The Gasthof Hochalmspitze lies in the small village of Malta in Maltatal (the Valley) at the foot of Maltaberg (the Mountain). At the entrance to the valley is the larger town of Gmund (birthplace of Porsche) and at the blind top of the valley sits the massive Kolnbein Dam, the largest in Austria. The valley is surrounded by great riding opportunities with Salzburg to the north along the beautiful strip of A99 road, Slovenia and the Italian Dolomites to the south, the Nockalmstrasse to the East (a national park ride to be experienced) and the grandaddy of them all, the Grossglockner (Austria's highest Mountain) to the west. Little wonder we had booked a week here but would that be enough?
Saturday night after our greeting (and a free pint) produced a stormy night which carried into Sunday. An easy day was had with an afternoon run into Gmund and a visit to the fascinating 'sound museum' a place impossible to describe but fascinating to visit. Our batteries were recharged so with the promise of fine weather on Monday we prepared to tackle the Grossglockner.
The Grossglockner Hochalpenstrasse is a high Alpine road that passes through a National Park that contains the Grossglockner and Franz Josef Glacier amongst many features. It is a tolled road but the Karnten Pass Card (included with 3 nights stay with John & Ros) gave us free access. The road to the Park leads by the Maiden's Leap waterfall and a portent of what is to come. The park road is in top condition so even if you had to pay the motorbike toll of 22 Euro you would not be disappointed. As you ascend the pass the road forks with the left option leading up a dead end road to the Glacier and best views of the Grossglockner while the right leads to the highest part of the road, Bikers Point. We chose the latter option. As we climbed into the cloud the temperature dropped and it started to snow, a very rare experience for us and the first time on the bike. Bikers Point forks off the main road up a tight cobble-stoned series of switchback bends that were saturated with snow melt. We got to the top in what was by now very low visibility in near freezing conditions and were proud that our Grey Ghost was the only bike there.
We dropped down to the main pass road and across to the Glacier to be greeted with bright blue skies and warm sunshine a world away from where we had been a mere 30 minutes earlier. There were many bikes here as the late starters had arrived including Ian leading an English Group from our Gasthof. Pleasantries exchanged, we headed back by Bikers Point towards the northern exit from the park to receive another drop of snow. Interestingly Ian's group experienced sunshine just half an hour later so we had been "lucky". It was a day of meet and greets for as we exited the park we ran into Matt & Andy our Welsh friends who we first met in 2010. We had bid them farewell that morning as they headed home. We completed the long loop back home tired but satisfied and filled with new experiences.
The weather forecast for the next few days was good so best enjoy it. Tuesday we tackled the Nokalmstrasse another tolled road but totally different geology to the Grossglockner Hochalpenstrasse. This road passes through pine forests over two passes at 2024 and 2042 meters along a winding ribbon of road that could only have been designed by a motorcyclist. . If you were to ride just one road in your life then this would be the one. It is pure magic with a near perfect surface, well formed corners, good sight lines and light traffic for us early starters. We enjoyed it so much that we turned around at the end and repeated the experience in the opposite direction. That afternoon we visited the Porsche Museum in Gmund before returning home to a few well earned beers.
We had visited Salzburg in 2010 on a very wet day so we were giving it another chance under blue skies. The scenic run north to Salzburg is along the A99 that follows the river course along the valley floor but there is a fast option on the concrete strip of autostrasse that is suspended above the valley. There are many contrasting photo opportunities of the concrete autostrasse from the green valley below. Salzburg conjures images of Mozart and the Sound of Music and both have strong reminders in the City but for us its Architecture and history took centre place. It is a fascinating city that has been shaped throughout the middle ages by the strong control of the Archbishop/Princes who ruled the land. This dual religious/ruler role has created a city rich in church architecture.
Thursday the weather Gods were still shining as we set off on the locally famous three countries run - Austria/Slovenia/Italy. The route south took us along the shore of Lake Millstatter and on this bright morning it was filled with physical activity, boating, jogging, cycling. We could have stopped there for the day and been satisfied but the road called. Our pathway into the former Eastern Bloc country of Slovenia (formerly part of Yugoslavia) took us over a less travelled mountain pass by a dormant tank (previous border control?) and into an immediate change of Architecture. We had lost the beauty of the Austrian villages for a more utilitarian form devoid of the added details that makes its northern neighbor so appealing. Any lost beauty was recovered however as we dropped down to Lake Bled and its stunning blue waters. This was our destination for the day and it is an absolute cracker. Lunch by the lake, a walk along the lake shore, look at the cathedral and castle and time for home. We chose not to venture into Italy preferring to explore some more of the villages on this too small a taste of Slovenia. There was a predicted change of weather late in the day and our 6.30pm return just beat the storm. Our luck was holding.
Friday started with a planned 60,000 km service for the Grey Ghost which was undertaken in John's very well equipped garage at the Gasthof. Another good reason for bikers to stay here (if you needed one). A few valve tappets adjusted, general check & tighten, new oil & filter and the Grey Ghost was purring like a kitten again. The afternoon was taken up with a run up the valley to the Kolnbein Dam and then a trip up the Maltaberg for stunning views over the Maltatal Valley. The night finished off with a massive storm which had fortunately cleared by morning. It was hard to believe that our week was over but there are still things we need to do - there will be a next time. Farewell to John & Ros and their wonderful staff and we were on our way to the Czech Republic under leaden skies.
Thank you because you have been willing to share information with us. we will always appreciate all you have done here because I know you are very concerned with our. Austria's grossglockner
ReplyDelete