• Wolpertinger Wanderings
8月 – 9月 2022

Bavaria and Middle Rhine

Wolpertinger Wanderingsによる22日間のアドベンチャー もっと詳しく
  • On Top of Karwendel

    2022年9月4日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 57 °F

    Well, since time was short, we decided to use it wisely. See, I'm learning to pivot and be flexible. I had a plan for Mittenwald, and it didn't include wandering around the town on our first afternoon with our bags. I had each day laid out, and when we were standing there, forlorn, looking at the locked door of our pension, I thought-- screw it, time to be flexible.

    New plan. Go down to the train station and leave the bags in a locker. Cross the river, and ride the Karwendelbahn up to the top of the peak. The Karwendelbahn is the second highest gondola in Germany after the outside Grainau that takes you to the Zugspitze. The peak isn't the second highest, that's in Berchtesgadenland somewhere, but the gondola station is.

    Anyway, that's what we did. Thankfully there was a large locker. We left the bags, crossed the tracks, and made our way to the station. It was uphill. Pretty steep at points, but I managed. Thank goodness for those overpriced, novelty hiking poles I bought in Berchtesgaden.

    We paid our entrance, there was no line, so when the car came down, we boarded. Before we left a family group got on. I felt bad since we were in front, and they had two little kids, so I let them get in front. The little boy was thrilled and was talking to us in German (yeah, I'm dumber than a three year old). His sister, not so much. She stood there with her eyes closed, and her mother explained she didn't like heights. So it was only half of a good deed.

    The ride up was fast. Not as dramatic as the ride up to Montserrat outside Barcelona, meaning I didn't feel like we were going to smash into the side of the mountain. At the top is a restaurant, a trail around the area and up towards the summit of the peak, and a sketchy tunnel through the mountains that leads to the trail you can hike from the valley to get up there. That trail was way above our pay grade, we didn't even think about it.

    Here's the ride, complete with appropriate musical accompaniment. It's five minutes long, but worth it, shot through the bluish glass of the gondola. And oh, yeah, we didn't know we should turn the phone horizontally. Our bad.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Amhf2Xbl3ag

    At the top, we had lunch. I had the schnitzel this time, with a Bavarian beer garden favorite called obatzda which is a cheese spread with onion, caraway seed and paprika. Herr Hai had weisswurst and a pretzel with sweet mustard, a traditional breakfast in Munich, but we didn't get to try it there. We shared. Everything was good. The obatzda was much better than when I tried to make it at home the previous Christmas. Looks like I need a new recipe.

    At the top-- wow. There aren't enough superlatives in my vocabulary. I might have been up this high in Yellowstone, but this was more stunning. 7,360 odd feet above sea level, with mountains marching away to the south and east, and Mittenwald, its two lakes, and more mountains to the west.

    We walked along the trail, which got quite steep at times. Then there were the sheep. They came up from the grassy bowl in the middle to hit the hikers up for food and petting. No thanks. They didn't want to give way, and I didn't want to push them or touch them or anything, afraid to hurt them. Herr Hai had no such compunction and we made our way passed.

    We also went part way into the Dammkar tunnel. I don't think this was one of the famous "Nazi tunnels" of the Alpine Fortress where they hid treasures and planned to wage a forever war, like the ones around Garmisch. It just seemed to be a tunnel that connected the top of the mountain to the ski area below. If you hike up from the town, you pass through it. We didn't go far into it, though, and probably should have gone through to the other side.

    We didn't go up to the summit cross. It was a bit too high and rocky for me. I had a little attack of vertigo at one point. I couldn't walk. I just froze, unable to turn or move. Thankfully I worked through it, or I'd still be up there. But the views (and the schnitzel) were worth it.

    More pictures on the FB page, as always.
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  • not our Wolpi

    Beautiful Views and Hazelnut Windbeutel

    2022年9月4日, ドイツ ⋅ 🌙 61 °F

    We checked into our pension with no problem at the appointed time. The owner is a Scottish man who's lived in southern Bavaria for twenty plus years. The place is nice, besides some weird streaks on the ceiling. Second floor, nice balcony overlooking the street and beyond the Karwendel mountains. And, there was a wolpertinger in the hall, so I took it as a good sign.

    We didn't unpack since we'll only be here for a few days. We also didn't stay in the room long. We were hungry, and the place we wanted to eat was on the same side of town, but way up on a hill towards the north. So off we went, taking a lot of pictures on the way.

    I'll say it again, Mittenwald is a really beautiful town. We didn't get to see Berchtegaden at its best, but I think Mittenwald is prettier. Or rather, Mittenwald has a lot more "Alpine charm" packed into a small area. So many of the house are decorated, there are flowers everywhere, and it's surrounded by towering mountains.

    This place was a whole complex, with pricey hotel, dining room, etc. Since we didn't have reservations, and Germans are big on reservations, we were seated outside. We were really Germanized now though, and actually wanted to sit out on the terrace. Various pork with mushroom cream sauce and schnitzel, which often comes served with fries.

    That was all well and good. Food was nice. Service was German. They really expect you to be ready with a drink order seconds after you sit down, which we have to get used to. But the main reason we trekked up here, put up with a stuffy headwaiter who was scandalized we didn't have a reservation and told us quite haughtily, "Well you must sit outside, then..." was for the windbeutel.

