A short but fine adventure by Gina Read more

List of countries

  • Switzerland
  • Germany
Categories
None
  • 1.9kkilometers traveled
Means of transport
  • Flight928kilometers
  • Walking-kilometers
  • Hiking-kilometers
  • Bicycle-kilometers
  • Motorbike-kilometers
  • Tuk Tuk-kilometers
  • Car-kilometers
  • Train-kilometers
  • Bus-kilometers
  • Camper-kilometers
  • Caravan-kilometers
  • 4x4-kilometers
  • Swimming-kilometers
  • Paddling/Rowing-kilometers
  • Motorboat-kilometers
  • Sailing-kilometers
  • Houseboat-kilometers
  • Ferry-kilometers
  • Cruise ship-kilometers
  • Horse-kilometers
  • Skiing-kilometers
  • Hitchhiking-kilometers
  • Cable car-kilometers
  • Helicopter-kilometers
  • Barefoot-kilometers
  • 10footprints
  • 6days
  • 22photos
  • 10likes
  • Hamburg Airport, Germany

    June 24, 2020 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    travelling in covid times... a strange thing… and since there are so little plane ✈️ connections, i have to fly over munich… but the incidences are low at the moment so i took the chance…

  • Haltingerstrasse, Basel, Switzerland

    June 24, 2020 in Switzerland ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    covid changes a lot of things… for example where to stay. normally i stay at my old friends, let’s say my old „peer group“ 🤪. they own a big house together as a house community. but this time i thought it would be too crowded, so i rented an apartment over airbnb. it‘s a stroke of luck in the middle of the city with a great balcony and, hold on tight, an eurasian jay!Read more

  • Johanniter Bridge, Basel, Switzerland

    June 24, 2020 in Switzerland ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    the basler „rhyschwimme“ (old name „stromschwimme“) is the free water swimming practiced as a leisure activity in the rhine in the city center of basel. it is particularly popular with the local population in midsummer and has recently become a tourist attraction. swimming in the rhine is part of the list of living traditions in switzerland. when i was a child only a few people swam in the rhine, certainly also because there was the sandoz fire in the 80s, as a result of which fire-fighting water contaminated with pesticides got into the rhine, which led to fish deaths downstream to mannheim. nowadays thousands jump into the rhine during the summer months to refresh themselves. swimming in the rhine in basel is the number one popular sport on warm summer days. the city has come up with something practical and innovative for this pleasure: the so-called „wickelfischli“. this is where you can stow your clothes during your swimming excursion in the rhine. the wrapped fish keeps clothes dry - a swim bag in the shape of a fish and an original basel invention. so off to the cool wet at the tinguely museum and under the wettstein bridge, the middle rhein bridge, the johanniter bridge and maybe even the dreirosen bridge and then enjoy a café in the hirscheneck on your way back to give it a second ride 🤪.Read more

  • River Rhine, Basel, Switzerland

    June 25, 2020 in Switzerland ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    The „fischerhäuschen“ und „fischergalgen“ on the banks of the rhine in basel are rarely used for fishing than they used to be. in earlier times the fishing gallows were still called "salmenwaage" or "fischwoog". the dialect word “woog” means something like “deepest water point”, which could be an indication of the location of this fishing tackle, *not* of a relationship with the scales ⚖️. the “woog fishing” on salmon was mainly carried out during the night and less during the day; unless the rhine was slightly clouded. the catch was most productive in may, june, july and september. the fishing gallows known today have only existed since the end of the 19th century. the „fischerhäuschen“ und „fischergalgen“ is practically the luxury version of the fishing gallows, which has been around for much longer as fishing gear. the fishermen's cottages came “in vogue” at a point in time when the salmon was about to withdraw from this body of water. at the same time, the leisure behavior of the urban bourgeoisie changed: out, back to nature, but with comfort and the latest fishing technology. the principle of fishing has remained the same: a metal rod on which a square net was lowered to the bottom of the river with a crank and then lifted up again as soon as the fish were above the net. the fishermen only had to wait on their stool - the „böggli“ - until enough fish swam over the net in order to then pull it up.Read more

