down to Mammern.

 

Wallfahrtskapelle Klingenzell | Gaienhofen

 

At the Lourdes Grotto, built from stones of the Chapel, is seen the figure of Bernadette, who was said to have witnessed several apparitions of Mary in Lourdes, is kneeling in front of a portrait of Our Lady.

A candle lights up the figure.

Flowers adorn the scene.

 

Untersee-Höhenweg über Mammern • Wanderung » outdooractive.com

 

I return to the chapel and walk 800 metres west to Freudenfels Castle on a rock spur above the Untersee.

Freudenfels Castle belongs to the municipality of Eschenz and it was probably built in the 12th century by the Lords of Eschenz as a defensive and residential tower.

With the Hohenklingen and Oberstaad Castles, Freudenfels served as part of a weir (a series of water dams) system used to secure the traffic junction near Stein am Rhein.

At the same time, the court of Freudenfels, also administered from here, acted as a system of law and order in the region.

After numerous changes of ownership, the castle and titles of Freudenfels came into the possession of the monastery in Einsiedeln in 1623.

Since 1996, Freudenfels Castle has been leased to the Princely House of Liechtenstein, who through their Liechtenstein Academy Foundation, uses the Castle as an events location for parties and seminars.

 

 

 

A forest path takes me to a dirt road which leads me completely downhill to the Untersee village of Eschenz.

 

Eschenz mit Werd.JPG

 

Werd Island and the Seeäcker (lake fields) northeast of Eschenz have shown extensive finds, including a gold cup (2000 BC) and a Gallo-Roman wooden figure (AD 60).

 

Goldbecher

 

Numerous horse bridle components suggest that Werd Island was a shipment transferral port.

In the early 1st century, Romans built a village (Tasgetium) here with a wooden bridge over to Werd Island and across the Lake.

 

 

In the 4th century, a fort was built in “Vor der Brugg” (today’s Stein am Rhein) as a frontier fort.

 

Above: Stein am Rhein and Hohenklingen Castle

 

The inhabitants lived from agriculture, livestock and fishing.

When the Romans left after AD 400, the Alemanni grabbed the land.

Little is known about the time up to the 10th century, except that Ottmar (689 – 759), the first abbot of the Benedictine Abbey of St. Gallen, spent the last months of his exile on Werd Island and died there in AD 759.

 

Above: St. Otmar (with abbot staff and wine barrel) on the guild flag of the Modling winegrowers (1755)

 

At that time, a predecessor of the Romanesque Chapel (that is still extant on the Island) must have existed.

As a result, Werd Island became a place of pilgrimage.

 

 

In AD 799, Eschenz was first mentioned as “Exsientia“.

 

In AD 958, King Otto I (912 – 973) gave the very young Benedictine monastery of Einsiedeln the church on Werd Island.

 

 

The parish of Eschenz was incorporated in 1362 under Einsiedeln Monastery.

 

 

During the Reformation (1525–1529) the municipality converted to the new faith.

In the course of the 1560s the Counter-Reformation entered the village and converted the villagers back to the Roman Catholic faith.

A Protestant minority population remained and they became part of the parish of Burg.

The cemetery was used equally by both faiths until 1690.

 

Above: Mariä Himmelfahrt (ascension to Heaven) Church, Eschenz

 

In 1851 the village of Hüttwilen separated from Eschenz to form an independent municipality was located beyond the lake crest.

In 1835, a paper mill opened in Eschenz.

Around the end of the 19th century, animal husbandry and agriculture replaced viticulture and fishing as the major industries.

With the exception of Unipektin AG (80 jobs), which operates in the food industry, there is no industry in Eschenz.

 

About UNIPEKTIN Ingredients AG.

 

The village of Eschenz itself (population: 1,743) is unremarkable.

Nearby Werd Island, Freudenfels Castle and the pilgrimage chapel of St. Otmar on the Island are worth visiting, which I have done in the past both alone and accompanied by my wife.

