A Top Gear Top Holiday, Austrian-Swiss-Italian Alps

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Whilst a Mini is a decent car (I'm surprised you haven't driven one!), bit of a let down! Having said that, the last one I drove was a mid 2000's naturally aspirated version, which was slow/gutless! Handled like it was on rails though!

Would you mind clarifying hertz Gold membership courtesy of Westpac Black? Hertz Gold Plus Rewards is free to join. Do you mean 5* status?

Hi AdMEL, thanks for that - I actually didn't realise there are 2 programs. I just checked and yes, the Black Amex lets you into the Gold Plus Rewards 5 star. Cheers I'll amend my post

Agree, with only 90kW under the bonnet it's not going to break any records. My current car has 3 times the power. The funny thing is, it doesn't matter much in Europe or in an urban situation. Being relatively underpowered, you gun it hard - and this engine willingly takes it. I am showing my bias now, but I can't think of a more complementary car to take on a twisty and narrow Alpine road!
 
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Following.

Awesome so far! I've rented a Mini from Hertz in SYD before (by accident, it was an upgrade) absolutely awesome little car.

I thrashed the daylights a out of it.

The engine is very willing and sucks up the thrashing. It was very very fun!
 
Next, off the main motorway and onto the backroads. I took route 154 to St Gilgen, then 158 to Bad Ischl.
At times, the road hugs the shores of the Mondsee and Wolfgangsee, offering views of the pristine lakes. At other times, it plunges into forests and meadows and small hamlets. The echo of the exhaust was great amongst the trees. I pulled over many times to admire the views, walking through fields of flowers blossoming in springtime, and all around you the tall mountains sometimes dusted with snow. It is good for the soul.

By this stage, it was getting late so I rejoined the A1 and zoomed at 150kph to reach Innsbruck just as dusk was falling. Quick meal, night cap, programmed the GPS for Day 2, and off to bed.


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Hi AdMEL, thanks for that - I actually didn't realise there are 2 programs. I just checked and yes, the Black Amex lets you into the Gold Plus Rewards 5 star. Cheers I'll amend my post

Agree, with only 90kW under the bonnet it's not going to break any records. My current car has 3 times the power. The funny thing is, it doesn't matter much in Europe or in an urban situation. Being relatively underpowered, you gun it hard - and this engine willingly takes it. I am showing my bias now, but I can't think of a more complementary car to take on a twisty and narrow Alpine road!

Hertz has one membership program, Gold Plus Rewards (previously #1 Club Gold) with several levels.

Base level is just Gold Plus Rewards, which is free to join in Australia (It costs to join in the US). Only benefit is no paperwork.

Second level is 5 star, which you need to rent 7 times a year to attain, or be gifted via various cards or airlines. Also provides a one class upgrade to a max. Full size, subject to availability.

Next level is Pesidents Circle, which is the top level in Australia. Attained by renting 20 times a year, IIRC. Gifted by some cards. IIRC, guaranteed one class upgrade and some other benefits.

I think there is another level in the US - Platinum - which is not available in Australia.

I like the Mini. Would like to drive the more powerful turbo version though! Interested to hear your further thoughts.
 
Nice write-up and pics. Love a TR with a motoring focus. Makes me want to go back.

This probably won't help, but back in 2009 (from memory) I rented an E92 M3, inclusive of all insurance and 2,500km (we used 2,480 odd :D) for EUR900, for 7 days. :p

Just got lucky though. Incredibly good deal via the SixT website (German website only - had to get a colleague to translate as this was before the days of Chrome auto-translate, and the deal wasn't available on the English website). Took it through Switzerland, Austria, even into Italy. Had a ball!
 
Enjoying the TR, good work ozkid.
Too bad the Boxter was unavailable. Not hard to get it in Australia due to the ridiculous price Hertz are asking for it. I wonder if it's cheaper in Europe.
 
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Thanks everyone for the encouragement

Nice write-up and pics. Love a TR with a motoring focus. Makes me want to go back.

This probably won't help, but back in 2009 (from memory) I rented an E92 M3, inclusive of all insurance and 2,500km (we used 2,480 odd :D) for EUR900, for 7 days. :p

Just got lucky though. Incredibly good deal via the SixT website (German website only - had to get a colleague to translate as this was before the days of Chrome auto-translate, and the deal wasn't available on the English website). Took it through Switzerland, Austria, even into Italy. Had a ball!

