Showing posts with label Surselva Valley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Surselva Valley. Show all posts

Monday, April 12, 2010

Hotel Kistenpass and Restaurant

Hotel Kistenpass and Restaurant : Brigels, CH

As mentioned earlier, my friend Krissy T. and her husband, Lorenz D. own and operate a hotel and restaurant at the entrance of the village of Brigels in the Surselva Valley in Canton Graubünden. The Hotel Kistenpass is rated as a three-star hotel by the Swiss Hotel Association. To see a few shots of the food to be had at this lovely hotel and restaurant, visit my Picasa Web Albums. A note about that: Krissy was kind enough to set up a table in the kitchen where we could observe preparations and interact with the cook, Rocco. It was a lot of fun!

Rocco flambes shrimp in Kirsch for a tasty Graubünden tapas : Brigels, CH

Photo copyright: Janet M Kincaid, 4/10

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Kistenpass and the Surselva Valley

Avalanche gates crisscross the Alps of Switzerland, protecting the villages below : Brigels, CH

Brigels, Switzerland, lies at the foothills of the Kistenpass in the Bernese Alps in the Surselva Valley. The Surselva Valley is where the headwaters of the Rhine River begin. The river starts its journey high in the Alps in Canton Graubünden with the Anterior Rhine (Vorderrhein) beginning in Tomasee and the Posterior Rhine (Hinterrhein) starting on the Paradies Glacier. The two converge at Reichenau, Switzerland, and make up the Alpenrhein, which flows through Switzerland, along Austria, into Lake Constance (Bodensee), and comprises the northern border of Switzerland with the southern border of Germany. Eventually, the river flows through eastern France, on through Germany, into the Netherlands, and then to the Atlantic Ocean.

The Surselva Valley is surrounded by alps and its canton, Graubünden, is the last place where the fourth official language of Switzerland, Romansch, is spoken. Here's a bit of trivia for you: Romansch is spoken by a little more than 35,000 people (all in Canton Graubünden) and is one of the most expensivee languages to translate, costing more per word than any other language in the world. To see more pictures of this beautiful valley and its surrounding alps, visit my Picasa Web Albums.

Photo copyright: Janet M Kincaid, 4/10