Wednesday, May 22, 2013

May 20, 2013 – Day 49 – Berlin, Germany Karneval der Kulturen (Carnival of Cultures)


May 20, 2013 – Day 49 – Berlin, Germany  Karneval der Kulturen (Carnival of Cultures)
Berliner Baar - One of many that can be seen around Berlin when you least expect them.
Claudia, our lovely and oh-so-nice landlady, told us about the Karneval der Kulturen in Kreuzberg long before we reached Berlin.  It is a green and multi-cultural carnival.  On Sunday, we went to a very colorful parade that included floats and bands (heavy on drums) from a variety of ethnic cultures.  It was a beautiful day, and we went early to get a good place on the parade route.  We ended up at the beginning of the parade which meant we got to see a performance from every group that came by.  At about 38 of 79 floats, we bailed and went to get a beer and a doner (you will remember doner sandwiches from Munich, I think).  Kreuzberg is part of East Berlin and is home to the largest Turkish population outside of Turkey; as such there are Turkish restaurants everywhere.  By the time we finished our meal and went back to the parade route, the U-bahn had regurgitated thousands of people – fueled no doubt by the weather forecast for the rest of the weekend and the lousy weather of the previous day.  We couldn’t get out fast enough. 

For some reason, we opted to go back again the next day.  It was Whit Monday, the day after Pentecost Sunday and a national holiday in Germany. We, of course, did not realize that until we tried to go to the mall on the way home – closed!  We have had at least five holidays since we left home. The Europeans could teach Americans a thing or two about time off.  We had a great time at the Strassenfest.  There were booths from many countries with an emphasis on the Middle East and Africa. Great music and lots of ethnic food, but I jumped at the chance to have good old corn-on-the-cob.  I have had exactly one hamburger since leaving the states, but lots of pizza and Italian food interspersed with Schnitzel and Bratwurst.  We went back to the apartment after several hours at the carnival and watched Avatar in German.  Then we went out to the nearby Italian restaurant which we have made our go-to place when we want food and don’t want to either cook or go too far.  We are becoming quite friendly with the staff.  They tell me I speak very good German, but I have been disappointed in my inability to understand what people are saying.  I have always been good at writing and speaking other languages, but I can’t hear what people are saying to me.  I’m really hoping to work on that in the 25 days we have left in Germany. 

I would have had lots more pictures to choose from at the carnival parade, but my camera battery died. 
DANG!  

Whenever we see frogs, we think of our friend Cindy Lindsey - the word for frog is Frosch in German.
Add caption

One of many showgirl-type outfits in the parade.
The Devil 

Saturday, May 18, 2013

May 18, 2013 – Day 47 – Berlin, Germany


May 18, 2013 – Day 47 – Berlin, Germany
I am writing to you from our cozy apartment in Berlin, Germany.  It is in an area that was once on the other side of the wall in East Berlin and is across the river from Treptower Park.  Our view is beautiful.  We can walk alongside the river from the back of our apartment.  We have learned how to take the bus and bring groceries back, walk to the park, go to the mall, use a German washing machine, and take the S-Bahn.  Bill got his haircut in the mall today.  That was a really good thing because he was beginning to look like Albert Einstein.  Shopping for groceries at the mall was quite interesting.  I went while Bill was getting his hair cut.  When I entered the store, I thought I had goofed because all I could see were clothing and furniture.  Then I saw the sign for Lebensmittel (groceries) pointing downward.  I already had some things in my cart and I was confused, but then I realized that people were riding down the escalator with their grocery carts. 

Berlin is a huge city with many interesting areas to see.  We will be here a month and hope to see them all.  With luck, I will catch up on our blog and show you all the interesting things I have neglected to tell you about: Paris, Amsterdam, Cologne, Salzburg.  And hopefully, I can continue with my thoughts about Europe.  Here are some pictures of our lovely apartment on the River Spree. 

