Germany
Brandenburg

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    • Day 1

      Zonder zorgen

      July 11, 2020 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      Hoe luxe is je leven als je je zomerpaleis Zonder Zorgen kan noemen? Frederik de Grote kon dat blijkbaar... Leuk om het wereldberoemde Sanssouci te bekijken. De fietsroute was ingewikkeld, geregeld liep het fietspad uit op een mul zandpad.Read more

    • Day 13

      Wittenberge, Stadt

      July 13, 2020 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

      Über Wittenberge kann man viel berichten, was man selbst recherchieten kann.
      Wir folgen dem "grünen Weg" und finden so viele intetessante Orte. So zum Beispiel die vielen restaurierten Backsteingebäude, welche einen besonderen Charme ausstrahlen. Die hübschen Restaurants und Biergärten - wo es nicht nur Bier gibt - haben auch ihren Reitz. Besonders beeindruckte uns die grandiose Aussicht bei diesem schönen Wetter vom Rathausturm aus.
      Nach einer Siesta an der Elbe essen wir vorzüglich im Restaurant "Germania" und bummeln gemütlich am alten Zollhaus vorbei in unsere "Stube"
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    • Day 3

      Dag 3, Sachsenhausen

      May 4, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

      Nog steeds is het mooi weer. Vandaag bezoeken we Sachsenhausen, het voormalige werkkamp. Indrukwekkend en bijzonder dat we hier op 4 mei zijn. We gaan met de Sbahn en de bus heen. Rond de klok van half 2 vertrekken we weer richting ons hotel. Hier pakken we de fiets en gaan we richting Eastside gallery. We wandelen langs de muur en springen weer op de fiets om te gaan eten. Het was een goede keuze van Peter. We staan nog even stil bij de dodenherdenking om 8 uur en houden het dan voor gezien, drinken in het hotel nog een borrel en duiken ons bed in. De activiteiten beginnen zijn tol te eisen... we zijn moe!Read more

    • Day 15

      Meters maken door polen.

      July 2, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

      Stephan gaat maandagochtend zijn dochters uitzwaaien naar Curaçao Daarom willen we morgen na de finish gelijk door naar Nederland en maken we vandaag flink kilometers door polen met soms toch wel gedateerde verkeersborden 🙂 . Én goed opletten., regelmatig verbazen we ons over t rijgedrag van de Polen.
      We belanden op een prima camping in de buurt van Potsdam en sluiten de dag mooi af met een heerlijk maal, bier en whisky in en van de betere restaurants in de omgeving.
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    • Day 3

      Day 3: A Day touring Glindow with Ulrich

      July 6, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

      We had a cozy night sleep to wake up to a homemade European breakfast (soft boiled eggs, salmon, cheese, fresh bread rolls, jams, tea and coffee). YUM! Afterward, we finished the bicycle assembly, and then headed out for a test ride. Ulrich planned an 18 mile ride around Glindow which included a walk through an outdoor museum of a hospital in a forest. It had rich history, but has since become ruins after WWII. Since then they built tree line walkways to view the different ruins. It was fascinating to see the trees growing out of the bricks, and how much vegetation and trees grew from the rooftops of the abandoned buildings. In true European fashion, they had several playful components for both children an adults alike. We tried them all! On our way back home, we stopped to have ice cream, cake, tea, and coffee at a local restaurant overlooking the lake. When we arrived home, we worked on packing our bags, had a lovely meal of chicken cordon blue with vegetables and potatoes. Lucky for us, Wednesday night is Archery club so we got to participate in a tournament. Jim won first place and Lisa second. The evening was wrapped up with local wine and liquor in the living room with stories of family and wedding memories!Read more