    We missed having one of these in Berchtesgaden, where there was a well regarded place that specialized in them. It wasn't convenient to get to by bus, and the only free day with decent weather we had to get up there, it was closed. So I found this place online, and said, what the heck.

    When the time came to look at dessert, we asked about them, a hazelnut one. The waiter-- who was actually a pretty friendly guy for a German waiter-- looked pained and said, "We might not have any."

    Wow, super disappointed. He went off, and then didn't come back for a while. We were looking around, trying to find him so we could get our check and make our way back to the pension before it got dark. Then, he appeared with this enormous, absolutely lovely Windbeutel, or as we say in the US: a cream puff. Six out of five stars. It's a good thing we walked so much, and up so many hills, because this thing was a heart attack on a plate.

    He dropped it off and asked, "Just one?"
    Yeah, just one.
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  • Leutaschklamm, part 1

    2022年9月5日, オーストリア ⋅ ☁️ 57 °F

    After a restful night sleep on a comfortable bed, we were up and ready to go. The only problem was, breakfast wasn't served until eight. This was a huge drawback for us, as we're definitely people who like to get out early and start our days on vacation. But again, we adapted. It was vacation afterall.

    Breakfast was good, except for the liverwurst. Warm croissants, fresh pumpkin seed rolls, various meats and cheeses with butter and marmalade. Coffee in much smaller cups than we have at home, but he left the pot. It was clear we were the only non-Germans in the place, but we were getting used to that, as it was the case in Berchtesgaden as well.

    So the plan for today was to walk to the Leutaschklamm, a gorge with roaring water and one waterfall. It crossed the border between Austria and Germany, as our hike around the top of the mountains had the previous day. This was one of the three things we really wanted to see in Mittenwald, along with the two lakes and the ride on the Karwendelbahn.

    Off we went. Instead of walking into town and taking the bus to the entrance (and it would have been free with our guest card), we decided to walk out the upper back end of town, and then out to the gorge. It looked easy and clear enough on the map. Just walk down the street, make a right, then another right.

    WRONG. We turned too soon, I think, and ended up on another road. A road with no pavement. A road that gained horribly quickly in elevation in spots, and had switchbacks. A road that took us into Austria, and passed one of the many small roadside shrines that are all over the area, on both sides of the border.

    Okay, fine. We would just go into the gorge from that side. And we did. Eventually. The gorge, which is a favorite among the Instagram set, was gorgeous. Apparently there's one place, a bridge that crosses over it, that is THE PLACE to get your picture taken. People wait in lines to do this. We weren't quite sure where it was, but as we were the only people walking through the gorge for the longest time, we figured we'd find it and give it a shot.

    The trail through the gorge is a series of metal/mesh walkways and bridges. They hang onto the side of the rock face, and cross over at points. It's themed now, with stories about various mountain spirits, and portions called things like the Witches' Kitchen, the Devil's Pond, and Hell's Horror, not to mention the pay-for portion, the Ghost Gorge. There are informational signs along the way at several points, but everything was in German so I did my best to read them, which wasn't very good.

    The gorge is long and narrow, apparently the longest in the eastern limestone Alps. The water flowing through it, the Leutscher Ache river, is a beautiful pale blue, even without filters. At points, you can look straight out to the east and see the mountains rising up in the distance, at others, you're surrounded by jagged rocks and prickly pines, the water churning beneath you.

    We ran into a few other intrepid early birds as we got deeper into it. Then, we found it. Nobody was waiting, there was only one other couple there. So we too our pictures. Yay.

    Eventually, we found our way out. There was a switchback trail through the woods, and we took it. Somehow we had missed the Gleisterklamm, the part with the waterfall. Never fear though, because by the time we got to the bottom of the zig-zaggy trail, we were right by the entrance, on a nice long FLAT road leading back to Mittenwald, the way we had planned to come.
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  • Leutschklamm 2, Ghost Gorge

    2022年9月5日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 66 °F

    So we made it through the Gorge, not carried off by any witches or devils, or falling into any hell ponds. We also didn't run afoul of any Instagrammers. But we did end up where I wanted to start, as I mentioned previously.

    This was the part you had to pay to get into. It's much shorter, and the path runs right above the river. You really get a feeling for the power of the water going through this part.

    After finishing it, we merged back into the section we had done earlier, and walked all the way back through. On our return journey, we passed the Instagram bridge, with people waiting for their turn to take a photo. What we noticed, wow, we had taken our photos facing the wrong direction.... This social media influencer thing is just not for us.

    We were happy to make it out the other side, because we had another big adventure. My idea, natch. We were going to hike back down the road (thankfully it was down), and cut off on a side trail to hike up to this restaurant that was half in Germany, half in Austria. Not that that's such a big deal in these Schengen times, when you can wander willy-nilly across borders at will. In fact, we had crossed from Austria into Bavaria and back a couple times just this morning.
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  • Up the Mountain and Down Again

    2022年9月5日, オーストリア ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F

    Like the noble Duke of York, but with just two, not 10,000, we were off to our next objective, the Berggasthaus Ederkanzel, and lunch. Our plan: to find the trail up the hill/ mountain, and get to the place. We'd eat, then hike down the other side, ending up at one of Mittenwald's two lakes.

