Germany
Dusseldorf

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    • Day 1

      Weihnachtsmarkt die Erste

      December 8, 2016 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 6 °C

      Ich finde ja wenn einem das "Blind Booking" schon im Dezember nach Düsseldorf verschlägt, dann sollte man wenigstens genau inspizieren, was sich hier so tut, am Abend, in der Altstadt, im Advent. Und ich muss sagen - wir sind positiv überrascht.

      Die Altstadt entpuppt sich als (fast) flächendeckender Weihnachtsmarkt - vom Ambiente teilweise sehr herzig, teilweise irgendwie in den 90ern stecke geblieben, aber jede Ecke anders und durchwegs einladend. So konnten wir auch nicht vorübergehen, am Düsseldorfer Spießbratenbrötchen, am Lángos und am allgegenwärtig Eierpunsch. Prost, Mahlzeit.
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    • Day 2

      Ankunft in Düsseldorf

      June 13, 2019 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

      Nie mehr wieder im Zugabteil schlafen, das nächste Mal gibt es bestimmt ein Schlafwagenabteil. Viel Schlaf war in dieser Nacht nicht drin. Jetzt geht`s aber runter vom Zug, das Wetter ist traumhaft und es verspricht ein schöner Tag zu werden.Read more

    • Day 9

      Königsallee

      June 12, 2015 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

      The Königsallee is to Düsseldorf, what the Kurfürstendamm is to Berlin, what the Champs-Élysées is to Paris, or what Regent Street is to London. In other words, it isn't just the main high street (high street for 'high-end' brands) but also a cultural centre point and meeting place within the city.

      The Königsallee -- affectionately referred to as the Kö -- isn't really one street, but two. They run parallel with each other, separated by a tree lined canal . As far as I can tell, the canal is purely cosmetic, added to impress a feeling of class. But I don't really know. I only say that, because at the end of the Königsallee it just seems to stop. In any case, it's very nice. Every 100 meters or so there is a little bridge crossing it, where you can stand and contemplate life in Düsseldorf. The trees, the water, the bridges, all detract -- in a good way -- from the busyness of the high street.

      The shops on either side of the Königsallee are Gucci or Prada or some other such meaningless brand. It's for rich people. I guess if it weren't for the other activities that take place along the allee, it would be effectively a dead, sanitised playground for the wealthy. But the non-Gucci activities save it. Today, for example, running the whole length of the Königsallee were stall selling used books for three Euros, or beer, or chocolate, or Jazz vinyls and such stuff. It's a nice place, too, if you want so shelter from the 30 degree sun.
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    • Day 3

      Colourful Bilk

      June 6, 2015 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

      Bilk is colourful, overwhelmingly colourful. I've tried to capture some of that colour, but its hard to do in just six photos. The buildings; the cafés overspilling on to the street; the fruit stalls of oranges, watermelons, applets, strawberries. Everywhere you go, ever corner you turn, there is colour. The sun is out, it's a hundred-million degrees, and everything is drenched in light. Colour, heat, colour.Read more

    • Day 6

      The Apocalypse Tram

      June 9, 2015 in Germany ⋅ 🌙 13 °C

      Düsseldorf is a well connected city. There is the S Bahn, the U Bahn, the trams and the buses. Getting about the city is easy. Then there is the location of the city itself. Nordrhein-Westfalen -- Germany's most populous and densely populated state -- is nearly twice the size of Wales, but has over double the population of London. 18 million people live here, and Düsseldorf is the capital. Trains come and go by the minute, hastily keeping the cities of Cologne, Bonn, Wuppertal, Dortmund, Duisburg, etc, well connected. Then there are trains, several times an hour, to the nearby Netherlands and Belgium. That is a real plus side to Düsseldorf.

      But then there is the downside to living in Düsseldorf, or at least a downside to living on BachStraße in Düsseldorf. For here we have to endue the apocalypse trams. You see, Düsseldorf has really new trams, new trams, trams, old trams, and really old trams. And then it has the oldest trams in the known universe. It just so happens that these trams (strange remnants, let over from when the universe was just a fraction-of-a-millionth-of-a-second-old) make their way down BachStraße every ten minutes. And they seem to run all night long, too.

      It makes sleeping hard. And I often find myself awaking at some godforsaken hour, thinking the world is about to end, only to realise it is one of the apocalypse trams slowly passing by.

      Despite being deafening loud, they are elusive and hard to photograph. I managed to catch one on camera as it was passing, but the quality isn't very good.
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    • Day 26

      Giant Wooden Strawberry with Man Inside

      June 29, 2015 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

      I was 26 when I saw my first giant wooden strawberry with a man inside. I've been seeing them every since. Outside the Bilk Arcarden, what's that, a giant wooden strawberry! The other day, in the middle of a vast stretch of countryside, somewhere near Viersen, I saw another giant wooden strawberry. Giant wooden strawberries here, giant wooden strawberries there, giant wooden strawberries everywhere.Read more

    • Day 7

      Schloss Benrath

      June 10, 2015 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

      I went on a daytrip to Holland today. It was for work. And then later in the evening I visited Schloss Benrath. I really can’t complain.

      Schloss Benrath was built in the late 1700’s and sits on the bank of the Rhein a couple of miles south of Düsseldorf. It takes roughly about a year and half to get there on an apocalypse tram. Or, to be more precise, about 25 minutes. But that is a lot of time when you’re in a race against the setting sun.

      I got to Benrath at about 9m, so only had about an hour and a half to play with before darkness set in. I didn’t get a chance to see much of Benrtah, the town itself, or the enormous palace gardens, but both seemed really nice. Tonight, I was here just to see the palace.

