Luxemburg
Luxemburg
City
Places to Stay
HI Hostel - http://www.hihostels.com/dba/hostel036001.en.htm
Located
below the city in the valley. This was my first hostel experience after sleeping
in a tent for 2 weeks, so it is hard to rate. At the time, it was heaven on
earth for my sore back. Since this is the only hostel in Lux City, it was
crowded. It has dorm rooms as well as single and double rooms.
The Irish pub down by the hostel is the Pygmalion and it really is
fantastic
Things to Do
Luxembourg City is really nice. The wooden models of the city's development
at the Village History Museum are wonderful. The Casements are a worthwhile side
bar too, and the Irish pub (down by the hostel) is fantastic!
A day is enough to see the sights in Luxemboug city.
Day Trips
Vianden is enjoyable and just a short
distance away. It is one of the prettiest cities in all of Europe. On
weekends they have a German festival with brass band, oompah loompahs, sausage
and beer. Oh, and the fireworks shooting over the beautiful mountain top castle
is spectacular too.
Schengen is a lovely town.
The countryside is
great for hiking. There are enough trails and they are well maintained. There
are also a lot of very cute small villages in the countryside but unless you
have a car (or your hiking trail takes you through one) it's not worth the
effort to go there.
Brussels to Lux will take about 3 hours by
train, Lux-Paris is 3.5-4 hours. It would be about an 9 hour train
ride to go from Brugge to Paris via Luxembourg.
Trip Report -
Hekate
I went to Luxemburg a couple of weeks ago. Yes, it's very
close to Belgium, but I'd only ever stopped there on the way to somewhere else.
It seems Belgians only go to Luxemburg to stop for gas or to buy cigarettes.
Actually that's not true, I met loads of Belgian tourists, but that's what it
sounded like when I was looking for info.
Close can be good. About three
hours on the train and I was in Luxemburg City. From there I took a bus to
Echternach on the German border. I'd found out there were hiking trails
connecting all the youth hostels, so I walked from Echternach to Beaufort to
Larochette to Hollenfels to a town near Luxemburg City. As you can tell from
reading this blog, I've got plenty of experience travelling by myself, but this
was the first hiking trip by myself. I'm not a very good mapreader, so I was
somehwat anxious about the whole thing upfront.
Echternach turned out to
be a really nice little town. Very touristy, but for a good reason. It has
beautiful old buildings (including one of the finest Romanesque churches I ever
visited) and laid-back atmosphere, and is surrounded by beautiful hills. And the
hostek was nice too, even if it did have lock-out and curfew.
I stayed
there two nights so I had a day for a short hike to warm up. I walked to a
nearby (artificial) lake and around it, first up into the hills, then along the
lakeshore. There's a Roman villa on the lakeshore too, so I checked that out.
Then I walked back to town and saw everything there is to see in Echternach, and
walked into Germany and back. And then I was bored. But luckily I ran into
Hannah, my American roommate from the hostel, at the park and we went to play
minigolf. Fun!
In the evening we made pasta, joined by another roommate,
Maria from Shrewsbury, coïncidentally one of the few places I've been to in
England. She was cycling around southern Belgium and Luxemburg, that sounded
pretty cool. After dinner we walked into Germany again, and found out it was
only an hour by bus to Trier, Hannah's next stop.
The walk from Echternach to
Beaufort was very nice. The start of the trail went straight up, but it was
worth it. I saw a lot of odd rock formations, like caves turned inside out. The
Wolfsschlucht/Gorge du Loup (wolf's gorge) was truly spectacular. It rained for
a while, but I barely felt it because the forest was so dense.
I
accidentally took the wrong trail that day for a bit, because I had more faith
in the trail-markers than in my own map-reading ability. I knew the hostel trail
was marked by triangles. What I didn't know was that those were not the green
triangles that I'd followed until then, but the white ones that only appeared
sporadically (and rarely at crossroads). It turned out to be a lucky mistake, as
that detour really offered the most rewarding scenery and oddest rock formations
of the entire trip.
After I got back to the right trail it got kinda boring
for a while, but the last part went along a river so that was nice.
The first
sign of Beaufort was its castle. I still had plenty of time before the hostel
opened, so I checked out the interior as well. Not really worth the entrance
fee, unless you haven't been to any castles before. But my first day walking had
gone well, so I was happy nonetheless. It wouldn't last very long. But I'll tell
you about that next time.