Europe 2024

April - June 2024
A 51-day adventure by Desiree and Neil Read more
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  • Day 14

    Munich to Strasbourg: a Bit Weird!

    May 13 in France ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

    Up at 5, breakfast, and into the taxi ordered for 6 am. All went well until the driver tried to take a shortcut. We got caught for 10 or 15 minutes in a narrow alley behind a not-moving rubbish truck. 😡 We got to the train with only a few minutes to spare, lugged bags up the stairs, and found our seats occupied already. 😟 It turned out that our travel agent had made seat reservations (a must on this train) for Sunday, not for the Monday I had booked!! 😡😡 I managed to track down the train “chef” and explained. He was great, directed me to a couple of unreserved seats. Three hours later we made it to Strasbourg France. Whew!!😀

    We’re staying in an apartment right in the centre of town, and after a light 3 course (“Plat du Jour”) for 17 euro at a local restaurant - and a divine espresso - we went down to the river, and caught an hour-long Batorama cruise around the inner city. Great fun!

    A strange mixed day, with a stressful morning, but a much better afternoon.

    Tomorrow am, the first of two reasons we came to Strasbourg - Notre Dame Cathedral, one of the great gothic cathedrals.
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  • Day 15

    A morning in Strasbourg

    May 14 in France ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    The historic city of Strasbourg is very compact, tucked into an island surrounded by the River Ill. Everywhere there are charming old buildings, some criss-crossed with crazy gables and painted beams, uneven with age, later ones in the severe French style, with straight lines, exact proportions, and shutters, with the windows opening inwards.
    We were heading for the famous cathedral, but were side-tracked-fatally- by a little square
    Full of open-air book stalls. I’m not sure how we will get it home, but I was seduced by a three-volume biography of Maurice de Talleyrand, a favourite of mine.
    Strasbourg cathedral, one a the greatest Gothic churches, is another jaw-dropper, this time in red sandstone.
    What power of mind could imagine the initial idea? Let alone have the skills to calculate the stresses and forces acting on mountains of stone, somehow magicked into soaring veils of stone lace? Walking inside is like entering a jewel box of vivid colour. Intense colour everywhere you look. Mighty pillars that somehow look like graceful treetrunks. Then at the end, the rose window glowing out of the darkness. And all this extended, repaired, maintained for 900 years through weather, war, and revolution. Everywhere beautiful statues, (eg Joan of Arc ), altars, carvings, an organ somehow mounted halfway up the wall, and a magnificent clock.

    Emerging into the sunlight, we found an ice-cream shop - just the thing for a hot afternoon. Neil chose pistachio and chicolate; I had melon. Delicious. Don’t know why they din’t make it at home. (They also had kiwi!! N)
    A more serious note as we walked backed was a squad of six French soldiers, in full battle gear, with machine-guns at the ready, fanning out through the crowd. Turns out there’s a serious manhunt on after a prisoner escaped this morning; two prison officers were killed, and others seriously wounded. Story in the New York Times.
    Back to the apartment for the challenge of the afternoon: 1: finding the laundry and 2: making it work!
    Neil had found the local branch of the famous Paris store Galèries Lafayette. Might check it out once the washing’s done!
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  • Day 16

    Palais Rohan: 3 Museums

    May 15 in France ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    Hi folks

    Today was really different: we visited the building that started life in the 1730s as the residence of the prince-bishops and cardinals of the aristocratic Rohan family. It has hosted King Louis XV, Marie Antoinette and Napoleon, and more recently Margaret Thatcher and Barack Obama. It now hosts three museums.

    We started the day with the beautiful state apartments (together designated a Museum of Decorative Arts), which provide a wonderful insight into the life of the rich and powerful through multiple regimes. These were overwhelming, and Des fell particularly in love with the library. This museum also included collections of chinaware and religious chalices etc from the period.

    The Museum of Fine Arts was on the first floor of the building, and displayed an amazing range of paintings from the 14th to the 18th centuries.

    In need of sustenance after all this, we retired to a cafe for the Plat du Jour, today (1) a fresh salad, (2) a pork steak smothered in a mushroom sauce, and (3) a mille feuille for dessert.

    Another visit to Strasbourg’s stunning cathedral, then on to museum 3, the Archaeological Museum. We saw artifacts from all over Alsace, from the earliest inhabitants (600,000 years ago!) through to the Romans. Strasbourg actually got its name from a huge Roman garrison camp on the site.

    We finished the day with a special exhibition of the work of Gustave Doré, the Alsatian famous for his etchings, paintings and book illustrations. What a talent!!
    (For Liz, which Doré etching looks like David Seymour!)

