Exploring Tyrol of Austria

Hall in Tirol came close to becoming our home. Learn more!

Thanks for subscribing to Holistic Travellers. This is Suneela and Yeswanth and we are travelling to Europe again! Through this email series, we will share our travel journey, stories and history. 

Link to our previous email (if you haven’t checked it yet)- “Another Trip to Europe”  

Hall in Tirol

Austria is our first country for this trip and we stayed at a small town called Hall in Tirol, next to Innsbruck for eight days. Our Airbnb was an absolute delight. There were Easter surprises including chocolates and wine. As this Airbnb catered to longer stay travellers, it was well equipped with a lot of supplies (like multiple varieties of pasta and rice). We also received a guest card that allowed us to use unlimited public transport across the region.   

As we have travelled to Switzerland and Dolomites in Italy before, we were pleasantly surprised to see that the Austrian mountainous landscape had a bit of both. We could see the green mountains (reminding us of Switzerland) on one side and the rocky lime-stone mountains  (reminding us of Dolomites in Italy) on the other side. Hall in Tyrol is a small picturesque town, well connected by buses to Innsbruck (half an hour). And the best part: we could see the mountains by standing anywhere in the town.

Views of Austrian Alps

Salt Mining

This town is called Hall in Tirol as it was famous for salt mining (mining ended 50 years back). The people here started mining in the 1500s from the mountains around this region. Yes, you heard it right! The mountains here contained salt. Salt is often referred as white gold and it brought a lot of wealth to these regions back in the day. It is not very economical to mine salt now as it is very cheap to import it. Read more here

We missed the bus!

One evening, we did a small hike in a forest surrounded by mountains and reached a remote-village called Gnadenwald. As we reached the village bus stand, we realised that the last bus had left and there were no buses to go back to our stay in Hall in Tirol. What do we do now? Hall in Tirol is quite far and we will have to walk 5 kms on a highway to reach the nearest town.

We tried asking for lift from cars passing by. After about 20 cars, we finally saw someone stopping ahead for us. We ran to the car and found a lady named Verena, a local of the region, waiting for us. She graciously dropped us at Hall in Tirol. She was curious as to who we were and where we were travelling from.  We love connecting with locals and asked her if we should meet again for a coffee. Luckily, she was open to the suggestion.

We met Verena another time. This time in a coffee shop. We spoke about Indian food and about our love for travel. She talked about Easter and also helped us understand a few Austrian foods and gave us restaurant recommendations. It was really nice connecting with a local.

Other things

We also visited the neighbouring towns of Rinn and Absam. They were extremely beautiful. At Rinn, we did a small hike through dandelion fields. To our surprise, we ended up getting a spectacular views of the mountains after the climb. We also watched a traditional Austrian dance another day, where men, women, boys and girls danced in pairs in traditional Austrian attire, welcoming spring.

Suneela looking at the Austrian Alps

Hall in Tirol became our home and we didn't want to leave it. But, we had to keep moving forward and go to our next destination. In the next mail, learn about how we watched a symphony for free in Salzburg (Sound of Music, anyone?) and what we learnt about Austrian history in Vienna. 

In Case You Missed It

This email series is meant for us to share a few stories and a few pictures from our journey in Europe. We would love to get replies from you and hear your thoughts or suggestions while we continue writing about our journey in Central Europe 😀