Germany
Landkreis Esslingen

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    • Day 13

      Stuttgart

      October 1, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

      This morning we drove into Stuttgart and went to Birkenkopf. As we walked through the park
      ( pic 1), we finally got to the top of the hill. This is where they put all the ruins from Stuttgart after it was bombed in WWII. Fifty percent of the city was destroyed. 165 million cubic feet of destroyed buildings were moved to this area and it added 130 ft of height to the hill (Pics2-5). The view of Stuttgart from above was great!(pic 6,7).
      Saw a wonderful church in Stuttgart, Johanneskirche(pics 8-10). It was closed so we could only enjoy it from outside.
      Enjoyed lunch at a beer garden near the church. I always drink a Radler, a mixture of beer and sprite! It’s very refreshing.
      Then we went to the Porsche Museum(pic 11). I think the guys really took it in.
      The second to last my bit of humor for the day from the bathroom at the beer garden!
      And the last pic is of the 3 of us at The top of Birkenkopf.

      Highlight of the day: the weather here has been perfect, sunny but cool temps!
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    • Day 6

      Stuttgart Part 2

      December 10 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 3 °C

      This evening we headed back to the markets for dinner and to spy on the lights that we had seen in the big square earlier. I was really glad we had spied on the markets earlier in the day as they were so busy! Way too many people so we just snuck in to get what we wanted and then got out again. We had some vegan multaschen which are like big ravioli and were pretty tasty, and some Kürbis soup which was really delicious. Then we went to spy on the lights and we got there right at 7 and a light show started! We had a seat and watched it and then just hung out watching the lights as they still changed colors outside the show. We actually sat there a half hour and another, different light show started! It was really nice and I was glad we went to spy on them! We headed back to our place after the second light show as it was getting cold, but what fun! Tomorrow we head on!

      Overall Stuttgart was a good stop, though I don’t know that I would come here if there was not something happening, like the Christmas markets. I really enjoyed our day, but if we didn’t have the markets to spy on I’m not sure what we would have done all day…I did love Esslingen though and would definitely go back there if we are in the area!
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    • Day 17

      Day 16 farewell till next year

      September 10, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

      I’m tired 😂😂 I’ve slept till 8am, Ken and Jan Mahon are joining me in the car to Stuttgart so they can catch a train. BUT first - Breakfast and goodbyes to all these magnificent buggers. Stuttgart here we come!Read more

    • Day 19

      Day 18a Damiler Benz

      September 12, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

      OMG, what can I say? This museum alone would make it worth paying premium for the blog….. 10 photos is not enough!
      From the first Daimler and Benz vehicles to the merger, both world wars and recognition of their part. To the developments and of coarse racing heritage! Thank you Rashelle, I only had time today for one and these pics are for you 🥰Read more

    • Day 18

      Day 17 Stuttgart

      September 11, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

      Museums and sights 🥺 well that didn’t go to plan! Arrived in the hotel room and thought I’d jump on the WiFi and try booking tickets for both the Porsche and Mercedes museums - guess what? The only day of the week they don’t open is Monday. Walked a bit, but not much to take pictures of. Will try Porsche in the morning on my way to Venlo. On another point though, today mark 22 years since 9/11 so a quiet reflection 🥺Read more

    • Day 1

      Anreise nach Nürnberg über Stuttgart

      March 9 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      Heute geht es nun nach grosser Vorfreude wieder los. Wir fahren mit dem Twerenbold Bus nach Nürnberg, Bei recht schönem Wetter haben wir unterwegs einen längeren Halt im Zentrum von Stuttgart. Noch vor weniger als 3 Monaten waren wir beide schon mal hier und haben den grossen Weihnachtsmarkt erlebt. Es ist echt bereichernd nun bereits die blühende Natur zu sehen. Der Kerzen- und Lampenschein wurde durch blühende Magnolien und Blumenrabatten ersetzt. Einzig Menschen hat es gefühlt noch fast immer gleich viele in den Gassen. Am Abend erreichen wir dann unser Hotel im Zentrum von Nürnberg.Read more

