Tag: adventure

  • Simplon Car Train: When Chetak Took the Train Through the Alps

    Simplon Car Train: When Chetak Took the Train Through the Alps

    Landborder between Brig (Switzerland) & Islle (Italy)

    On Day 8 of the Odyssean Journey, we left Chandolin with Lake Como in our sights. Switzerland had already given us more than enough drama: mountain roads and impossible views, but somewhere between the valleys of Valais and the promise of Italy, the Alps had one more surprise for us.

    The Simplon Car Train.

    Of course, like many great discoveries on the road, we first missed it.

    Google Maps, with its usual confidence and occasional mischief, had us driving along Route 9. We passed what looked suspiciously like the car train station, continued for a bit, then had that familiar travelling conversation:

    “Was that it?”

    “No, surely not.”

    “Actually… maybe that was it.”

    So, we turned around, slightly sheepish, slightly amused, and very grateful that in Switzerland even confusion tends to happen in scenic surroundings.

    After a brief argument with Google Maps, we found the Simplon car train station.

    The Simplon route itself is no ordinary crossing. For centuries, this has been one of the great north–south passages through the Alps. In earlier days it was a mule track and trade route; later, Napoleon saw its military value and commissioned a proper road over the Simplon Pass to connect France with northern Italy. The road from Brig towards Domodossola opened in the early 19th century and became one of Europe’s great Alpine routes.

    But modern Switzerland, being modern Switzerland, found a more elegant solution than asking every driver to wrestle with the mountains: put the car on a train and send the whole lot under the Alps.

    The Simplon Tunnel, connecting Brig in Switzerland with Iselle in Italy, opened in 1906. At nearly 20 kilometres long, it was an astonishing engineering achievement for its time, cutting through the mountains rather than climbing over them. Today, the BLS car transport service carries vehicles between Brig and Iselle, allowing drivers to remain with their cars while being transported through the tunnel. The crossing takes about 20 minutes.

    There was something wonderfully odd about the whole experience. One moment we were road travellers, masters of our own steering wheel. The next, Chetak was being lined up like a well-behaved schoolchild, waiting to board a train. The train times were well structured (At Brig we were told the next one to Iselle would be in 2 hours, exactly), the attendants were extremely helpful in helping us load our cars in the correct way and the journey cost us £23.80 (26.00 CHF)

    Driving onto the flat wagon felt a little like entering a mechanical ark. Cars ahead, cars behind, all of us packed neatly into place, engines quietened, drivers pretending to look confident. Chetak, who had crossed cities, plains, ferries, borders and campsites, now stood still — as if enjoying his own well-earned Alpine spa treatment. This was Chetak’s turn to be the passenger!

    Chetak takes the train: crossing beneath the Alps from Brig to Iselle.

    Inside the car, we sat and waited. There was no dramatic mountain pass to conquer, no steering correction, no braking for hairpins, no sudden gasp from the passenger seat. Instead, there was darkness, steel, rhythm, and that faintly childlike thrill of being transported while still sitting inside your own vehicle. It was travel within travel — a journey folded inside another journey.

    And then, almost before the novelty had worn off, daylight returned.

    After crossing-over to Italy.
    Simplon Car Train from Chetak.

    We emerged at Iselle, on the Italian side, with the quiet satisfaction of people who had crossed the Alps without actually having to cross the Alps. Switzerland had slipped behind us; Italy was ahead. The road began to soften, the signs changed, and the mood changed with them. There is always a small magic in crossing borders by land — the gradual shift of language, food, architecture, temperament. But crossing by car train made it feel even more theatrical, as if the Alps had drawn a curtain and raised it again on a new act.

    From there, we continued towards Lake Como, carrying with us another small story from the road: how Google Maps made us overshoot the station, how Chetak took a train under the Alps, and how one of Europe’s greatest mountain barriers became, for 20 minutes, a dark tunnel filled with cars and quiet wonder.

    The Simplon Car Train was a reminder that travel is often at its best when it surprises you. The memorable part of a day was when a road journey suddenly became a railway journey, and your car, your companion, your beast of burden, is carried through the heart of the mountains like precious cargo.

    We had set out to follow roads, rivers, trade routes and old histories across continents. And here, between Chandolin and Lake Como, we found all of that compressed into one Alpine crossing: ancient passage, Napoleonic ambition, Swiss engineering, Italian promise — and one slightly embarrassed U-turn back to the correct station.

    Once in Italy, so as the Italians do. We were cursing nicely along E62, then along A9. Then came A36 – “Toll Road without Toll Gates” – it was not easy to catch the signboards on display but managed to take a photo of one of the many signs – that allowed us to avoid the hefty fine by paying £4.47 (5.23 EUR) only.

    Discussing Diabetes Awareness @Crotto di Lierna

    We wanted to stop over on the side of Lake Como for a photographic opportunity- we could not have found a better place than the village of Lierna. The Crotto di Lierna, which locals say, have been making the best grilled meat since 1892, indeed served us with extraordinary food. The warmth of Guiseppie, the owner added an extra flavour, and we engaged in a deeper discussion that included diabetes awareness, food, life in Italy vs. life in England – to name a few. Following our late lunch we could not resist the temptation of local ice-creams by the side of Lake Como, before hitting the road again.