 

Above: Gasthof Zum Raben (Guesthouse of the Grapes), Eschenz

 

Eschenz was the birthplace of Paul Joseph von Beroldingen (1754 – 1831) as well as (still-kicking) painters Hans Niederhauser and Richard Tisserand.

From what little I’ve read and the least I’ve understood, I believe Beroldingen was a spy….

 

 

After completing his law studies at the University of Göttingen (Germany), Beroldingen entered the employ of the Principality of Ellwangen.

 

 

When Ellwangen was incorporated into the state of Württemberg, Beroldingen joined the civil service.

In 1806, he became the royal Württemberg secret adviser and envoy to the Viennese court.

In 1817, Beroldingen became the first Chamberlain and Chief Court Master of Queen Catherine of Württemberg (Katharina Pawlowna) (1788 – 1819) and later also Chief Court Master of Queen Pauline of Württemberg (1800 – 1873).

 

Above: Katharina Pawlowna

 

Above: Pauline von Württemberg

 

From 1815 to 1819, Beroldingen was a member of the State Assmbly of the Kingdom of Württemberg.

After the death of childless Baron Franz Konrad von Ratzenried in 1813, the Baron’s nephew Beroldingen inherited the Ratzenried Castle in Argenbühl near Ravensburg.

However, he rarely lived at the Castle due to the demand of his duties….

 

File:Schloss Ratzenried GO-1.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

Above: Ratzenreid Castle, Ravensburg

 

 

Near the western side of the bay, I stroll into the village of Eschenz via the railroad.

I cross the main street into Brüelweg (Brüel Way), a business street signposted to Mammern and reach the Waldbüel district.

After crossing the main street and the railway again, the Trail goes slightly uphill between the lower class neighbourhoods.

A dreamy stroll and soon I am in the hamlet of Halden and within 25 minutes I am back at Mammern Station.

 

 

 

The Lake Constance area has a long history and a special charisma.

A walk along the Lake opens up legendary places, characterized by their location and historical significance, which cannot be experienced if rushed past or sped by.

A walk along the Lake leads to holy places, to stilt houses, through gorges and glaciers, to magical springs, mysterious pagan caves and places for burnt offerings.

The baroque churches that surround Lake Constance like a string of pearls invite you to contemplate and bring you closer to those who shaped the history of the Bodensee.

Here the walker finds medicinal herb gardens and heavenly apples and divine wine to taste.

 

 

Until the 19th century, Lake Constance was a natural lake.

Since then, nature has been heavily influenced by clearing and the cultivation of much of the land around its shores.

However, some near-natural areas have been largely conserved, especially in the nature reserves, or were re-naturalised.

As a result, the Lake Constance region has some unusual ecological features.

 

 

These include the large forested area on the Bodanrück, the occurrence of marsh gentian and orchids in the Wollmatinger Ried, and the Siberian iris (Iris sibirica) in the Eriskircher Ried, which was therefore given its own name.

 

Sibirische Schwertlilie, Iris sibirica 06.JPG

 

One unique species among the local flora is the Lake Constance forget-me-not (Myosotis rehsteineri), whose habitat is restricted to undisturbed beaches of lime trees.

 

Lake constance forget me not Stock Photos and Images | agefotostock

 

Lake Constance is also the home of numerous bird species, many of which nest in its nature reserves, such as the Wollmatinger Ried or the Mettnau peninsula.

412 species have so far been recorded.

 

 

The ten most common breeding bird species at Lake Constance according to a 2000–2003 survey in descending order are the:

  • blackbird

Common Blackbird.jpg

 

  • chaffinch

Chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs).jpg

 

  • house sparrow

Passer domesticus male (15).jpg

 

  • great tit

The bird has a black head with a prominent white cheek, a greenish back, a blue wing with a prominent white bar, and a yellowish belly.