      Pink, Baroque, lovely. The palace sits, raised slightly, in front of a circular, tree lined pond. Geese and goslings, ducks and ducklings swam about the pond, which reflected the pinkness of the palace and the pale orange of the retiring sun. There are two wings on either side of the palace, which curve about the perimeter of the pond.

      To the back of the palace is another pond; a long one that seems to stretch on forever. Here nature has been tamed and controlled, in a very French, ordered way. A mini Versailles. The lawns were full of people, sitting watching the world go by or walking their dogs. (One person, would you believe it, was walking a bear. A barking bear! I jumped, ever so slightly, when I saw that beast.)

      There is an Englischer Garten too, full of roses and tulips and other flowers I couldn’t put a name to. An Englischer Garten with tulips. You see, Mum, there really is no excuse.

      Then there was an orangerie, an enormous orangerie. I’m partial to an orange myself, but these lots must have taken it to a whole different level. The orangerie was larger than the actual palace itself.

      Schloss Benrath seems to get overlooked. It isn’t on most people’s radars. Whilst my spinach ravioli was cooking (two days down, six to go), I was studying the new Düsseldorf street plan map that I’d just bought. I was trying to figure out the best way to the palace, when a housemate walked in and offered to help me. ‘I’ve been once,’ they said, ‘but that was over ten years ago, and I was there only by accident’. That was coming from someone who had lived in Düsseldorf all their life. So we worked out the best way to get there, and off we went.

      It is worth remembering, though, that this is the Rhein land. Palaces here are a plenty. So if Benrath should fail to get the attention it deserves, it’s because it’s a small fish in a big pond. If you head south there are palaces and castles scattered across the entire landscape. I remember travelling from Koblenz to Strasbourg, and for much of that journey the train followed the Rhein. On both the French and the German side, there were palaces and castles and fortresses almost every 200 meters are so. This patch of land has, over the years, been fiercely thought over. Although watching the geese paddle around the Schloßweiher, you would never have thought so.
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    • Day 9

      Die Altstadt

      June 12, 2015 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

      Die Altstadt -- the old town -- is where people go of an evening. I've been several times before, but this afternoon was my first time there with a camera. I wouldn't dare take my camera after the sun goes down. For what is strange about the Altstadt is how it can go from being the quiet, peaceful old part of Düsseldorf in the day, to the scene of debauchery that it becomes at night. To be fair, most of that is located on just one long street, but still.

      The reason why most of drinking that gets done in Düsseldorf gets done in the pubs and bards of the Altstadt, is because the Altstadt has forever been the site of breweries. There are a dozen or so of them here, brewing the 'Altbier' unique to Düsseldorf and the region.

      Apart from the breweries, every other building is either a cafe, a bar, a (Irish) pub or a restaurant. And the whole of the little old town is, as it should be, pedestrianised. I'm back off to the Altstadt now, for a meal at the Uerige brewery.
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    • Day 39

      Frankreichfest

      July 12, 2015 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      Ever since the signing of the Élysée Treaty in 1963 France and Germany have gone to great lengths to become as united as possible. The Frankreichfest in Düsseldorf -- that takes place every year on the weekend around the 14th of July -- is carried out with that intention in mind.

      It was a rainy weekend but that didn't stop over 100,000 visitors making their way to the Altstadt and checking out the Frankreichfest. I went along with a few French friends and we potted about the stalls. I was happy to try a Galette but steadfastly refused to give the Champignons a go. Cheeses, wines, Crepes, old Citroen cars, a 15 meter Eiffel Tower – everything you would expect was there. Each year, it is the turn of a different French region and this year it was Brittany’s. So there was pipe music, too, and people dressed in traditional Breton costume

      Meanwhile, in Brussels, Eurozone leaders gathered to negotiate the future of Greece. It is generally assumed that Merkel has run a tight ship in Germany and in Europe for the past decade or so. Whilst, on the other hand, Hollande is often reported as being the most unpopular French president there's been. One thing is for sure, though, and that is that Hollande and Hollande alone who has been the sole rational voice over the Greece crisis. This weekend was a triumph for French diplomacy, and Hollande has single handedly prevented Germany from inflicting a lot of reputational damage upon itself.
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    • Day 10

      Düsseldorf

      April 21, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      Heute wird in Düsseldorf am Rhein übernachtet... Nicht weit entfernt der Heimat, aber zwei Konzertkarten in der Tonhalle laden zu diesem Stop ein...
      Toller Stellplatz direkt am Rhein.... Nicht weit zur Altstadt....👍Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Düsseldorf, Duesseldorf, Dusseldorf, ዲውስልዶርፍ, دوسلدورف, Düssldorf, Дзюсельдорф, Дюселдорф, Дюссельдорф, دوسلدۆرف, Ντίσελντορφ, Duseldorfo, Ντύσσελντορφ, דיסלדורף, डसेलडॉर्फ़, Դյուսելդորֆ, DUS, デュッセルドルフ, დიუსელდორფი, 뒤셀도르프, Дүсселдорф, Dusseldorpium, Dusseldörp, Diuseldorfas, Diseldorfa, Диселдорф, ഡൂസൽഡോർഫ്, ड्युसेलडॉर्फ, ဒပ်ဆဲလ်ဒေါ့ဖ်မြို့, Düsseldörp, Disseldorf, ڈسلڈورف, Dyzeldorfi, தியூசல்டோர்ஃபு, ดึสเซลดอร์ฟ, 調素多爾夫, 杜塞尔多夫

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