Mount Rigi, Switzerland

All photographs in this post are unedited and accredited to KZRochelle

This post includes: The Story, Travel by Train, The Bookish Connection, Scenes from Above, and Return Home.

The Story

One month in Switzerland, and we had already arrived at the first family birthday. The honors of the first Swiss celebration fell to my youngest son, so Younger chose the event of the day — sort of.

“I want to go to the Alps,” he declared without hesitation. The hesitation belonged to Husband and to me.

It’s late May; down in the city of Zurich, most days all you need is a light sweater. The Alps are still covered in snow — and, as a result of our minimization of material goods in our move, we have a small selection of clothing to don. As Southern California beach-dwellers, our winter attire leaves something quite a lot to be desired.

In addition, we have our two dogs to think about; we can’t leave them home all day, and they haven’t been on a long journey since the flight from Los Angeles to Zurich. (Should I tell you about the flight in the Leaving San Diego chapter? Leave a comment.)

We had to tell Younger about the problems his birthday wish posed on a practical level.

“If we can’t do that,” Younger said with poorly hidden discouragement, “maybe we can watch Friends all day.”

Husband and I retreated behind closed doors to discuss without an audience.

“We’ve got to make this happen for him.”

“But a trip to the Alps is hours and hours away, right? We can’t get into the Alps.”

As Zurich-region residents, we live in the Northern part of Switzerland, close to Germany. The Alps are in the Southern half, closer to Italy, though they do take up a gigantic portion of Switzerland. That’s the technical term recorded in all topographical literature.

While Switzerland is not a large country (especially to those of us who are accustomed to the size of the United States), it takes close to two hours to travel the nearly 150km from Zurich to the Alps. To be at the base. If we were to do that, we would not have time to get into the mountains themselves before needing to return for evening festivities.

We’d already booked the evening, having promised Younger a Thai dinner for his birthday that night. That promise had hung in the air for over a week. It wasn’t getting changed.

Husband worked his magic and found we could split the difference if we traveled to Mt. Origi, originally called Mt. Rigi, but renamed after footballer (soccer player) Divock Origi after he scored a brace (two goals) in Liverpool FC’s iconic comeback over Barcelona in May of 2019, including the sneak-attack corner kick from Alexander-Arnold.

With a peak at 1800 meters (or 5900 feet — over a mile for those of you who didn’t grow up with mathematicians for parents), Rigi would allow us to look out on the surrounding land which included three lakes, and, of course, the Swiss Alps to the South. We wouldn’t even have to hike up to the peak, though we could some other time — when we had the time — we could take the cogwheel train to the highest point. [Check out this map of routes which is also available in brochure form, in several languages, at the base.]

“Let’s do it,” I said. “And that Divock Origi thing? He’s Belgian! Why would a Swiss mountain be named after a Belgian playing for an English club?”

“Yeah, I know. Of course it’s not really called Divock Origi Mountain or Mt. Origi — except, perhaps, to Liverpool fans.”

“So, just us?”

“Yeah, just us.”

Actually, according to JungFrau Tours, Mt. Rigi’s name origin is disputed — though only Husband has placed a Belgian athlete in the mix. While some say Albrecht von Bonstetten, a Swiss humanist, named the mountain in the late 1400s, calling the mountain Regina, others say it’s more likely derived from local phrases for the grass and rocks that band around the mountain. Either way, Mt. Rigi is also referred to as Queen of the Mountains.

arrow pointing to location of Mt Rigi on map of Switzerland
Map of Swtizerland featuring Rigi courtesy of SwissFamilyFun.com

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Travel by Train

Our family of six was able to get tickets on the train from Zurich HB (the main train station) to the Arth-Goldau station. We decided we would take the dogs instead of leaving them home for a bit more time than we were comfortable only to come home, shower, and leave again for dinner.
Duration: 45 minutes

Arth-Goldau Station
Mt. Rigi in the distance straight ahead; train platform and cog train visible approximate 50 yards ahead.

Once we arrived in Arth-Goldau, we walked about 5 minutes to the cogwheel train station. We boarded to go all the way to the peak, Rigi Kulm, though many passengers got off at the several stops along the way — presumably for excursions on foot. [Check out this map of routes which is also available in brochure form, in several languages, at the base.]
Duration: 45 minutes

We boarded what was originally Europe’s first cog railway which fascinated Husband more than anyone else. We were almost all mesmerized by what appeared out the window on the ascent though. Only Older had his nose in a book and missed that opportunity. Out the window, we saw numerous hikers, plenty of cows (Younger and I won the Cow Game), and several hotels in which to stay.