  • Basel, Switzerland

    June 26, 2020 in Switzerland ⋅ 🌙 20 °C

    normally i would spent some time here but i decided not to - you know, covid… but i had to pass by to get a short glimpse of one of my favorite placecs here: kaserne. the basler kaserene is a building erected in basel in 1863. today it is a cultural center for the independent theater, dance and performance scene as well as for concerts in the field of popular music. its own productions and guest performances take place in three event rooms for a total of 1700 visitors, and kaserne supports young artists. the operation is supported by the «verein kulturwerkstatt kaserne» and receives state subsidies. pubs (restaurants, bars) are connected.
    so next time, when everybody is vaccinated: kaserne!!!
    Read more

  • Gresgen, Germany

    June 27, 2020 in Germany ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    today i visited my brother, he lives right across the border. not only he lives there, my whole big family lives in a valley called „wiesental“ - and we’re really a quite biiiiiig family. i’m the only black sheep 🐑, who left home sweet home 🤪.
    so when i visit my brother we drive around and visit those places we love ❤️ most and for sure go for lunch somewhere. the valley i grew up is called wiesental because the river wiese flows through it. there is also a „kleines wiesental“ where the river „kleine wiese“ flows through… the kleine wiese naturally flows into the wiese. personally i like the kleine wiesental more than the wiesental, it’s less developed… so today we drove around kleines wiesental and there are quite some nice restaurants to visit. e.g. hirschen in sallneck, sennhütte in schwand or zum gässle in gresgen. this time we decided for gresgen. so if you’re around there, visit the wiesental and i can recommend all the three restaurants i mentioned above.
    Read more

  • Hausen im Wiesental, Germany

    June 27, 2020 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

    this is a riddle i also posted on facebook for my old school friends: „who can tell me before second 16, what will be written on the place-name sign?“. as you can read in the name of the footprint, the answer is „hausen“ and the little hill there is called „maieberg“. a lot of people recognized it straight away and posted it as a comment, because it’s a very nice road also for bikes.Read more

  • Weidlinge, Basel, Switzerland

    June 28, 2020 in Switzerland ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

    this are „weidlinge“… the weidling is the cultural heritage of switzerland and the activity with it is called „wasserfahren“. several centuries ago it was used to transport heavy loads on the aare, reuss, limmat, thur and ultimately also on the rhine. for „wasserfahren“ you need the weidling, a rudder, an oar holder, the cuttings or rowing nails, and a spike or switch (this is a wooden spar with an iron spike). with the weidling one traverses rivers and/or uses them for descents or with the sting for upstream journeys. the weidling used to be made of wood, but is now mainly made of plastic. a weidling is usually 10 meters long and weighs around 320 kilograms. usually the crew consists of two men/women standing in the ship, a helmsman in the back of the weidling and a driver in the front of the boat, which is called a couple. a weidling can also only be driven by the helmsman alone, which is called single driving. the navigation goes back to the earlier rafting, which took place on the navigable rivers of switzerland from zürich, bern and konstanz. as early as 1200 this type of transportation was mentioned in the koblenz customs ordinance. in 1456 the millet trip took place. it was a bet between the cities of zürich and strasbourg, which was intended to prove how quickly the people of zürich could rush to the aid of the alsatians in the event of war. the fishermen and the boatmen organized themselves in guilds, which took their professions very seriously. e.g. in the late middle ages in basel an apprenticeship as a boatman could take up to four years before he was accepted into the guild. from 1820 a kind of engineering troops were formed from these guilds, which from 1850 were used in the swiss army as pontoon units and sappers for river crossings and building bridges. from 1869 the first water driving clubs were founded and the only military use was turned away and water driving was also used as a sport and as a competition.Read more