 

  • blackcap

A grey bird with a black cap and an open bill

 

  • starling

Lamprotornis hildebrandti -Tanzania-8-2c.jpg

 

  • robin

Erithacus rubecula with cocked head.jpg

 

  • chiffchaff

Chiffchaff - Phylloscopus collybita.jpg

 

  • greenfinch

European Greenfinch male female.jpg

 

  • blue tit.

Eurasian blue tit Lancashire.jpg

 

In spring, the Lake Constance is an important breeding ground, especially for the coot and great crested grebe.

 

Eurasian Coot - Penrith.jpg

 

Great Crested Grebe 1 - Penrith.jpg

 

Typical waterfowl include the:

  • shoveler

Northern shoveler Steve Sinclair outreach use only (19838806616).jpg

 

  • goldeneye

Common Goldeneye (Bucephala clangula).jpg

 

  • goosander

Mergus merganser -Sandwell -England -male-8.jpg

 

  • pochard

Aythya ferina Sandwell 2.jpg

 

  • grey heron

Graureiher Grey Heron.jpg

 

  • pintail

Northern Pintails (Male & Female) I IMG 0911.jpg

 

  • tufted duck

Tufted-Duck-male-female.jpg

 

  • mallard

Anas platyrhynchos male female quadrat.jpg

 

In December 2014, 1,389 cormorant were counted.

 

Microcarbo melanoleucos Austins Ferry 3.jpg

 

The International Lake Constance Fishery Association (IBF) estimates the food requirements of the cormorants on Lake Constance at 150 tonnes of fish annually.

Lake Constance is an important overwintering area for around 250,000 birds annually.

Bird species such as the dunlin, the curlew and the lapwing overwinter at Lake Constance.

 

Dunlin (Calidris alpina) juvenile.jpg

 

Eurasian Curlew.jpg

 

Northern-Lapwing-Vanellus-vanellus.jpg

 

In the middle of December 2014 there were 56,798 heron, 51,713 coot and 43,938 pochard.

In November/December are about 10,000 to 15,000 red-crested pochard and 10,000 great crested grebe on Lake Constance.

 

Netta rufina (Red-crested Pochard) Male, London Wetland Centre - Diliff.jpg

 

During migration in late autumn there are also numerous loon on the lake (black-throated and red-throated loon as well as a few great northern divers).

 

PacificLoon24.jpg

 

Lake Constance is also very important as a staging post during the bird migration.

Bird migration is often inconspicuous and most noticeable when there are special weather conditions that make day migration obvious.

Only where there is a prolonged spell of widespread low-pressure is it common to observe the congestion of large groups of migratory birds.

 

This can often be observed in autumn on the Eriskircher Ried on the northern shore of Lake Constance.

This is where broad front migration converges on the lake and birds then try to move along the shore towards the northwest.

The importance of Lake Constance as an important area for resting and overwintering is underlined by the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology’s Radolfzell Bird Observatory (Vogelwarte Radolfzell), which is the bird ringing centre for the German states of Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg, Berlin, Rhineland-Palatinate and the Saarland as well as for Austria, and which researches bird migration.

 

 

Around 45 species of fish live in Lake Constance.

The annual haul from fishing is 1.5 million kg.

Unusual species occurring here considering the location of the lake are the whitefish (Coregonus spec.) and the Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus).

 

Lake whitefish1.jpg

 

Salvelinusalpinus.jpg

 

Fish that are important for the fishing industry are:

  • Bodenseefelchen (Coregonus wartmanni)(Lake whitefish)
  • Sandfelchen (Coregonus arenicolus)(Sand whitefish)
  • Gangfisch (Coregonus macrophthalmus)

 

  • Lake Constance whitefish (Coregonus gutturosus)(extinct)

Kilch.jpg

 

  • Grayling (Thymallus thymallus)

Thymallus thymallus2.jpg

 

  • Perch (Perca fluviatilis)