    • Day 4

      Day 4: Palitz, Germany

      July 7, 2022 in Germany ⋅ 🌧 18 °C

      The day started out rainy and slippery and I took Lisa on a bunch of cobble, sandy trails, and steep shortcuts to some lookout towers to get her ready for the rest of the trip. 🤪 Lucky for us, some of the shortcuts led to some ripe raspberries, and a curious fox. We stopped at a roadside tourist area that specializes in local produce, especially berries, cheese, Liquor , and different salamis. We bought a couple different kinds of salami, some cherries, and a blueberry flavored beer. Since it was a cooler day, no one was occupying the beer garden, so we took a vantage of that and had a picnic with the sandwiches that were left over from breakfast and all the goodies we bought. The day was filled with many of the things we love about to rain in Germany, sunflower fields, produce stands, cobbles, Shortcuts in the forest, Bakeries that actually serve pastries that they made and coffee with cremé, beautiful steeples always gracing the horizon, and of course more than can be explained!
      We arrived at Katrin and Tomas (Warmshower host) at about 5 PM enjoyed a cold beverage and wine on the patio with Katrin.
      For dinner we had spietzl (potato pasta) and mixed vegetable salad. It was a perfect dinner after a perfect day of riding!
      After dinner we took a mosey around their town and through the forest, The walk was concluded with a tour of their beautiful garden. We dreamed of swimming in the pool and using the sauna, but it was too cold! We shared stories and cocktails until about 11 PM We even sampled Mongolian vodka together!
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    • Day 5

      Day 5: Cottbus, Germany

      July 8, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

      We woke up to the smell of fresh bread from the local bakery and coffee. We had vegetables, cheese, several home made spreads, and meats to eat with delicious rolls. We shared a few more stories with Thomas and Katrin before hitting the pavement towards Cottbus. It was a tough day of riding on gravel, single track, sand, and a few trails. But we made it to Thomas’s place just in time to pick up his wife, Negar at the train station and head to the beach for a picnic and swimming. They swim every day, even in the winter, cutting through the ice to take a plung! Jim was brave enough to get into the lake, while Lisa stayed snuggled up in her parka! It was about 55° F outside (and windy)🥶. Afterwards, we went back to the flat of Thomas and Nager’s for a night cap and more stories. Nigal entertained us with her beautiful music. We walked back to our tiny house in Thomas’ garden accommodation where our bed had a view of the stars. From the sky light in the loft. We fell asleep to the sound of the neighbors socializing and slept peacefully under the blanket of stars.Read more

    • Day 3

      Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp

      December 11, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 30 °F

      Today was cold, eerie, and windy, with a constant flurry. Normally, I would say it was a miserable day but today I can only be grateful for the amazing life I live and those who fought to defend a right to that life. Today we visited Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp. 

      We arrived by train on the same tracks that prisoners would almost a hundred years ago. There was no bus or nice car to drive us, just the same rough streets that so many had taken, through the small town, to the entrance of the camp about a mile away. People sat in their houses, warm, watching us walk by just as many people sat in those same houses watching prisoners walking by on their way to almost certain death. 

      Sachsenhausen is a unique camp. It was one of the first in the SS concentration camp system and was considered a model camp. Every aspect of it was meticulously designed to be efficient. While it isn’t as well known as camps like Dachau and Auschwitz, Sachsenhausen served as the headquarters and training ground for the SS concentration camp system. After the end of World War II, Sachsenhausen was taken over by the USSR where it continued to be used for several more years as a concentration camp. 

      After completing the 20-minute walk, we arrived at the entrance road. We were greeted by three models that showed the scale of the camp at its height during WWII. Most of it had been leveled by the GDR but what remained was extremely powerful. It was a long stone path that stretched along one side of the perfectly triangular prison camp. To the right was a brightly colored hall for the concentration camp workers and to the left a tall stone wall with towers guarding it. 

      After the short walk, a simple iron gate appeared on our left which was the entrance to the camp. Every prisoner who entered Sachsenhausen walked through that same gate. After passing through the gate we entered a beautiful wooded area with a couple of buildings. This area was for the commanders and would have been beautifully decorated. This section was renowned for its flower gardens and overall beauty. This would be the prisoners' last sight before entering the harsh reality of the camp. 

      As we approached the tall inner guard tower of the prisoners' camp it was clear how everything would change. The size and depth of the camp were overwhelming. From up in the guard tower, we could see every inch of the camp as it was designed when being built. Every building was perfectly laid out in rows of semicircles stretching all the way to the tip of the triangle. Immediately in front of us was the roll call area. As we stood there listening to a recording about the area, we were shivering from the lack of sun and blistering wind. We looked at each other, bundled up for the winter yet shivering, and could not fathom how anyone could stand out here for hours on end for roll call and other activities. Through the gates of the tower, we could see the beauty of the inner section that would have been just out of reach for prisoners less than a hundred years before us.