Kitchen - Kuche

Living Room - Wohnzimmer

Bedroom - Schlafzimmer

View from the back of the Apartment

Even Double Sinks in the Bathroom

View of the River from Our Apartment


Friday, May 10, 2013

More Pictures


Kathie on the Cable Car on the Way to see Germania
Statue of Germania

Statue in Rudesheim Square - Our New Mascot

Bill and Our Innkeeper and Friend Ellen in front of Hotel Rose

Bill and a really great Munich dentist

Even the rain won't keep Munich (or us) down



The Rain and the Dentist Won't Stop Us


May 10, 2013 –Day39- Munich, Germany
The Rain and the Dentist Won't Stop Us
We always said that this would be a great adventure – not a vacation – and it has been.  After nearly 40 days of being totally inseparable, we have had our little /big spats, but we are still glad that we decided to do this.  This past week has been a week of challenges.  When we last posted, we were in Koln, Germany, eating bratwurst.  Sunday night, May 5, neither of us slept well.  We have discovered that even though the hotels have been perfect about wake-up calls, we still don’t sleep well if we have to get up early to make a connection.  We walked to the train station at 7:15 a.m. so that we could catch the 7:53 train to Koblenz where we planned to take the 11:00 am Rhein River Cruise.  The cruise was fabulous.  Five and a half hours of castle after castle on a picture perfect sunny day.  We drank wine and ate lunch on the top deck as the KD Rhine Schiff lazily sailed down the river until we got off the boat in Rudesheim – a postcard village of a town where we had planned to stay the night before heading to Heidelberg.

Then things went a little south.  We couldn’t find a taxi or a TI (Tourist Information), so we had to rely
on asking people.  They got us to Wilhelmstrasse where the Hotel Rose was located, and we were staring at a straight up hill that we had to climb with our luggage.  Bill and I both do ok on straight pavement – we can walk for several hours.  Downhill doesn’t bother us a bit – but stairs and uphill climbs do us in. 

We both have back trouble; I have a bad left knee; and Bill has asthma.  We did it anyway, but by the time we opened the door to the hotel, we both looked pretty bad.  Ellen and Joseph Bertram took one look at us – poured us water and started waiting on us hand and foot.  Unbeknownst to us, if we had e-mailed them and told them we were arriving by boat, they would have met us at the dock in their car. 
New lesson – always e-mail the hotel and ask them the best way to get there. 

I was tired and Bill was exhausted and neither one of us was in the mood to think about going to Heidelberg the next day.  We decided to stay in Rudesheim for three days before going on to Munich.  It was a great decision.  We had dinner at a nice restaurant that Ellen recommended and then, the next day, we went by cable car to the Niederwald Monument with its 114 foot high statue of Germania.  Rudesheim is also wine country so we sampled some great Riesling.  The high point of the trip for me, however, was when I went downstairs on our second evening to check e-mail (sometimes wifi is available in the rooms, and sometimes it’s not).  Ellen, who doesn’t speak much English, and I, whose German is passable at best, started talking and had the most wonderful conversation.  We talked for a couple of hours using gestures and Google translator until Bill had to come and find me.  In those few short moments, I felt like I made a friend for life.  

The next day, we just walked around Rudesheim and did some shopping, had lunch, and talked to a lovely British tour guide who has our dream job.  That night – Bill had a bad case of stomach something or other, and it was not a pleasant night. 

The Hotel Rose is lovely, and we were sorry to leave.  The next morning, we began our trek to Munich:
Joseph drove us to the train station where we took a train to Frankfurt, then another train to the airport, then a plane to the Munich airport, than another train to the Munich train station, and then we walked four blocks to the hotel.  I goofed on this hotel.  When making hotel reservations in Europe, you have to be careful to be sure of what you are getting.  In this case, I mistakenly booked a room with a private shower, but with the toilet across the hall.  Not good for someone recovering from Montezuma’s revenge.  Luckily, Bill’s tummy has settled down, and he feels much better.