    Another very interesting and challenging day. Tomorrow, high speed train(s) - one change - to Cologne.
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  • Day 17

    To Cologne: Alarums and Excursions

    May 16 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Shakespeare’s famous stage direction is an apt introduction to today’s adventures.
    This was our trickiest day. To reach Cologne we must board the TGV ( high speed train) at Strasbourg (France), travel to Mannheim (Germany), unload our bulky luggage, find the correct platform for the second train, board it and get off in time in Cologne before the ICE (German high speed train) shot off to its ultimate destination in Kiel.
    After our scare in Munich, where we found the correct carriage and seats with only minutes to spare, we decided to take no chances. We arrived at Le Gare Strasbourg at 0800. Heaps of time (we thought ) for us to find our first train, due to leave at 0905.
    The minutes ticked by as we paced the gloomy corridors, avoiding hoards of worried looking people on their way to work. Deutche Bahn, the German rail service prides itself on clear explanation, helpful staff and informative signboards so you can find your way around,
    Not the French so-called “Information” office, staffed by a woman whose ancestors surely knitted at the guillotine.
    Neil asked which was the platform for our train.
    Until it arrives I will not know.
    Who can I ask?
    The train manager.
    Where can I find him?
    With the train. You must watch the notices.
    What is the final destination of the Mannheim train?
    (Triumphantly) I don’t know.

    We were getting nervous by this stage as I had worked out that there was less than 20 minutes between when the incoming showed up on the signboard and when it left. But Google saved the day; once we learned the first train was going to Frankfurt we at least knew which name ti look for!
    We were later told by a friendly US couple, married 52 years to our 54, and similarly touring the great gothic cathedrals, that French railway personnel hate Eurail passes ( like ours).

    We have now learned to park our heavy suitcases downstairs on two-level trains.we then made our way upstairs to enjoy the endless variety of life on the TGV- a charming young man from Tunisia ( North Africa), who works between Pariis snd Strasbourg ( his super-cute little boy gave us big smiles) . Four young musicians totally focussed on a table covered in musical scores (Ionesco’s Octet).
    The second leg of our journey went more smoothly. But we were relieved to exit correctly, on the right side of the train, onto the modern and well-lit Hauptbahnhof at Cologne.
    And look up, to see the towering twin spires of Cologne Cathedral, at 157m, the tallest twin-spired chuch in the eorkd; Getmany’s most-visited landmark (6 million visitors a year.)
    After dumping our bags with great relief at the hotel, we walked to the Rhine river to rhe famous Hohenzollern railway bridge. (417m). The original three-span bridge was built by Kaiser William II in 1911. Its piers were blown up by the Nazis in 1945 in a vain attempt to halt the Allied advance into Germany.
    It has now been reconstructed as a railway bridge with a separate pedestrian/ cyclist path. The wire fences are covered in padlocks.
    We walked across, looking fown at the huge barges passing underneath, feeling the path vibrate with each passing train.
    Then back to the hotel, just missing a mid-afternoon thunderstorm and heavy downpour.
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  • Day 18

    Stupendous Cathedral, & chocolate!

    May 17 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Hi folks

    We enjoyed a late start today, lolling in bed till after 10 - a very comfortable bed too, though it squeaks with any movement!

    We had a Thai curry for lunch, and then walked over to the Cathedral, or “Dom”. I had booked a guided tour at 2pm, but we had an hour beforehand, so we spent the time wandering around the church taking photos.

    What an amazing building! Started in 1248, it took over 600 years to finish. We were both blown away by the beauty everywhere you looked. And so many different spaces - behind the high altar there are seven chapels to accommodate the Masses each priest in the Chapter had to say each day.

    The Cathedral was started to provide an appropriate home for the supposed bones of the Three Kings of the Christmas Story. These relics quickly became popular with pilgrims, who came to venerate them.

    The relics are housed in a beautiful gold casket, studded with 1000 gems- see photos.

    Come 2 o’clock, we reported for our tour, which was led by a young religious brother. He gave us a lot of additional interesting information about the Cathedral, such as the age of different elements - the oldest stained glass window dates from 1260!!

    The Cathedral is right next to Cologne’s main railway station, and close to the Rhine River’s bridges, so damage was inevitable in World War II. Fourteen bombs landed on the Cathedral, and although the lower windows and furniture had been removed for safety, the upper windows, roof and masonry suffered badly.

    Fortunately the towers (mostly) survived, and there are pictures from that time showing the Cathedral surrounded by an utter wasteland. Awful.

    As we left the church, Des caught sight of a little yellow train, and she thought that could be fun! The train turned out to be the Schoko Express, and it took us to the Chocolate Museum. This turned out to be an excellent museum about the history and development of the chocolate industry. Funded by Lindt, the museum also includes a working chocolate factory, and a chocolate fountain!!

    Another great day!