Perca fluviatilis2.jpg

 

  • Bream (Abramis brama)

Carp bream1.jpg

 

  • Northern pike (Esox lucius)

Esox lucius1.jpg

 

  • Zander (Sander lucioperca)(pike perch)

Sander lucioperca 1.jpg

 

  • Burbot (Lota lota)

Trüsche Walchensee.jpg

 

  • Eel (Anguilla Anguilla)

Anguilla anguilla.jpg

 

  • Bullhead (Cottus gobio)

Cottus Pesh.JPG

 

  • Tench (Tinca tinca)

Tinca tinca Prague Vltava 2.jpg

 

  • Wels catfish (Silurus glanis)

Silurus glanis 02.jpg

 

  • Lake trout (Salmo trutta lacustris).

Bachforelle Zeichnung.jpg

 

The Bodenseefelchen (Coregonus wartmanni), which was named after Lake Constance due to the great numbers found there, is often prepared whole or as a fillet, in the style of the miller’s wife (nach Müllerin Art), in local fish restaurants in a similar way to other trout.

It is also often served smoked.

 

The endemic species, formerly found in Lake Constance, the Bodensee Kilch (Coregonus gutturosus) and deepwater char (Salvelinus profundus) are now assumed to be extinct.

 

Unsere Süßwasserfische (Tafel 24) (6102600905).jpg

 

 

After a collision with the Stadt Zürich in 1864 the wreck of the Jura has lain on the lake bed at a depth of 45 metres off the Swiss shore near Bottinghofen.

 

Stadt Zürich (1855).jpg

Above: The Stadt Zürich

 

Above: Model of the Jura, Seemuseum (Lake Museum), Kreuzlingen

 

In the early 20th century four ships were sunk in the Obersee after being taken out of service: in 1931 the Baden, formerly the Kaiser Wilhelm, in 1932 the Helvetia, in 1933 the Säntis and in 1934 the Stadt Radolfzell.

The hull of the burnt-out Friedrichshafen was scuttled in 1944 off the mouth of the Argen in 100 to 150 metres of water.

 

The tourism and leisure industry is important for this region.

Overnight stays reached 17,56m visitors in 2012 with an turnover of about 1.9bn Euros.

The same amount comes from the 70 million daily visitors that visit Lake Constance each year.

This region is known for sightseeing, water-sports, winter-sports like skiing, summer-sports like swimming, sailing and other recreational activiities.

It is also one of the few places where modern Zeppelin airships operate and 12–14 people can take a trip above the lake around various points of interests.

In cooperation with tourism service providers, tourism organizations and public institutions in Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Liechtenstein, the International Bodensee Tourismus GmbH (IBT GmbH) is responsible for the tourism marketing of the Lake Constance region.

 

 

The Lake and the region around it have a substantial touristic infrastructure as well as many attractions and points of interests.

Important are especially cities like:

  • Konstanz

 

  • Überlingen

 

  • Meersburg

 

  • Friedrichshafen

Friedrichshafen in August 2009

 

  • Lindau

 

  • Bregenz

…..as they are the big hubs for boating tourism.

 

The main tourism attractions are places like:

  • Rhine Falls, one of the three biggest waterfalls in Europe

 

  • Mainau Island

Mainau Italienische Wassertreppe.jpg

 

  • Reichenau Island (UNESCO world heritage)

 

  • the pilgrimage church at Birnau

 

  • castles and palaces like:
    • Salem Abbey

 

    • Meersburg Castle

 

    • the Pfahlbaumuseum (stilt house museum) Unteruhldingen (UNESCO)

 

    • the Church of St. George, Oberzell, Reichenau

 

The Alps reach almost to the east of the Lake, producing great scenic beauty.

 

Mont Blanc oct 2004.JPG

 

The Pfänderbahn (a cable car) goes from top of the mountain right down to the lake in Bregenz.

