Tuesday 31 July 2018

320. Above Average

Innsbruck

Max temperature: Average max daily (24h) temperature per month
Minimum temperature: Average minimum daily (24h) temperature per month
Average temperature: Average daily (24h) temperature per month.
The temperature normals are measured in the period 1961–1990.
Woke during the night with the horrible thought of being evicted from this camp with nowhere to go. First stop in the morning was to the camp office to see if we could stay on as I had only booked originally for six days. The lovely bloke was brilliant and changed my booking, adding another couple of weeks. He did comment that this summer booking madness only goes through to about the twelfth of August so I hope that he is right. This paragraph will give the Holyport lads a laugh as they warned me many times about summer booking chaos.

Forecast for Innsbruck
Only Friday the 10th has rain as <3mm is nothing
Talking to our lovely Dutch neighbours I commented that summers in Austria are way warmer than Christchurch. He stated that he has been coming here for years and it has never been this warm, usually about twenty to twenty five degrees. I looked Innsbruck up as we have been here for nearly a week and every day has been sunny and thirty plus degrees. We are very glad that we have air conditioning in the Giantavan which we now run day and night.

Haberdashery can be quite
complicated to get right
Roman's tea light
The camp manager said that usually they are not this full but people are flooding back from Italy where it is reaching temperatures up to forty degrees!

My book is proving to be a delight and a amazing time suck, feeling a bit guilty actually

The children dashed of to the morning camp programme decorating tea lights (doesn't get dark till nine) and hats.

In the afternoon the Disco decided to run over the new neighbours power reel, twice. They were very good about it and fifty euro passed over, settling things.

Audrey's tea light

Monday 30 July 2018

319. Enquiring

Innsbruck

Discovered that what I had assumed was a booking for our next campsite was in fact a non binding enquiry, that is we are bound not to go there. Spend I think six hours online trying to find our next site nearish to Munich where my Mother arrives next week. Sent enquires to thirty two campsites which involves looking on GMaps for campsites in the area, finding their www, looking to see whether they accept Giantavans, filling out their silly booking pages, each site completely different and adding them to my list below as it stands currently on my notepad.

Those that have been good enough to reply I have sent a follow up email asking when is their first vacancy.


Children enthusiastically disappeared off to both camp sessions again with the younger three making wool art hangings which they are very pleased with, as are we, I hastily add.

The afternoon session was at the pool. I wandered within discrete viewing range during the afternoon to see a dry Roman, with a stash of supplied water balloons, squirting water down the back of the rather lovely, unsuspecting, supervising girls, bikini bottom with great results - all good, left them to it. Audrey returned drenched, happy and exhausted with two dutch children that had been at the pool and set to on craft with them. 

318. Indulged

Innsbruck, Austria

I have often felt envious of other travellers sitting reading all day when I am rushing around like a mad thing so today I sat down in the sun, with Kindle and set about reading

  The Unlikely Voyage of Jack De Crow: A Mirror Odyssey from North Wales to the Black Sea