    • Day 6

      Stuttgart Part 1 & Bad Cannstatt

      December 10 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 4 °C

      Today we had a relaxing morning then went out to spy on the Christmas markets for lunch! Stuttgart is not the prettiest city, but the Christmas market was fun to wander through they had lots if vegan options - so many we had to pick and choose what we wanted! We ended up getting some spinach spatzle, vegan currywurst, and a ginormous germknödel (yeasted dumpling) with plum filling and vanilla pistachio sauce. It was so much food! The gerknödel was WAY bigger than we thought it would be. Really We thought the portions of everything would be way smaller! But it was all really tasty! I also found a Holunder cranberry punch which was tart and tasty while Raymond had a really good apple cinnamon one.

      After eating all the food we headed out to the outskirts of the city to Bad Cannstatt as there was a market there…only it was not much of a market! Like three stands, though there were some nice lights on the Main Street. We did find a record shop that had cheap records and I ended up getting a bunch - there were bins that were outside 1€ each or 10 for 5€…I had more than 10 and whittled it down to 11, but I couldn’t give up another one so said that’s fine. The people working there were super nice. There were a couple guys hanging out and we talked records for a bit and they gave me my 11 records for 5€! Now I have new music to listen to when I get home :) So I was glad we ventured out there even if the Christmas market wasn’t a win.
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    • Day 1

      Departure Germany

      November 27 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

      You'll always know, it's a big trip when you wear hiking boots for your journey 🙃

      Left Germany to travel South America for four months (open for extension) 🥰

      -----

      Man weiß, dass es eine große Reise wird, wenn man die Wanderschuhe für den Flug anzieht 🙃

      Deutschland verlassen, um für vier Monate (gerne auch länger) durch Südamerika zu reisen 🥰
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    • Day 2,900

      An airbus, and a village called Neuffen

      April 8 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

      The time had come. I was at Auckland Airport, with Mum, Hannah, and Alisha as my farewell party, awaiting my first solo long haul flight. Some tears were shed, but I mostly remember feeling so excited that it didn't occur to me to feel sad.
      A year didn't seem long enough anyway.
      I boarded my Emirates flight, direct to Dubai. Lucky me had booked a window seat with 2 empties beside me. Very convenient for the 18 hour non-stop journey.
      God I love this feeling. Walking into an airplane at night, each seat all ready and waiting with a blanket and pillow, the lights dim, the rows slowly filling with people all excited for their travels, getting settled in.

      I found my seat, and got all my things ready to feel as cosy as possible. I'd brought pyjamas, a pair of comfy socks, my journal, a scarf, and toiletries. It was the start of what became an important tradition for me to journal at the very start of a journey, on the flight, or bus, or ferry.
      It's genuinely crazy for me writing this now, at 27, thinking back to my 19 year old self sitting on that flight, not having a single clue what the next years would bring. Just by choosing to go on this adventure, the course of my life would be wonderfully and accordingly shaped, to mould myself into who I am today.

      I wrote my entry, and as we took off, I watched the lights of little Auckland slowly fade into the distance. The dinner they served was fantastic, some kind of stew if I remember correctly.
      After dinner I changed and went about my routine as if I were just going to bed on any normal night. I prepared the cosiest bed you could ever ask for in economy class, complete with the extra pillows and blankets, and curled up to sleep.
      After some hours I woke up and peered out the window. There were some lights way down there. I looked at the map to see we were over Australia, and a rush of excitement went through me. I was really there, hovering over the planet, moving through the air to a very far away place.
      I slept for another several hours. The next time I stirred and looked down below us, I felt a new sensation. I was looking down at lights that were laid out in a style I had never seen before. It was unlike anything I could think of.
      India. We were passing over India. This new sensation was something of a passing over a threshold. From the familiar, to that giddy excitement, to a sudden and sobering knowing, that the world I come from is but the tiniest sliver. And that I will grow to know the world beyond it and it will change me.