    We walked along the road. No signs for the trail. No signs OF a trail. I read about it online, so it had to be true right? People suggested this was a good way to get to this restaurant. Well maybe trusting random strangers on the internet isn't always the best way to plan a vacation adventure.

    Finally, Herr Hai said, "I see a trail, let's just take it." I didn't see anything remotely looking like a trail where he was pointing. However, since it was reminiscent of my trip with our oldest daughter, when we were driving across the Navajo Nation and I said I saw the town of Window Rock, and she said I was crazy, there's no town there... I was right. So I went with his vision.

    It turns out, it was a trail. A forest service trail of some sort. Whether we were supposed to be on it, I don't know. It was steep. In places, steeper than that jinky trail up on top of Karwendel. No switchbacks. Not much of a trail, to be honest, just some tamped down dirt weaving around trees and over rocks.

    At one point, as I was dragging myself up using said trees, we saw some people coming down. They looked to be in worst shape than I felt, and I almost asked, "Is there truly a restaurant up there?" But I didn't want to know, in case there wasn't. Then I'd probably have to start biting Herr Hai.

    Then, as if by magic, or a lot of complaining and dragging my body up a mountain, there was a clearing. Turkeys! The place we were looking for was famous for serving turkey at certain times of the year, so it had to be it.

    And then, there it was. We crossed the border back into Bavaria as we walked around the verandah of the restaurant. It was crowded, but the place did have a parking lot so maybe some of those people had been smart enough to have a car and drive up

    It was a nice lunch. We decided to split two dishes: Kartoffelpuffer (potato pancakes) with apple sauce, and Leberkäse. Leberkäse, which contains neither liver nor cheese despite the name, is almost a meatloaf like dish. It's made of pork and who knows what, maybe veal, ground to a paste, flavored with various spices, maybe even that mystical German secret ingredient Maggi wurze. This version had a fried egg on top and was served with potatoes and something approximating a little salad on the side.

    With a couple beers, it was the perfect lunch after all that climbing and whining and lamenting about how we were lost and would be eaten by Tazelwurms, never to be heard from again.

    After that, we were ready to close out the day, even though it was only early afternoon. One more objective remained, then we would probably pass out in bed and not wake up until the middle of the night. But first we had to walk back down the other side. At least that was an actual wide trail, which made things a lot easier, even though we had to walk past goats.
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  • Lautersee and Ferchensee

    2022年9月5日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 73 °F

    At the bottom of the trail, we ran into, not literally, Lautersee. Mittenwald has two beautiful Alpine lakes, and in seeing them, we crossed another thing off my list of objectives for the area.

    Not much to say (shocking, I know), besides the water was beautiful, the surroundings were beautiful, it was nice to put our feet in, and we saw more Germans getting naked to go swimming. And nuns. We saw some nuns in a boat.

    After visiting both lakes, we lazily jumped on the free bus back to town, forced ourselves to stay up, and went out for Italian food in the pedestrian zone. I had my first Aperol spritz, and found it less than I'd imagined from all the chick lit I've read lately.
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  • Lüftlmalerei and Views

    2022年9月5日, ドイツ ⋅ ☀️ 73 °F

    The title speaks for itself. More examples of the beautiful painted buildings we saw on our walk around town tonight on the way to and from dinner. No pictures of dinner though, it was Italian food. Everybody knows what that looks like.もっと詳しく

  • Lainbach Falls

    2022年9月6日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    Our last day in Mittenwald. As with Berchtesgadenland, we could have spent a lot more time here. This is a popular vacation destination for Germans, some people spend two weeks or more here. We could easily have filled that much time. Since it was our last day, we decided to pack it as full as possible.

    It was misty morning, so we pulled out the raincoats and headed out after breakfast. Objective one for the day, and the next to the last thing on my list: Lainbach Falls. The trailhead was right around the corner from the pension, and this time, we didn't get lost.

    We walked up alongside the falling water, which ran all the way down the trail, sometimes steeper and more dramatic than others. Not a lot of water, but enough. Along the side were various statues and markers. It was a nice, serene walk, a good start to the day.
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  • Kapelle Maria Königin

    2022年9月6日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 61 °F

    This was an extra bonus to our short hike up here. We kept walking up the Lainbach, and saw we were close to Lautersee, the first lake we had visited the previous day. We figured, let's get a look at it in in different lighting. On the way, we passed this little chapel.

    Kapelle Maria Königin: the chapel of Mary the Queen, is a new site. It was commissioned in the early 1990s by the Gebirgstrachtverein Mittenwald, and the closest thing I can take from that name, is that they're a society that celebrates the traditional customs of the mountainous region.

    It's a small, but very well decorated chapel, and we were glad to see it.
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  • Church of Saints Peter and Paul

    2022年9月6日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F

    There's a beautiful church here in Mittenwald, and we weren't going to leave without seeing it. I hadn't particularly put it into my plan, though off-handedly I figured we'd see it the first day we arrived since we were going to drop our bags and hang out in town. Well, that changed, so we hadn't gotten to the church.

    Now was our chance. We were going to catch a bus, and it was on the way to the bus stop. We also had plenty of time, so took the opportunity.

