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E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 192 Seiten

Lohmüller Templars on Trek


1. Auflage 2021
ISBN: 978-3-7543-8651-4
Verlag: BoD - Books on Demand
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection

E-Book, Englisch, 192 Seiten

ISBN: 978-3-7543-8651-4
Verlag: BoD - Books on Demand
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection



The Knights Templar in this book do not wear armour, but Scout uniforms; they are fresh boys of the Panther and Seagull patrols on their Whitsun trip in the south of France. But with the same pride as those medieval warriors they wear the Knights Templar cross, along with the scout lily, as a symbol of their troop name. None of the boys would have dreamed that they would be drawn into a tremendous adventure through this. Who is the mysterious Dark One? Where did Torti go? Are the riddles solved at the Cathar Castle? This is not a fictitious story; it was really experienced, and is described to us in a gripping manner by Otto Lohmüller, the leader of the happy band, who also contributes the illustrations and expressive portraits as well as the painting and the design of the title.

Otto Lohmüller, artist, painter and the author of the book "Templars on Trek" (title in German: Tempelritter auf Fahrt), is born in 1943, retired, lives in Gengenbach in the Black Forest, Germany. He has with his wife Ute the two sons David (lives in Freiburg) and Adrian (lives in Berlin). He was working as a gravure retoucher and was, with body and soul, the leader of a group of young scouts. He joined the Boy Scouts at the age of nine. But after completing his school years at the humanistic grammar school, he gradually withdrew from youth work in order to be able to pursue his football ambitions more intensely. He was a football player for a long time and also played in a band. As a realistic painter, who signs himself Otolo. He has been exhibiting since 1976 and published several Art volumes at ZEUS-press e.K., Hansjakobstrasse 14, D-77723 Gengenbach. He had, and still has, exhibitions and participations in exhibitions at home and abroad and has been the 2nd board member of the artist group ARTist Gengenbach-Obernai e.V. for 18 years Otolo illustrated song books and volumes of poetry and thus came into contact with the youth movement again after years of being away. In addition, since 1989 Otolo has been the 2nd President of the COPSE (Comité pour la Promotion du Scoutisme en Europe) in Strasbourg, an interest group for the preservation of the scouting spirit according to Lord Robert Baden-Powell. Otolo also wrote two follow-up books about the boy scouts Templars, "Der Junge und die Tempelritter" and "Tempelritter auf der Flucht". He inspires the boys with the ideals of scouting, teaches them the appropriate skills and a comprehensive range of songs, and goes on adventurous journeys with them. This results in trip reports, written by himself and illustrated by him in the usual manner as an artist. Such a trip report was used to create this genuinely-lived adventure book "Templars on Trek".
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Chapter 1


The Seagull and Panther Patrols


There I sat again for the umpteenth time on the banks of a magical tributary of the Ardèche in southern France. Me, a 46-year-old donkey and father of two sons who, a few years ago, let himself be persuaded to take over the management of a group of lively boys aged 11 to 13, the scouts. I used to be an avid boy scout and in a sense remained so all my life, but as time went on, I had ...

“Ottooo ...?!”

Nestor, a boy of the Panther Patrol with big eyes under thick glasses and striking buck teeth, interrupted my thoughts.

“Ottooo ... can I go down with Ringo and break stones?”

“You’re on kitchen duty!”

“Yes, but I've already fetched wood, and Tiger is helping Jurgen cook.”

“You can go and smash stones.” For him, that meant looking for fossils. We had already conjured up the most beautiful fossils from the black stones out of this gorge.

Nestor trotted off with Ringo.

“But be careful not to hurt yourselves!” I called after them.

This warning was well-founded, because our clothes, which could have protected against stone splinters, left a lot to be desired in this heavenly solitude and in this spring warmth. The dress code was actually zero in the truest sense of the word, although in uniform we could be seen, actually, as a very smart group of scouts.

Usually the boys wore either a blue Scout neckerchief with their khaki shirt or the orange neckerchief of the Wolves, and the coral-red beret or, depending on the weather, the well-tried scout hat crowned the boys’ heads, even with the most dishevelled hair. This outfit was adorned with the Scouts’ blue lily badge, the insignia of Germany, the cloth coat-of-arms of earlier trips to France and Italy, the Patrol ribbons and animal symbols of the Seagulls in blue-red and the Panther in green-black as well as our own troop’s coat-of-arms, the Knights Templar cross – the red cross, with split ends, on a white background.

An earlier generation of scouts had chosen the name ‘Templars’ for the troop on their first big trip, but as they were boys, not knights-in-shining-armour, they chose to omit the word ‘knight’ from their troop name. This happened in the environment of weathered Templar ruins on a rock core of a remote loop of the Ardèche gorge. In doing so, they had shown a good feeling for this Mediterranean landscape, which was intimately and inextricably linked with the glorious, but ultimately tragic history of the Knights Templar.

With the first point, ‘landscape,’ which is timelessly existing relative to human life, and the second point, ‘Templars,’ who strongly influenced the fortunes of this region for two hundred years during the Middle Ages, the boys, in naming our troop, fatefully added a third point ‘Jungpfadfinder / Youngpathfinder / Young Scout / scout’ as a direct reference to the present. ‘Three’ had also been the sacred number of the Templars. Since then, we have been magically drawn to these regions, and time and again we have come across the history and remnants of the Knights Templars, often completely unexpectedly.