      All up I slept for a bit over 10 hours. Pretty unheard of when it comes to flying. I still had 8 whole hours left though.
      I found what remains one of my favourite films of all time: Unbranded, a documentary about 4 American cowboys who train wild mustangs and ride them from Mexico to Canada, through the wilderness of the mid-west.
      I must've watched other things but this was the only one I will never forget.

      Eventually the night turned into morning, and in the lead-up to landing in Dubai, they served us a delicious breakfast.
      I gawked looking out the window at the houses as we flew closer to Dubai airport. Middle Eastern mansions, desert, palm trees, pools. Truly another world.
      The airport itself too, a structural masterpiece.
      I didn't have too long to wait here. It was remarkable seeing the Arab men walking around in their robes. Everything felt very clean, bright and crisp here. It was also around 8am, so the coolest it would be for the rest of the day.

      Before long I was boarding the next flight, the 7hr to Frankfurt, in no less than an Airbus A380. Such an impressive plane, the economy seats felt like a normal plane's business class.
      I took my window seat, a distinctly different feeling in this day time setting than the long haul had been. It was hard to let it sink in, that I was in the Middle East.

      There was a free seat beside me, and a very tall young man sat down in the aisle seat. We smiled at each other, and starting chatting. Henry was from Germany, heading home after 6 months in Western Australia. He had such an impeccable accent, initially I thought he was Australian.
      There is a great word in German, which I didn't know at the time: 'sympatisch'. This is how I would've described Henry if I'd known the word. Essentially it means that you get a really good feeling about a person. Good, trustworthy, quality vibes.

      Throughout the flight we got to know each other, realised we had a lot of similar interests in the music realm, and he invited me to join him and his best friend for a festival in Berlin in a few months' time. Looking back at it now, it really was such an astounding way to form a friendship; it could've easily been one of those things that we said, yes we should totally do that, and have it amount to nothing.

      Henry became a huge part of my time in Germany! And I still consider him a friend all these years later.
      But as the flight ended, it'd be a while before we reunited, and my journey in Baden-Wurttemberg was about to begin.

      Gesine picked me up from the Frankfurt airport. It was so surreal. Absolutely delightful to see her familiar face, smiley, bubbly and warm as always! Gesine was like a mentor/friend figure to me. It was about 2pm when I arrived, and I experienced my first drive on the Autobahn, as we drove in her Volkswagen to the beautiful little village of Neuffen.

      Everything was so captivating. The architecture, the trees, just how completely different this world was. Neuffen lays nestled beside a low, forest-covered mountain range called the Schwaebische Alb. The houses had red roofs, white cladding, and all looked cosy and sturdy.
      I had the privilege of being invited to stay with Gesine at her Auntie Baerbel's house. They welcomed me so warmly into their lovely home. I can still walk through it in my mind.

      My room was a dream, with a huge window onto the balcony, and the A-frame of the ceiling giving the room a very cosy feeling.
      We had some food, and talked incessantly. Around 7pm, the jetlag hit me like a cricket bat to the face. Gesine insisted I needed to last even just one hour longer, so she dragged me out onto a walk. It was early summer there, so at that time it was still light out, with that deeply relaxing air at the end of a long warm day. We followed a gorgeous little walkway that went through some residential areas, some orchards, a bit of the forest, and paddocks.
      As we walked, we came across a shepherdess. She was a strong and beautiful woman, in her 50's, a true sheep herder. She didn't own land, rather she grazed and drove her sheep around the outskirts of the village. Her name was Annerose, and when she found out I was from New Zealand, she showed such immense excitement. Her daughter, a few years younger than me, was obsessed with NZ, and planning to visit once she finished school.
      So on this very first evening, Gesine and I made a friend. During my time in Neuffen, we had Annerose and Aline over for dinner, met up with them several times, and Aline took me to a very local party which was a fun experience.