    Another high Baroque church, built in the 1720s, the Church of Saints Peter and Paul is pretty fantastic inside. Characteristic of the style, there's a lot of gold and frills. This trip is making me rethink my dislike of Baroque style, but we'll see how long that lasts.

    That said: some pictures of the Lüftlmalerei outside, and the extravagant interior.
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  • The Buckelwiesen Hike, part 1

    2022年9月6日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 70 °F

    So this was our plan: the long hike across the Buckelwiesen, the characteristic rolling hills in the area from the town of Wallgau back to Mittenwald. It was a pretty long hike, about eight miles, but only 600 feet total gain in elevation. It had come highly recommended by the regulars, mainly German, on the trip advisor Germany forum, so I was glad we had the time to do it.

    We caught the bus from Mittenwald. The driver was a little bit surly, but I guess he was tired of driving tourists around on the regular bus, because some of said tourists were being testy with him for not opening the bus door when they thought it was time for it to be opened. That said, we got on, took two seats, and off we went, north from town.

    On the way, we passed the army base, which we had only seen from overhead from Karwendel. It's a Bundeswehr base, mountain troops or some such thing. We saw a few of them in town, but not with the cute little hats they used to wear.

    Anyway, a lot of the tourists got off long before us, so maybe when we finally got off in center of Wallgau, Mister Surly Bus Driver thought we were locals, but I doubt it. We looked around the town, and decided we should eat first. One place was open, so that was it.

    We sat outside. The day had gotten much nicer. The sun was out, the skies were blue, it was getting a bit warm, but not bad. I had the schnitzel this time, with cream sauce, unbreaded. It was very good, and so were the fries. Herr Hai tried currywurst, which is a huge thing in Germany. Not so great. Not bad, just didn't live up to the expectations we both had. Beer and food was good overall, service was friendly though non-English speaking, bathroom was clean. What more could you want?

    Now, hike part one. We set off from downtown Wallgau, knowing some of the hike would be along the road. I think we got sort of lost, or at least, we weren't sure how to find this trail. So after some wandering around, consulting websites (yay, thank you burner phone and Austrian sim card!) and google maps, we found our way.

    We came out of the town, which was much smaller than Mittenwald. The buildings became fewer and farther between, and finally, we reached the Isar river. Now, it was really hot. No shade. The Isar was unbelievably clear, unlike the very blue color of the Leutasch.

    The path took us along a line of trees, mountains beginning to rise to our left. After a while, we crossed the Isar again and came into the town of Krun, stopping to look at the war memorial. We could have given up here and gotten on a bus, being hot, tired, grumpy, having already already hiked out and back to Lautersee, visited the church. We didn't though, because if nothing else, we're persistent.

    Oddly enough, we didn't take any pictures of Wallgau, except the food and the monkey truck, and this part of the hike was less scenic than we had anticipated. Of course, the last week or so has spoiled us when it comes to scenery.
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  • The Buckelwiesen, part 2

    2022年9月6日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 75 °F

    From Krun, we really passed into the fields. The pictures really don't show the roll-- the grass hummocks that rise from the fields. It reminded me of a greener version of parts of Montana near the Crow Nation, though not as big and undulating.

    We had our sights set on a place, the Goas Alm. It was another farm with a pension. Goats. I don't particularly like goats, but we planned to stop and get something to eat.

    This part of the hike took us through a sketchy tunnel under a large road, and then went along for a while on the Jakobsweg, otherwise known as the Camino de Santiago (being honest here, I had to look that up, I knew it had something to do with the Saint James pilgrimage, but for the life of me couldn't remember the right term). Along the route was a little chapel, and we stopped in for a few moments before going on our way.

    Lots of pictures of flowers and such incoming, but no pictures of the cake and coffee we had at the goat alm. In hindsight, it would have made sense to get something made from actual goat milk, or pick up some cheese or soap or something. That's how we roll though, stupidly. And did I mention goats really creep me out?
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  • More of the Buckelwiesen

    2022年9月6日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 75 °F

    Last leg. We were both getting tired, and knew there would be some elevation gain on the way into Mittenwald, and then through the town itself. It was getting close to dinner as well. Or at least, we were going to have to pick something up as places closed early and we were going out to see the local traditional music ensemble play in the park that night.

    Bad news, it looked like rain was returning. We saw dark clouds on the horizon to the west, and unsure how the weather moved there, weren't sure what it might mean for us. We were really out on the fields now, so it wasn't like we could just hop the bus that connected the smaller towns to Mittenwald.

    We pressed on passed a lot of pretty flowers and through the rolling hills. The mountains were looming closer. Finally, we started the climb up, the trail went into the trees, and we came out right where the road entered Mittenwald.

    We decided to try our first döner in Germany. We make and eat out a good deal of Middle Eastern food, various national cuisines, and have had döner as a sandwich, the way they also serve it in Germany, at a Christmas market in the US. So we knew about what to expect. We wanted to get it from the place on the main street in town, because it looked more authentic-- like it was definitely a quick serve, street food kind of place. Unfortunately, no one was there, so we went to other place we saw. Suffice it to say, we should have waited to get our döner until later in the trip.
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  • Music, Moonlight and Final Thoughts

    2022年9月6日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 63 °F

    This was the night the band was scheduled to play in the Kurpark, which was a good thing because it was our last night here. We did most of our packing because we planned for an early start. Or at least, as soon as we finished breakfast, which would be late for us. When we say an early start, we usually mean no later than 6:00 AM on a travel day.

