Day 203 (39 to go, Accomodation 85, 2.39 days per stay.)
The Bilger Eck, in Konstanz, will be remembered as one of the better places we've stayed at. Nice comfy bed. Kettle and fridge in the room so you can make a flask of tea. Good dependable WiFi. We even had a decent eggy breakfast with two nice cups of coffee to wash it down.
Every time we stay in a nice place like that I feel quite sad leaving, especially as blue had replaced grey as the colour of the sky.
But anyway, it was time to leave the "cycling around Lake Constance" phase of the holiday and get ready for the Rhine River cruise phase. To do that we had the small matter of getting from Konstanz to Basel. Google maps gives you several options and they all seemed pretty straightforward. Yeah. Right!
The walk to the bus stop was easy enough, as was the bus to the main station. That's where the trouble started, although we didn't realise it at the time.
We're getting pretty experienced in navigating the German rail system and buying tickets. Go up to the machine. Change language to English. Type in destination. Accept all defaults about 2nd class, next train etc. Pay. Collect tickets. Go to platform. Done.
The destination city this time was... Basel. The fee €45. Not bad for two of us. The clue, that I didn't pick up on at the moment of purchase, was the only specific destination station was Basel Bad with no option to choose Basel Hbf the station next to which I'd booked our next hotel (so for me, that should be Basel 'Good').
We had 40 minutes to wait so we had a nice coffee and time to bitch about
Booking.com, the mega online booking company I've used pretty exclusively on this trip.
Why bitch? See, whilst we were staying in Friedrichshaven I got a very legitimate-looking email from the Ibis Budget Hotel we're now staying at in Basel via
Booking.com. I've had loads of similar emails from forthcoming hotels and other places we'd booked. Basically they give some simple info about check in times etc. Some of them give key information about how to get in the place if there'll be no-one on reception - that kind of thing. You start looking out for them and... you start to trust them.
This one looked pretty boring and standard but at the end it had an additional note requesting that I register my payment within 24 hours otherwise I would lose the booking. Yes. I know. The scammer alarm bells should have been going at this point and not the "panic! I don't want to lose my booking" ones. I just thought this is a legitimate email from the hotel via
Booking.com. It came about the right time I would expect and most of it *was* authentic. For example, it contained the correct booking id and clicking on it linked correctly to the correct booking page on
Booking.com. Anyway, it would appear that several Ibis customers had got stung by this too because the hotel sent out another message this morning, again through
Booking.com (and again it looked identical to the other one) but warning people NOT to click on any links and pay any money like muggins here did. No such message has yet been sent from
Booking.com.On their web site they tell you to report any such scammy experiences. I'd been trying to do that for 24 hours but when you *do* try you are sent around a never ending loop of Web pages with a very limited number of menu options and nowhere where you can actually *report* anything. Like our Sykes Holidays experience earlier, they make it impossible to actually write to a human being as the whole company hides behind its Web site. We predicted the hotel would deny any responsibility and ask for payment for the room anyway.
So, with that bitch off my chest it was time for the second leg of our journey to the Ibis in question: a train ride to Zurich. We got on and we'd soon passed seamlessly from Germany back into Switzerland. Woohoo! This was a breeze. Even the weather had turned warm and I had to take my jumper and shirt off. Jeans and a bloody T-shirt.
About half an hour into the journey a very young looking ticket collector came round the carriage. We showed him ours and the puzzled look on his face immediately indicated there was "ein Problem". He asked his colleague but she wasn't sure either. Twenty minutes later their boss appeared (how many ticket collectors are there on German/Swiss trains?) and we knew the news could not be good.
He explained to us, in perfect English of course, how our ticket was invalid. It only allows travel from Konstanz to Basel through Germany, not Switzerland.
"How much would it cost to travel to Basel through Switzerland?"
"Hold onto your hat" he joked "it would be €120 each!"
What? Why is Swiss travel so much more expensive than German? It made no sense. It's about the same distance either way.
After a bit of tapping on his handy he said "the cheapest option for you is get off at the next station and buy a ticket back to Konstanz and then do the journey from there through Germany as you should have done."
So we did. As we stepped off onto Weinfelden station I thanked the inspector (!) but suggested this could have been made clear at the ticket machine. He shrugged an uncomfortable, squirmy shrug. To be fair to him, he *could* have charged us for the wasted journey we'd made to that point.
As we bought tickets back to Konstanz (€12.50 each) the weather had ominously turned colder and the skies had gone grey again. Bizarrely, right by platform 1, there was a fun fair with the air filled with the squeals of delighted children. It felt like the Swiss were having a joke at our expense.
Of course no ticket inspector checked our tickets on the way back. Murphy's Law!
Quite gloomy with the time approaching 2pm and with us still at our starting point, things did start to brighten when the lady at the information desk told us the next correct train was actually standing at platform 3a and would leave in 10 minutes. She printed off a sheet with all the times, platforms and train numbers.
Danke veilen mal!!
Within moments we were heading in the right direction... to the German town of Singen.
When we arrived the change of train couldn't be easier. Platform 6 was right next to the one we'd got off and the train to Basel was already there waiting. Even though it was now raining and the skies were dark, our mood had lifted.
"We're Singen in the rain!" Of course, was the only tune that came to mind.
The final leg went smoothly with the train racing along the German-Swiss border next to the Rhine for almost all of the rest of the way. A slice of Germany pokes right into Switzerland right up to Basel, so that by the time we had almost arrived at the station north of the Rhine, Basel Bad, we were still in Germany.
Once off the train we caught the #1 tram into the city center and then the #11 to the *other* station Basel Hbf, where I'd assumed we'd be coming into, hence our hotel booking.
Upon arrival I told my sob story to the young man at reception and he tried to be sympathetic (probably thinking "stupid old man!") but as expected he took our money anyway.
After settling in we went for a walk into the city center. My plan was to go to an old traditional beer/wine house/restaurant recommended by the interweb: Brasserie Zum Braunen Mutz. It looks lovely from the outside and inside but the prices on the menu were outrageous. What is it with the Swiss? It seems everything is at least twice as expensive as anywhere else. They didn't even have the traditional vegetable soup with bone marrow I'd been promised.
So, we upped and left and popped in next door for a maccers. Even here it was 8.50 CH ($17 AUD) for a burger. No chips. No drink.
After a quick look at the Rhine... our home for the next week, we returned here on the #11 tram feeling just a bit ripped off.