Initial planning:
[SIZE=12pt]How the Cheese Tour became the Grand Tour des Alpes.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt][/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]A small group of Mustang enthusiasts were together on a round trip through Switzerland in July 2019. The motto of this tour was: "007 – in Goldfinger's footsteps" and we visited various film locations of this legendary motion picture on our route, in which a white pre-production Mustang convertible also made its first appearance. Thomas and Doris from Switzerland planned and organized this tour very lovingly and in detail, so that no wishes remained open and it would be difficult to top this performance.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]Unfortunately, my own Mustang failed at that time with a capital engine failure and I was forced to drive this tour with the everyday car. I was torn between the elation of watching six classic Mustangs drive in front of me and the dejection of not being able to participate with my own Mustang. So the dream grew to drive this tour again at a later date.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]In late 2019, it was foreseeable that the engine damage would be repaired during the cold and dark season, I started planning a small ride over a long weekend, virtually as a dress rehearsal for the newly rebuilt engine. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]The plan was a relaxed drive from Stuttgart to the Allgäu with a stop in Zwiefalten, the following day a visit to a cheese school where you learn to make your own cheese in small groups, as well as a drive up the Nebelhorn or a visit to the Breitachklamm.[/SIZE][SIZE=14pt] [/SIZE][SIZE=12pt]The following day we wanted to return to Oberstdorf through the Bregenz Forest, the Montafon, the Arlberg and the Lechtal Alps. The trip home was to be south of Lake Constance through Switzerland, finishing in the afternoon on the Höri peninsula. Everything was planned, the hotels, the events such as the cheese school and the ride on the Nebelhorn cable car, and the restaurants for the rest stops in February 2020 booked. And then Covid19 came along and all the travel plans were history.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]To make a long story short; 2020 only allowed a few day trips in the local area. Multi-day trips could not be safely planned. Nevertheless, my Mustang put nearly 3,000 nearly breakdown-free kilometers on the clock in 2020. The engine overhaul had proven stable. So the thought of repeating the Switzerland tour continued to circle incessantly in the back of my mind.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]Trusting common sense that the restrictions on public life experienced during the year would be reversed bit by bit by the summer of 2021, I worked out a new tour in the fall of 2020. This consisted of fragments of the failed cheese tour, the 007 tour from 2019, and some new aspects. A call in the group of Mustang-Freunde-Stuttgart, a loose interest group of over 100 drivers of classic Mustangs from the greater Stuttgart area, immediately showed sufficient potential participants.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]The round trip should lead us over nearly all considerable mountain passes in the east of Switzerland and in the west of Austria. That the tour would lead us over 30 different mountain passes at the end was not foreseeable to me at this time. The daily stages should not be longer than 300 km and the pure driving time per day should not exceed 6 hours. Average speeds of more than 50 km/h on mountain passes are an illusion anyway.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]Three hotels were set from the beginning. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]This was followed by weeks of research for hotels that could be reasonably conveniently located in the route of the tour planned so far, that would definitely offer a safe parking space for the Mustangs and that finally also called for accommodation costs within a manageable range.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]So after many inquiries by email, tough negotiations by phone about overnight costs, reservation allotments, and adjusted cancellation agreements, etc., 3 more hotels were found:[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]Now the detailed planning of the itinerary and the daily stages could be started.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt][/SIZE]
- to be continued -
[SIZE=12pt][/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]How the Cheese Tour became the Grand Tour des Alpes.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt][/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]A small group of Mustang enthusiasts were together on a round trip through Switzerland in July 2019. The motto of this tour was: "007 – in Goldfinger's footsteps" and we visited various film locations of this legendary motion picture on our route, in which a white pre-production Mustang convertible also made its first appearance. Thomas and Doris from Switzerland planned and organized this tour very lovingly and in detail, so that no wishes remained open and it would be difficult to top this performance.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]Unfortunately, my own Mustang failed at that time with a capital engine failure and I was forced to drive this tour with the everyday car. I was torn between the elation of watching six classic Mustangs drive in front of me and the dejection of not being able to participate with my own Mustang. So the dream grew to drive this tour again at a later date.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]In late 2019, it was foreseeable that the engine damage would be repaired during the cold and dark season, I started planning a small ride over a long weekend, virtually as a dress rehearsal for the newly rebuilt engine. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]The plan was a relaxed drive from Stuttgart to the Allgäu with a stop in Zwiefalten, the following day a visit to a cheese school where you learn to make your own cheese in small groups, as well as a drive up the Nebelhorn or a visit to the Breitachklamm.[/SIZE][SIZE=14pt] [/SIZE][SIZE=12pt]The following day we wanted to return to Oberstdorf through the Bregenz Forest, the Montafon, the Arlberg and the Lechtal Alps. The trip home was to be south of Lake Constance through Switzerland, finishing in the afternoon on the Höri peninsula. Everything was planned, the hotels, the events such as the cheese school and the ride on the Nebelhorn cable car, and the restaurants for the rest stops in February 2020 booked. And then Covid19 came along and all the travel plans were history.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]To make a long story short; 2020 only allowed a few day trips in the local area. Multi-day trips could not be safely planned. Nevertheless, my Mustang put nearly 3,000 nearly breakdown-free kilometers on the clock in 2020. The engine overhaul had proven stable. So the thought of repeating the Switzerland tour continued to circle incessantly in the back of my mind.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]Trusting common sense that the restrictions on public life experienced during the year would be reversed bit by bit by the summer of 2021, I worked out a new tour in the fall of 2020. This consisted of fragments of the failed cheese tour, the 007 tour from 2019, and some new aspects. A call in the group of Mustang-Freunde-Stuttgart, a loose interest group of over 100 drivers of classic Mustangs from the greater Stuttgart area, immediately showed sufficient potential participants.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]The round trip should lead us over nearly all considerable mountain passes in the east of Switzerland and in the west of Austria. That the tour would lead us over 30 different mountain passes at the end was not foreseeable to me at this time. The daily stages should not be longer than 300 km and the pure driving time per day should not exceed 6 hours. Average speeds of more than 50 km/h on mountain passes are an illusion anyway.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]Three hotels were set from the beginning. [/SIZE]
- [SIZE=12pt]the Aurora Hotel in Andermatt (CH), which also served as a filming location in the 007 movie Goldfinger and which we could only marvel at briefly from the outside in 2019, [/SIZE]
- [SIZE=12pt]the Vezia Hotel in Lugano (CH), which already inspired us in 2019 with its design from the 1950s,[/SIZE]
- [SIZE=12pt]and the Explorer Hotel in Oberstdorf (D).[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]This was followed by weeks of research for hotels that could be reasonably conveniently located in the route of the tour planned so far, that would definitely offer a safe parking space for the Mustangs and that finally also called for accommodation costs within a manageable range.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]So after many inquiries by email, tough negotiations by phone about overnight costs, reservation allotments, and adjusted cancellation agreements, etc., 3 more hotels were found:[/SIZE]
- [SIZE=12pt]the Sihlpark Hotel&Spa in Schindellegi,[/SIZE]
- [SIZE=12pt]the Sarain Hotel in Lantsch,[/SIZE]
- [SIZE=12pt]as well as the Silvretta Park Hotel in Klosters.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]Now the detailed planning of the itinerary and the daily stages could be started.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt][/SIZE]
- to be continued -
[SIZE=12pt][/SIZE]