    The threatening weather seemed to be catching up with us, but we hoped it would hold off until the show was over. The park was close to the pension, and as we entered, we saw a lot of the band members showing up. They were all dressed in traditional Bavarian trachten, with really impressive hats. The band members were a good mix of ages, this definitely wasn't, as you see in the US, a thing for just older people.

    The audience skewed older, for a while Herr Hai and I were the youngest people. It was kind of like being on a Holland America cruise. When the start time approached though, families with small kids showed up. A good number of them. What we noticed both here and in Berchtesgadenland, some of these younger couples had three, four, five kids, which is something we didn't expect to see. We also saw large groups together, two or three couples with their three to five kids each. Not multi-generational, just young couples together with a bunch of happy, rambunctious children.

    Sociological observations aside, we sat down, under the covered part though it wasn't the best view, because the sky looked really threatening. The band came on. They played a few songs, before it started to sprinkle, and then pour. Again, streams of water. That didn't dissuade them or the audience. Some people moved under the roof, but others just pulled out rain jackets and umbrellas and sat in the deluge. Again: there is no bad weather, just bad clothing".

    It was a nice concert. They played a lot of what I guess you could call "traditional" German music. Not specifically regional. They even did one march, but not any of the ones I like. When they did more current (and I mean like 1970s-1980s pop showtune kind of things, that was a bit of a bummer for me. Unfortunately I didn't have my camera, just the crummy Russian burner phone, so the video and photos didn't come out. Not to mention I'm really bad at taking video, so there's only a short video here, something to do with clarinets, but not the clarinet polka. I picked a portion of that despite the bad quality, because back in the day I played the clarinet. Never like these guys though. Wow.

    By the time the concert was over, the rain had stopped. We walked the couple blocks back to the pension, rechecked out bags, started charging our electronics, and got ready for bed.

    Final thoughts: These few days were nice. I would want to spend more time here. In terms of the town, I liked it better than Berchtesgarten. In terms of the over all area, I liked Berchtesgarten National Park and the surrounding area better. If I ever strike it rich, I'll buy a house somewhere down here.
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  • Nuremberg

    2022年9月7日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 64 °F

    Today, we bid ade to the Alpine region, and headed through Bavaria, all the way into the Franken region. Our base would be the city of Nuremberg. We didn't pick it for any historical reasons, but rather because when this was a Christmas Market trip, the city had one of the largest, oldest, and most well known markets, as well as having a central location for a lot of other good places to see, markets to experience in northern Bavaria. We kept it for this trip because we had discovered a lot of things we wanted to visit, whether there were Christmas markets or not.

    We took the earliest train we could, after breakfast and our discount Bayern Ticket for the train kicked in. It was a fairly long ride, a little over four hours by regional trains, with a change in Munich. The trains were running a little behind, which is apparently becoming the norm in Germany, so we'd see what time we got there.

    We stopped on the way to the train station to buy some food for lunch. Rolls at the baker's, meat and cheese at the butcher shop. We had water to drink, but maybe we'd pick up a beer. We had already seen Germans drinking on the trains, on the street, et cetera, and while illegal in Philly, it's fine in Germany.

    We missed out train in Munich. By seconds, literally. We got off one train, just beyond the building, on an open platform, then ran down into the building, then all the way across to where the regional to Nuremberg (or Nürnberg for you purists) was set to leave. As we ran up-- bye bye, train leaving.

    Thankfully, we wouldn't have to wait another hour, because another regional train going towards Nuremberg was leaving in about twenty minutes. So we sat down, ate our sandwiches and water, and waited.

    Finally, we were on our way. A bit late. Okay, the last train couldn't have been "a bit late", could it? This was a new part of the trip for us. It wasn't long after we were out of Munich that we came into hop fields. The hops were still up, strung high to overhead lines, looking nice and green. Thank you farmers, for our beer.

    We both kind of dozed off, but not for long. We pulled into Nuremberg. The station was ummm, kind of sketch. Not New York City subway sketch, but just big city, kind of dank and darkish in the tunnels leading from the tracks, busy, not as clean as it could be. Some people looking less than upright. Outside was much the same. A group of people hanging out on the steps, eyeing everyone in that way that tells us city folks to be on our guard.

    But across the street- WOW. The walled Altstadt of Nuremberg.

    Now though, we had to get to our apartment. Why we were dumb, and decided to walk, I don't know. We had that Bayern ticket and could have taken the tram, but no... It wasn't a really long walk, about a mile and a quarter, but it was hot, and we had bags.

    Our host, who I had been in contact with earlier, was waiting. A nice guy named Volker. He took us up to the fifth floor (no elevator), showed us the apartment which was much bigger than it looked online. He gave us a little orientation: how to work the dishwasher, the washing machine, showing us the clothes drying rack, where everything was. Then with the maps showing us all the places he thought were interesting, the good restaurants, the local stores.

