Thanks for joining me on this 8th episode of our tour up the Rhine, seeking clockwork adventures. In this post I encourage you to look up, things aren't as bad as they seem in the world around us. And the heavens are beautiful. There is hope. The folks in medieval times felt this therapy was useful - that there was something higher than our lives here on the flatlands - can we?
So we have a collection of photos with a video at the end. This compilation is simply the clock tours and church spires I spotted. These make use of my Sony camera's 50x Zeiss lens.
Cologne Cathedral starts us off

This appeared on my radar just as we were going under a bridge.

As discussed earlier in another thread, we learned this tower "clock" is not a 10-hour French clock, but a river water level height indicator (cleverly disguised as a clock)

I'm sorry that I cannot identify all these towers.

Some were at the extreme end of my zoom's reach.

Others were taken through coach windows, around corners, and in driving winds.
What do you suppose is indicated by the lower dial ? It's not Leap Years... is it minutes?
I wonder who has the turret room in this tower, with those windows?

Most of these dials look very well maintained.

World's finest astronomical clock, sadly undergoing maintenance.

Annoying electrical pole in the way.

Twin-tower church in the Black Forest.
This looks like a Cuckoo Clock

This is a crazy-crazy priced Cuckoo Clock. I put it in because everything else in this post is HIGH.
Tower Carillons
A carillon is a musical instrument that is typically housed in the bell tower (belfry) of a church or municipal building. The instrument consists of at least 23 cast bronze, cup-shaped bells, which are played serially to produce a melody, or sounded together to play a chord. (A carillon-like instrument with fewer than 23 bells is called a chime.)
A traditional manual carillon is played by striking a keyboard – the stick-like keys of which are called batons – with the fists, and by pressing the keys of a pedal keyboard with the feet. The keys mechanically activate levers and wires that connect to metal clappers that strike the inside of the bells, allowing the performer on the bells, or carillonneur/carillonist to vary the intensity of the note according to the force applied to the key. The volume however, is always LOUD.
The word "carillon" is from the French quadrillon, meaning four bells.
In German, a carillon is also called a Glockenspiel.
The percussion instrument called a "glockenspiel" by English speakers is often called a carillon in French.