    Tomorrow, day trip to Aachen and Charlemagne.
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  • Day 19

    To the shrine of Mighty Charles

    May 18 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    This morning we headed west to Aachen. Cologne has been humid, with the occasional thunderstorm. We dressed for spring weather, then travelled through flat misty countryside to arrive at decidedly chill Aachen. Frustrating, as we have bern carting around our winter clothes since Vancouver, and today had left them behind. Neil got a lot of mileage out of his nobility in lending me his raincoat!
    After a reviving expresso we found the Cathedral Treasury. The mighty Charlemagne built the cathedral, started in 796, as his Royal Chapel, in the Byzantine style, a high octagon with marble pillars, sixteen vaults, and exquisite gold interlaced mosaics. A gothic hall for pilgrims and a stunning chapel with soaring walls of stained glass were added. It is a unique treasure which has survived Viking raids, Napoleonic plunder and more recently Allied bombing attacks and artillery fire. Some parts of the complex were destroyed beyond repair, but 30 years of restoration, costing €40 million euros, have rescued this unique treasure, one of the first buildings to be declared a world heritage site.
    We have seen a number of cathedral treasuries, but this one blows your socks off. This stuff is authentic ( Charlemagne’s hunting knife, well worn, with sheath, and his hunting horn), of the highest medieval workmanship ( how did they do this stuff back then?) and unique in the light it throws on earlier ages. These are not just superb decorative objects.. They are reliquaries - the golden hand with a bone frim the emperor’s arm; the famous bust (in all the history books) with part of his skull inside, the intricate gold construction that holds part if his thighbone.
    Pilgrims travelled from all over Europe to be close to these objects of power and blessing. We may scoff, but the adulation poured out on modern pop stars comes from the sane impulse: to share a power greater than our own. Plus what we do in plastic, they did in gold of the highest workmanship.
    This man laid the foundations of European civilization, three hundred years after Rome had collapsed. He deserves our respect..
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  • Day 20

    Rembrandts Galore!

    May 19 in the Netherlands ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Hi folks

    We started early again today in order to catch our high speed train to Amsterdam. No problems in a 3+ hour very smooth trip - 268km. The only odd things were the periodic warnings (in 3 languages!) from the train staff about pickpocket train riders!

    We caught a tram to the Rijksmuseum, our reason for the trip. After a stop for lunch we presented ourselves at the appointed time - when you book a visit to this museum, you are given a a 15 minute entry window, and told if you miss the window you won’t be admitted!

    So to the Rijksmuseum. This wonderful place hosts 22 Rembrandts and four Vermeers. We saw most if not all of these, plus a good number of the other 6,000 paintings the museum has!

    We had planned to focus on Rembrandt - and we spent considerable time with him - but the range of subjects and sheer talent displayed in all the paintings we saw was overwhelming.
    At the shop we bought postcards - and a 1000-piece jigsaw of Rembrandt’s Night Watch painting!

    After a break at the cafe and the WC (free here, not the usual 2 Euros!) we turned to a couple of other topics of interest, Waterloo and a collection of ship models.

    The Waterloo exhibition was a disappointment, with most of the exhibits bearing little or no relationship to the battle, but a strong interest in the Dutch connection.

    By contrast, the dozens of ship models were superb. Galleys, galliasses, merchant ships and warships were all created in such detail that made you wonder how anyone could have had such skill - and that much patience!

    Now came one of the highlights. Take a 2-metre long model of a Dutch warship. Both the warship and the model were built in the 1860s, but the model is split fore and aft so you can see all the decks.

    Now get some modern wizard to create little holographic people doing their thing in each deck - absolutely brilliant. Watch Desiree’s video.

    Back to the train station, and thence to Cologne. Another brilliant day!

    But we’re ready for a rest day tomorrow - just as well, as all the shops are shut for Pentecost Monday!

    Last word today from Des:

    Song 19 May
    A day trip to Amsterdam?

    In our youth we were very demure
    And our lives were obedient and pure
    We worked at our studies and never got drunk
    I lived with my folks, as did Neil, an ex-monk
    While others flew off to enjoy their OE
    We had beautiful babies and mortgages three
    (Plus two others) which kept us both very busy
    With the RNZN and my long PhD.
    For our 40th at last we got Europe to see-
    Covid nuked plans for anything more.

    But now over seventy-five
    We will celebrate being alive
    We can do crazy things like a trip on a whim
    To the great Rijksmuseum to see Rembrandt van Rijn
    Despite aches and twinges and wrinkly skin
    You’re never too old for a quest to begin
    (Think of Bilbo! But hopefully not with a Ring)
    We can all of us prosper and thrive!
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  • Day 21

    Des and Neil’s Rest Day!

