• First Kyushu, Then...
Apr. – Mai 2024

France and Germany 2024

Ein 32-Tage Abenteuer von First Kyushu, Then... Weiterlesen
  • Inside Churches: Figeac to Cahors

    8. Mai 2024 in Frankreich ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

    Cajarc to Cahors

  • Cahors/Bordeaux

    9. Mai 2024 in Frankreich ⋅ 🌙 20 °C

    We had a relatively late and relatively leisurely breakfast at the Brit Hotel, and decided it was only the wifi that matched the grim exterior. Anne raced back to the church at 8:30 for a pilgrim passport stamp, but it was closed.

    We walked to the station to catch the 9:30 train to Bordeaux and arrived to a throng of inaction. There is one every 60 minutes today, so unsurprising. The train arrived a few minutes early and left Shinkansen-style on the dot. It only had 3 carriages, but very light and modern reading lights and charging points on each seat, and it ripped along. We had 45 mins on the first train, a 20 min change, 48 mins on the second train (to Agen), a 90 minute wait, then finally around 1.75 hours to Bordeaux. We walked around Agen in our 90 minutes and had lunch back at the station, so at Bordeaux we walked straight to the hotel (15 mins) and had a cup of tea. The hotel was a Hilton Garden Inn, and we continued a tradition by arriving a little before 3pm.. Lovely room, very quiet, and okay position.

    The guy who checked us in suggested a way to see most of Bordeaux in 6 hours. It was much the same as the Bordeaux World Heritage Circuit we found later in a guide, so he did well. The city heart is 1810 hectares - 18 sq kms, so 4km x 4.5km - and we saw a lot of it. We walked north and saw old city gates, cathedrals, the old town, the river and more. it was a glorious day and a holiday, so the streets and esplanades were crowded, and the restaurants along the streets were all full to overflowing. Not just in the main squares or on the main tourist strip: Bordeaux was crowded mile after mile. Definitely holiday time. It was very warm: in the sun it felt as if we were perhaps being burned, but we are the latitude of Dunedin in NZ, so it was more warmth than sting. Sunglasses on (a first) and a T-shirt all day (another first) and crowds of more than 20 or 30 (another first since leaving Le Puy)

    Bordeaux is a mixture of the old, three or four storey pale-tan limestone buildings from (say) Figeac, laid out with wide, straight streets, and then infinitely bigger, with some glorious grand old buildings scattered amongst the 3 or 4 storey facades, along with theatres, statues and parks. We walked until 7:00pm, had dinner in a trattoria, walked a bit more and caught the tram back. We were in the hotel by 8:45, and the sun was still shining. it is 9pm now and it is starting to set.

    Some huge cathedrals and lovely little streets, a grand old Stock Exchange by the river and not a high-rise to be seen. It is a very different and unspoilt metropolis.

    21,389 steps, 16.8km and 3 flights... hardly worth mentioning, really.
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  • Paris

    10. Mai 2024 in Frankreich ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    We left the hotel in Bordeaux around 7:45, walked to the station, went through the barrier where tickets were scanned, found our seats on the upper deck of the Ouigo train, and waited, with three heavily-armed policemen outside our carriage window. The train left exactly on time and arrived in Paris 2hts 27mins later. It was a long walk to the Metro, but the Metro train came quickly, and we were at the hotel (Villa Pantheon) by 12. Within a few minutes they had a room ready, so we unpacked and then set off to nowhere in particular, but via Notre Dame, which is a 20 min walk away.

    Notre Dame is still closed for restoration, but there were crowds around it anyway. The displays down one side showed some of the salvage and restoration work, with pictures of the delicate stonework and intricate wooden trusses (some the size of houses) that will be hidden for centuries once the restoration is complete.