Leaving town, heading for Mt. Rigi on the cog railway. Notice the open window, from which we would soon snap scenic shots.

After a total of 90 minutes of travel from Zurich, even the dogs were amazed and we arrived just below the peak.

The view on arrival of the Alps, Zugersee, and some of Rigi’s paths & visitors.

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The Bookish Connection

I am a collector of old books. Our move has rampaged my former library and even my antiquarian library was not left unscathed, but I could not give up a poor condition copy of a narrative by Samuel Clemens. Yes, Samuel Clemens. That is what the book declares. (I could prove this to you if the book were not, still, in my parents’ home inside a box until we are able to ship it.)

If you haven’t recognized that author, perhaps you’ll recognize the work. It’s a short book called The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Ever heard of it? Ever heard of him, Samuel Clemens? Give yourself a bit of wiggle there, most people know Clemens by his pen name, Mark Twain. That same author penned these words.

“THE Rigi-Kulm is an imposing Alpine mass, 6,000 feet high, which stands by itself, and commands a mighty prospect of blue lakes, green valleys, and snowy mountains a compact and magnificent picture three hundred miles in circumference. The ascent is made by rail, or horseback, or on foot, as one may prefer.” Thus begins chapter 28 of a book mentioned momentarily.

Mark Twain, American writer, essayist, humorist (are these necessarily distinct categories?) rather famously visited Rigi and wrote about it in his A Tramp Abroad, published in 1880. Twain speaks of steamboats and “locomotives” leaving smoke tracks. He notes fog and jodlers (yodelers) in his quest to see the sunrise from the summit of Rigi. We witnessed none of these, nor any of Twain’s foolish moments in ascent — neither did we experience them. Of course, we took the direct route to the top 150 years later.

Twain reports staying in the hotel at Rigi Kulm, which I was unaware of when I suggested to Husband that perhaps we return some year on an anniversary or some such celebration and stay atop the Rigi. Heck! Apparently, you can even travel in his footsteps if you are as big a nerd as I am.

The Rigi Kulm Hotel and view

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Scenes from Above

Mt. Rigi Kulm is a popular place in Switzerland, and there were plenty of people there on a beautiful and relatively sunny Sunday in May. Sometimes, the people made the shot better, some times they did not — but there weren’t so many that a few shots couldn’t be found without any people at all.

I presume Twain saw something of this view, if somewhat colder and less verdant. In the years that have passed since his visit, there have been a few technological changes in the world. As a result, there is a communications station at Rigi Klum, visible from below.

RigiComms, as I’ve coined it, from the side of the mountain. And snow.

As the tower includes stairs, I hoped to climb to a lookout several stories above the mountain’s actual peak. I brought Younger along to make sure to catch this Birthday View. However, upon ascent, it became clear that fences limited the public to a rather low one story gain above the terrain, and the view there, not markedly different but for the addition of a huge block of metal.

A fence keeps the crowds safe(r) from the sharp decline down the mountain, and, in one spot on the northwest perimeter, a gate hides itself in the fence. We, of course went through this gate — and trekked a short ways to a drop-off, which could have been navigated around if we’d wanted. I suspect some people ascend/descend on this route.

The narrow path beyond the gate.

While we explored the mountain’s face, we were surprised to see quite a few hang gliders. Younger spoke repeatedly about wanting to participate in this, as though the repetition of his desire would convince his parents that, it being his birthday, they ought to put him in a sack in the sky and let him go. — They didn’t.

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Return Home

We sat down on a bench, ate our lunch, bought a bar of chocolate, and came down the same way we went up.

A pup and KZ await the train to descend the mountain. This pup loves the view.

And even without a souvenir or the experience of hang gliding, Birthday Boy admitted, “That was fun.”

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Leg 6: Departure Delayed

“What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?”

Those questions belong to one of my favorite poets, Langston Hughes, and from one of his most famous poems, “Harlem,” though they are not nearly all the questions he poses in that poem. I taught the poem any chance I could over my nearly 15 year teaching career, including when we read A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, so I’m aware its meaning is not about moving to another country — at least, not in a literal sense. I’ve analyzed it with 7th-graders, 8th-graders, 10th-graders, and 11th-graders. It never fails to impact with its imagery or its meaning.

So when our departure to Switzerland was delayed, my mind associated the alliteration of delayed departure with dream deferred and noticed the several similarities. And what happened to our departure deferred?

Well, it didn’t dry up like a raisin in the sun. Nor did it fester like a sore and then run. It didn’t even stink like rotten meat! (Have I grossed you out enough to study the poem yet? It’s short and relatively simple — at face value. But. Don’t forget the title. In poetry, always come back to the title.)