His description of his Mirror dinghy which is the same as our Teasel is written in a style that I can only aspire to. His description, please indulge me
A Mirror is to the sailing world what a Volkswagen Beetle is to the world of motoring. Everyone, anywhere, without exception. who has ever sailed a dinghy,  seems to have learnt the basic skills in one of these gallant little tubs with their distinctive scarlet sails, almost invariably taught by some eccentric great aunt* wearing a big straw hat and calling out “Swallows and Amazons for ever!” with every tack and turn. 
People will tell you that they were first designed in the 1950s in response to a competition initiated by the Daily Mirror, but, frankly. I don't believe it. No. it was clearly designed some time in the 1900s as a joint project between Arthur Ransome and Heath Robinson, with Ernest Shephard chipping in occasionally on the blueprints.  
It is appropriate here, I suppose, while I am standing over the dinghy in the warm sunshine waiting for the black paint to dry, to describe a Mirror dinghy for the benefit of those not privileged enough to have had a nautical Swallows-and-Amazons aunt. I comfort myself with the thought that all the classics are unashamedly dull when it comes to describing the minutiae of nautical travel and seafaring adventures. 
Half-an-hour's perusal of any Ransome book will enable even the most landlubberly of readers to rig up a mainsail jury hitch with belayed cross-over, and in Robinson Crusoe, there are detailed instructions for such things as converting a goat into a pair of moccasins without fatally damaging the original animal. 
A Mirror dinghy is eleven feet long and four feet wide. Her nose is not pointed like most dinghies, but cut off square, giving her a sturdy, snub-nosed look. There is nothing even remotely aggressive or shark-like about a Mirror. She looks about as streamlined and racy as a toy hippo. The front three feet consist of a flat deck beneath which are two door-less lockers. This is where your aunt stows away bottles of ginger pop and pemmican sandwiches and more serious sailors store spare bits of rope or sail or shackles. It was where I was to stow all my worldly possessions to last me for a year of sailing: a space about the size of your average vegetable crisper. 
Three broad decks or seats run right around the cockpit. making a Mirror the most sofa-like of all small dinghies to sail. and enabling several First Mates, an Able Seaman and a Ship's Boy to be deployed in relative comfort about the dinghy. Across the middle, however, is a sturdy thwart where a solitary oarsman will sit to row. Slotting into the gunwale on either side to hold the oars are the rowlocks, pronounced ‘rollocks'. much to the amusement of the Third Form when attending sailing lessons. (Yes, all right, settle down, Smithers, settle down). 
So much for the dinghy as a mere rowing boat. However, she is primarily a sailing vessel and as such needs a mast. rigging. a centreboard and a rudder. These may be briefly explained thus. 
A Mirror's mast is only about ten feet tall, not nearly tall enough to take a full sized sail, so it makes use of a gaff. This is a long light beam of wood with a hollow groove along its underside into which the thick leading edge of the sail is threaded. It is this gaff that is hauled aloft and when fully erect. (All right, Smithers, I've warned you once) projects out another six feet or so above the mast top, providing the necessary height for the sail. By modern design standards this is a clumsy contraption, but was ideal for my purposes. You see, unlike most dinghy sailors out for a quick skim on a local reservoir, I would be encountering bridges and it is a very rare bridge that is generous enough to allow a fully masted dinghy to sail beneath it with impunity. With the ability, however, to simply lower the gaff and dip the peak and still keep sailing onwards, I was sure that I could escape being mauled by all but the lowest and meanest of the bridge tribe. Such confidence 
We have just hauled up the mainsail and noticed that along its bottom edge is a long, heavy and potentially deadly wooden beam called a boom. This is what swings about in a gale in a Conrad film and sweeps hero and villain off into the raging seas to battle it out there once all the poop deck fighting has become tedious. At the outer end is a dangling pulley through which a rope, the mainsheet. threads. This then runs through a series of pulleys, but ends up in the skipper’s hand, allowing him to haul in or let out the mainsail with ease. The only thing you need to know about this is that of all the myriad pieces of tackle and equipment on a sailing boat, this is the one that will jam, tangle or catch at every opportunity and cause imminent death by drowning, strangulation or sheer bloody bad temper. 
Nearly finished. A smaller sail known as the jib runs up the forestay and this is apparently invaluable or sailing into the wind for some mysterious aerodynamic reason which I've never been able to fathom. 
Very soon after setting off, I abandoned the additional complexity of a jib, and the appropriate Law of Aerodynamics went off in a sulk somewhere and Jack and I got on perfectly well without its pedantic presence. So much for science. 
The rudder, I assume, hardly needs explaining unless, dear Reader, you have grown up entirely as a member of some desert dwelling tribe without even the scantiest knowledge of boats, the sort of people Odysseus went looking for in his dotage. Nevertheless I will explain that it is the most vulnerable piece of the dinghy's equipment. being prone to ploughing into underwater obstacles, crushing against lock walls, jamming against banks and so on but. by some divine mystery, by the end of the whole trip. it was the single part of the entire boat that had not needed patching, mending. replacing or discarding 
As opposed to the centreboard  in fact. a hefty solid slab of hardwood that seemed to break at every opportunity, and the last item in this over-technical catalogue. The centreboard is simply a slim but heavy vane of timber that slots down through the hull and projects like an upside-down shark's fin several feet below the keel. When down it provides stability and prevents the dinghy drifting sideways in certain sailing conditions. When drawn up and out of the long centreboard case. it lies around, barks your shins and, if you are going fast enough, allows the foamy brine to well up through the case like a bubbling spring and fill half the dinghy with water before you notice what is happening. 
So there you have a Mirror Dinghy described. Any questions? No, not you, Smithers, put your hand down, I don't want to know. Dismissed.
So there you have it, Teasel described with a flourish and seeing our boat out of the corner of my eye atop the Disco while a sat in this thirty degree day was delicious. The book has me laughing out loud on many occasions as the man is as foolish as me. Getting the text was an ordeal that kept me up far too long. Kindle reader on my MacBook, screen grabs, online OCR then stringing it all together. Won't be doing that again in a hurry.