    Paris was very crowded, very dry and almost hot - 29deg. It was not ideal, but it had a buzz. We walked to the Place des Voges, which I loved when I saw it in 1975, then to the Louvre and its 500m long queue for tickets (no thanks), the gardens , the Seine again (they will swim in that? really??) and back up Rue St Germaine and on to the Rue des Ecoles, in the Quartier Latin, and our hotel. It is near the Sorbonne, so lots of young people (I think Anne wonders whether she is back at work), but it is also near the trail of Agnes Goodsir, my great-great-aunt. More tomorrow, but we almost went past her house on the way to the hotel in the morning: she lived at 18 Rue de l'Odeon.

    Paris may be a lovely city, but right now beset by hordes of tourists (like us...). Most of all there seem to be lots of Americans, including one kneeling to propose in the Tuileries Garden, and his new fiancee.

    We set out around 7:30 for dinner, as the air was cooler but the light still beautiful. The hotel is close to the Sorbonne, and there were young people everywhere, although the were certain cafes they flocked to, and others (touristy looking) that they avoided. Buildings along the streets often had signs saying they were the School of something-or-other, and the ground floor windows often looked in on rows of seats. We found a brasserie on the other side of the Pantheon...nice atmosphere, and pretty, quiet street.

    22,193 steps, 17.6km, 4 flights
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  • Paris: Agnes Goodsir and Embassy

    11. Mai 2024 in Frankreich ⋅ ☁️ 25 °C

    Off the beaten track today: in search for Agnes Goodsir, then dinner with friends at their temporary home near the Eiffel Tower.

    Breakfast at 8:15 - decadently late, but it is Paris and we both slept in. It was extremely good, suffering only from being in a windowless room. Then we set off around 9am to touch base with Great-Great-Aunt Aggie.

    My grandmother was a Lorimer, and her mother was a Goodsir. Agnes Noyes Goodsir was her aunt. Agnes was born in rural Victoria in 1864 and was a painter. She studied art at the Bendigo School of Mines and Industries from 1898 to 1899, and in 1899 some of her work was raffled in Bendigo to partly finance her trip to study in Paris. (Sounds odd, but turn of the century exchange rates made it possible). She studied art in Paris and lived there from 1900 until she died there in 1939, although there was a break from 1914-1921 when she was in London because of WW1. Quite a bit is known about those London years because her three nephews - all farmers from Victoria - were in France with the AIF, and one of them wrote many long, eloquent and detailed letters about visiting his aunt Aggie in London (where he and his brothers met Cherry and her then husband) when he was on leave from the front. All three made it back home. When I was little I knew the letter-writer well: he was my father's Uncle Pat, a farmer well south of Nyngan.

    Agnes painted light and bright still lifes, mostly beautiful flowers in vases, but was most famous for her portraits. Her subjects included Bertrand Russell, Banjo Patterson, Mussolini and Tolstoy, but most were of her partner, Rachel (Cherry) Dunn, One of the best of those was hanging for 45 years in the harbourside apartment of my aunt and uncle, Mickey and Rob, and is now on Rob's wall a little north of Sydney.

    Agnes and Cherry lived at 18 Rue de l'Odeon, which was a 10 minute walk from our hotel. It was Paris at it's best: lovely temperature, cool breeze, empty streets except for a few people out shopping, bright blue sky. Even better, we found what we wanted straight away. No. 18 Rue de l'Odeon was still there, and the same (I am sure) from the outside as it was 100 years ago. It was the 1920s artistic heartland. A few doors up from their building, Ulysses was first published (at No. 22). It is just down the road from a theatre, the short street is home to several known writers and has plaques for people every second or third building, there is a typical French cafe on the corner ( as there was a century ago), and the street still has the odd bookshop.

    One of the residents of No. 18 let us see the foyer, but we did not know which apartment she lived in, so there was no point going further. Anne had found a 1922 photo looking down the street from the Odeon Theatre… and it is still almost exactly the same, except that the roundabout outside the theatre has been replaced by a plaza, the restaurant is on the other side and the large metal sculpture in the roundabout in the 1922 photo was removed in 1942 and melted down to make German guns.