    He asked us if there was anything we wanted to do, and we said, "Oh yes, we want to go the Nürnberg Volksfest," which was currently running somewhere in town. He was unbelievably pleased we even knew about this thing, and proceeded to give us extensive directions on how to get there by public transit. Told us to call if we needed anything, have fun, nice to meet you, thanks for staying at my place. Definitely recommend staying at his place, he rents on Air bnb and VRBO, a few local sites as well. Not the fanciest place, but clean, good location, great host.

    When he left, we went around to the Netto-- the cheapy grocery store-- and got some food for the next few days of breakfast. We were, as I had mentioned, very Germanized by this point and went with butter, jelly, ham, and cheeses. I even bought some Quark, since I've been reading about it for so long.

    Good start to our time here. No disasters. We changed, took off the heavy hiking shoes and boots, and went out to the Volksfest.
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  • LOOMING

    Nürnberger Volksfest, Teil Eins

    2022年9月7日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 81 °F

    Author's Note: There will be a couple parts to this, because the use of images at this event, including the blending of various companies' IP was just amazing. I mean this in a good way. I was laughing at a lot of these things, things we'd never do in America now.

    We got on the tram, the stop was directly in front of the apartment building. Convenient. We were still able to use our Bayern ticket-- basically a day ticket for all public transit in the entire state of Bavaria, good from 9 AM - 3AM on weekdays, all day on weekends. At the hauptbahnhof, we switched to another line, as per Volker's instructions. This tram was filled with middle and young high school aged kids, so we were obviously going in the right direction.

    When we got off the tram, I had a bit of a shock. There it was, LOOMING in front of me. The Nazi Party rally grounds. Those of you familiar with history, or film history, will know this as an important setting in Leni Riefenstahl's "Triumph of the Will". It's still there, having survived the war. There was a great deal of construction going on, and I'm not sure if the museum is opened, but we weren't planning on a visit on this trip.

    So there it was. This looming structure, the first surviving obviously Nazi structure we've seen here. It's used for various things now. It's been built out again, and has exhibitions along with the Documentation Center museum, and the fair grounds. That's where we were headed, to the open space along the water.

    So this Volksfest wasn't what I had expected. I thought it would be more of a traditional thing, or have those elements. This was a straight out carnival. Lots of rides. Lots of food choices, some quite interesting. Lots of families and young teens. Think of a really large church carnival, then add that LOOMING building behind it. The structure really put a damper on things for me.

    We didn't go any rides, though I was tempted by the giant, enclosed Ferris wheel and the swings. Not to mention the "American" log flume and whatever ride had the Minions on it. Like I said, the abuse of intellectual property was fabulous.

    It was loud, chaotic, and Herr Hai was getting a little antsy. Crowds sometimes aren't his thing, so we found a place to eat, and decided we'd do that, then beat it back to the apartment. We had a lot planned for the next few days, so we needed some rest.

    For dinner: German fest food. Local beer, a really long wurst, and of course the traditional small Nürnberg wursts, the Drei im Weggla-- three in a roll. Also fries with mayonnaise, because that's what they do here. On our way out, we bought some Gebrante Mandeln, sugar roasted almonds. They had a lot of sugar roasted things at the stand, and maybe we should have gotten some more.

    Pictures incoming, two post worth...
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  • BEST abuse of IP ever

    Nürnberger Volksfest Teil Zwei

    2022年9月7日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 79 °F

    More pictures, few words. I'm sure everybody's happy about that. The American flume ride is featured here, and they also had a "Wild West" funhouse, but the pictures weren't great. Not to mention American 100% beef hot dogs!

    The food is in this post, and I liked the wurst, the Drei im Weggla was good, kind of like a sagey breakfast sausage. I also liked the fries, which were very crisp, with the mayonnaise, they had a nice garlic flavor to them. The almonds, not really. I don't know what I expected, but I think I would have liked them better if they were walnuts or pecans, because honestly, what's not to like about nuts coated in cinnamon and sugar?

    I put in that picture with the pig- just because it was pretty scary. On a kids' ride. Weird.
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  • Kaiserburg, Nuremberg

    2022年9月8日, ドイツ ⋅ 🌧 61 °F

    Busy day today, a lot of sites to see. We're really rushing through this trip, because I said, we don't know if we're ever coming back. If I had my way, we'd go a lot slower, and see a lot more. Having said that, on to stop one.

    We walked from the apartment passed the Maxtor and into the old city. We wandered around for a while, visited a church with a stark interior (Nuremberg was very Lutheran, back in those days), saw some statues, passed the Judengasse. One of my goals, find the remnants of the old Jewish ghettos/ neighborhoods in the various towns and cities we visit.

    Our first stop was the Kaiserburg, the Imperial Castle of Nuremberg. It has a long and storied history, dating back to around the year 1000. As with many of these immense structures, it was added to, expanded, and changed over time. It was almost completely destroyed in World War II, and took over thirty years to be restored to what it is now. Like the Hohenfestung in Salzburg, this place is enormous.

    The Kaiserburg is important in German history as it was one of the many complexes used by the King of the Germans/ Holy Roman Emperor, and which in fact, hosted every one of them up through the Thirty Years War. The KoG/ HRE had no permanent abode, but rather traveled among various fortifications in the very spread out realm.