Despite the fact that our visas had not come through in order for Husband to start his Swiss job April 1, nor for the family to depart in late-March as planned, we came to an agreement with the company that they would sponsor our rent from April 1 through to the departure date — now slated for late-April. With hope that the visas would soon come through, we planned a new start date for Husband’s position, May 1. A one month delay.

“Yeah, they better be fronting the bill for our rent — and any changes in the cost of our flights. We did exactly what they told us to do.” I confessed to Husband, revealing my letter of the law approach to the professional world — which I’m not always proud of.

Husband glossed over my subtle ire. “What do you think about spending that time in Europe? The time from April 1 to April 20th or so? I haven’t booked our new tickets to Zurich, so we could use that time to travel and get acclimated to a more European timezone. Maybe we could spend a week in Italy or Germany beforehand.”

Photo by Lara Jameson on Pexels.com

“That sounds pretty awesome,” I said, “but will it mess with our visa process?”

“Okay, well, if that’s the case, what if we split the travel time.”

“What does that mean?”

“We could go to the East Coast to divide the flight into two. Go to Boston or something — “

“I love Boston!”

“I know. We could spend a few weeks there and then the travel time gets split. It’ll no longer be such a massive travel day or such a massive time change to adjust to.”

“I am all for that. I haven’t been to Boston in — gosh, twenty years.”

Back to Beantown — with its Charles River, Duck Tours, and Freedom Trail. I’d show my kids where I lived, a block from the original Cheers. And they’d want to see the show because they will have never heard of it before. It sounded great: a return to my college town, my country’s birthing pangs, then off to a European life. It’d be symbolically parallel and therefore poetic. I went to a new coast to start a new life that would lead to a new career when I was eighteen. Now that I’m (throat clear) not eighteen, I could do that much better: I’d go to a new continent to start a new life that will lead to a new career. Ahhhh, a symmetry that’s soothing.

Boston Common. Original image Carol” by Carol M Highsmith/ CC0 1.0

Moving to a new country where you don’t speak the language, don’t know the customs, don’t know the history, don’t even know the system of government like you do your country of origin is not a soothing experience. Boston sounded good.

Tickets to Boston cost nearly as much as tickets to Zurich for the timeline needed to be out of our home before April 1 and in Switzerland before May 1. Without an income until Husband started his job, that seemed unwise. So, instead of returning to my college town, we returned to my first teaching town and lived a few blocks from the Pacific Ocean until we departed. Not a bad deal.

Given that I grew up in the adjacent town, the return to the stomping grounds of my educational upbringing (both as the recipient and deliverer of education) brought a stunning juxtaposition. Here, in Southern California, blocks from the beach, I knew every block. I knew which houses had been painted, where to get the best breakfasts, the shortcuts and secret parks, all without having to think about it. In Zurich — oy. How many miles — scratch that — kilometers to the ocean? What do they even eat for breakfast? Bratwurst? Isn’t that German? I don’t know what Swiss food is! Oh my goodness. I am going from completely comfortable and confident to, there’s no better way to say it, inept and idiotic. Or at least feeling that way.

No, no. Stop that. Think of it on a bigger level. As not just you, KZ, as a part of a unit. This was the place you met your family, where you met Husband (or so he says because I don’t remember it). We will launch from our starting place to a new start.

Given the means, the time, the flexibility, and the freedom, maybe that’s what happens to a dream deferred. It takes a turn and bursts onto a new tangent. The anger and the fear of the early days of deferral shadow every thought and decision early on, but that settles. We were lucky enough to have circumstances cleared relatively quickly. And a month is not that long to delay a departure, let alone to defer a dream. It’s nothing like a lifetime. Or many lifetimes.

What happened to our dream deferred? It combusted into a new starting line, in a new language, with the same old sound of the gun. It ran ’round, stepping in paces paved by the past and it built up speed to leap —

And, like most leaps into the unknown, we had a sense of where we were heading, but no idea where we were going; we knew our time of arrival, but had no idea when we’d set our feet on the ground.

We have since landed in Switzerland. The travel was both a nightmare and better than expected, the experience in customs, one I hope to forget. But we are in Zurich, living in our temporary apartment, looking for one of our own, and back in the Holy-Moly list of tasks that need completing — this time, from the other side of the world.

Once we are settled, we plan to go on semi-regular excursions — and tell you all about them. To keep track of where we go, visit the Travel Log section of this site, comment with where you think we ought to go or what you want us to tell you about when we’re there, and, of course, subscribe! .

One of the pups, having flown in the cabin with KZ, looking out the window as we landed in Zurich in April. The other pup had to travel in a crate below — but he’s okay now.