Yes, that is a great price for the E92 rental. Love the almost jet turbine-like wail as it goes beyond 4000rpm. And at 8000rpm it is positively screaming. Interesting, as most of the M3's soundtrack is engine derived, whereas (say) the C63 AMG is more butch and comes from the exhaust note.
 
Enjoying this very much and looking forward to the rest of it.

Good to see some Canberra wine being served, i have a bottle of 2008 Clonakilla Shiraz Viogner waiting for the right moment to be drunk!
 
Day 2 started gloriously, sunshine and clear skies. A quick breakfast in the Innsbruck Altstadt, in a cosy cafe in a cobblestoned alley off the main square. With fur lined chairs to keep one's bottom warm.

We pointed west along the A12, then took the 180 exit towards Pfunds. I was told that there is a speed limit in Austria, unlike the autobahns in Germany, but you could have fooled me. Drivers were generally divided into 3 groups - truckies, who are speed limited and reasonably conscientious with this; a main group that hangs around 120kph more or less; and Niki Lauda wannabes above 160kph. Having driven in Germany before, I was very conscious of the rearview and kept an eye for the low flying missiles that looked really far away in the distance and 5 seconds later right up the hooter. Oddly enough, most of these were driving station wagon Audi and BMWs ("estate cars") - the school run in Austria must be very competitive :)

From Pfunds, we crossed into Italy using the SS40 and the countryside changed. The road hugged the mountains before depositing you into a magical place called Graun im Vinschgau. The lake (Reschensee) is artificial, created as a result of a hydroelectricity project that flooded the old village. The only bit left is the church bell tower, and it was a spectacular reveal - as you go around a curve into a mountain valley, it just comes into view. It must have been some glacier that carved this valley; it opens up into a broad flat fertile area all the while reducing in elevation. And all criss-crossed with switchbacks and sweeping curves :D:D

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The plan was to the tackle the Stelvio Pass in the morning, before it got too busy. Lots of advice stating this, apparently after it got the Top Gear treatment stating it was the best road in the world (before the boys found the "Transfargargagrarrian highway" in Romania) every tourist in their campervan have tried to do the run. After Stelvio, hit Bormia and do a big U shaped loop to Saint Moritz in Switzerland via Torino. Then onwards to Chur, then Vaduz, before trekking eastwards back to Innsbruck.

I drove onwards to the village of Stelvio, but then stopped at this sign. Bugger!!


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Enjoying this very much and looking forward to the rest of it.

Good to see some Canberra wine being served, i have a bottle of 2008 Clonakilla Shiraz Viogner waiting for the right moment to be drunk!

Oooh that would be a very nice bottle! Love Murrumbateman wines, the cool climate shiraz is delicious and spicy. It's a great take on the prototypical "heavy" shiraz. Have several vintages of the Clonakilla Hilltops, Shiraz Viognier, and the straight voignier. This last is really good if you haven't tried it.
 
Um, this is no good. Burned through the travel SIM allowance to check on opening times. Even worse than I thought; several alpine passes in Austria and Switzerland will remain closed until mid-May, on account of the roads still covered in snow. This included the Gotthard, Furka, and San Bernardino, which were also on the To Do list. I've arrived a fortnight too early :!::evil:

This will teach me for not doing proper research before I left Australia. Ok, Plan B. Diversion to an all-year round road to St Moritz, then cross back into Italy to do the Via Spluga then back to Innsbruck. So backtrack for a few km to connect with road 28, which plunged me into Switzerland. Have to stop at border checkpoint. Um, hang on, the very serious border officer was talking to the driver in each car. Passport in hotel safe! I've only brought the credit card, drivers license, camera, and phone. My turn to be interrogated: "Arrrrh, G'DAY MATE! LURVELY DAY FOR A DRIVE!". He takes one look at me and wave me through.

2nd note to self: Bring passport tomorrow
 
This new route will take me through the Swiss National Park, and its alpine roads: Ofenpass/Fuorn Pass, Malojapass, and the Reschen pass. All are stunning, at some points about 5min of constant switchbacks, zigzags up and down mountainsides, and over crests. No tunnels going through the belly of mountains, instead only avalanche tunnels - built over the road with a sloping roof, so that snow can slide off. A nice side effect, of course, is huge reverberations when goosing the pedal as you go through them. Cheap thrills :cool:


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The next stretch will take me to Chiavenna on the other side of the border with Italy, using roads 27, 3, and SS37. This road runs through St Moritz, alongside the beautiful lakes south, the Silvaplana and Sils im Engadin. St Moritz is nestled beside a lake with mountains all around. It was very quiet that day, but I could imagine during winter the rich and surgically enhanced will be strutting their stuff. No guessing why they chose this place; it's postcard pretty. Ice still very much in evidence on the lake. Lunch was at a Swiss seafood restaurant right on the water's edge on the Silvaplana with a delicious pasta and fresh warm bread.