From memory from her book
Roman had spotted that there was an organised camp activity for playing with Play Doe. He had cycled the camp without success so we set off about an hour after the session had started and after enquiring at the office found two lovely teenage girl facilitators sitting playing with their phones and no children in sight. Roman immediately peddled off to get Audrey then the two of them basked in the teenagers attention for the next couple of hours.

The same went for the afternoon's hat and bag making course except this time there were two facilitators and four Royds'. Roman checked the clock every four minutes for the two hours till the afternoon's session started and lolled around BORED. All four disappeared off for the afternoon session leaving me to the adventures of Jack de Crow. The teenagers happy to speak English got a through briefing on all our adventures and probably a few secrets as well.

*Auntie Stephanie, my enthusiastic sister fills this role beautifully when we are in NZ (as does their Grandmother, my Mum an enthusiastic Ransome disciple, as am I). 

Saturday 28 July 2018

317. A swing to the Right

Innsbruck - Austria

Deep into Austria

Karabadangbaraka

Woke to un-forecast rain which became torrential. Rain certainly makes things less pleasant but Fyfe was up for it so we both donned raincoats and packed up, typically a two hour job but longer in the rain as everything can't just be cast aside and packed in sensible order. Drove listening to the last chapters of Secret Water by Arthur Ransome wonderfully read by Stephen Fry - 

One of the friendliest replies to a campsite enquiry had today's site decided. Easy drive down with lunch of various packet soup all round, heated in the Giantavan with bread warmed in the oven - easy. The day passed without blogable mentions and I was a duffer not.  Quick dash to the supermarket as everything is shut on Sundays, as it should be in NZ.

Arriving here at camp the guy looked concerned at the size of our rig but, good to his emailed promise found us a lovely large plot.

Akarabgnadabarak



Lambos, watched by Fyfe,
Departing our lunch services stop

Impressive pile in the background is the camp owners



Friday 27 July 2018

316. Poles Apart

LIECHTENSTEIN

As we were out of Toilet Blue, and the camp manager had assured me that the local supermarket stocked it I left promptly this morning by bike ........ obviously, that I am telling this fascinating tale regarding ablution supplies precursors failure, otherwise this wouldn't be blog material ...... so I returned empty handed.

Organising where to next then flights for my Mum from Tallinn, Estonia to wherever we are, or as close as possible. She (The Cat's Mother) is currently cruising from Moscow to St Petersburg by river boat then making her way to Estonia. This took an unprecedented degree of organisation as we, to date, have only booked our next location on leaving the last with campsite availability and price influencing that process. This task deemed it necessary to decide whereabouts we might be right through to mid August, a future date unimaginable to us myopic Giantervaners. Eventually managed to get my Mum a direct flight, throwing her at the mercy of Polish Airways, arriving Munich at seven thirty in the evening. I would say job well done but as yet I have not succeeded in my battle, with their web site, to secure her baggage. Beaten for now I will prevail. She is in seat 6F so that is something.

By the time I cried uncle at the hands of the Poles website, they empowered by our crappy wifi at this camp, a significant part of the day had passed meant that we were very late in getting away for Zürich, with a planned stop at a camping store for the aforementioned Toilet Blue. Despite the best efforts of Apple Maps to take us else where we arrived with a few U-turns at probably the best and largest camping store we have ever visited. Prices were only about double eBay and, who knows what a Swiss Franc is anyway - we were in our element till we were chased out at six o'clock. Thanks to the ridiculously huge range of stock we couldn't decide on anything and left with toilet blue, a five Watt light bulb for the Giantavan's second number plate lamp and a plastic door catch for the Giantavan door as the old one can't hold against the breeze, and that was it!

