National Geographic Traveller UK - 04.2020

(Wang) #1
Getting there & around
Salzburg is 40 miles north of St Johann
im Pongau (the nearest town to
Alpendorf) and the Hochkönig region.
British Airways, EasyJet and Ryanair
are among the airlines that offer
summer lights to Salzburg from
Gatwick and Stansted. ba.com
easyjet.com ryanair.com
Average light time: 2h.

When to go
In summer, temperatures average in the
low 20Cs, although mountain weather
can be unpredictable. April-May and
September-October are cooler.

Where to stay
Hotel AlpenSchlössl in Alpendorf.
hotel-alpenschloessl.at
Hotel Gasthof Niederreiter in Maria Alm.
niederreiter.com

Places mentioned
Eisriesenwelt. eisriesenwelt.at
Kitzloch Gorge. kitzlochklamm.at
Hohenwerfen Castle. salzburg-burgen.at
Obersteghof.
obersteghof.members.cablelink.at
Grünegg Alm. gruenegg.at

How to do it
ZENITH HOLIDAYS offers a six-day hiking
trip in the Salzburg region on a B&B
basis from £445, excluding lights.
Package itineraries can be booked via
the St Johann im Pongau and Hochkönig
tourist ofices from £220 for between
three and seven nights.
zenithholidays.co.uk josalzburg.com
hochkoenig.at

ESSENTIALS


SALZBURG

Dienten

EISRIESENWELT

GHOSTMOUNTAIN

St Johannim Pongau

Saalfelden Bischofshofen

Alpendorf

HOCHKÖNIG

KITZLOCHGORGE

HOHENWERFENBURG

Maria Alm

Salzach

Zeller See

Salzburg
AUSTRIA

5 Miles

10t tall, lanking a vat topped with a bulbous
cap the shape of a hot-air balloon. Brushed
steel pipes chart courses between the three
copper containers, and there’s an elegant
clutter of dials, taps and tubes.
He seems young to be a distiller — 21 years
old, I learn — but he could pass for even
younger with his side parting and Harry
Potter glasses. He demonstrates where
the fruit goes, how it’s heated and where
the alcohol lows, then dutifully runs me
through volumes and percentages. But, like
the science of the Ice Cave, I know it’s an
explanation for the unbelievers, because
Johannes has a git. His pine liqueur won the
Goldene Stamperl award when he was just 15,
the youngest-ever winner.
“I started distilling when I was eight,” he
reveals, eyes suddenly alight. “But I only
snifed what I made!” he adds hurriedly,
reading my expression, and a picture loats
before me of Harry Potter nursing a butter
beer while all around him grizzled wizards
hit the hard stuf. He points to the beginner’s
still his father gave him, displayed on a ledge.
“It was fun. I caused an explosion once, trying
to make beer in it.”
We move to a low-lit room lined with
hundreds of bottles, their contents radiating
all the colours of autumn, and Johannes
hands me glass ater glass. His father and
grandfather made schnaps from blueberries
or rowanberries — nothing else — but he has
never been scared to experiment. There’s a


raspberry schnaps, a hazelnut liqueur and
a gin laced with lime and local herbs. One
schnaps is made from hay, scythe-cut nearby,
and has something of the barnyard about it.
“This year I’m going to see what I can do with
carrots,” Johannes conides, as he pours a
liqueur that tastes of the woods.
At the same time the following day, I’m
careering feet-irst down a 200t chute. It’s one
of a series of slides buried deep in the forest
on Natrun Prince Mountain that visitors
can use to travel back down to Maria Alm
ater they’ve hiked or biked to the summit.
And it’s another experience to confound my
expectations of the Austrian Alps in summer.
I’d anticipated gentle trails, rolling
pastures and picnic spots dotted with long-
horned cattle, and they’re all here; if you
want the sound of music you can hear it loud
and clear. But you’ll hear too the sounds of
witches and sprites, of potions bubbling (and
sometimes exploding), of eagles lording and
nature rampaging. You’ll hear legends, fables
and stories of derring-do, because this is
a landscape of imagination and adventure
as suited to a questing Indiana Jones or
a boozing Richard Burton as a melodious
Maria von Trapp. And, yes, you’ll hear my
wails as I slide faster and faster, hoping my
stomach will catch up. When the chute levels
out and I slow to a halt, all is suddenly still.
The tourist silenced. I catch my breath and
shake my head: an Alpine summer is a hell
of a ride.

Mountain biking,
Natrun Prince Mountain

ILLUSTRATION: JOHN PLUMER

116 nationalgeographic.co.uk/travel


AUSTRIA
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