    We strolled around the nearby streets and were probably the only tourists, even though it seemed like quintessential Paris. We then walked south on a very shady boulevard all the way out of the city proper to the Parisian Cemetery of Bagneux, where Agnes (died 11 August 1939) and Cherry (died April 1950) are buried. The walk took maybe 1.5 hrs, and was beautiful until the very last and more-modern section. The cemetery admin people had emailed Anne that Agnes was in Section 37, Row 13, Tomb 2. The cemetery was perhaps a square km, with 83,000 graves, but we found their rather darkened, simple cement tombstone very easily.

    From Bagneux we caught a metro to Sacre Couer, looked down on the city and around at the teeming tourist crowd, then walked down the hill, past a strange hardware store where I bought a sisal and copper-wire brush to clean the mud off our boots, through the Palais Royal gardens, where Anne, Fiona, Alistair and Nicolas had breakfast each morning 22 years ago, then through the Louvre and back to the hotel. Very important to be showered and changed into our trekking best, as were were going to dinner at 7pm with friends at the Australian Embassy. More specifically, with the Ambassador and a few diplomat/academic guests.

    Dinner was good. We had a truly unique view of the Eiffel Tower from the third or fourth floor of a rather austere Seidler building. Grosvenor Place in miniature. My university friend (the ambassador), her columnist and omniscient husband, a former academic/journalist, a former ambassador to China and his partner, and us. Some stereotypes, perhaps, but made up for by the columnist's amazing knowledge and ability to link the world together, and the journalist's amusing frankness about his French-government sponsored junket. It went quite late, so we were back at our hotel at 12:15. We took the Metro. Others headed for taxis, but the streets were jam-packed with people (a Taylor Swift concert as well in Paris tonight) so the queues looked long. It was not as if we were at risk: the stations were far busier than at 6:30 pm, and the Metro trains ran every 5 minutes. I am sure we were back faster than if we had caught a taxi straight away...and all those extra steps!

    25,314 steps, 20.3 km and 12 flights.
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  • Paris: More Agnes and More Sights

    12. Mai 2024 in Frankreich ⋅ 🌩️ 23 °C

    Saturday night was a late night - battling French Swifties for seats on the midnight Metro is not the sort of thing that gets you to sleep early.

    Breakfast (good) in the basement (not so good) around 8:30, then some reading and planning and we set off on another quasi-Agnes exploration day around 10.

    We walked south-west to the Luxembourg Gardens, meaning we had to cross Rue de l’Odeon. The gardens were exactly what might have been pictured in the school texts 50 years ago. We strolled around under the trees as joggers slogged by, then went mainly west though quiet, unspoilt streets to 2 Rue Brea. It is a nothing building now with neither plaque nor historical interest, but in the 1920s and 1930s it was the shop where all Parisian artists bought paint, canvas and other materials. Agnes bought things there, too, because the shop's sticker is still on the back of one of her paintings from 1925. Marc Chagall had his studio just minutes away.

    From there we went north east for about an hour and a half, through the universally ugly blob of a train station at Montparnasse and the bland, modern tower that seems to blight many Parisian street scenes, then around the foot of the Eiffel Tower, where we saw the balcony on which we stood last night. From there we went past the half-built Olympic stands, over the Seine and up to the 16th district and 7 Rue Eugene Manuel, (nearly) where Agnes died in 1939.

    In many ways Rue Eugene Manuel was like Rue de l'Odeon: short, narrowish, blocks of 5-storey buildings on both sides and character-full. Agnes died in "7 bis Rue Eugene Manuel" (like 7A) in August 1939, three weeks before the start of WW2. 7 bis was behind 7, and was (at least from 1947) a hospital, but was then pulled down in the 1990s and replaced by an apartment block. We had to assume it had looked a little like 7, and we know it was tucked in behind No 9, so we were in the right spot, regardless of which buildings stood there. The fact that the building was later a hospital might also explain whey her last days were spent there, away from the avante-garde hotspot of Rue de l"Odeon.

