Monday, 22 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 19

Mulhouse - Autun
A hot day: 28°C in the shade before 9:00am, reaching 38 by 2:00pm. There was a nasty road accident just outside Besançon which added a very hot hour to our day.

TGV001, beside the autoroute just outsides Mulhouse. The shape may be familiar, but this was gas turbine powered.

Burgundian roofs


The Royal Saltworks at Arc-et-Senons. We didn't stop, it was too hot and it appeared there was a special event on

Vineyards just south of Beaune


Distance travelled 336km
Cumulative total 3349km @ 56km/h

Ernest Brand 1932 - 2026


Ernest Thomas Brand, was born on the 21st of November 1932 at Hackney Hospital, London, England, the son of Robert Percy Brand and Marie Therese Brand (nee Schlitt). He was a twin, but his brother died of meningitis in 1937 as a result of a fall. 

Dad was an inspiration to me, a brave man who took his young family from London to Australia, an absolute optimist and not afraid of really hard work. His willingness to put himself in that sort of situation with good cheer and enthusiasm gave us the belief that we could also make changes in our lives, and his encouragement in our various mad projects and ability to understand what we were trying to do gave us the confidence not to give up when the going got tough.

Ernest Thomas Brand 12/11/1932 - 22/6/2026
A good man.

Sunday, 21 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 18

Eight years ago we were in Mulhouse and visited the Cité de l'Automobile. This year it was time to do the train equivalent.













We stayed a couple of hours at the museum, but even though it is air-conditioned it was still mighty warm. We retreated to our accommodation which is smaller but really effectively air-conditioned.

Saturday, 20 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 17

Rothenburg aub der Taber - Mulhouse

We started with stuff on a stick at the  Auto & Technik Museum Sinsheim, but only in the car park. It would take 6 hours we didn't have to do the place justice.

MIG23

Foreground: Hunting Percival P.66 Pembroke
Middle: Martin MGM-1 Matador, the first operational surface-to-surface cruise missile
Background: Concorde

Vertol (VFW) H-21C Shawnee

It's not all aircraft on a stick in the car park: U 17 German submarine, 1973.


Neuf-Brisach is a fortified town in Alsace. The town was intended to guard the border between France and the Holy Roman Empire and, subsequently, the German states. It was built after the Treaty of Ryswick in 1697 that resulted in France losing the town of Breisach, on the opposite bank of the Rhine. When that happened the french speaking population voted with their feet and moved to the new town designed by Vaubin.


Distance covered 417km
Cumulative total 3013km@ 56km/h

Friday, 19 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 16

Rothenburg - Shrozberg - Rothenburg

The church my great grandmother was baptised in, Shrozberg.


The St. Anna Chapel in Mulfingen

The brightly painted altar is designed as a family tree style piece dedicated to Saint Anne.

The Protestant parish church of St. Bonifatius located in Oberstetten. It was locked when we got there

The Herrgottskirche is in Creglingen. We didn't photo the outside. It contains multiple altarpieces.


The masterpiece is the Marian altarpiece which stands in the middle of the nave and is one of Tilman Riemenschneider's best-known works.

The altarpiece is 9.20 meters high and 3.68 meters wide. It consists of the predella, the central shrine, two side wings and the tracery.

Distance covered 100km
Cumulative total 2596km@ 54km/h


Thursday, 18 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 15

A big day: cold war borders, a huge music shop, and one of the prettiest towns in Germany.

Point Alpha overlooks the Fulda Gap, which is where it was expected the Soviet invaders would come. You can see an Easy German observation point in the background, facing off against the more obvious NATO observation tower.

A restaurant for a music shop. Excellent food, excellent value

(Photo from Thomann's website)

Temptation 

Rothenburg aub der Taber. The first photo is the pension where we are staying.


Distance covered 336km
Cumulative total 2496km@ 55km/h



Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Reedmace versus Bulrush

Reedmace Typha latifolia (Fr. Massette) is the plant with the brown cylindrical seedheads that grows on the edge of ponds. It is called Cattail in North America, Cumbungi in Australia, and often, everywhere, now called Bulrush. But it is a reed, not a rush. Rushes are a different family.

 

Reedmace on the village pond (Fr. plan d'eau) in Preuilly.

Reedmace Typha latifolia, France.

 The 'bul' of Bulrush means 'big', and true bulrush is exactly that -- a gigantic rush.

 

 Bulrush on the edge of the étang (dam) at le Louroux. This is a nature reserve.

Bulrush Schoenoplectus lacustris, France.

The confusion started in the 19th century, with  mass produced illustrated Bibles. For some reason Moses was depicted amongst the reedmace. Ironically, the plant the illustrators should have been depicting was actually a Papyrus.

 

 Reedmace.

Reedmace Typha latifolia, France.

In prehistoric times the rhizomes of Reedmace were eaten, in hunter-gatherer societies over 30 000 years ago. The plant was abundant and full of starch. In the 19th century there are accounts of it being used as low quality forage for horses in France, and pigs apparently adored the rhizomes. The leaves could also be dried and woven as chair seats. In modern times they are sometimes grown in natural water purification systems and the plant can be seen on the edges of many fresh water ponds. 

 

 A variety of plants, including both bulrush (left) and reedmace (right), in a phytopurification water filtration station at the Moulin de Malicorne (a private home).

Phytopurification water filtration station, France.

Bulrush Schoenoplectus lacustris (Fr. Jonc des chaisiers) was once abundant and much valued as the raw material for cords, woven or plaited mats, wall coverings and chair seats. Harvesting the plants, processing and transforming them was an important artisanal skill. Nowadays, those skills are lost and the plant is rare. Where it is present it is generally protected.  

 

 Rush matting at the Chateau d'Azay le Rideau.

Rush matting, Chateau d'Azay le Rideau, France.

Today the buzz word you will see associated with bulrushes is 'paludiculture'. That's when peat wetland is used as a cultivated carbon sink. Drones are used to distribute the seed of reedmace, bulrush and other plants that can be used commercially if peatbog is exploited. The fluffy reedmace seed heads are harvested to be used as insulation in 'down' jackets, and the bulrush is being used in construction materials. Unfortunately both plants are being referred to by journalists as 'bulrush' so it can be confusing.

 

 Bulrush on the edge of an étang at Chambon, on a ZNIEFF (site of special scientific interest).

Bulrush Schoenoplectus lacustris, France.

2026 Holiday Day 14

Hamburg to Eisenach. Bach and Eeemers. (I could have said Bach to Beemers to be alliterative, but that definitely would have been wrong, and the first car is a Dixi, anyway.)






Distance covered 374km (plus about 200km in Hamburg & Lubeck)
Cumulative total 2160km@ 55km/h