      Wrapping around the wall that formed the triangle was several layers of security which prisoners coined “Death-Strip”. This consisted of barbed wire, an electric fence, followed by a stone wall. But even more deadly was about 3 feet of beautifully laid gravel. Any prisoner, who took one step on the gravel, would be shot instantly with no questions asked. From the roll call area, we could see the empty rectangles laid out in perfect symmetry where over 50 barracks would have stood. Today most of them had been leveled, but a couple still remained. 

      As we walked over to the barracks, it was clear the ground was not even and contained lots of strips of different types of gravel in stone. These walkways were used as testing grounds where prisoners would be forced to walk 30 km a day to test out new types of boots and materials for soldiers. Inside the tight barracks we the original bunks, bathrooms, and washrooms. They were tiny and we couldn’t fathom how hundreds of people were crammed into these tiny quarters, yet many would consider this the place of relief from the manual labor.

      Inside the prisoners camp was a prison that had 80 cells. Each of the cells was equipped with covers for the windows that would deprive any light from entering. Some prisoners were held in the darkness of solitary confinement for months at a time. While walking the grounds we also toured the prison kitchen, laundry facilities, and performance hall, where prisoners who had talents would come to perform for their captors in the hope of extra rations. 

      Towards the end of our journey through the grounds, we came upon an area next to the industrial yards in which the prisoners worked. Around the corner, hidden from view was a trench lined with wood full of holes. This was the execution trench, where thousands of prisoners were shot and killed by the SS and USSR. Sachsenhausen did not have gas chambers until the very end of the war when a very small one was constructed for special cases, so the trench was the main method of execution for those that didn’t die from other causes. Right next to it was the crematorium that was built on-site. It started with one burner but three more were added to keep up with the backlog of bodies. 

      As were walking, mounds of ground were everywhere labeled “Ashes of Prisoners”. These mounds consisted of thousands of prisoners' ashes that had mixed together and buried throughout the compound. 

      As our day came to an end something had been made clear to us throughout the process. Most of the buildings were gone. There were statues and memorials throughout the site, but they seemed off. The prisoners looked happy in many. This was because the original memorial to this ground had been made by the GDR, German Democratic Republic. It was clear the GDR wanted to hide a lot of the history that had occurred on the site and reshape the memorial to benefit the government at that time. In fact, the ground went on to be used for many ceremonies and banquets for the GDR during the late 20th century until the fall of that government. 

      The memorial today tries to piece together what is left from the different eras: SS, USSR, and GDR control but shows the power of what propaganda can do. As the sun set, we walked out of the gates with freedom. As the snow began to fall, we began to retrace our steps back to the station where it all began. Outside the entrance of the camp, the street split in two. To the right was a sign which signified the road from Sachsenhausen, which started the path to one of the many death marches. A lot of these prisoners, who were detained for characteristics and religion, never got to walk out of that gate. Many that did, took the split in the road to the right, to start their march to continued misery and hurt. We got to take the road to the left, to freedom, to life, to safety, to peace. Within an hour we were back at the hotel, in the warmth, with as much food and water as we wanted. How grateful we ought to be.
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    • Day 3