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The Via Spluga, SS36, runs almost north from Chiavenna taking in little villages called Campodolcino, Idola, Madesimo, and links northern Italy with Switzerland. It begins at 300m elevation at the southern end, and crests the Alps at 2200m in 30km. The route follows the San Giocomo valley. It allowed people to traverse the otherwise imposing and impossible central Alps, and was an important trading route over the centuries.

It is now a glorious, mind blowing road trip.

The road quality was immediately different from Austria and Switzerland, and narrower. Scary as hell in some places, there's bits of wood as guardrails between you and the valley floor 1000m below. With corrugated and rippled tarmac, I thought the ABS would be in for a real shakedown. But Veronica handled these with aplomb, a testament to the strength of the underlying chassis. With the almost 180degree switchbacks at several spots, the convertible came into its own: with the top down, I can look up to whether there were cars, cyclists or tour buses coming down onto my head. With a clear road, it was engine brake into the corner, tap on the brakes, swivel the car around your hips and accelerate out, hard, in 2nd. And all around you, majestic vistas of mountains, valleys, rivers, alpine lakes, and forests.

As we ascended, snow became everywhere. Near the summit, snow was packed to about 2-2.5m over the road surface; a snowdozer has simply cleared the road but in a Mini, top down, it felt like in an X-wing fighter doing a version of the Death Star trench run. Except perhaps, on the planet Hoth. It did pose a different problem - snow could and did fall onto the road, and straight line visibility was hampered by the height of the snow. And in the shadows, black ice. Nothing for it, increase power to the engines, after all Vader is on your tail.

As I mentioned, being relatively underpowered I spent a lot of time in 2nd and 3rd, and at high revs. Some cough sphincter contracting moments when you see a bad patch on the road and thinking this would be a really bad time to lose traction at 60kph with a cliff 2m away. But this car gobbled it up without flashing the DSC warning. A real blast. Made you very confident that you can chuck it into a corner and you can make it out.

End of Day 2, sedate drive back to Innsbruck for the last hurrah on Day 3. Day 4 is back to Vienna and the grindstone, so spent a bit of time planning the route - and checking which passes are actually open.


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Today's run was back roads into the Italian Dolomites. Day 3 was quite a departure, weather wise, from Day 2.

Sit-rep:
1. Is it raining and miserable? Yes. But hopefully will stop by the time I get to the Dolomites. It is alpine weather after all.
2. Is it cold enough to form black ice on alpine roads? Oh yes.
3. Are these mountain passes notorious for death? Yes, must be, there were a lot of road safety signs with the Grim Reaper that I passed on Day 2
4. Should I be worried? No. All the posters only illustrated Mr Reaper hovering over motorcyclists. I should be doubly safe, as 4 wheels = 2 wheels x 2
5. Are you planning to drive with the top down? Sure, why not.
6. But it's about 5 degrees? True, but the Mini vents keep you warm, when dialed up to 28degrees and at full blast.
7. You're going to get wet? No. If you drive fast enough, the water flows over the car. Jamie and Adam busted that myth in Mythbusters, driving a Boxster, so it must be true.

Ok, Autobots, transform and roll out...
 
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Great TR.
Only driven a friends mini back in the 70s.Had to put the head down-mine not the cars.And when braking my foot hit the accelerator and clutch as well.Totally ended any relationship I had with the mini.My Datsun 1600 after I had it race tuned on the other hand!
 
Great TR.
Only driven a friends mini back in the 70s.Had to put the head down-mine not the cars.And when braking my foot hit the accelerator and clutch as well.Totally ended any relationship I had with the mini.My Datsun 1600 after I had it race tuned on the other hand!

Haha. The car I learned to drive on was dad's Datsun, a 160B I think. Canary yellow, non power steering, manual, he took me to an empty carpark to teach. It was very large open space and devoid of any obstructions apart from a mound of sand about 1m high in the corner. Like a moth to the flame, I managed to zero in to the only thing I could hit and put the front end into it. He wasn't very impressed!!

The first car I bought with my own cash, 1 year after starting working, was back to another Nissan, a Pulsar SSS which was the last of that range (N15 model)
 
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