Supermarket next till we were thrown out at seven.
The local pile
Standing on the Giantavan roof this is my snap
of tonights unseen lunar eclipse
(in the V of the valley)
Very pleased with my new Swiss T-Shirt
SWF4.5 from the supermarket



Thursday 26 July 2018

315. The Blues

LIECHTENSTEIN

Yacked to cousin Tony who was at Changi Airport, en-route for NZ for an hour. Lots of admin including paying house insurance, thanks for nothing Christchurch earthquake, the insurance companies will win in the end.

Out of toilet blue, biked in the heat with Fyfe to the local supermarket, got lots of provisions, returned without toilet blue - duh.

Had got three days behind with this blog so that took quite some catching up so including this that is four for the day.  Certainly eats a hole in the day.

Need to fix where to next, Austria? Germany? My Mum arrived in nine days so need to get sorted.

Wednesday 25 July 2018

314. Boardwalk

Zurich

On the way, at eighty k, impressive mountains
Normal departure time, nuff said....

Lovely drive on four lane motorways, no tolls in Switzerland as everyone pays the thirty francs on first entering Switzerland which lasts a year.

Zurich was a hot thirty two degrees as we walked into town. Jacqueline and the older two wanted to go shopping and the younger two elected to go walkabout with me. We arranged to meet again in an hour.

Audrey cooling
Audrey melting
We returned a hundred metres to the river and while I sat with my feet the river, little fish actually nibbling my toes reading the news on my phone the children played in the warm water. Beautiful, large rainbow trout, about fifteen inches long cruised by. I brook no argument with them here in their natural environment but hate them as river rats that destroy native habitats and fish in NZ. Another introduced pest in NZ but for some reason protected by the Department of Conservation in NZ such is the power of the fishing lobby.

Phoned J at the agreed meeting time and got another hour by the river till seven. Phoned and chatted to various friends and had a lovely time. Audrey had found a discarded porcelain espresso cup and an empty bottle so Roman and she were engrossed in a complicated game so we three were very happy.

1kg, more expensive per 100g
than the small Toblerones
Met the other half in a very air-conditioned department store. Used their lovely Ballentynes like toilets then looked and bought the worlds flashest leather Jandals at Jacqueline encouragement, they are very nice.

Tuesday 24 July 2018

313. Countrywide

Liechtenstein

Moved and set up
Mountains with everything
The thin grey lines are the borders
Realised that today was the last day to enrol Fyfe into year nine at Cashmere High School for next academic year, starting February.  Luckily I had school reports etc. from Holyport College, his last school so was able to complete the application in time. Most of Fyfe's friends are going as well as Findlay, his cousin who is a year ahead.

Drying loose hay with a Tedder
Late in the afternoon we went for an explore. Turns out Vaduz, halfway up the country was only fifteen minutes away so, we did the whole country before dinner, well the left hand side of it as the right side is not easily drivable. Mostly, along the roads things are semi industrial like South Auckland or farming with hand walked sickle bar mowers mowing the hay. Tedding is done by tractor and then the loose hay is swept up by tractor and trailer to be blown into a barn. Returning home we got stymied by roadworks so returned via Switzerland, as one does, adding an extra eight kilometres to the round trip.

Very hot here so particularly grateful for the AC which keeps the Giantavan at a very pleasant sixteen degrees centigrade during the night. Now running it during the day as well as the kids are less restless and more inclined to do their homework.

Monday 23 July 2018

312. Big World, Small Country

Liechtenstein


Focused start as the campsite locks the gate from midday till two - just the incentive the Gaintarvaners need to get us going. As it was we slipped out a eleven fifty six with an easy four minutes to spare.

Stopped on the way for lunch in a rest and it was a baking thirty degrees but lovely flopping round making lunch with plenty of time on this two hour drive. The map above time is if we were doing the normal road speed of one hundred and twenty kilometres per hour but we only travel at two thirds that speed, eighty kilometres per hour.