    May 20 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

    Today dawned misty, humid (91% humidity and heavily overcast.) We were tired after the big emotional high of our Rembrandt Run yesterday. But hey, this was our last day in Cologne, and we won’t be back anytime soon, so we headed off through the empty streets (today being a feast day holiday) down to the mighty River Rhine. (Cue Wagner🎶 Siegfried’s Rhine Journey).

    The Rhine had swollen with flooding overnight. The riverside promenade was flooded, with Warning High Water signs closing access.

    We found our cruise boat and sat on the upper deck watching the City go by while eating sausage and chips with curry sauce. A panorama of cultural treasures carefully reconstructed after the Allied bombing, cheap boxy housing run up after the war to house what was left of the people, and modern luxury apartments in interesting designs.

    From time to time mega barges would shoulder their purposeful way past us.

    In NZ we have seagulls. On the Rhine, ravens. I kept looking about anxiously for an old man with a floppy hat and one eye.

    After the cruise we walked back through the Old Market and main shopping areas. Interesting to look at but saved from temptation as they were all shut!

    Our last port of call was the Roman-German Museum. The Roman Emperor Augustus founded a city here in the first century CE: Colonia Claudia Ara Aggippinensium. This strategic site was a major military and trade centre. Soldiers, traders, workers, craftsmen, families came from all over the world, telling their stories in inscriptions and the huge numbers of everyday things like the 1.6 million objects , from boathooks to nit combs, retrieved by archaelogists from the bottom of the Roman harbour.

    Wealthy citizens lived in city villas decorated with mosaic floors, wall paintings, fine tableware, exquisite glassware and jewellery.

    We were running out of legs after viewing these treasures, remarkable because they all came from the same place over hundreds of years. Luckily the helpful lady at the desk pointed out a taxi stand a few metres away, so we gratefully took our throbbing feet home!

    Time to pack up and prepare for our big rail journey tomorrow - four plus hours north to Hamburg.
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  • Day 22

    Train Day #7: To Hamburg

    May 21 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

    Hi folks

    Today we shouted ourselves a lovely hotel breakfast, with the aim of keeping us fed through the four hour (432 km) from Cologne to Hamburg.

    We made it to the main train station in miles of time - had to watch three other trains use our platform before our ICE arrived. As we found before, platforms at the main city stations in Germany are so long, that as well as its number, each platform is divided into zones A to G. Signage then tells you in which zone your carriage will stop.

    For this train the Eurail planner told me when I looked that there was no need to reserve seats. So I didn’t - mistake! The first class carriages were packed.

    Des & I eventually found a couple of odd unoccupied seats, and settled down. Half an hour and a couple of stops later, it turned out that the seats we were in belonged to a couple who had reserved their seats.

    So we got booted out, but fortunately there were a couple of unreserved seats close by. We spent the rest of the journey back to back - quite peaceful, actually.

    Arriving at our destination, we were drifting along the platform wondering if there was a lift to take us down to ground level when we were greeted by a wonderful smile - Des’s old friend Marie-Thérèse had come to pick us up!

    Marie-Thérèse fitted us and all our junk into her car (another example of how accommodating and flexible a Honda Jazz is!), and we set off.

    First we visited the cemetery at Ohlsdorf where Marie-Thérèse’s husband Gerhardt was buried 12 years ago. The cemetery is unlike any I have ever seen before, with graves surrounded (and mostly hidden from the road) by brilliant banks of mauve rhododendrons. We took a circular route to the grave, enjoying the walk, and in particular a couple of geese and their goslings’ antics.

    Second stop was for ice creams - yum!

    At home, Marie-Thérèse had cooked a lovely loaf of bread for our lunch.

    As I began to write this, two beautiful ladies were in full flow catching up on years of unshared experiences interspersed with reminiscence.

    Now I’ve finished, and guess what … !!
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  • Day 23

    A quiet day in Hamburg

    May 22 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    Our journey from Cologne yesterday was the longest and last of our stages with (rather too much!) luggage.

    So this morning we were happy to take things easy. I enjoyed the sound of birdsong rather than the EEE AWW of sirens. Instead of looking out the window to see grinding traffic , every window showed green lawns, trees in their spring foliage, mauve rhododendrons, foxgloves, and flame-coloured azaleas.

    After meal planning we walked through this pretty garden suburb to the local EDEKA supermarket. This was large, pleasant and well-stocked, with a café where we enjoyed lunch.
    The girls would enjoy the mini-car kiddy trolleys ( see the photo).

    We also chuckled at the variety of “Don’t Let Your Dog Poo On My Lawn “ notices (one attached).

    A thunderstorm was forecast for the early afternoon. Luckily for us it held off until after we got home.

    We are booked for Miniatur Wonderland tonight. Report on this in the morning!
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