On our trip this particular year, however, the drawn triangle ‘Landscape-Templar-Scout’ would have an astonishing and extraordinary meaning for us. We would, almost inevitably, become involved in an adventure that was drawing us towards an unknown and mysterious destination.

The trip back then, on which our present-day routes were almost subconsciously planned, was also the first trip for me after my decision to take over the young boy scout group. What could be more natural than to go with the boys to a place that I knew very well and which offered everything: wonderfully wild landscape with rocks and water, different people of another country, but nevertheless seclusion, and enough warmth at Whitsun to swim and sleep outdoors too!

We all knew our home territory, the Black Forest in southern Germany, from many small hikes and activities. Therefore, the boys were completely enthusiastic about the idea of going to the south of France to hike through the Ardèche gorge with a backpack and tent. In addition, my friend Charlie, today’s Leader of the 14- to 16-year-old ‘Senior Scouts’, jumped on this Boy Scout Express which was about to start. I’ll talk about his story in more detail later. Like me, he had been a boy scout before, and this way of life had also become a way of life for him.

“Ottooo ...?! See what a great snail I found in the stone!” exclaimed Nestor, an excited Ringo following after him, panting:

“Such bad luck, mine is actually much bigger, but unfortunately it’s completely splintered!”

“Well, you’ll have used too much strength there,” I remarked.

I had to grin, because Ringo, the son of a former sports comrade, looked at me completely aghast. His rather whitish body, partly sprinkled with freckles, seemed to me even more reddened by his eagerness, since it had already been coloured by the southern sun. His brace flashed at me as he added:

“But something like this always happens to me!”

He was right, because he had proven himself to be our little ‘Mr. Clumsy’ in the few days of our trip, with Diver and Torti sometimes trying to outdo him.

Diver had, unhappily, managed to lose balance and slip three times while crossing the river, so that he was running around constantly in wet clothes. The last time he finally made us happy by going completely under the water, so that from now on his real name, Torsten, was revoked and he was now only called ‘Diver’.

Torti, on the other hand, was more concerned with financial loss. At a ford, a gust of wind tore his scout hat off his head, which then swam away in the rapids. When he tried to catch it with a stick from the bank, he suddenly found himself, stunned, up to his neck in the water... with an “Oh”, his clothes and all the groceries. The hat he finally got back by swimming after it a few days later – “Man, I’m so unlucky” – during a night hike.

Nestor left with his snail treasure in hand, still getting the admiration from the kitchen staff – “Isn’t that an implement!” - and from the swimmers in the river, with whom he joined up after his success – “I’d also like to find a missile like that!”- .

Yes, it was a real lazy day, our sixth day on the move. Many small experiences had already welded us together. On the one hand it was the awkwardness on the river crossings or the joint effort while hiking, on the other it was the contemplative hours around the campfire or the willingness of the boys to help each other. We had slowly become a conspiratorial group.

... the management team with the second man, Jurgen, with the thunderous voice, an old, experienced warrior who was not knocked over by every little earthquake and who turned out to be a cook for the trip - “Jurgen, you are the River-Bokus for us,” Al said appreciatively, alluding to the famous French chef Paul Bocuse - and stood out as a driver as well.

... and me, Otto or Zeus, as I was called after the Greek father of the gods.

I roared fiercely, and Tiger performed a pagan spectacle with the huge pot lid and a log. “Food is ready, food is ready!” it echoed through the rocky gorge, and hungry mouths raced up from the river below to the tents to gulp down, in a cosy atmosphere, a hearty soup on their tables made of stacked stones.

Today, there was a strange vibration and foreboding tension among the boys, as you only know from eventful days. It was not the first time that we felt something like this, because we had been overcome by strange feelings days before. We knew it more precisely later: it was an omen of the events to come, which would leave their mark on our journey and lead to an unexpected adventure, which the boys will tell about years after growing out of their childhood.

Today we felt that even the birds behaved differently than usual, the crickets also seemed to chirp even more intensely, even the fish disturbed the smooth surface of the water more often by jumping, then splashing back loudly. A great uneasiness took hold of the boys. Like ants, they were constantly looking for new fields of activity, but were in no way quarrelsome or irritable, as one might easily assume.

Despite everything, they bathed peacefully, followed their ideas and helped each other. The short week of being together had already helped most of them become proper scouts, to such an extent that I had announced the day before:

“We will soon be looking for a nice, suitable place so that you can finally make your promise as a Young Scout.”

And that applied to almost everyone.

Torti glanced over at his neighbour, Diver:

“You can promise us straight away that you will give us a diving course.”

“You would say that, the boy who has hung his soggy ID and pocket money on the clothes-line to dry along with his clothes.”

“But my head wasn't under water, so only YOU can give diving courses. But if you don't want to promise that, you could at least promise to spare us your reptilian creatures. Your snake almost puked up over us with its nasty black stuff.”

“Did it hit you? Huh? Besides, you were very enthusiastic about the fat toad that I discovered and brought to...



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