Sent up temporarily as we are sited on a narrow strip and could get landlocked by campers either side of us. The intention is to back up into the motorhome space behind us tomorrow. The children were otherwise amused and Fyfe normally helps me uncouple the caravan by operating the Disco's height control for me. Not wanting to bother him I flicked it to low and rushed round to release the coupling which stuck due to the weight of the Disco now pressing down. With over two and a half tons of Disco bearing down on the drawbar the new jockey wheel took the strain and bent backwards, bending the releasable friction coupling that holds the jockey wheel. 😡, I am a complete🤡. Dismantled it and straightened things as best as i could but it will never be the same.

Popped to the nearest supermarket and the Disco's gps announced Welcome to Switzerland, then, obviously, returning to camp Welcome to Liechtenstein.

Liechtenstein is an amazing place, only thirty eight thousand people and sixty two square miles. The mountains are incredibly steep and covered with trees and the highest gdp in the world, no army and seventy eight police personal.

Sunday 22 July 2018

311. Angle

UNTERÄGERI - NEARISH TO ZÜRICH AND LUCERNE

16.4 kilometres, further than I thought
Unfortunately, there is no fairlead track
adjustment available
Board meeting tonight, starting for me at eleven pm, so a long chat with Richard and reading the board notes in preparation. After lunch the breeze was up so took the opportunity to go for a sail on Lake Agerisee, joining the camp. Launched in a good breeze, just strong enough to have me sitting on the gunnel, beating tight reaching up the lake. Sailing, wondering why the angle of attack is so poor I looked hard at the jib sheet angle and the sheet is pointing high into the jib. I recall that the jib sheet should be pointing, the line continued from the clew  of the way down the length of the jib forestay sail length. I think Teasel's sheet was pointing to the centre of the forestay. Noticed that Teasels jib was attached at the tack by a three inch loop of rope. Hove to and attached the tack directly to the eye, dropping the sail by three inches and the sheeting angle was improved. The result of this high sheeting angle is the leech is chocked when the jib is sheeted. Un-choking the leech results in a tight reach not close hauled as desired. Modification and further thinking required.

Tacked up the lake in the dying breeze, loving the views and just being there. There was a commercial fishing boat on the lake setting gill nets, the tourist boat, a couple of paddlers and me. The water was beautifully warm and as the breeze died I could hear the cow bells on the hills around me as I sailed close to the shore then eventually, I could hear the bells on both sides of the lake. Add to this was the pealing church bells as it is Sunday, a four hour sail - it was a day I will remember for the rest of my days.

Photos all taken on Romans little waterproof camera before it went flat.

Ready to go
Heading for Oberägeri
Jib high
The hand cut hillsides are beautiful.
Jib now low

Saturday 21 July 2018

310. Overload

Swiss Museum of Transport - Lucerne

Obviously, I was very keen but the Giantavaners are not known for prompt starts. The result was that we only got a couple of hours at the museum and it was absolutely fantastic. Sited in old railway workshops there was a huge amount of space and it is well laid out and extensive. The railway section alone could have occupied me all day. There were even driving simulators that could be used.

Jacqueline left us to it and walked into town.

Being an old workshop you could go underneath to see the inner pistons and drive

Origional cog engine
Vertical boiler to keep steam tubes immersed on changing gradient
 Cut away, an engineer operated it while a voice over in english described the process
In this video the wheels are being driven, not the cog
Once the younger three say this manual metal processing plant
they did not want to venture further.
Iris and I ran around the rest independently.

Starfighter, fast but not manoeuvrable
How did it fly? 
The pitot hole is actually about 5mm in diameter
Aviation hall was overwhelming

Convair 990 - Coronado
Narrow body - fast, 1,000kph
No overhead lockers, just room for your hat
First class 
Lounge 
Navigator, Captain, Co, Engineer
Navigator had a remote sextant through the roof


There was a mock auction and the robot would collect and deliver the car
Iris took me through this amazing maze
(not my snap)

Old tourism display was fascinating
Early steam punk
Tunnel boring cutting head - very impressive

Then the museum closed Roman was absolutely gutted that he had missed seeing everything. Felt really sorry for him.