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Bargain Travel Europe guide to Europe on a budget for unusual destinations,
holiday travel tips and secret spots missed by travel tours.


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UPPER RHINE VALLEY
Where Alsace Meets the Black Forest

Upper Rhine Valley Hillside View photoWhere the mighty Rhine River flows from Switzerland, dividing France from Germany, the area known as the Upper Rhine Valley is located right in the center of Europe, dividing the Black Forest of southwest Baden-Wurttemburg from the Vosges Mountains of Alsace and the wine regions of the Palatine. This region has long attracted visitors who love art, culture and amazing food for centuries – Goethe stayed here on his travels to Italy, Lord Byron and Percy & Mary Shelley wrote of the remarkable scenery on their travels (see Follow the Rhine By Rail). The Upper Rhine Valley is a compact region of diverse landscapes and cultural traditions, embracing a special mix of the German and the French, with the Swiss influence. Driving from one stunning highlight of the many cities and villages on both sides of the Rhine valley to the next rarely takes more than ten to fifteen minutes and offers some of the most temperate weather in this part of Europe.

Black Forest Mountain Village photoKnown as the sunniest part of Germany, famed for its brief and relatively mild winters and warm temperatures from April to October, this is one of the continent’s most beautiful and fertile regions. Dark forests, lush green meadows, blooming orchards, grape vineyards and vegetable gardens mingle with sedate villages and historical towns with their traditional half-timber houses and ancient churches. Explore the lively farmers markets offering exquisite cheeses, fragrant fresh baked bread from the region, and locally produced fruit, juices and vegetables, and discover the unique cuisine, fusing the heritage of its historically mixed cultures. Sample the traditional local area pizza-like dish called “Flammen Kuchen” in German or “Tarte Flambée” on the French side of the river.

Farmer's Market Bread Rhine Valley photoThe Upper Rhine region is home to unique exhibitions from dolls (see Basel Doll Museum) to Black Forest crafts (see Glass Blowing Hut) and Steam Trains (see France National Rail Museum), opera houses and theaters presenting world renowned performers. Museums with collections of both contemporary and classical art, famous historic buildings like the Gothic cathedrals in Freiburg, Basel and Strasbourg (see Pointed Saints), medieval fortresses like Haut Koenigsbourg (see Castle Haut Konigsbourg) in Alsace and beautiful Rotteln (see Castle Rotteln) near the German border with Switzerland, Roman settlements like Augusta Raurica near Basel, or the famously luxurious traditional historic spa city of Baden-Baden with its stunning casino, Kur Palace, golf courses and elegant horse races. Stay in a quaint auberge along the Alsace Wine Road (see Alsace Wine Auberge), sleep in a wine barrel in the middle of a vineyard over-looking the Rhine River Valley (see Sasbachwalden Wine Barrel Sleeping), or learn the secrets to making Black Forest Cake.

Flammen Kuchen photoThe Upper Rhine Valley is easy to reach by air, via Stuttgart (see United to Stuttgart) or the Euro Airport, by train on the TGV of France (see France TGV Tours) or ICE of Germany (Germany High Speed ICE), though is perhaps best explored by car. The region is an ideal destination for hikers, golfers and bikers as well as river cruise passengers on the Rhine. War buffs will find the history of the region full of rich remnants of its past as the gateway across Europe for would-be conquerors (see Maginot Line and Wilhelm’s Fortress).

Getting There

TGV Train in Station photoRail lines traverse the Rhine valley on both the German side (DB), and the French (SNCF). Rail tickets can be purchased from the individual countries’ railways. If traveling by Rail Pass (see Eurail Rail Pass), Basel in Switzerland is a little unique, in that the railway station has two sides, one is Swiss and the other end is technically France, so does not need Switzerland included in a pass if traveling via the French side. The Euro Airport is technically divided between the three countries. Renting a car can be in either of France, Switzerland or Germany, but all really from the essentially same terminal. The Euro Airport is served by several discount European airlines (see Cheap Airfares). © Bargain Travel Europe

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See Also:

TRAVELING EUROPE ON A BUDGET

RENTING A CAR IN EUROPE

EUROSTAR CHUNNEL FROM LONDON TO PARIS

BADEN-BADEN IN THE BLACK FOREST