    The Kaiserburg, however, was on that every single one had to come to. After being crowned, it was traditional, not sure if it was statutory, that the HRE meet with the Diet in Nuremburg. There are many stories about the long processions of various Emperors coming through the gates, up the Königsstraße, and into the fortress. They even have a shadow play of this in one of the museum rooms of the castle.

    So we're going to an amazing historical complex. We bought the expensive ticket, no cheaping out here, which included the Sinwell Tower and the Tiefer Brunnen. The tower, with it's rickety wooden steps winding around provides an amazing view of the city. The Tiefer Brunnen-- the deeper well, has existed from the foundation of the structure, the only interior source of water for the complex.

    There's a lot more I can talk about, but it's all out there on the internet. I will say, besides the tower and the well, the places I was most interested in seeing were the Palas, which was the official residence of the Emperor when he was there, and the Kaiserkapelle, the Imperial Chapel. The chapel was designed with multiple levels, and a hole in the ceiling, providing separate levels for worship, the emperor up above, everyone below, reflecting the medieval hierarchy.

    So a few posts with pictures. I could go on about these guys, Frederick Barbarossa, the various Henrys, Ottos, etc, but I'll leave that for another time.

    We toured the museum, chapel, and as I said, the tower and well. Lots of pictures. Lots of armor, weaponry, and interesting things. Even just walking around the grounds without paying to go in is worth the walk up the hill, though I highly recommend visiting the inside.

    In this post, I'll be sharing the shots of the backside and one of the courtyards of the Kaiserburg, because that's the way we entered, a model of most of the complex, the outside of Tiefer Brunnen, and the candles they send down the wall, to show how deep it is.
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  • Sinwell Tor and Views from the Top

    2022年9月8日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F

    Here are the pictures we took of the ascent (not very many steps) and the views from the Sinwell Tower. It was an overcast, rainy day, and I would be interested in seeing how it would look in better weather. Or snow. I'd love to get pictures in the snow.

    There are also a few from just around the courtyards, and the front way in, and one is a photo of the view of Burgstraße, right below the castle, after World War II.
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  • Kaiserburg Part Three, Inside

    2022年9月8日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F

    Some pictures from inside the Kaiserburg, which houses a museum as well as just allowing you to tour the interior spaces. Included are views of the chapel, including paintings and sculptures of emperors and their empresses, including (I'm pretty sure) Saints Kunigunde and Heinrich (we'll be seeing more of them later in the trip, I hope), and Karl der Große, who most people know as Charlemagne. Not that he was ever in the Kaiserburg, but the importance of establishing legitimacy for the HRE led back to him for centuries, until the Hapsburgs, and don't get me started on THEM.

    Speaking of the Hapsburgs, the ceiling tiles (right before the illuminated manuscript) are reproductions of the tiles put in for a visit by Charles V (Hapsburg/Spain/sacker of Rome/opponent of Martin Luther/nephew of Katherine of Aragon).

    Then there's the orb. Looks imperial, doesn't it? You might ask, and you would be right to, well where is that beautiful crown of the Holy Roman Emperor, dating back to Karl der Große? That famous crown, with the big cross on top? You know, the one that maybe should be in Nuremberg, as every HRE for the longest time was compelled to come her and meet his electors? Well, maybe, you'd say, maybe Julie, it's in Aachen, you know where they were actually crowned. Well, you'd be wrong.

    It's in Vienna. Because when the Hapsburgs locked up the title, they took it with them. They kept it, long after there ceased to be a Holy Roman Empire. Hitler brought it back after the Anschluss, but the US government gave it back to the Austrians after the war. This is (as you can tell) a sore spot with me. To paraphrase Indiana Jones, "It belongs in a museum..." Yeah, in Germany, like the Aachen Cathedral Treasury.

    Oh, and Herr Hai chose the picture with the spears. He was insistent I put that in, along with the picture of the tower from the window.

    I could have easily spent an entire day in this place, and look forward to going back.
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  • Reliquary of Saint Sebaldus

    Sankt Sebaldus

    2022年9月8日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F

    This was the first of three churches in our objectives for today. We visited this one first, because it was closest to the Kaiserburg.

    Sankt Sebaldus, named for the city of Nuremberg's patron saint, is one of, perhaps the, oldest churches in Nuremberg. Originally built in the Thirteenth Century, it added more Gothic elements in a general sprucing up in the 1480s. The church contains relics of Saint Sebald, the English missionary who came to preach in the area. It was customary for emperors to pay their respects to the saint, stop and pray here, when they visited the Kaiserburg.

    Now, the church is an Evangelical (for my American readers Lutheran) church. Nuremberg was a city with a lot of wealthy, well-read, merchants, and they pretty much came to their own conclusions on where they stood during the Reformation. Even though it was still an Imperial city-- they didn't much care. They had their rights and charters and to the Devil with an emperor telling them what to do in terms of religion.

    As you can see, the Reformation in at least parts of Germany was very different from elsewhere. There are still many beautiful things in the church: statues, windows, altarpieces, and while not used in worship, they weren't destroyed. I'm looking at you-- Puritans in England and et cetera... While often Martin Luther himself is credited with saving the beauty of German churches (he opposed the wanton destruction of images), I have to imagine the good and thrifty Burgers who paid for the churches here didn't want to see their investment get trashed, even when they were the ones who supported the Reformation.

