Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Cobbles and castles in the Bavarian Alps

- Rick Steves Rick Steves (www.rick steves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@rick steves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

Like so many travelers, my images of Germany — cute villages, dirndls and lederhosen, and fairy-tale castles — are from Bavaria, in the foothills of the Alps. You could easily spend a week here, soaking up culture as you bike along fragrant fields and tour the sights.

My favorite home bases for exploring the Bavarian Alps are Fussen and Reutte ( just over the border in Austria). They put you an easy drive from the region’s most popular sights: the wood-carving capital of Oberammerg­au and the popular “King’s Castles” with their fairy-tale turrets and romantic aura.

The romance starts with the older castle, Hohenschwa­ngau — the hunting palace of King Ludwig II of Bavaria (aka “Mad” King Ludwig). Its mostly Neo-Gothic interior looks much like it did in 1835, with paintings inspired by Romantic themes.

Ludwig, who inherited the throne at age 18, did not want to deal with politics. He instead focused on constructi­ng the fanciful Neuschwans­tein Castle just up the hill, decorated with themes of brave knights, fair maidens and scenes from Wagnerian operas. Just a few months after he moved into Neuschwans­tein, Ludwig — who was already planning an even more extravagan­t castle — was declared mentally unfit to rule. Two days later, he was found dead in a lake.

People still debate: Was it murder — as he was nearly bankruptin­g his kingdom with his costly castle building — or suicide? But today nobody complains about the cost of The Bavarian town of Fussen has a rich his castles. In fact, within six weeks of his funeral, tourists were already paying to visit them.

From Fussen, it’s a quick drive or bike ride to the King’s Castles. The town itself, dramatical­ly situated under a renovated castle on the lively Lech River, is a mix of real-world and cutesy-cobbled sights, with a colorful church painted in a fresco technique called Luftlmaler­ei, and a pleasant path to Lech Falls. Fussen’s one must-see sight, its Heritage Museum, spans a thousand years of the town’s history. A highlight here is the Dance of Death, painted shortly after a plague devastated the community in 1590. It shows 20 social classes, each dancing with the Grim Reaper — starting with the pope and the emperor.

Just outside Fussen, the Royal Crystal Baths pool/ sauna complex is an unforgetta­ble chance to lounge around naked with German experts at relaxation. A nearby lake, the turquoise Forggensee, is a great place to boat or bike.

A 20-minute drive across the border is the Austrian town of Reutte. Although its setting — surrounded by alpine peaks — is striking, the town itself is unremarkab­le. But I like Reutte for its fine countrysid­e accommodat­ions (the farther from the town center, the more rustic, authentic and relaxing) and its proximity to one of my favorite ruined castles, Ehrenberg.

Ehrenberg was built to defend against the Bavarians and to bottle up the strategic Via Claudia trade route, which connected Italy and Germany. Now the castle is in ruins (though with explanator­y signage), with hiking paths, a museum, and a 1,200-foot pedestrian suspension bridge, 300 feet above the valley floor.

The German village of Oberammerg­au is as commercial as it is cute — busy with tour groups and the venerable shops of the town’s famous woodcarver­s. It’s just a 45-minute drive from the King’s Castles. Several sights are close by: Ettal Monastery (with a splendid Baroque church); Linderhof Castle (a Baroque and Rococo palace also built by Ludwig II); and the German lift to the Zugspitze (Germany’s highest mountain, with a view of over 400 peaks in four countries).

Oberammerg­au is famous for its once-perdecade Passion Play — next performed in 2020 (tickets are easiest through a package deal; www.passions spiele-oberammerg­au.de). In 1633, in the midst of the bloody Thirty Years’ War and with horrifying plagues devastatin­g entire cities, the people of Oberammerg­au promised God that if they were spared from extinction, they’d perform a play telling the story of Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem, the Crucifixio­n, and the Resurrecti­on every decade thereafter. The town survived, and the people of Oberammerg­au are still making good on the deal. Every 10 years, about half of the town’s population (a cast of 2,000) are involved in the production of this extravagan­t five-hour event.

Oberammerg­au is much sleepier in non-Passion Play years. Around town, you’ll see onion-domed churches, and there are biblical and fairy-tale scenes painted on houses. Shop windows and the local museum display crafts from this wood-carving mecca. For thrills, nearby attraction­s include a gondola, alpine coaster, summer luge, and swimming/ sauna complex.

Biking through Bavarian fields, I savor that moment when the setting sun warms up all the colors and the newly cut hay fills the air with a sweet and fertile humidity. Coasting home into my village, it occurs to me that the Alps hold a symphony of experience­s that can endlessly delight lovers of culture, history, and nature. They certainly have for me.

 ?? CAMERON HEWITT/RICK STEVES’ EUROPE ?? history and evocative corners beyond its cobbled core.
CAMERON HEWITT/RICK STEVES’ EUROPE history and evocative corners beyond its cobbled core.
 ?? DOMINIC ARIZONA BONUCCELLI/RICK STEVES’ EUROPE ?? In its fairy-tale alpine setting, Neuschwans­tein Castle is the most popular tourist destinatio­n in southern Bavaria.
DOMINIC ARIZONA BONUCCELLI/RICK STEVES’ EUROPE In its fairy-tale alpine setting, Neuschwans­tein Castle is the most popular tourist destinatio­n in southern Bavaria.
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