 

 

Lake Constance is the location for the annual Bregenzer Festspiele, a well-known arts festival that, among other venues, takes place on a floating stage in Bregenz.

The operas, plays and concerts performed are usually popular works, e.g. The Magic Flute by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 – 1791) or Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi (1813 – 1901).

 

 

Since 2001, ART BODENSEE has taken place in Dornbirn.

It is an annual meeting point for the exchange between collectors, artists and art appreciators.

 

 

Biking around the lake is also possible on the 261 km (162 mi) long trail called “Bodensee-Radweg“.

It brings its visitors to the most interesting sites and goes around the whole lake.

Nevertheless, various shortcuts via ferries allow shorter routes and the trail is suitable for all levels.

Note: There is also a trail that goes by the name “Bodensee-Rundweg“.

This path is intended for pedestrians so biking is sometimes not suitable or allowed.

 

 

Swimming in the Lake is usually possible from mid-June to mid-September.

Depending on the weather, the water temperatures reach 19 to 25 °C (66.2 to 77.0 °F).

Within one day, differences of up to 3 °C (5.4 °F) are possible with appropriate sunlight, so that the Lake invites you to swim, especially on warm summer evenings.

 

 

Diving in Lake Constance is considered attractive and challenging.

Most of the diving areas are located in the northern part of the lake (Überlingen, Ludwigshafen, Marienschlucht and others), a few also in the south.

The areas should be dived exclusively by experienced divers under the guidance of one of the local diving schools or a seasoned diver.

Diving at some spots like the impressive devils table (“Teufelstisch“) is a rock needle in the Lake in front of the Marienschlucht and is only allowed with the approval of the district office in Konstanz.

The aforementioned famous freshwater wreck in Europe of the paddle steamer Jura, which lies in front of Bottighofen at a depth of 39 metres (128 feet) is popular with divers.

The canton of Thurgau, the office for archeology in Frauenfeld, has placed the Jura under protection as an underwater industrial monument.

For all divers, the water in Lake Constance—even in summer—is already below 10 °C (50 °F) from a depth of 10 metres (32.8 ft) which requires suitable cold-water regulators that do not freeze at such temperatures.

 

Above: Diving spot Teufelstisch

 

The importance of pleasure boating is enormous.

At the beginning of 2011, 57,875 amusement vehicles were registered for Lake Constance.

The legal basis for all shipping on the lake is the ordinance on shipping on Lake Constance, or “Bodensee-Schifffahrtsordnung“.

It is monitored on Lake Constance and on the Upper Rhine by the German, Swiss and Austrian Lake Police/ “Seepolizei“.

All boats must be registered and boat drivers must hold a “Bodenseeschifferpatent” (Authorization to drive a patented vehicle on Lake Constance).

It is awarded in Germany by the shipping offices of the district of Konstanz, the Lake Constance district and the district of Lindau, in Switzerland by the cantonal authorities and in Austria by the District Commission Bregenz.

For pleasure boaters short-term guest licenses are possible (for the categories A for motorboats over 4.4 kW and D for sailboats over 12 m2 sail area).

Boating events

  • Since 1979, every year during the assumption of Mary, Europe’s largest ship procession is held on Lake Constance.
  • Every year (early summer) the spectacular all-around (!Rund-um”) Regatta from Lindau to Lindau via Meersburg, Überlingen, Romanshorn is organized.
  • Since 2009, the annual water sports and sailing festival “International Lake Constance week”, a joint sports event takes place in Konstanz.
  • In Friedrichshafen, one of the most important water sports fairs in Europe, the Interboot, takes place annually.

 

 

But most of all, in my humble opinion, hiking trails and pilgrim paths are the best way to experience the Region.

The 260-kilometer long Lake Constance circular route, signposted as “Bodensee Rundwanderweg“, leads around Lake Constance through the territories of Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

 

 

It is mainly intended for hiking.