    While I appreciated the High Baroque churches of southern Bavaria, especially the Asam Kirche, these are really more to my taste. They're darkish, heavy, filled with colorful stained glass and saturated altar pieces. The woodwork is also pretty amazing, something for which this region Franken/Franconia is known.

    Additional fun fact: the composer Johann Pachelbel was the organist here 1695-1706. Imagine, coming to church on Sunday and he's playing the music.

    Unfortunately, all of the church pictures, and some from around town, were taken not with our real camera, but with my less than wonderful phone. We had three batteries for the camera. We were sure we charged them fully. Well, they were all empty after the one in the camera ran out. NOT HAPPY.
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  • Tucher AltarSt. Edith Stein/ Theresa Benedict

    Frauenkirche

    2022年9月8日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 66 °F

    Another Church of Our Lady, and you'll find one in most large, old, German cities as devotion to Mary was an important part of German religious life in the Middle Ages. This one, built at the behest of Emperor Karl IV (or Charles, if you prefer the English way) in the 1350s, was built on the site of a former Jewish neighborhood. After the Black Death reached Nuremberg in 1349, the residents of the town drove out the Jews in a pogrom. The synagogue was destroyed for the building of the Hauptmarkt-- the market place in front of the church, and then Charles ordered the church to be built as the new imperial church, and had his son baptized here. The church became Lutheran in 1525, but reverted back to the Catholic Church in the early 1800s. It was almost completely destroyed in WW II, and mostly restored by 1953, with a further period of restoration work in the late 1980s.

    Architecturally and artistically: this was the first Gothic hall church in Franconia. It has three of the city's oldest surviving stained glass windows. The Tucher altar is the considered the most important panel painting before the works of Albrecht Dürer. The Mannleinlaufen-- the glockenspiel in the tower of the church, which was created in 1509, depicts the scene of Karl IV (he who exiled the Jews) promulgating the Golden Bull of 1356, the edict which set the conditions for governing the empire. During World War II, the figures were removed from the tower and along with many other treasures, hidden in the art bunker beneath the city.

    There's a statue of Edith Stein. A convert to Catholicism from Judaism in the 1920s, she became nun, and was executed at Birkenau in 1942. She was canonized by Pope John Paul II in 1998 under the name she chose when she entered the Carmelite Order: Theresa Benedicta. If you're interested, here's a short biography:

    https://www.vatican.va/news_services/liturgy/sa…
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  • Lorenzkirche

    2022年9月8日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

    The last of the triad of churches we visited today was Lorenzkirche, or if you prefer, Saint Lawrence Church. Another beautiful Gothic church, construction began in the 1250s, and finished in the 1400s. Apparently, Lorenzkirche was one of the first churches to "go Lutheran" in 1525, but as with Sebalduskirche, the people who paid for the beautiful interior weren't really keen to destroy it.

    Because of that, there are two pieces of significance still in the church. I'm assuming these were also stowed in the art bunker during World War II, because the Lorenzkirche was really flattened in 1945 by both aerial bombing and artillery strikes. Despite that, Veit Stoß's hanging carving of the Annunciation, and Adam Kraft's tabernacle are still there, and pictured below.
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  • The Castle Gardens

    2022年9月8日, ドイツ ⋅ ☁️ 66 °F

    None of this is in order, by the way. I just put the churches all in a row, and am adding in other things we saw thematically, rather than chronologically.

    The weather brightened up. Sun came out. It got warmer. We had something to eat (more on this later), and wandered in the area by the Kaiserburg. There were gardens along the side, some having belonged to the castle, the other I'm not sure about. Very nice. A lot of flowers and greenery. I can see a benefit of traveling this time of year, or earlier in the summer, versus winter as had been our plan: seeing these gardens in bloom.

    Also, at the end, a very exciting picture of black squirrel, straight from Mirkwood.
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  • Walls, Towers, and Albrecht Dürer

    2022年9月8日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

    Nuremberg was the home of the artist Albrecht Dürer, who is credited with being the first artist who actually signed his work. He was famous for his woodblock prints, and the incredible detail in them. We didn't go to the small museum in his former house, just stopped by to look at the outside, take a picture, then went across the street to have something to eat. We also didn't take any pictures of the rabbit statue nearby-- it's famous-- because I didn't like it.

    On a return trip to Nuremberg, Dürer's house and the art bunker will definitely be top of my list. For this trip, as rushed as it is, we're not going to manage either.

    After eating, we found our way up into one of the towers the Tiergärtnertor, and walked for a bit along the walls. From there, back on the trail of churches and general ambience. The walls are thick in places (see the picture of the tunnel, and i made sure to get a picture of an arrow slit, as well as a few views from above.

    A note on lunch: I was going to get the carp, as that's a very popular Franconian dish. I'm not usually a fish person, I didn't grow up eating it (besides fish sticks on Fridays in Lent), but when in Franken... I decided against it because it wasn't cheap, and if I didn't like it, Herr Hai wouldn't trade with me. He really dislikes fish. So instead, I went with another Bavarian specialty-- Schweinshaxe, but just a portion, not the whole thing, served with a dark beer sauce and potato dumpling. It looks dry in the picture, but was really good, the crackling especially. Herr Hai got Nurembergwurst cooked in water, vinegar, spices and onions. Beer. It was all good.
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