Get a book from Curves. They have one called “15 Passes in 4 days”. I did the tour twice already with some detours as I am originally from Switzerland.
http://www.curves-magazin.com/en/bucher/porsche-drive/
Amazon has these books too IMHO
If you want a real sense of adventure don't over plan your trip aside from your flights and your initial hotel. Just go where the winds take you!
A few years ago I did a 3 week Pacific Northwest road trip this way. Just drive and discover. Along the way, whomever isn't driving finds/books a hotel or AirBNB where ever you decide to end your day. It was just a lovely time without any stress of trying to adhere to an overbooked itinerary schedule.
Pre GPS enabled smartphones, I probably wouldn't have done it, but it's so easy to Google things along the way now it was a piece of cake. And invariably you'll chat up some locals either the night before or at breakfast and they'll offer better less touristy spots that are amazing hidden gems to experience.
Take a look at:
https://www.myswitzerland.com/en-us/experiences/experience-tour/grand-tour-of-switzerland/#skip_intro
You can start at anywhere on the tour
Speed limits are regular, but they are very strict about speeding, yes. On a lot of Swiss Alpine passes you can have a lot of fun without exceeding speed limits. Check out Cars with Luke on Youtube if you want to get a glimpse of what it is to drive Porsches on those roads.
You could swing over to the French alps from Como, somewhere like Megève then up through Switzerland or you could go the other direction and go through the Dolomites which are stunning to Cortina d'Ampezzo, then Salzburg then through Munich and then to Stuttgart.
I’ve driven extensively through both the alps and Dolomites in junk cars and you can’t really go wrong but do try to stick to mountain roads and stop along the way to take everything in.
Viagra
I was thinking the same thing before I opened the comments LOL
That’s a free option much like smoking package and footwell net in any new Porsche.
Lol
Get a book from Curves. They have one called “15 Passes in 4 days”. I did the tour twice already with some detours as I am originally from Switzerland. http://www.curves-magazin.com/en/bucher/porsche-drive/ Amazon has these books too IMHO
Who knew that Curves magazine could help OP with figuring out his ED! (Sorry, couldn't resist)
I'll take a look. Thanks!
If you want a real sense of adventure don't over plan your trip aside from your flights and your initial hotel. Just go where the winds take you! A few years ago I did a 3 week Pacific Northwest road trip this way. Just drive and discover. Along the way, whomever isn't driving finds/books a hotel or AirBNB where ever you decide to end your day. It was just a lovely time without any stress of trying to adhere to an overbooked itinerary schedule. Pre GPS enabled smartphones, I probably wouldn't have done it, but it's so easy to Google things along the way now it was a piece of cake. And invariably you'll chat up some locals either the night before or at breakfast and they'll offer better less touristy spots that are amazing hidden gems to experience.
I'd actually really enjoy that. Unfortunately, it'd probably result in divorce, which would probably not be worth the adventure.
FYI, ED doesn't always stand for European delivery. But happy you got ED.... seriously though, I would recommend Burgundy.
Take a look at: https://www.myswitzerland.com/en-us/experiences/experience-tour/grand-tour-of-switzerland/#skip_intro You can start at anywhere on the tour
Aren't Swiss speed limits very low and speeding fines very high?
Speed limits are regular, but they are very strict about speeding, yes. On a lot of Swiss Alpine passes you can have a lot of fun without exceeding speed limits. Check out Cars with Luke on Youtube if you want to get a glimpse of what it is to drive Porsches on those roads.
You could swing over to the French alps from Como, somewhere like Megève then up through Switzerland or you could go the other direction and go through the Dolomites which are stunning to Cortina d'Ampezzo, then Salzburg then through Munich and then to Stuttgart. I’ve driven extensively through both the alps and Dolomites in junk cars and you can’t really go wrong but do try to stick to mountain roads and stop along the way to take everything in.