      Jetlag wore off after the first couple of days. Gesine and I just free-flowed with our days, going for walks, hanging out with her Auntie, and introducing me to more of her family, as well as to German cuisine, and all the different shops and supermarkets. The novelty of it all meant that it really didn't matter what we were doing, it was all so interesting.

      We planned our first trip to see her brother Thomas, and his wife Judith, whose family I'd gotten to know well at Sonshine Ranch. They'd been living there as I did the outdoor leadership program after school. The kids, Nathanael, Noemi, and Joshie, were like little siblings to me by the end.
      They lived a couple of hours away, in an even smaller village called Nitzenhausen, affectionately called Nizza.

      This was such a quaint place, with very old buildings, surrounded by farmland. They were in the process of renovating the house they'd bought, a 200 yr old building, with a big barn at the back. Gesine and I were going to help them with any projects we could.
      I was so happy to see them again. It felt so familiar and easy to settle back in with the kids, playing in the barn, which had a big concreted area that we played ball games in, and rode around on the skateboard. Gesine and I were camping in the loft of the barn.

      We helped them with wallpapering, a special type they called 'tapete'. It was immensely satisfying. I was so impressed by Thomas' skills in building. Besides that, the fact that a 200 yr old property was in such good shape. It would be a very different story in NZ.
      On the days off we went for adventures. One day we went to a local river and paddled down in canoes. It was my first unfortunate encounter with stinging nettle. My whole hand was burning for hours.
      We'd play soccer on the sports field. Go swimming at the nearby lake. Noemi and I played a lot on the trampoline. She really was like my sister. We explored a nearby town and ate ice cream.

      The soccer world cup was on at the time. One evening I went by myself down to the local viewing. I was stared at, very openly. A village like this, everyone knew everyone. I stuck out like a sore thumb, but I enjoyed this experience. It became a theme of my travels, putting myself into really random situations like this. I got to see something very few tourists would!

      Gesine and I made another friend one night. We went for a beautiful evening bike ride, beside the golden fields surrounding the town. It was magical. As we arrived back into the town, before dark, we were called out to by a guy on a bike. He came boosting down towards us, with a big cheeky smile on his face. I liked his energy. He spoke very little English, but was so curious to know who we were. His name was Ele, and he reminded me of Chad, from Kaitaia. He invited me to a party if I was interested. I definitely was, but I didn't make it there.

      The time in Nizza was so enjoyable, Gesine and I really didn't want to leave! It was hard to say goodbye, but we planned to come back.
      Back in Neuffen, I made plans for some solo journeys. First stop was Switzerland, to see a few very special people.
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    • Weilheim an der Teck, Stellplatz

      April 18, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Diesen Stellplatz haben wir auf Empfehlung von Bekannten angesteuert. Sie wohnen im selben Ort. Ist sehr grosszügig für alle Grössen von Wohnmobilen. Preis pro Nacht € 8.00 mittels BezahlApp. Strom & Frischwasser gegen Aufpreis vorhanden, Entsorgung kostenfrei. Die Zufahrt ist sehr klein ausgeschildert und man fährt durch ein Quartier.

      Einrichtungen:
      Toiletten 👎
      Duschen 👎
      Entsorgung Grauwasser 👍
      Entsorgung Chemie-Toiletten 👍
      Frischwasser 👍
      Abwaschen 👎
      Waschmaschine 👎
      WLAN 👎
      Strom 👍

      4,8 von 5⭐️

      Einkaufsmöglichkeiten ⭐️⭐️⭐️ ⭐️⭐️
      Sauberkeit ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
      Preis/Leistung ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
      Zufahrt ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
      Wiederholung ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
      Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Landkreis Esslingen, Esslingen

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