    For Odyssean Journey, this day was perfect. Not everything goes to plan. Sometimes you miss the turning. Sometimes you come back. And sometimes, if you are lucky, you are greeted by lovely experience, lovely food and lovely people.

    Before we knew, we were driving out of this beautiful area for our next destination.

    Guess where?

  • Chandolin: In the Footsteps of Ella Maillart

    Chandolin: In the Footsteps of Ella Maillart

    Overlanding to Chandolin

    Day 6 of Odyssean Journey brought us from Lyon to the Camping de Molignon, in the district of Anniviers, Switzerland. We drove along A40 and then on E62 by the side of the beautiful Lake Geneva for a total of 335 km for just over 3.5 hours.

    There are places we visit because they are beautiful. Then there are places we visit because they mean something. Chandolin was both.

    High in the Swiss Alps, surrounded by pine forests, wooden chalets, church bells and snow-marked peaks, this little village could easily have been just a scenic stop on our Odyssean Journey from the UK to Kolkata. But for us, Chandolin had a deeper pull. We had come here because of Ella Maillart.

    Chandolin, a quiet Alpine village that became one of the emotional halts of our journey.

    Ella Maillart was one of the great traveller-writers of the 20th century — Swiss, adventurous, fiercely independent, and far ahead of her time. She had been an Olympic sailor, a skier, a photographer, and above all, a woman who refused to live within the limits expected of her. Her journeys took her across Central Asia, China, Kashmir, Tibet, Nepal and India. In the 1930s, when such travel was difficult for anyone and almost unthinkable for a woman travelling alone, she crossed vast landscapes by horse, camel, car and sheer determination.

    For a journey like ours, following the spirit of the old Silk Roads, Ella Maillart felt like a quiet guide. Long before we reached Central Asia ourselves, we had read about her travels through Turkestan, about the mountains and deserts, the nomads and borderlands, the mystery of places that still pull travellers eastwards.

    Ella Maillart’s Turkestan Solo — a book that made Central Asia feel like both history and invitation.

    Switzerland was more like a pilgrimage, and not merely a detour for Odyssean Journey.

    In Chandolin, Ella built her chalet, Atchala, and spent many years returning to this mountain village after travelling across the world. Standing outside that simple wooden house, we felt something difficult to describe. It was not grand or dramatic. But it had a presence. Here was a woman who had crossed deserts, sailed seas, photographed distant cultures and written about the world with rare honesty — and yet she had chosen this quiet Alpine slope as her place of return.

    Atchala — Ella Maillart’s mountain home in Chandolin.

    The name of her house, Atchala, stayed with us. In Sanskrit, it suggests something “immovable” or “constant” — a name with a quiet sense of permanence. In Bengal, at-chala also refers to a traditional architectural style, often seen in temples and mosques, especially among the terracotta temples of West Bengal. This layered meaning made the name feel both personal and deeply rooted in history.

    Museum dedicated to Ella Maillart

    The small museum dedicated to her felt intimate. There were photographs, books, posters, maps, letters and personal objects. A hat. Sailing medals. Images from her younger years. Posters from talks on Nepal and India. These were not just museum pieces. We could almost feel the essence of a life lived with courage, curiosity and discipline.

    Inside the Ella Maillart exhibition — objects from a life of movement, courage and curiosity.

    What moved us most was not simply that Ella had travelled far. Many people travel far. What made her remarkable was the way she travelled —observing and questioning. She was not ticking off countries. She was trying to understand lives of people she encountered. Perhaps that is why her story still feels so relevant. At its best, travel is not about escape. It is about seeing the world more clearly and perhaps seeing oneself more honestly too.

    The small museum in Chandolin brings Ella’s extraordinary journeys back into a quiet Alpine room.

    After visiting the museum, we walked through Chandolin with a different feeling. The flowers, the old chalets, the church tower, the mountain air — everything seemed connected to her story. This was not just a beautiful Swiss village anymore. It was the place where a life of great movement had found stillness.

    Alpine flowers and mountain light — Chandolin at its most delicate and beautiful.

    There was also something personal in that moment. We were travelling in Chetak, our Toyota Hilux, carrying maps, camera gear, diabetes-awareness leaflets, hopes, anxieties and a roof tent. Our journey was very different from Ella’s, of course. The world has changed. Roads, phones and border systems have made some things easier. But the old impulse remains the same: to leave the familiar, to cross boundaries, to meet people, and to return with stories larger than oneself.

    Chandolin | Val d’Anniviers | Switzerland

    That evening, beneath the mountains, our roof tent became our little chalet on wheels. The valley grew quiet. The clouds moved over the peaks. Somewhere above us was Chandolin; somewhere behind us was Ella’s Atchala; and somewhere ahead lay the long road east.

    From the Swiss Alps, the road would soon turn east again — towards the Silk Roads and Asia.

    We came to Chandolin because of Ella Maillart.

    We left with the feeling that she had quietly blessed the journey ahead.

    Stay tuned :)