Grossglockner!

Yamaha FJR Motorcycle Forum

Help Support Yamaha FJR Motorcycle Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

teerex51

The Italian Scallion
Joined
Jun 14, 2005
Messages
1,125
Reaction score
57
Location
Milan, Italy
Gletscher.JPG


The Grossglockner Hochalpenstrasse (yup, that's a mouthful of Deutsch right there) is a legendary high-mountain road that was opened in 1935 and climbs a huge massif (including Austria's tallest mountain at 3,798 meters) from the southern Moell valley to descend into Salzburg on the northern side. This is not far from Berchtesgaden, where Hitler and the top Nazi bigwigs had built their mountain retreats, which US troops liberated in 1945 and found exceedingly well stocked with fine wines and the occasional Van Gogh masterpiece. All of the loot having been stolen from cellars and museums here and there in Europe. ;)

Hochtor6.JPG


We left Milan early in the AM and pushed our rides (one 2007 FJR1300 and a 2008 C-14) into the Dolomites and down into South Tyrol like bats out of hell. We crossed into Austria at lunchtime. The plan was to head North to Kitzbuehel in Tyrol and treat ourselves to some very large beers, go to bed and ride the GH southbound the next day. By the time we rode into the Austrian town of Lienz, though, we figured: "Aw hell, it's sunny and mild, let's do this SOB now!".

Hochtor7.JPG


We stopped for gas on the outskirts of Lienz and as we were getting ready to roll on, a summer thunderstorm that had been brewing further down the valley rushed in preceded by a barrage of thunderclaps. The Tyrolean gas-station manager pointed skywards and urged us to Losfahren! (In the US of A, he'd have put it like: "you guys had better git the hell outa here...". Who says German can't be concise?). We laid some rubber and headed to Heiligenblut (it means Holy Blood, I guess Tyroleans like their religion pretty overstated) and up the mountain. The GH is a toll road and it costs all of Eur 18 for a bike but the quality of the road and all amenities is first-class. It's like a mountain theme-park where you bring your own transportation. Should you so decide, you can ride around all day and check out every nook and cranny of the Grossglockner. The entry ticket's good for a full day.

Hochtor8.JPG


We reached the Hochtor (high gate) at elevation 2500 meters and the view south was spectacular. The thunderstorm was thrashing the Moell valley but up here the sky was only partly cloudy. Through the Hochtor tunnel we reached the North Side and enjoyed more amazing views of the GG and the Pasterzen Glacier to the NW.

Gletscher1.JPG


The road then winds down past some Alpine lakes to the Fuscher Toerl, a great overlook encompassing the whole mountain range. All of the peaks are at least 10,000 feet high with the majestic Grossglockner towering above them at over 12,000 ft. The road is absolute heaven for bikers, although it's also open to car traffic and littered with gawking cagers whose road antics you really need to watch. Some of them come from the flattest parts of Europe and the mere sight of a plain curve makes them queasy. Prepare for the worst. You also get suicidal cyclists negotiating the killer climbs in low gear, see them pedal like crazy just to keep from rolling backward.

Reit1.JPG


We eventually hit the valley at 4.30 PM and endured the thick summer traffic all the way to Kitzbuehel and St Johann in Tirol, then crossed into Germany and to a small village called Reit im Winkl which is a sight for sore eyes. It's almost a German enclave in Tyrol and it's so pretty it looks fake.

Reit.JPG


We had booked a 4-star joint with pool and spa but, by the time we got there, we realized we really just wanted to have a few beers. Screw the health farm crap. The next day we woke up in the middle of a raincloud. Day-um - we said - good thing we did the GG yesterday... B)

Reit4.JPG


The Wx improved at 9.00 however and we took in more beautiful sights along the local back roads. This area is part of the Deutsche Alpenstrasse, a concept similar to the BRP but with lots more traffic. Yet it makes for beautiful riding, while with a watchful eye on local speed cameras at all times.

Reit3.JPG


Many quaint and spotless villages along this route sport their own variation of the Maypole, a tradition which goes back 7 centuries. You see them in the main square of every burg beautifully decorated with the icons of local arts and crafts.

Maibaum.JPG


We soon hit the East/West Salzburg-to-Munich superslab and headed West for a while to connect to the southbound Inntal-Autobahn that leads to Innsbruck and the Italian border at the Brennerpass. Traffic was the absolute sh*ts, with every Hans or Marike having left their native German or Dutch town in their mobile home bound for the Italian lakes or seashore. This sucks, we said, after eating the fumes of yet another diesel-powered camper hogging the passing lane.

At Innsbruck we decided to head West into Switzerland and then SW to St Moritz, now planning to reach the Italian border the hard way. It sure turned out to be the hard way. It rained non-stop for three hours as we negotiated a beautiful if threadbare valley road all the way to glitzy St Moritz.