I forgot to mention our other challenge – on the plane from Frankfurt to Munich, Bill lost a crown.  We were able to recover it, but we were terrified.  We had heard some really bad tales of German dentists, and we didn’t know what to expect.  Our first day in Munich was a bank holiday (Europe has lots of those – I think this is the third one since we left on April 2).  The next day we went to the dentist with fear and trembling.  Wonder of wonders – we had the most wonderful dentist.  He spoke excellent English; he was funny; and our invoice came to 60.70 Euros.  We thought we would be spending hundreds of dollars.  Then we went to buy a cell phone (they call them Handys in Germany), and we are now figuring out how to use it so that we can call our German friends when we go to Berlin next week. 

Munich has been wet, cold, and rainy.  We would hate it if it weren’t one of our all- time favorite cities (my fifth visit, Bill’s third).  We went shopping to get new tennis shoes for me since I already have worn a hole in the ones that I brought, and then stopped at one of our all- time favorite restaurants – the Rathskeller on Marienplatz.  All in all, not a bad day – and hopefully, an end to a challenging week.  It will probably rain all day tomorrow, but we will walk to the Munich Hauptbahnhof ( Main Train Station) – decide when to travel to Salzburg on Sunday and eat a Turkish Doner – a sandwich that our good friend Denise introduced us to when we visited her in Berlin.  Still owe you stuff from Paris and Amsterdam, but we hope you enjoy our latest pictures of the Rhein, Rudesheim, and our Munich dentist.
By the way, even in the rain, there are people everywhere having a good time.  And that includes us – a little rain and a tooth emergency isn’t enough to slow us down.

First Group of Pictures - The Amazing Rhein




Statue of the Loreley - The real Loreley are the cliffs around the bend. 





Sunday, May 5, 2013

 April 25, 2013 – The Keukenhof Gardens Outside of Amsterdam

This is obviously out of order, but there are some days when there is just no time to blog.  Bill and I booked a trip to the Keukenhof Gardens about an hour and a half outside of Amsterdam for April 25.  This Park is only open in April and May when the flowers are blooming.  We thought it was going to rain, but it turned out to be cloudy but dry!  It was really beautiful!  We walked and walked and didn’t even realize how tired we were until about an hour before we had to be back at the bus.  By that time, all we could do was shuffle our way back to the meeting place and sit.  The only things we have lost so far on this trip have been our second umbrella and my camera case, and we lost them both on the bus ride back. 

An observation on Amsterdam and probably The Netherlands in general - they seem to know how to take care of the weakest among them.  This is the only country where we didn't see beggars on the street.  In the Keukenhof, there were processions of people in wheelchairs with their caretakers.  We saw a group of Downs Syndrome kids being gently herded by folks who obviously loved them.  They are a liberal country - legalized prostitution and legalized weed, but a genuine caring for people.

  I think I will stop typing now and let the pictures speak for themselves. 

Tulips in the flower fields outside of Keukenhof

The Flower Fields Outside of Keukenhof

More Flower Fields Outside of Keukenhof

Bill and his new shoes


Entrance to Keukenhof

One of the sculptures in the Keukenhof Gardens

Kathie at the Entrance to Keukenhof

Another Sculpture 

Flower Beds in the Keukenhof

Windmill in the Keukenhof

May 5, 2013 – Day 34 – Debunking a Myth!


May 5, 2013 – Day 34 – Debunking a Myth!

It is a complete falsehood that Americans are fatter than Europeans because their portions are out of control.  Please note the picture of what we were served for lunch today.  Granted – it was lunch for two, but definitely more than two normal people needed. It was delicious – house made bratwurst with fried potatoes, sauerkraut, salad, and more Kolsch beer.  When I get back to talking about Amsterdam, check out the picture of the Dutch pancake and you’ll see more of what I mean.  By the way, I think we are fatter because we don’t walk or ride bikes everywhere like the Europeans do.  Bill and I will have trouble getting in car when we get home.

