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SAVERNE , seat of the exiled Catholic prince-bishops of Strasbourg during the Reformation, commands the only easy route across the Vosges into Alsace, at a point where the hills are pinched to a narrow waist. It's a small and friendly town, not as picturesque as some of its neighbours, but possessing the region's characteristic steep-pitched roofs, dormer windows and window boxes full of geraniums. It's also the best launch pad from which to explore the northern Vosges. The town has a couple of sights worth visiting, not least the vast red sandstone Chateau des Rohan , on place de Gaulle, built in rather austere classical style by one of the Rohans who was prince-bishop at the time, and now housing the Musee Rohan (March-June & Sept-Nov daily except Tues 2-5pm; July & Aug daily except Tues 10am-noon & 2-6pm; Dec-March Sun only 2-5pm; 16F/?2.44) and hostel. A feature of the museum is the collection of local Resistance journalist Louise Weiss. The River Zorn and the Marne-Rhine canal both weave their way through the town, the latter framing the chateau's formal gardens in a graceful right-angle bend. Alongside the chateau, the church of Notre-Dame-de-la-Nativite contains another finely carved pulpit by Hans Hammer. Horticultural distraction can be found in the town's famed rose garden, La Roseraie (June-Sept daily 9am-7pm; tel 03.88.71.83.33; 15F/?2.29), to the west of the centre by the river, which boasts over four hundred varieties; and the botanical gardens 3km out of town off the N4 Metz-Nancy road (May, June & first two weeks Sept Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, Sun 2-6pm; July & Aug Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, Sat & Sun 2-7pm; 25F/?3.81) There are several relatively easy walks around Saverne (the tourist office can give details), the most popular being the one to the ruined Chateau du Haut-Barr (2hr return). Follow rue du Haut-Barr southeast along the canal past the leafy suburban villas until you reach the woods, where a signboard indicates the various walks possible. Take the path marked "Haut-Barr" through woods of chestnut, beech and larch, and you'll see the castle standing dramatically on a narrow sandstone ridge, with fearsome drops on both sides and views across the wooded hills and eastward over the plain towards Strasbourg. Approaching by road you'll pass an early telegraph station , part of the Paris-Strasbourg line dating from around 1800 (July & Aug Tues-Sun noon-6pm; 10F/?1.52). If you're driving, you can easily get to the several beautiful small towns and villages around Saverne, in particular Bouxwiller, Neuwiller, Pfaffenhoffen and Ingwiller, from where an alternative road to Bitche leads through the densely wooded heart of the northern Vosges. A focus to your explorations could be the Chateau of Lichtenburg (March & Nov Mon-Sat 1-4pm, Sun 10am-7pm; April, May, Sept & Oct Mon 1.30-6pm, Tues-Sat 10am-noon & 1.30-4pm, Sun & hols 10am-7pm; June-Aug Mon 1.30-6pm, Tues-Sat 10am-6pm, Sun & hols 10am-7pm; 15F/?2.29), dating back to the thirteenth century and much restored, situated just a short way outside Ingwiller.
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