There was a rally of vintage Jaguars in town that the weather mercilessly ruined. We were briefly stuck in convoys of foul-smelling veteran cars but we took advantage of several long straights to get untangled very quickly. Too quickly, in fact. Some parts we did at 170 kmh, which is over double the Swiss speed limit for non-slab highways. No chance of any radar camera having nabbed us, as we were pulling a cloud of fine spray behind our bikes that would have screwed any flash snapshot.

Got home safe and sound at 6PM on Day 2 after a mere 1,200 kilometers. What an exhilarating ride, though!

Stef

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Sounds like a wonderful trip Stef... wish we had more of your terrain and riding opportunities here in the flatlands...

 
Sounds like a wonderful trip Stef... wish we had more of your terrain and riding opportunities here in the flatlands...

You're right Groo, sometimes I take all this for granted. :rolleyes:

In about 800 miles we crossed into Austria, then Germany, then Austria again. We rode along the SE border of Switzerland for about 150 miles and back into Italy. We negotiated 5 Alpine passes and lost track of the number of lakes we rode by.

Gas may be $10 a gallon over here :blink: but we get a lot of bang for the buck!

Stef

 
Glad you got a chance to enjoy the scenery. When I last rode it in July 2006 I had to put up with fog. Took 3 hours to cross and hardly saw the bends, let alone the drop offs.

 
My soul sighs with hopes of one day actually riding those roads.

Nice write-up.

 
Looks awesome! I've never been to europe, but if I ever do get there, thats the kind of stuff I'd like to see.

 
Glad you got a chance to enjoy the scenery. When I last rode it in July 2006 I had to put up with fog. Took 3 hours to cross and hardly saw the bends, let alone the drop offs.
That's too bad, Dave. :angry:

Like every large mountain, the GG has its own weather system and the Wx report may predict sunny skies in the general area but when you get there you can find the big guy covered with clouds.

That's why I guess we were lucky to have decided on the spur of the moment to change our plans and do the GG while the going was good.

Hochtor5.JPG


It looks like you're gonna have to ride it again. :rolleyes: Just be sure to give me a call before you do, maybe we can hook up somewhere.

I'd really love to have more time to check out the whole area. With the Eur 18 admission ticket you get a sticker and a map. There's a lot to be seen there

beside some great twisties and you need to hit the magic moment (good weather, little traffic) to enjoy it all.

Mapsticker.jpg


Another thing I like about that area is the huge number of hotels displaying the sign "Bikers Welcome". There are other parts of Old Europe where they're planning to bar entire areas to motorcycle traffic :huh: These folks here have realized how good our business is and that the vast majority of visiting riders are decent people who enjoy the good things in life. It just occurs to me that all I saw on the GG were serious riders that had come a long way to visit and not a single short-sleeved puke on a tricked-out bike.

Stef

 
Guten Tag und Gruss Gott Herr Sarao, Was ist los? Is that Hook standing next to the Kawi C-14 in the picture of Unterwirt Wohlfuhloase Haus? I am uncertain from the picture if that is Luciano or not, riding jacket and helmet look familiar to me.

How is Mek? Have you spoken with Caba - Eric lately? Dr. Bob and I still talk about our riding with Dave and the rest of you constantly, und Herr Flanders and I ride together on a weekly basis. Once again, a fantastic ride report from you, Stef!!

With my being stationed in Augsburg, Bavaria for two full years the Grosslglockner was my backyard riding road on my BMW R60/2; I bought the yearly motorcycle pass and rode it from the day the snow cleared until it fell again in the fall.

I'd thought that maybe you would take me up on my offer of using "Lucy Liu" my 2003 FJR and ride to NAFO with SkooterG!!

Postscript: In all of the evening conversation that the seven of us enjoyed for all of those Spanish M/C nights, we had never discussed if any of you European gentlemen enjoyed dirt bike riding. If you have any interest in riding in the dirt in Mexico, I am organizing an offroad trip to Real de Catorce in the mountains of the Sierra Madre Oriental around Zacatecas, Mexico for the Spring of 2009. I can arrange for your rental of a Suzuki DR 650; with your skills, dirt riding will be second nature to you!

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Hey Don :hi:

Yes, that's Hook the Unstoppable in the pic. :rolleyes: The whole Pyrenees crew is fine, AFAIK...

Thanks for the Mexican invite, but we'll have to see what my job situation looks like next year.

...and I'm sorry I'll be missing NAFO. I'll be in Europe for 3 more weeks, then I'm off to Raleigh for my hard-earned stateside vacation.

Have a great time :exhappysmiley:

Stef

 
Top