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Travel Guide to Switzerland

Switzerland

Overview

Boasting the highest qualities of life in the world, Switzerland is a famed tourist destination in Europe. Two mountain ranges provide ample opportunities for skiing and winter sports while cruising in the beautiful lakes is a treat for the senses. Switzerland is also home to a number of international organizations including the headquarters of several UN organizations that attract professionals from various cultures.

For a majority of visitors Switzerland is the perfect destination for a skiing holiday. The Alpine region has some of the highest peaks in Europe with reliable snow conditions and several beautiful resorts such as Davos, Gstaad, St Moritz, Zermatt, and Verbier offering great accommodation, shopping, dining and a host of Arbeiten in der Schweiz other facilities.

However there is more to the country than the mountains and snow. Visit Switzerland in summer and you will be captivated by the beauty of Geneva, Lausanne and the Bernese Oberland region comprising pristine lakes, snow-capped mountains towering in the near distance, scenic meadows dotted with iconic wooden chalets.

The most popular resort here is Interlaken that offers excellent hiking opportunities and luxury accommodation including private Switzerland villas. It also provides access to the cog railway that leads up to the plateau of Jungfrau Mountain.

Switzerland’s cosmopolitan

Go beyond nature’s gifts and there are Switzerland’s cosmopolitan cities such as Zurich, Geneva and Bern where rich history combines with modern development complete with wonderful dining and shopping opportunities.

Then there is a wealth of tourist sites adding to its charms. The Jet D’eau is the tallest fountain in the world with water projecting up to 460 feet in Lake Leman (Geneva). The lake itself is very popular with the visitors and during the summer months you can see the boats, yachts and cruise ships weave its way through the waters. The famous photogenic Chateau de Chillon and the Barbier-Mueller Museum are also worth a mention. The Lion of Luzern, which Mark Twain called ‘the most mournful and moving piece of stone in the world’ should not be missed.

Getting to Switzerland

You can try for a number of cheap flights from airports in the US and UK. There are plenty of flights to Geneva and Zurich.

Best time to visit Switzerland

The weather in Switzerland makes it a year-round destination. The best time to visit depends on what you wish to see and do in the country. The ski season is from the end of November to early April. The high season is from July to August. To Deutschland in die Schweiz umziehen experience the best of the countryside, spring season is ideal. During the autumn months, you can find better deals in terms of accommodation and flights.

Preety is a travel writer with Eats & retreats a modern online magazine with unique travel articles, photo galleries and a selected portfolio of holiday villas and apartments featured by Web Perspective Ltd.

Switzerland’s Valais is Decidedly Different

Thankfully, American travelers have moved beyond the European Grand Tour, where they were forced to dart through 10 countries in 17 days-the kind of travel travesty that spawned movies like If It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium or European Vacation. Today, independent travelers are likely to spend more time in a more tightly-focused area, discovering the rich history, natural splendor, traditional cuisine, and local charms of one distinctive region.

Cultural regions in Europe

As other cultural regions in Europe suffocate under the swarm of mass tourism, the Swiss canton of Valais, with alpine reaches bisected by the Arbeiten in der Schweiz enormous Rhone Valley and ribbed by dozens of equally spectacular lateral glacial valleys, still has plenty of surprises to reveal to unhurried sojourners. And for independent travelers in search of untrammeled corners of Europe with distinctive appeal, Valais has every bit as much charisma and uniquely fascinating allure as Tuscany, Bavaria, or Normandy.

Valais is easily the most diverse and distinctive canton in Switzerland -historically, culturally, and scenically. It’s bordered on the south by Italy and the west by France, and bounded on all sides by the sunny southern Alps. The climate is dryer than the lush Bernese Oberland to the north, but still abundantly watered by heavy mountain snowfall and glaciers which produce pounding waterfalls in the higher valleys.

The Romans just didn’t get it

Their chief interest in the Valais was the direct route it offered from Italy to Northern Gaul. In passing they left a legacy of viniculture which flourishes on the sundrenched lower slopes of the valley. Traces of the Roman road over the Grand Saint-Bernard Pass remain today, as does a 2nd century amphitheater in Martigny, but the Romans left the exquisitely scenic alpine meadows and high passes largely untouched.

As the Bishop of Sion ruled much of Valais during the Middle Ages, Germanic people moved into the upper Rhone and high alpine valleys, introducing the linguistic composite of French and German that exists today. The dominant architectural styles which emerged throughout Europe-Romanesque, Gothic, and Baroque-flourished in Valais and are still on display. The fortified hill of Saillon with its turrets, ancient gates, and ramparts make it the best preserved medieval town in Valais, and entreats visitors into a world of catapults, crossbows, and armor. Similarly, the twin hills of Valere and Tourbillon overlooking Sion are so strategically set that building the magnificent fortified church and castle complex was the only logical choice in the medieval period. Later Gothic and Baroque masterworks, including many parish churches, abound in Valais, while hundreds of traditional large-timbered alpine-style homes and farm structures dating to the 14th and 15th centuries are on display in Zermatt, Grimentz, and other historic villages.

Architecture and cultural treasures

Valais’ variety of architecture and cultural treasures are outdone only by its natural wonders and scenic magnificence. The mountain peaks and ski resorts of Valais-the Matterhorn, Zermatt, Saas-Fee, Verbier-are iconic and need no introduction to most visitors. Valais has 47 of the Alps’ 4000 meter peaks and is the most glaciated canton in Switzerland. If you’re looking for the longest glaciers and some of the most spectacular glacial icefalls in Europe, you’ll find them in Valais, where showstoppers like the Aletsch Glacier, the Gorner Glacier, and the Moiry Icefall are surprisingly accessible to casual walkers.

But the natural wonders of Valais aren’t limited to the mountains. From the first wild cascades of the young Rhone to the still-chilly lapping of Lac Leman, the valley floor cradles astonishing diversity with marshes, ponds, willow forests, and alluvial rises. The Pfyn-Finges Regional Nature Park welcomes visitors into the largest von Deutschland in die Schweiz umziehen dry pine forest in Switzerland, where footpaths lead through moorland, and stands of poplar, oak, and white fir. This biodiverse paradise contains 185 species of nesting birds along with beavers, frogs, water snakes, and an astounding 26 species of dragonflies.

The Swiss regard Valais as possessing a mystical power- Kraftorte der Schweiz as it is known. These are power places-energetic sites that give off good vibes and have the ability to produce energy, well-being, and healthy benefits to those who visit. The Lotschen Valley to the north of the Rhone, the Binn Valley to the south, and the Aletsch Glacier all have been claimed as “places of light” and capable of radiating curative, life-enhancing forces. Whether you buy into the supernatural notion or just enjoy the super nature, there is little doubt that Valais has it all together.

Switzerland’s most culturally diverse

Switzerland’s most culturally diverse canton also dishes up some of its most memorable cuisine. And while Valais may not have the far-flung notoriety or culinary cachet of Lyon to the west or Tuscany to the south, it boasts an agricultural abundance with tender spring asparagus followed by orchards bursting with succulent plums, apricots, peaches, and pears. Artisan rye breads are favored at tables in homes and restaurants and regional specialties like alp cheese and air-cured meats reflect time-honored alpine traditions.

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