Papenburg

Today is Himmelfahrt – Ascension Day – so (as I’ve noted before) liquid picnics seem to be the tradition. Unfortunately for the picknickers, the weather has also been rather liquid.

Papenburg sits amongst fenland, which made for a dull rest-day ride before the drizzle set in properly. The canals out of the town are dead straight and lined with houses; the only charm are the waterside irises. But there is always something to spark interest: here it was cycling above an automotive test track, which was unexpected. Even more exciting was the misbehaviour of my cycle computer: I’ve noticed once before that wind turbines can disrupt it, but today I observed that I was travelling at speeds of 86 kph into a head wind – and not a turbine in sight. My maximum speed – and I just had to take a photo – came in at 105.9 kph. Since we both clocked 105.9 kph, I must conclude – sadly – that something must have sent the computer haywire.

Dörpen to Papenburg

A short day with the unexpected pleasure of discovering Papenburg. Before that, though, there was a 1,000-year-old lime tree in Heede to see – propped up and garlanded with barrier tape, but nonetheless green and still flowering in abundance. A pleasant ride thereafter, with a coffee stop in the commercial outskirts that had hollowed out Rhede centre.

Looking at the map beforehand, I had a flashback re the Meyer Werft – shipyard (wharf?) – on the Ems in Papenburg and an article in a German lesson years ago about the shipbuilder. Their current line is cruise ships. Since Papenburg is quite definitely inland, it boggles the mind to think of a newly built ship leaving the shipyard and shimmying its way to the sea.

The industrial outskirts didn’t prepare me for the centre of Papenburg. It’s delightful. Instead of a Hauptstraße it has a Hauptkanal just like a Dutch town. (Harlingen came to mind, but it’s years since I was there.) Since we are staying here for two nights, it couldn’t be better.

Meppen to Dörpen

Another very green day – lots of cycling under tree canopies. A strong tail wind blotted out the nuisance of showers in the middle of the day. We followed the relationship between the river and the canal: now in each other’s arms, now going their separate ways.

I have nothing to say about Dörpen beyond the fact that it has a hotel of sorts with a restaurant that closes at 7 p.m. and long key codes for all the doors. On the plus side, the room has proper light switches.

I think I have heard the distinct local accent (or dialect?) here. Perhaps some Dutch influence? Anyway, today I have been saying “Moin” rather than “Guten Tag”!

Lingen to Meppen

The Emsland Route is as sinuous as the river itself: the 20km-via-main-road from Lingen to Meppen doubled in length via the Radweg – but nonetheless it took us most of the day. Goodness knows how we will cope with the slightly longer distance tomorrow!

The day was bookended with Rathäuser:

and filled with lots of green. Very pleasant cycling – and even the short rain burst was serendipitous, for we sheltered beneath an information board on a road named Am Kraftwerk. This was once the site of a peat-fired power station – 50 years of producing electricity until it was decommissioned in 1974. Just west of Geeste is a big moor/fen area – the source of the peat. From satellite photos you can see the long empty strips where it has been torn from the land. There’s also crude oil production and an oil refinery around Lingen, which came as a surprise after so much pedalling between arable fields and trees full of singing birds.

Meppen is interesting as the place where the River Hase joins the Ems while the Dortmund-Ems-Kanal plays gooseberry. I’m becoming rather fond of the Ems (in my sightline at this very moment) and rather regret that I shan’t be following it to the sea.

Once again, we have a touch screen for the room lights plus some motion-sensitive ones. Why make illumination so complex?

Rheine to Lingen

Today we started clockwise on the Emsland-Route. It’s just over 300km, but, with the weather and surfaces, I’m not sure that we’re going to complete it and get back to Europoort in time. No matter: there are trains after all.

We set off in light drizzle under tree cover as our route took us past a monastery and – brilliantly – some Salinen (which I’ve just learned are called graduation towers or thorn houses). I’ve seen a few in my time but I still can’t quite fathom them out. Salt water drips through vast screens of twigs, and the patient – perhaps an asthma-sufferer? – would sit downwind and breathe in the salty air. They are enormous – and presumably obsolete now that we have inhalers? I am grateful for modern medicine but still find them tremendously impressive.

And this is one of the charms of following a set route rather than plotting my own way across a map. Someone has already done the legwork for me and chosen a route which combines a roundabout way of getting somewhere with plenty of local interest. It was no great surprise to discover that the little town just beyond the Salinen is called Salzbergen. Coffee and a Windbeutel – no German holiday is complete without one! – in Emsbüren, and then the oddity of the River Ems and the Dortmund-Ems-Kanal briefly entwining for a kilometre or two before they unwound themselves.

There’s an historic centre to Lingen, but it wasn’t the day to see it – a run was just finishing as we arrived and the Marktplatz still had inflatable arches and local radio station broadcasting. There’s quite a lot of industry, both current and historic: we passed a power station and some steelworks, and once upon a time Salzbergen had a Erdölraffinerie.

The hotel room is good, but there are shades of Mon Oncle: the lights, for example, are controlled by a computer pad and switch themselves on unexpectedly.

Vreden to Rheine

Thanks to the new map I bought yesterday, I was able to navigate with confidence a fairly straight line to Rheine via Ahaus, Heek and Metelen. At Wettringen we picked up a disused railway line to Rheine – beautifully surfaced, sheltered, signposted for idiots – and hence the perfect route for the end of a longish day in light drizzle. There were times when I was sure I had pedalled a particular stretch before or passed a particular corner – which I probably had, but I’ve cycled in this region so many times that I can’t possibly pinpoint exactly when.

Our lunch stop was in a bakery/cafe attached to a supermarket. It’s been some years since I stopped being sniffy about such places, but I still regret that it’s a sign that there will be no traditional Bäckerei/Konditorei in the town centre. Even less attractive was the self-service bakery/cafe in Rheine. I do sometimes pine for Kaffee und Kuchen served at the table by a waitress in black and white, where you eat first and pay later.

Which reminds me: I must stop eating so much. I had forgotten about German portion sizes.

Emmerich am Rhein to Vreden

More country-hopping: the only map I had covered the Netherlands rather than Germany, so that was the route we took. I couldn’t find a German one in either of Emmerich’s two bookshops; both were staffed solely by elderly women who knew their stock inside out, but the stock itself didn’t suggest Emmerich was a town of avid readers. Vreden, on the other hand, has a comprehensive bookshop run by several younger staff – just one of the things (along with a formal, family-run hotel) that suggests Vreden is a bit better off than Emmerich.

I experienced rain for the first time in weeks. I suppose I should be glad for sake of the garden – but not for my holiday! It was drizzly and not too dreadful, but it cast a slight pall over a rather uninteresting ride. Which is not to say I didn’t enjoy it – but I note that I’ve taken no photographs today.