The trail can be walked in smaller stages of various lengths and offers nice views of the lake, landscape and wildlife.

However, due to industrial settlements, buildings and nature reserves, not all the coastal zones are readily accessible.

Furthermore, in the estuary of the rivers, such the Leiblach, Bregenzer Ach, canalized Rhine and Old Rhine (Fußacher breakthrough), considerable distances have to be covered inland to the next bridge or river crossing point.

Due to busy riverside roads, the Bodensee-Rundweg sometimes runs as a trail above the lake with some lookout possibilities.

 

 

Lake Constance is also a hub for long-distance hikers and pilgrims.

It has been a crucial reference point of important pilgrimage routes since ancient times:

  • Via Beuronensis, a Way of St. James from the Neckar region over the Swabian Alb

 

 

  • the Upper Swabian pilgrimage route of St. James, which leads from Upper Swabia to the Lake and branches north of the Lake both in the direction of Nonnenhorn and in the direction of Meersburg

Oberschwäbischer Jakobswegstempel Ulm

 

  • the Bavarian-Swabian route of St. James, which leads down from the West Allgäu to the Lake

 

  • the Schwabenweg, which ensures the connection to Switzerland to the Lake near Konstanz

 

 

To capture the poetry and passion that a walk evokes in me, let me quote a passionate poet:

 

The morning’s fair; the lusty sun
With ruddy cheek begins to run;
And early birds, that wing the skies,
Sweetly sing to see him rise.
I am resolved, this charming day,
In the open field to stray,
And have no roof above my head,
But that whereon the gods do tread.
Before the yellow barn I see
A beautiful variety
Of strutting cocks, advancing stout,
And flirting empty chaff about:
Hens, ducks, and geese, and all their brood,
And turkeys gobbling for their food,
While rustics thrash the wealthy floor,
And tempt them all to crowd the door.
What a fair face does Nature show!
Augusta! wipe thy dusty brow;
A landscape wide salutes my sight
Of shady vales and mountains bright;
And azure heavens I behold,
And clouds of silver and of gold.
And now into the fields I go,
Where thousand flaming flowers glow,
And every neighb’ring hedge I greet,
With honeysuckle smelling sweet.
Now o’er the daisy-meads I stray,
And meet with, as I pace my way,
Sweetly shining on the eye,
A riv’let gliding smoothly by,
Which shows with what an easy tide
The moments of the happy glide:
Here, finding pleasure after pain,
Sleeping, I see a weary’d swain,
While his full scrip lies open by,
That does his healthy food supply.
Happy swain! sure happier far
Than lofty kings and princes are!
Enjoy sweet sleep, which shuns the crown,
With all its easy beds of down.
The sun now shows his noontide blaze,
And sheds around me burning rays.
A little onward, and I go
Into the shade that groves bestow,
And on green moss I lay me down,
That o’er the root of oak has grown;
Where all is silent, but some flood
That sweetly murmurs in the wood;
But birds that warble in the sprays,
And charm ev’n Silence with their lays.
Oh! pow’rful Silence! How you reign
In the poet’s busy brain!
His num’rous thoughts obey the calls
Of the tuneful waterfalls;
Like moles, whene’er the coast is clear,
They rise before thee without fear,

