What Is The Romantische Straße?
According to Wikipedia:
The Romantic Road (German: Romantische Straße) is a “theme route” devised by promotion-minded travel agents in the 1950s. It describes the 460 kilometres (290 mi) of surface roads between Würzburg and Füssen in southern Germany, specifically in Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg, linking a number of picturesque towns and castles. In medieval times, part of it was a trade route that connected the center of Germany with the south.
Today, this region is thought by many international travellers to possess “quintessentially German” scenery and culture, in towns and cities such as Nördlingen, Dinkelsbühl and Rothenburg ob der Tauber and in castles such as Burg Harburg and the famous Neuschwanstein.

The Romantic Road Copyright © romantischestrasse.de
–
Our Itinerary Made With Help From Friends
The area surrounding the romantic road is called Bavaria. Along the foothills of the Bavarian Alps you enter into Austria via the Romantic road. It’s just spellbinding!
For hotels, what we do is usually go directly to the government website and request a travel agent’s help in deciding an itinerary. Of course, if you book on our own, it’s actually much cheaper that way using Airbnb and Tripadvisor recommendations.
A few of the hotels we stayed along the way from Frankfurt to Munich:
Marriott Heidelberg Hotel
NH Klosterle Nordlingen
Hotel Spitzweg
King’s Hotel First Class
******************************
My blogger friend who is German gave us tips:
I have found BAHN.DE website which looks great but does not give any tips for travel.
Especially Rothenburg is a city with a medieval touch (very idyllic – you can find a picture I took here: http://flic.kr/p/7kmVsk); my wife and I were there about four or five times, it’s really awesome. For accommodation I can recommend www.hotel.de.
If you want a clean hotel that is affordable you could also take a look at the Accor hotel group:
http://www.accorhotels.com/
This consists of various chains (Etap, Mercure, etc.) for different comfort and budget levels.
If you need any help with booking, just let me know.
As you’ll land in Frankfurt, I must tell you that Berlin and Munich are quite a distance from each other. And as you travel with two children, this could get stressful, as German highways tend to be more hectic than those in the US – I also drove cars in the US, so I can really compare ;-) .
If you’d concentrate on the South of Germany, you could see Munich, Heidelberg and Rothenburg. Not to forget: Straßburg in France is not too far away either!
Last but not least, I live in the Southwest near the French border, perhaps we could meet (we have a daughter who turns 3 in May). However, I cannot promise that 100%, since summer is the time in which I earn my money mostly (as a freelancer I have to accept seasonal ups and downs, photography is just a side business of mine), so this should not influence your planning!
About Berlin: I reaaally love it, but it is somehow not typical IMHO. A bit like New York City that is different from the rest of the US if you know what I mean – in a positive way though!
******************************
My neighbor whose husband is German talks about Berlin:
We stayed in Berlin for a summer and here are my recommendations:
– the Reichstag (since you have kids under 7 the people in the red bundestag shirts will take you out of the long line and let you go thru a private entrance to the elevator),
– the Brandenberg gate,
– the memorial for the murdered Jews of Europe (young kids can tour the memorial but not the museum underground),
– the spielplatz (playground) in the Tiergarten,
– the Siegesaule (the victory column with the angel on top),
– both zoos and the aquarium that is part of the zoo,
– Deutches Technik Museum,
– Museum fur Naturkund,
– Pergamon Museum,
– Schloss Charlottenburg (palace and garden)
– If you kids are good walkers do the Original walking tour of Berlin which meets at the Haagen Das at Hackesher Markt. It was an excellent overview and run by history majors.
– I do not recommend the boat tours or Legoland – cheesy.
– Two great places to have lunch – the restaurant at the top of the TV Tower (on a clear day you can see the whole city and the restaurant revolves) and the Sony Center in Potsdamer Platz – very cool architecture.
– The kids loved sitting in the front seat on the top level of the double decker busses. You don’t need a car in Berlin. The trains and buses are very easy to use, very prompt, and take you everywhere.
– If you have time, take a train to Potsdam. Lots of history, palaces, and shops.
– A Lonely Planet book on Berlin was an excellent resource, too. If I can find it, I can bring it to you.
I’m sure there is a train or an inexpensive flight to Berlin Tegel airport. When we flew over to Sweden we used SAS airline and they were great.
– 0 –
*

* * *
Travel Around The World
Travel isn’t always pretty. It isn’t always comfortable. Sometimes it hurts. It even breaks your heart. But that’s okay. The journey changes you. It should change you. ~ Anthony Bourdain
My India Travel Diaries: It’s Not a Destination. It’s an Experience.
Travel Around Bharat “Once you have been to India, the rest of the world feels a little less colorful.” ~ Anonymous
Sunset at the Library of the World: Where a World of Words Meets the Mediterranean
I still get goosebumps when I think about the wonderous gigantic library I recently visited in Alexandria, Egypt. This modern library built in 2002, the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, can accommodate 2000 readers in its main reading hall on any given day. It's located on...
