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- Tremola San Gottardo - Wikipedia
One of the highest paved roads in Europe, located on the west side of the Val Tremola, it was constructed with the opening of the roadway of the Gotthard Pass In its most important stretch, over a length of four kilometers it climbs a height of 300 meters in 24 hairpin bends
- Gotthard Tremola — Cobblestone Legend — 80 km 50 mi Switzerland . . .
The old Gotthard Pass road — the Tremola — is Switzerland's most famous cobblestone climb 24 hairpin bends of original granite cobbles lead to the 2,106 m… Free GPX download maps
- Tremoloa - Wikipedia
The tremoloa ˈtreɪmoʊloʊwə , [1] plural tremoloas, is a stringed instrument belonging to the fretless zither family It was produced in the United States in response to the rapid increase in popularity of Hawaiian music during the 1920s, and continued to be produced until the 1950s [2] Musical collective Broken Social Scene features the instrument in "Tremoloa Debut " The instrument
- Gotthard Pass (Tremola) — Driving Guide, Map, Conditions Photos . . .
The Tremola is Switzerland's most famous cobbled road — 24 hairpins on original granite setts climbing from Airolo to the Gotthard summit at 2,106m It's not fast and it's not smooth
- St. Gotthard Pass - Switzerland Tourism
The St Gotthard Pass connects German-speaking Switzerland with Ticino Drive over the historic Tremola, visit the museum and enjoy the mountain panorama
- The Tremola Road, Airolo - Things to do in Ticino
The world-famous serpentine road on slopes of the Val Tremola was created with the construction of the Gotthard Pass road On the most spectacular section, the road climbs 300 metres altitude around 24 bends over a distance of four kilometres Each bend has its own name
- Tremola Grenade GPb-1 - Official Foxhole Wiki
The Tremola Grenade GPb-1 (simply known as a Tremola) is an HE Grenade that can only be launched from Grenade Launchers
- Ticino’s Tremola Road is a passage to heaven - Newly Swissed
In the good old days, the Tremola Road was the only way to get past the great San Gottardo pass This cobbled path was where perhaps thousands of people traveled with their mules and coaches, carrying goods from one end to another
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