(Three hikes since the weekend, so I have a lot of pictures to sort and stories to tell, but this is not in chronological order at the moment...)
Friday June 4, 2021 -- There is another stretch of the country which we very often travel through, in the Eastern part of the country (St.Gallen, Graubünden), namely along Lake Walensee, past Sargans, along the Rhine River past Bad Ragaz, Landquart to Chur... and always we pass the entrance to the mystical Tamina Gorge with its old thermal baths at the back of the gorge behind the town of Bad Ragaz, and we talk often about finally going to see it. Drawback is that you have to walk four kilometers on partly paved roads to get to the historical Bad Pfäfers spa buildings (and to a fabulous walk inside the narrowest part of the gorge), so today we decided: Let's pay for the bus! (There IS a bus, but it costs 6 SFr. per trip for everyone).
From the old Spa buildings at the back of the gorge, you pay to walk 500m to the source of the hot water (36.5 degrees) along the raging Tamina River with the cliff walls soaring high above you, bending inward to almost form a roof. Hunters from the nearby Pfäfers Monastery discovered this spring in about 1240, and recognizing the healing powers of the hot water built wooden bathhouses near the spring, where sick people were lowered in baskets from 70m higher up (sometimes blindfolded) and left to "stew" for up to ten days!
We then returned to the old hotel and walked up and out of the gorge (about 100m on 310 wooden steps) to the town of Pfäfers, where we visited the castle ruins of Burg Wartenstein before descending back to Bad Ragaz. (Special Note: Internet information about the arch bridge which crosses the Tamina Gorge is worth reading, link is HERE.... ) Since this wasn't a particularly strenuous hike, we decided to walk to another neaby ruins (both ruins are prominent landmarks as we pass through this region by train), namely the Freudenberg Castle ruins.
Contrary to the weather report, we actually had very nice weather with lots of blue skies, maybe just a little too hot because it was partly muggy. But a great day, another 12-km, 4-hour hike on the side of the valley which we rarely go to. In fact, it was quite satisfying to look across the Rhine River toward the Chlus, that narrow passage that opens up the Prättigau, where we were just five days ago.
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From Bad Ragaz train station we boarded a large bus which first drove through narrow city streets, and then likewise narrow streets through the Tamina Gorge. At places, the distance from railing to cliff were barely wide enough to pass. |
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At the back of the gorge are the buildings of the old Bad Pfäfers Thermal "spa" and beyond that the entrance to a 500m-long very narrow passage which we could follow right to the source of the hot spring. Entrance was 5 Fr. |
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Through this passage people in the middle-ages made their way along the raging Tamina River to the hot springs |
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This final section to the baths is too "dangerous", so a parallel tunnel has been created for tourists. But this is where the sick people used to pass. Those who could not walk were lowered from the openings above |
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Caption in English: "The first written record of the spa dates to 1382. Initially, the patients bathed very close to the spring in rock recesses and wooden bathtubs. They stayed in the water up to ten days at once and left it as little as possible. They believed that the water would soften up their skin so much that toxins would be drawn out of the body. Getting into the awe-inspiring gorge was especially arduous. Those who could climbed on ladders, other were roped down in baskets". |
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Looking straight up to openings above, from where patients were lowered in baskets. This would be a height of about 70 meters. After we left the gorge, we passed at the level of these openings on a natural bridge. |
VIDEO:
Tamina Gorge
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Side tunnels made for tourists to get to the source of the hotsprings. The small spring where the water bubbles out is behind a glass window, but a fountain nearby has warm water running out of it. |
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Walking in to the source of the hotsprings and back out again is about 1 km. From here we head out of the gorge further up. |
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From the former spa, we climbed up higher, further back in the gorge, passing over the tunnels and then up out the other side. From there we walked to the village of Pfäfers, the site of the Monastery which administered the spa, then to the Ruins of Burg Wartenstein, back to the entrance of the Tamina Gorge, and then to the ruins of Burg Freudenberg, before catching a bus back to the train station. Including the walk to the hotsprings, it was about 12 km and four hours. |
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Here at the natural bridge we are actually standing above the hotsprings, which are some 70m or so below. |
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It is hard to see, but those are openings in the rock which were the skylights when we were in the tunnel about 70m below. |
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From the natural bridge, we climbed up another 100m out of the gorge, mostly on a series of wooden steps |
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Someone counted those steps, and marked them on the trail marker! 310 steps, apparently. |
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As we emerged from the gorge, we could see up the valley on the other side. The community on the other side of the river and gorge is called Valens |
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Whereas in our part of the country, all the meadows have now been mowed, here there were still lots of meadows and meadow flowers to enjoy. |
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The current meadow-flower seems to be the columbine. They were everywhere, and in so many different shades of pink, blue, violet and almost black! |
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After exiting the gorge, the trail to Pfäfers followed the road parallel to the gorge, but on comfortable paths. We found this convenient bench for our picnic lunch with a view across the gorge to Valens. Behind us a small post bus is making a run up this side of the valley |
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The bridge over the Tamina Gorge requires special mention. On the far side of the gorge, the original curving road from Bad Ragaz to that side of the valley was prone to rock slides and needed repair, but it was easier to build this bridge to connect the two sides of the gorge. This bridge is the highest arch bridge ever built in Europe (200m above the gorge bottom) and has a main arch span of 259 meters. The bridge was only just recently completed, in 2017. The bridge won the 2018 International Supreme Award for Structural Engineering Excellence. |
HERE is a link to a particularly fantastic photo which shows the construction of the arch: PHOTO CLICK HERE. This is from the website http://www.highestbridges.com/wiki/index.php?title=Tamina_Bridge |
More lovely meadows |
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We came across a spot where we could look way down into the gorge. You can just see the road below. |
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Walking along the Tamina Gorge |
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Here we reached the village of Pfäfers. In the back is the former Pfäfers Monastery, now part of a psychiatric clinic. |
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Such beautiful flowers, so simple yet stunning! |
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All kinds of colours of columbines in the meadows! |
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On a round-about route through Pfäfers we reached the New Wartenstein Castle, which is now a hotel. From the hotel grounds we get a look at the Old Wartenstein Castle, which we want to visit. |
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As a side-note, the "New Wartenstein Castle" has been converted into a rather ugly hotel, so this picture from 1885 is a better rendition of the region. We did go out to the edge of the hotel grounds for the view. |
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There was a display of some pretty good mock-ups of how the castle might have looked back in the day!!! |
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On our way down from the fortress ruins, we passed this beautiful waterfall where a family was having a good time |
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This photo is from the bus stop below the fortress, where we caught a bus back to the station in Bad Ragaz. |
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Our hike as depicted on Google Earth Maps |
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On the bus on the way back to the station, we passed once again near the entrance to the gorge. |
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And one note of interest. Way up even higher on the mountainside was this look-out point with a very weird "creature". There were lots of works of art displayed in the city, even one sculpture in the center of a river, so I assume this was part of the art display??? |
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The location of our hike today in relation to where we live |
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