Shirin Ebadi’s Fight for Freedom: Lessons from a Nobel Laureate and Iranian Women’s Resistance
Shirin Ebadi is a 2003 Nobel Prize winner known for her political activism and human rights work as a lawyer in Iran. She was also one of the people placed on the state’s execution lists. In 2017, I listened to the audiobook version of her memoir, Until We Are Free:...
Love For My Lava – A Poem by Rachana
It’s not a recurring dream —it’s my childhood in technicolor. I’m in Eluru again,first-floor balcony,colored baby chicksstrut past the open street sewer. Over the brick wall,police cadets march —stiff, precise,the way colonizers drilled them,looking ridiculous under...
Skyfaring In Luxor, Egypt: A Sunrise Hot Air Balloon Ride Over the Valley of the Kings
At 5am, we got ready for our sunrise hot air balloon ride. We were each handed a small bag of breakfast items to take with us at the lobby of our cruise. A few of us ate a muffin or a slice of bread but were mostly not hungry at that early. We were then picked up by a...
I Walked In as a Tourist and Left Feeling Like I Belonged Somewhere I’d Never Been Before
Selling Our Soul to The Arts I arrived in SFO as a tourist, but the moment I walked into SFMOMA, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, it felt like I belonged there. I was suddenly in the company of over 50,000 artists’ works. The Grand Atrium’s minimalist...
A Speck on the Sahara – Read by Rachana
https://youtu.be/ob4pSskh2pg Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Sipping Tea In The Sahara One early morning in late December, we set off on a three hour journey from Cairo to Dahshur. As we passed village after village, lush green fields...
I Stumbled Upon a Baby Shower in a Café. It Became a Reminder That Joy Finds Us Anywhere.
It's safe to say it's been a while since I've attended a baby shower. I don't even come across infants on a regular basis. I last saw a baby (almost 1 year old) was at a party this past Thanksgiving. My friend had a grandbaby in 2025. So, that's that. And also...
Kagemni Slayed Me With a Reed Pen: A Love Affair With Ancient Egyptian Scribes and Tombs
Falling Into A Saqqara Tomb Silly me, when I visited the Djoser Step Pyramid complex of the Saqqara necropolis (ancient Egyptian burial ground city), I was worried I would fall into a catacomb, one of those recesses between the ancient Egyptian tombs. Little...
Living in America’s Melting Pot While Confronting the Housing Crisis No One Talks About
It’s safe to say that even in America, as a true blooded Indian, I live in my own world of Indian food and Bollywood style parties. What little I understand about how everyone else lives is mostly through shows like Friends, Seinfeld, Sex and the City and movies like...
One Road Trip, Many Spains: A Soulful Journey Through Art, Faith, Food, and Freedom
A Slow Drive Through Spain’s History and Heart I have a million essays planned about Spain. I’ve already written about some gorgeous places HERE. We went on a 16-day road trip through Spain, starting in Barcelona, traveling to the tip of Catalonia, looping...
A Dream Mehendi in Sitges: An Indian Wedding Celebration Where Tradition Meets Mediterranean Magic
In Sitges, a coastal town in Spain's Andalusian region, we once attended a beautiful mehendi function. A mehendi event is a pre-wedding celebration where family and friends gather to decorate the bride’s hands and feet with henna. Henna (or natural tattoos) is...
Wandering Through Spain: Siestas, Weddings, and Andalusian Wonders
Losing My Way In SpainHi, welcome. In these essays, I write about the fascinating landscapes of Spain, Spaniards and their siestas, and the fierce art of flamenco. Through road trips, weddings, whitewashed villages, and seaside camper days, this is my attempt to...
A Speck on the Sahara: Sipping Tea Above Egypt’s Bent and Red Pyramids
Listen to the audio version of this poem on HERE. One early morning in late December, we set off on a three hour journey from Cairo to Dahshur. As we passed village after village, lush green fields dotted with beautiful villas belonging to farmers, we...
Walking With the Ancients: Egypt’s Temples, Art, and Timeless Lessons for Modern Life
Eternal. Enduring. Egypt. Egypt — to me, the most beloved and beautiful of things. ~ Salah Jahin, Egyptian poet
Homesick for the Stars – Read by Rachana
https://youtu.be/AHm4v2h1PhU - Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Homesick for the Stars This essay is about travel, wanderlust and our perennial need for discovery. I wrote this while staring at a glorious sunset. As the golden hour sky...
The Abu Simbel Temple: Egypt’s Timeless Wonder and a Tribute To Global Heritage Preservation
These Words Won't Be Enough Abu Simbel is located in a remote town three hours away from Aswan. Our cab driver picked us up from our cruise boat on the Nile that was stationed at the Aswan harbor. Our cab was flying at 140 kilometers an hour as I fell in and...
Between Two Worlds: An Indian American Woman’s Honest Take on Identity, Culture, and Belonging
Observations, Opinions, and Cultural Critique Cultural Essays from a Life Lived Between Worlds

















