Swiss-ful Thinking

Blogeintrag Nr. 8. Rapperswil-Jona; Markthalle IM Viadukt

September 9, 2023.

After all the driving over the past two days, we wanted something closer to home. Stef had marked down a town about a half-hour outside of Zürich, called Rapperswil-Jona, as having a lovely Schloß (castle) and a rose garden, and other charming features.

We headed south, along the eastern shore of the ZΓΌrichersee, stopping first at the Chinagarten. The Chinese Garden is located right by the lake at the ZΓΌrichhorn (a part of land sticking out into the lake on the eastern side). It is classed as a “temple garden,” and one of the highest ranking Chinese gardens outside of China proper. (Ellen, this reminded us of our wonderful trip with you.)

The garden was a gift to ZΓΌrich from its “partner” city of Kunming, out of gratitude to ZΓΌrich for having provided Kunming with technical and scientific support (related to expanding drinking water supplies and urban drainage). Quite beautiful and serene.

Then off to Rapperswil. Actually not much there besides the view of the castle and a bevy of restaurants,

marred by the construction crane (they’re ubiquitous in Switzerland). We had a nice lunch of quinoa pokΓ© bowl and tofu salad in a restaurant outside the Hotel Jakob.

Never did find the rose garden, by the way. GPS sent us in circles until we gave up. We should have known better than to consider a place that was mentioned nowhere by Rick Steves.

Then the quick way home (along the western shore of the ZΓΌrichersee) back to ZΓΌrich West, and out to find the shopping/eating area created under the the former viaduct (Markthalle IM Viadukt). On our walk over there, we saw some of the avant-garde stuff that typifies the industrial-chic ZΓΌrich West,

including Frau Gerolds Garten, containing an old CitroΓ«n auto turned into a planter (I know, Marty, I know, what a waste!), and a number of high fashion and funky shops,

and examples of creative use of shipping containers:

There was also a sign in mangled German/English that my high school German teacher (Frau MΓΌnch) would have called “gemixtes pickles.”

As best I can translate it, “Coffee makes everything better.” (This reminded me of the decorative mug on the bookshelf of a former colleague from Mount Sinai, which bore the legend, “Human Being: Just Add Coffee.”) The Viadukt market itself spans a length of several blocks under 36 arches, and puts suburban shopping malls to shame:

We stopped at a fromagerie for (what else?) more cheese. On the way back to Naphthastraße, Stef scoped out a place where they’d created an urban surfing opportunity:

In the middle of ZΓΌrich: Who’d believe this?

17 responses to “Swiss-ful Thinking”

  1. Your writing is he best I’ve seen in anyone’s account of their travels. Danke AgAiN!!

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    1. Boy, that was a fast response!

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  2. I love following your adventures and living vicariously. It all sounds wonderful.
    Vielen Dank

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  3. I guess the surfing opportunity is as believable as the red 2CV planter. Oh, maybe the 2CV still runs and was just parked there briefly before delivering the plant. Thank you!
    Best Wishes.
    Marty

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    1. Seen several spiffy Maseratis, and our parking garage has two (2!) Ferraris! BMWs and Porsches are all over the place.

      Our little rental is a Ford Focus with (I can hardly bear to admit it) an automatic transmission. πŸ™„

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      1. Oh my. I hope it’s not a CVT transmission. Only one gear, very noisy during acceleration but may be lower fuel consumption. Many manufacturers using them. They are cheaper to make but very costly to repair. If I do ever get a newer car I’d avoid one with that transmission.

        Marty

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      2. Now that you mention it, I’ve never heard that slight *clunk” when the gears change on an automatic. One speed! So far, however, the car’s been running fine, smooth and easy to handle. 🀞

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      3. Glad to hear it’s running. Nearly all recent Subarus and Nissans have CVTs. Other makes held out with 6 speed automatics but Hyundai and Kia have recently adopted CVTs. Others may follow.

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      4. The question I have, and you may be the person to ask, is whether these transmissions are regularly installed in the Ford Focus?

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      5. It’s apparent that the German “ß” is not used in Switzerland. Didn’t realize that at first. You learn something every day.

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  4. Sounds like a nice change of pace. You are finding many more entertaining spots in
    Zurich than I seem to remember . Although, as I recall We were only there a short time. I’ve been waking up in the middle of the night frequently..?sometimes happy to find your post already there xx

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    1. Glad you’re enjoying it, sweetie!

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  5. Surfing in Zurich proper?!
    That’s very wild!
    Iceskating in NYC, maybe tourists here are incredulous.
    Life can be a hoot!
    πŸ‘πŸŒŽ

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    1. I toyed with the idea of paragliding in the Alpa. It took 0.00000001 seconds of contemplation to come to the conclusion, “Naaah!”

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  6. When are the yodeling lessons?

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    1. It’s supposed to be rainy Wednesday. We’ll try the yodeling school then. Wait for the video.

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