    From Rue Eugene Emanuel we walked back to the Eiffel Tower area and Trocadero Gardens, then on up to the Champs Elysees, did some Sunday shopping, then back along the CE to the river and to the hotel. There was a minor revolt when I stopped at a florist and Anne said (rather tersely) that buying flowers lacked logic as they would be crushed when packed next morning for traveling (or words to that effect) but I had been commissioned by Alistair to buy her a flower for Mothers Day. All forgiven once explained.

    The forecast said that it would rain from 3pm, but at 3pm the midday clouds had lifted... although at 4:15 there was thunder and lightning and some pretty heavy showers. By then we were back in our room and planning an early dinner ahead of a 6am departure to catch a 7:15am train to Bamberg in Bavaria.

    We walked out and turned right then right to find s place for dinner. The streets were mostly restaurant-less, but then we found a few cross- streets tucked behind the Pantheon that were full of Sorbonne students, cafes, and restaurants.

    26,900 steps, 20.5km and 6 flights.
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  • Paris / Bamberg

    13. Mai 2024 in Deutschland ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    We were on the metro at 6:07 and at Gare de l'Est by 6:40 to catch the 7:25 train to Bamberg... a trip of 865 or so km. I had wanted to buy a Eurail pass for all our trains, but Anne thought it better to book and buy them individually, and she was right. Seats had to be reserved in any case on many of them, and for us they ran like clockwork.

    It was two trains together, so the walk along the platform to find our carriage was 250m +. It streaked to Strasbourg, then crawled to Karlsruhe and then Frankfurt at 11 (or a few minutes late). We changed platforms for the Regional train for the last bit. It left soon enough (11:30) but stuttered along, stopping everywhere (even where there were no stations) so it reached Bamberg at 14:32... plenty of time to look around.

    Bamberg is quite something. It is called the Frankish Rome, is built where two rivers meet, was first mentioned around 900AD, and is on the UNESCO world heritage list. It also has something like 8 breweries in the centre of the town. We have been here three times before, but always in winter, so summer was a new experience. The days are longer and the colours brighter... although it also brought lots of (mainly German) tourists. We stopped at a laundromat on the way, so did not check in at the hotel (Hotel Messerschmidt Weinhaus) until 3:30. It seems an odd name, but it is the building where Willy Messerschmitt (of Messerschmitt aircraft fame) was born and opened his first aircraft manufacturing business in 1923.

    We have a lovely bright room, and it is almost right in the old town. We organised ourselves, discussed our options for Wednesday /Thursday (still tbd), walked around the town hall just to re-acquaint ourselves, then headed off to meet Max at 6:30 at a restaurant/brewery near his new house.

    When I was an exchange student in 1975, I lived in Neumuenster (NMS), which is between Hamburg and Kiel. I lived with Max's family for perhaps half the year. Much of the other 6 months were spent with two other families, whom we will visit on Friday and Saturday when we are there. Max is a few years younger than me, but we got on well and keep in touch. Max moved to Bamberg perhaps 40 years ago, and began a website design business that did well. He married quite late (say 18 years ago) and has two children (13 and 11). Max was immortalised in the Great Bamberg Snowball Fight of January 2003, when Nico (in his first professional snowfight) was out-manouvered and hit by his own handfuls of snow, while Alistair picked everyone off because no-one could match his range. That was before we all had dinner in a brewery that made smoked beer.

    Tragically, Max's wife died about 15 months ago. Dinner with us had to fit in with school and flute lessons, since Max is now Mr Dad, and it was always going to be a bit tentative, I thought. In reality, it was fantastic. We were bowled along by the unstoppable enthusiasm of 11 yo Jens, who has taught himself English by watching Mr Beast on YouTube, and was speaking excellent English at 120 words a minute. We were stunned - but not nearly as much as his father! His sister Ilka was shyer to start with, but she was soon in control, and the two of them talked to us in English until they had to go home at 8:30. We had seen Ilka as a baby...before she won last year’s Bavarian State Championship for Flautist for her age. The three clearly get on well, but on all of them it must be so hard.