And range in parties here and there.
Some wildly to Parnassus wing,
And view the fair Castalian spring,
Where they behold a lonely well
Where now no tuneful Muses dwell,
But now and then a slavish hind
Paddling the troubled pool they find.
Some trace the pleasing paths of joy,
Others the blissful scene destroy,
In thorny tracks of sorrow stray,
And pine for Clio far away.
But stay — Methinks her lays I hear,
So smooth! so sweet! so deep! so clear!
No, it is no other voice I find;
‘Tis but the echo stays behind.
Some meditate Ambition’s brow,
And the black gulf that gapes below;
Some peep in courts, and there they see
The sneaking tribe of Flattery: —
But, striking to the ear and eye,
A nimble deer comes bounding by!
When rushing from yon rustling spray,
It made them vanish all away.
I rouse me up, and on I rove;
‘Tis more than time to leave the grove;
The sun declines, the evening breeze
Begins to whisper through the trees;
And as I leave the sylvan gloom,
As to the glare of day I come,
An old man’s smoky nest I see
Leaning on an aged tree,
Whose willow walls, and furzy brow,
A little garden sway below.
Through spreading beds of blooming green,
Matted with herbage sweet and clean,
A vein of water limps along,
And makes them ever green and young.
Here he puffs upon his spade,
And digs up cabbage in the shade;
His tatter’d rags are sable brown,
His beard and hair are hoary grown:
The dying sap descends apace,
And leaves a withered hand and face.
Up Grongar Hill I labour now,
And catch at last his bushy brow.
Oh! how fresh, how pure the air!
Let me breathe a little here.
Where am I, Nature? I descry
Thy magazine before me lie.
Temples! and towns! and towers! and woods!
And hills! and rills! and fields! and floods!
Crowding before me, edg’d around
With naked wilds, and barren ground.
See, below, the pleasant dome,
The poet’s pride, the poet’s home,
Which the sunbeams shine upon,
To the even from the dawn.
See her woods, where Echo talks,
Her gardens trim, her terrace walks,
Her wildernesses, fragrant brakes,
Her gloomy bowers, and shining lakes.
Keep, ye gods! this humble seat
For ever pleasant, private, neat.
See yonder hill, uprising steep,
Above the river slow and deep;
It looks from hence a pyramid,
Beneath a verdant forest hid;
On whose high top there rises great,
The mighty remnant of a seat,
An old green tow’r, whose batter’d brow
Frowns upon the vale below.
Look upon that flowery plain,
How the sheep surround their swain,

How they crowd to hear his strain!
All careless with his legs across,
Leaning on a bank of moss,
He spends his empty hours at play,
Which fly as light as down away.
And there behold a bloomy mead,
A silver stream, a willow shade,
Beneath the shade a fisher stand,
Who, with the angle in his hand,
Swings the nibbling fry to land.
In blushes the descending sun
Kisses the streams, while slow they run;
And yonder hill remoter grows,
Or dusky clouds do interpose.
The fields are left, the lab’ring hind
His weary oxen does unbind;
And vocal mountains, as they low,
Re-echo to the vales below.
The jocund shepherds piping come,
And drive the herd before them home;
And now begin to light their fires,
Which send up smoke in curling spires;
While with light hearts all homeward tend,
To Aberglasney I descend.
But oh! how bless’d would be the day,
Did I with Clio pace my way,
And not alone and solitary stray!

 

Above: Self-portrait, John Dyer (1699 – 1757)

 

 

You may ask, perhaps rightly so, what have I shown you?

There is so much else that we could speak of, but have we made the abnormal so normal that what is normal feels abnormal?

You may argue that I write of what is commonplace and ordinary, but are not most of us that ourselves?

 

Pulp - Common People.JPG

 

Can you not feel the quiet majesty of the Seven Sorrows Mariä Chapel?

Can you not sense the fear that lay behind the bunker on the path?

Can you not imagine the bonfire of the holies on Mammern’s Main Street?

Can you not experience the wonder of defiant chapels that defied and defined faith?

 

 

My sharing the spirit of the land in which I reside and your reading that shares the experience….

 

Are not our lives improving?

 

 

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / http://www.mammern.ch / Herbert Mayr, Bodensee Süd Rother Wanderführer / Barbara Hutzl-Ronge, Magischer Bodensee: Wanderungen zu Orten der Kraft / Hans-Peter Siebenhaar, Bodensee (Michael Müller Verlag) / John Dyer, “The Country Walk” / William Hazlitt, “On Going a Journey” / Edward Abbey, “Walking” / Thomas Traherne, “Walking