• Bill Sherman
  • CJ Sherman
  • Lea Martin
  • Bill Sherman
  • CJ Sherman
  • Lea Martin

Cousin Larry’s farm

Through his ancestry research, Bill found a cousin of CJs in Austria. After many emails, we coordinated a visit. Now we have a return trip with Lea and Glyn. Read more
  • Trip start
    August 31, 2024

    Walk in Salzburg before the drive

    August 31, 2024 in Austria ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F

    Lea and CJ went on a walk and had a nice ‘girls only’ breakfast. We walked to the Mirabella gardens and a little bit of the city. A gorgeous cooler morning. Great conversation and a nice breakfast - Lea had a tiny toasted sandwich of ham and cheese and sprouts. CJ had porridge with bananas and raspberries! Cappuccino rounded out the meal! Daisy slept in and Bill took a walk. Glynn went and bought some pastries and fruit! Off we head to Tragwein to visit my second cousin Larry and his wife Gabby!
    We made it. The farm is gorgeous!!
    Read more

  • Bad Zell, Ruttenstein Fortress Ruins

    September 1, 2024 in Austria ⋅ ☁️ 81 °F

    After a lovely breakfast of garden veggies from my cousin Larry’s garden (tomatoes, zucchini, peppers) homemade yogurt and seven grain bread from an award winning baker as well as coffee we headed out for a walk around the farm. We also did laundry.
    By 12:40 we headed to Bad Zell for lunch at a pub. Lea and CJ had Viennese Schnitzel, Glyn had Cordon Bleu and Bill had turkey schnitzel with mozzarella baked into it. We then went to another side of the restaurant and there was a duck pin bowling alley and a door opening to the Erdstall caves- dug out sometime around 600-1000 years ago. No one knows the real use - maybe hiding from enemies or cold or war. We then hiked the ruins of the Ruttenstein Fortress -
    The weather is hot around 82 with little humidity.
    We stopped for beers and iced coffee and to rest at another cute pub! Life is good in Austria. 🇦🇹
    Read more

  • Mauthausen Memorial

    September 2, 2024 in Austria ⋅ ☁️ 75 °F

    Visiting this camp was educational, but mostly very surreal and heartbreaking. To think that man could, and still can harbor such hatred for those they deem “flawed”, is so hard for many of us to comprehend. Thankfully this camp is being used to memorialize the victims and give their families, and others, a place to remember.

    In spring 1949, the ‘Public Mauthausen Memorial’ was opened and has undergone many changes and additions over the years. On the roll call area, the Republic erected a central memorial, a sarcophagus bearing the inscription ‘May the living learn from the fate of the dead’. On top of this and many other memorials in the camp, you find small stones placed as a way to let others know they haven’t been forgotten. In autumn 1949 France unveiled the first national memorial. A memorial park grew up in the area where the SS barracks had stood and numerous nations and victim groups have erected further monuments.

    In the 1960s the memorial site underwent further changes. Cemeteries were laid out in Camp II and the area where barracks 16, 18 and 19 had stood. Over 14,000 victims are buried in the cemeteries at Mauthausen.

    The memorial site continues to grow for historical and political education.

    Most recently, in 2013, a ‘Room of Names’ commemorating the dead of the Mauthausen concentration camp and its subcamps was opened.
    Read more

  • A morning wog

    September 3, 2024 in Austria ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F

    Bill usually wakes up early and goes out to enjoy a walk/jog or wog. First off, it’s about 65 degrees and low humidity (compared to Florida). It’s also very quiet and peaceful.
    Yesterday we got about 30 minutes of rain so the grass was less crunchy, ground a bit softer. Just a really pleasant place to be.
    The route is just about 4km, a little more with some side trips. It goes past the disc golf course Gabi built. She was a high ranking amateur in Austria and one of the attractions for their BNB was the course. Up through the woods where the rabbits and marmots move faster than my reactions can catch them on camera. I get to the next farm (Hinterhinterburg or behind, behind the mountain) to find wood piles. Most of the farms here warm everything with wood, whether in fireplace, furnace or outdoor pit. I think little Johnny has a bit of chopping to do before this winter.
    Move past the combines threshing the cattle corn, and take a right at the Hinterburg (behind the mountain) volunteer fire station. Stop for a view of the deep blue sky by St Florian, then back up the hill to Larry and Gabi’s farm in Knollnhof or Hill farm. A beautiful place to have some relaxing and low effort days.
    Read more

    Trip end
    September 2, 2024