      Neu Seeland Velotour

      April 21, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

      Freude herrscht…wir werden heute Morgen von wärmenden Sonnenstrahlen geweckt!
      Wir beschliessen eine Velotour zu machen.
      Bloss…was soll man anziehen?
      Irgendwie ist man immer noch im Wintermodus, zudem weht noch ein frischer Wind.
      Nach einigen Bekleidungstests ist das Richtige gefunden und es kann endlich losgehen.
      Einmal um den Sedlitzersee (dieser ist immer noch in Flutung),mal am Ufer entlang, mal über Kanalbrücken die die verschiedenen Seen miteinander verbinden, mal durch den Wald.
      Die Natur wächst und gedeiht, es riecht sooo gut nach frischem Grün, nach Nadelholz und Wasser. Ahhhh…es tut sooo gut!!!
      Irgendwo, mitten im Wald, hoch über dem See treffen wir auf den „Rostigen Nagel“.
      Es ist ein markanter, 30 Meter hoher, rostroter Aussichtsturm aus Stahl. Er soll den Wandel der Region vom Bergbau zur neuen Zukunft darstellen. Gefällt mir!
      Danach radeln wir noch um den halben Senftenberger See wo wir uns bei einem Imbiss eine Jause gönnen.
      Der Senfteberger See soll einer der größten künstlich angelegten Seen Deutschlands sein.
      Eigentlich sollte das nächste Ziel ein weiterer See sein. Nur…irgendwie haben wir scheinbar irgendwo den Abzweiger verpasst und landen dafür in der heimeligen Innenstadt von Senftenberg. Echt gemütlich.
      Da kurven wir die Gassen rauf und runter, kommen am Schloss und der Festung von 1290 vorbei, überqueren den beschaulichen Marktplatz mit der „Kursächsischen Postmeilensäule von 1730“, durchqueren den Stadtpark und sehen ein Denkmal für „antifaschistische Widerstandskämpfer“ aha 🤓
      Sehr interessant 🤨
      Sogar eine fahrbare Polyesterkiste, ein Trabi kreuzt unseren Weg…cool😅
      Nachdem wir uns wieder orientiert haben und die richtige Richtung zu unserem Womo eingeschlagen haben erreichen wir den Stellplatz nach der knapp 40 Kilometer langen Tour.
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    • Day 5

      An der Havel in Pritzerbe

      April 23, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

      14 Grad, windstill und…hm…die Sonne scheint etwas diffus hinter dicker werdenden Wolken hervor.
      Heute fahren wir mal Richtung Berlin, vorbei am berühmten Spreewald mit seinen Touristischen Attraktionen.
      Dieses „Highlight“ lassen wir dieses Mal aus.
      Ab und zu sehen wir Störche in mitten riesiger Grasfelder herum stolzieren. Vielleicht hüpft ja ein Snack in den langen Schnabel 🐸?
      Aber meistens führt uns die Strasse mitten durch dichte Kiefernwälder.
      Nach dem Abzweiger Richtung Hamburg beginnt es doch tatsächlich zu Regnen ☹️
      Warum Hamburg??? Um Berlin möglichst grossräumig zu umfahren😅.
      Bei Göttin verlassen wir die Autobahn und steuern Stadt Brandenburg an.
      Einmal durch die Stadt rauschen, zweimal die Havel überqueren und wir erreichen den kleinen Ort „Pritzerbe“.
      Gleich nach der Anlegestelle der Havelfähre finden wir den kleinen Stellplatz „Havel Oase“.
      Für 3 Euro mehr, dürfen wir unsere „Perle“ in der ersten Reihe am Wasser parkieren.
      Im Wasser vor uns liegen verschiedene Hausboote die man, wenn man dann möchte, mieten könnte.
      Wir geniessen zuerst mal bei einer Tasse Kaffee den wunderschönen Ausblick über die Havel und natürlich die Sonne die sich hier durchgesetzt hat.
      Immer wieder mal tuckert ein Motorboot oder ein Hausboot vorbei. Die Fähre hat gerade auch viel zu tun. Regelmässig fährt sie von einer Seite der Havel auf die Andere.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Brandenburg, ብራንደንቡርግ, Brandemburgo, براندنبورغ, Brandenburg suyu, Brandenburq, Бранденбург, Brandnburg, Брандэнбург, ব্র্যান্ডেনবুর্গ, براندنبورگ, Braniborsko, Bramborska, Βρανδεμβούργο, Brandenburgio, Brandenburgo, Brandebourg, Brandenbörj, Brandenboarch, Brandeburgo, ברנדנבורג, ब्रैंडेनबर्ग, Braniborska, Բրանդենբուրգ, Brandenburgia, Brandenborg, ブランデンブルク州, ბრანდენბურგი, 브란덴부르크 주, Brandeborsch, Brandenburgum, Brandeburg, Brandebùrgo, Brandenburgas, Brandenburga, ब्रांडेनबुर्ग, Brannenborg, Braandenbörg, ब्रान्डेनबर्ग, L' Brandenbourg, Brandeborg, ਬ੍ਰਾਂਡਨਬੁਰਕ, Brandebursch, Brandeborgh, برانڈنبرگ, Brandenbursko, Brandenburgu, Brandenbuurich, รัฐบรันเดนบูร์ก, برندنبرگ, Brandiburgo, Brandänburgän, בראנדנבורג, 勃蘭登堡, 勃兰登堡

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