Headed to Klaipeda Thursday in sweltering heat and slogged through unbelievable traffic jams, mostly caused by endless road construction sites. After checking in, we trotted down to the harbour for a meal, apparently the entire town, especially the harbour area, was readying itself for the upcoming Sea Fest taking place from Friday-Sunday. Food stalls, souvenir vendors and loads more were setting up all over the place. As we were waiting for our meal, a trio of BMW 9Ts rolled up at the adjacent hotel, my Fratelli Rasanti mates Volker, Burkhard and Beat with whom I had ridden the 2022 Milano-Taranto! They had started their baltic tour a week prior and just arrived from a very wet Poland. Nice surprise for all of us! They hadn't booked and the hotel was full. After a short chat they headed off in search of accommodation.
Volker & Co.
Klaipeda MC. They still use the original germanic name of the city, Memel.
Woki and I spent the evening drinking and laughing, making our way from one watering hole to the next, but still found our hotel on the first try. Much to our surprise, we found Volker sitting in the foyer, the 3 had found room in our hotel. Breakfast took a little longer...
Checked out late to roll to the ferry terminal with riding gear strapped to the luggage, no way we were trawling through the de-toured traffic jams (half the inner city streets were closed due to the Sea Fest, most notably our route to the other end of the town/harbour!) in that heat again! The automated check in was a breeze, so we returned to the city to walk around and enjoy the buzz. Had a nice lunch and a few (soft) drinks before heading off to the terminal once again. Rolled in line and a guy stuck his head out of his camper and yelled, "Jeez, a Laverda!" Turns out he's good buddy of Andy Wagner who runs Laverda Paradies in Constance, Germany. The securing of the bikes was done by the ship crew, pretty rough and ready... fuckin' big rachet strap over the seat and tightened that I feared for my centre stand!
We soon realised why the booked passage was so much cheaper than the competitors, no room for a headache in the cabin, no bar on the sun deck (to which I was looking forward

), no sun protection on deck, no lounge/bar, only a cantine-like service counter with just a few basics. Oh well, it's only 24 hours... Our pre-booked dinner turned out quite mediocre, typical cantine slop. Breakfast was no better unfortunately. TT Lines cannot really be recommended, unless you bring along provisions of your own. At least the outer cabin was relatively quiet and we arrived in Travemünde on time and still floating!
Entering Travemünde harbour:

Travemünde and Lübeck threw all the traffic it had at us Saturday afternoon, hot and humid again. We had booked on the bank of the river Elbe some 80km from the port and arrived just in time for dinner before the kitchen closed. Left next morning in light drizzle, clad in rain gear. Due to road works, we couldn't use the route Miss Garmin had worked out and before I realised it, we were too far for an alternative in the correct direction. It took us 60km east to reach the next ferry, the Elbe has very few crossings, before we could head south again. Roads had mostly dried and we were already sweating in the rain gear, so off it went. Pretty uneventful, mostly moist ride through the Lüneburg Heath with a bit of Autobahn thrown in to circumnavigate Celle and Hannover. We had booked into the Villa Löwenherz (Lionheart) in Lauenförde, in the midst of the Weser hill country, a bikers hotel that we have been visiting on and off over the past 40-odd years. Rain finally caught up with us before we traversed the Ith range, so we donned the rain gear again. Disaster struck just before we reached Höxter, my clutch cable threw in the towel! Old problem, the nipple didn't freely rotate in the hand lever, mea culpa. I had packed a spare, replacement took less than 30 minutes, including unpacking and repacking the bike. Arrived at the Villa shortly after and enjoyed an evening of chatting bikes with others over plenty of Bier and Schnapps.
Weather again looked rather dodgy Monday morning, but we decided to chance it without rain suits. The ride from the Weser hills through the Sauerland region is very pleasant, good biking roads with mostly little traffic, only a couple small showers this time. Dropped in on my sister-in-law who works in a bike shop in Hilchenbach for a coffee, then continued to her husband at home in Netphen. Woki and I separated at the A45 at Freudenberg while I took the slow route home through the forests and along the Sieg river. Got slightly moist again and arrived just before a major downpour!
Four weeks that far exceeded my expectations. We saw incredible landscapes, experienced fantastic hospitality and met awesome people. I have come to realise just how cramped and over-populated central Europe is, Norway and Finland did remind me a bit of Oz, roads to the horizon and unchanging landscapes for miles on end. Somehow bizarre, awesome and boring, all in one. We were extremely lucky in regard to the weather, I honestly expected to hardly get out of the rain suits, turned out we hardly needed them. 31°C at the polar circle doesn't happen that often, usually, but may be a sign of things to come!
Finally reaching the Cape was rewarding for me personally, would I want to return? Nah, don't think so... I'd rather explore more of the Norwegian coastline, already ear-marked a trip with wifey in the roadster, maybe in '27. Southern and Central Norway impressed me the most in regard to riding/driving fun, awesome roller coaster roads with majestic views. Not sure if there will be a next big ride in the near future, bum certainly needs a long recovery!
That's it from me, hope some of you enjoyed my ravings, perhaps they may be an incentive for some to undertake similar, before it's too late.
Cheers,
piet