Today we didn’t do much – it was a lazy day in Cologne – at our ages, we have to pace ourselves or they would be sending us home in a box.  We walked to the Hauptbahnhof (main train station) to check out trains to Koblenz for tomorrow.  We are going there to get on a KD boat for what we hear will be a memorable cruise along the River Rhine.  We will stay the night at the Gasthaus Rose in Rudesheim and then head for Heidelberg.  We will be using a Eurail pass for the first time for all of this including the River Cruise.  We didn’t know that we had to have the pass validated with our passports in order to use it, so we’re glad we walked to the station to find out.  Then we walked down to the River for the huge lunch we showed you.  As I am typing this, the bells of the Cologne Cathedral are ringing; a few minutes ago, a street musician was playing “My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean” on a flute.  That song brings me many memories: my Mom used to sing it to me when I was little and it was played at her funeral.  My Mom and Dad are responsible for this trip for us - thanks.    I think I’ll close down this little blog and do some backtracking.  My friend Cathy True Nyberg wanted to see the flowers of Amsterdam so I think I will return there before taking you back to Paris and Normandy and then through Brussels and Brugge.


Saturday, May 4, 2013

May 4, 2013 – Day 33 – Finally – A Beautiful Day in Our Favorite Country! Wir sind jetzt in Deutschland – Köln! (We are now in Germany – Cologne!)


May 4, 2013 – Day 33 – Finally – A Beautiful Day in Our Favorite Country!  Wir sind jetzt in Deutschland – Köln!  (We are now in Germany – Cologne!)
Heaven knows that I am behind on this blog, but we spent a couple of interesting days in Brugge, Belgium, where there was no internet access, no phone, and no elevator.  We are now in Cologne, Germany – Köln in German.  We love Köln!  It’s such a young and vibrant city.  Once again, you have a major square – Dom Square – built around the largest Gothic Cathedral in Europe.  It’s constantly full of people.  Hohe Strasse, the big shopping street connects to it.  Our hotel is just off Hohestrasse and if you walk five minutes from our hotel, you find the Riverwalk.  In the summer, three boats offer parties.  You can’t believe the numbers of people that are on the square, on the shopping street, and on the Riverwalk! 

We arrived last afternoon from Brugge, Belgium.  Our hotel had the e-mail I had sent along with a confirmation of our room, but the room wasn’t in the reservation log.  We think we got an upgrade because of this slight screw-up.  We are in a top floor room with a balcony.  It’s bigger than most European hotel rooms and has a huge bathroom.  After we got there, we were advised that if we wanted to do laundry (and we did) we had better look for a place right then because the laundromats had limited service on Saturday.  So we went looking and the place we found – about five minutes from our hotel – said that they could get it done if we brought it over in the next few minutes.  We jogged (actually walked faster than our normal leisurely stroll), got the laundry and went back.  Along the way, I found a place and made an appointment for a color and cut. 

We found the Riverwalk and a restaurant that offered my absolute favorite – Zigeuner Schnitzel and also had Kolsch Beer – a shoutout to brother Tom and sister-in-law Jude who told us to be sure to have Kolsch beer in Köln. 

Today was a very busy day for us.  Had a great breakfast at the hotel, got our laundry, I got my hair cut and colored, visited the Cathedral, took a tour of the city on a bus that looks like a train, got off at the Chocolate Museum and toured that, had amazing desserts afterwards, and then went back to the hotel for a nap.  As soon as I finish this blog, we will walk along the river and have dinner.  Believe it or not, with all the great food we’re eating, our clothes still fit.   

Tomorrow we plan to visit the Cathedral again and catch up on this Blog.  The shops are all closed so it will be interesting to see what Cologne is like on Sunday. 

Picture 1: Kolsch Beer & Zigeuner Schnitzel; Picture 2: Crowds at Dom Square on a Friday afternoon; Picture 3 My German stylist Junka (sp?) and me; Picture
4. Kathie and Bill at the Chocolate Museum.