    The plan is to see Max again tomorrow so he can get more than the odd word in, maybe listen to Ilka's flute practice if the teacher allows and it is possible, and wander more through the town. We are also considering one of Max's suggestions for Wed/Thurs: Leipzig.

    The Messerschmidt hotel is excellent. 1. Feels like a traditional European hotel, not American. 2. Big, bright, quiet and clean room, with excellent wifi. 3. Right in the town. 4. Windows that open and small balcony. 5. No tea or coffee, but that's about the only flaw. 6. Jumping ahead, the breakfast (when we had it) was great.

    14,188 steps, 10.9km and 1 flight (which has to be wrong after the ups and downs at the stations...)
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  • Bamberg

    14. Mai 2024 in Deutschland ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    We wandered down the street to have breakfast in a café, but not until 9am. It was a fantastic, warm spring day. We went around the town a little and up to the Catherdral and another church up on the high side of town. The biggest church is closed for renovations, and we have seen the many city buildings severeal times before. When Bamberg was a regional powerhouse the administrators had the high side and churches, while the people had the low side and businesses, with the town hall on the very border. It was the burghers saying their admin was as good as that of the lords and nobles.

    We met Max on the Rathaus bridge at 11:30, walked around, then had a coffee before he had to head home to see Jens, who was not well. His is not the easiest of lives.

    The afternoon was spent wandering around bits of Bamberg we had seen before, but only ever in winter (seeing Karl Orff's house again, the flying fox again, the cricket ground (for us) again, the river, the Rathaus etc), then going to Ilke’s flute practice for 40 mins. It was in the same street as the laundromat from the day before, so we knew exactly where to go. She really is good, and her teacher was delighted we came. Ilke also had a favour to ask of us, which was on a secret English project we had to keep hidden from Max.

    Anne had mapped out dinner – two of Bamberg’s eight breweries were in the same street as the music lesson, so we tried the first one. It was simple Bavarian (or Frankish) pub life at its best, in a brewery that opened in 1649. It was crowded with non-tourists playing cards, talking and ordering very large (750ml?) glasses of beer. Dinner was simple pub food, but in massive amounts, and very good beer. After that we walked back through the town by going over a different bridge, from where we could see a SUP paddle-boarder on a very flat and still river, then back to the centre of town while the light was still so good.

    Tomorrow is a train to... drum roll... Luebeck, but not until 9:42am.

    19,124 steps, 14.5km and 6 flights…
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  • Bamberg / Lübeck

    15. Mai 2024 in Deutschland ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    We decided not to go out but to have breakfast in the hotel, and it was the best. It was in a huge, bright room with lots of space, with everything set out along one very long wall. One lady was rather shyly extolling the virtue of her home-made fruit quark, and another was plying people with pots of coffee or tea.

    We walked to the station and waited, and waited for the ICE to Hamburg. It was about 15 minutes late when it arrived. It had lots of spaces for luggage, seats weren’t a problem, the wifi was great (but no power points…) and raced along at 230kmph. The speed showed up on a monitor, and on a dedicated ICE computer link that also had all the connecting trains at all the stations, complete with platform numbers and time to get there. At one stage the train was 25 mins behind schedule, but by Hamburg (14:22) it was 1 minute ahead of time. We had to change platform for the regional train to Luebeck, and arrived around 3:15. We are getting to be very good at arriving at towns and hotels in the early afternoon. I have never done it before.

    Our hotel in Luebeck (Radisson Park Inn) is on an island between the station and city (5 mins to each). We walked into the city/town, and went up a lift to an observation platform in an old church tower, then walked up to the Rathaus and another huge church. In the 1200s Luebeck was the second largest city in Germany (after Cologne) and, even though not the home of kings or emperors, it was probably the richest, and it stayed that way for centuries, all due to trade. The old buildings were meant to show wealth and power – like the seven enormous steeples in town, and the fortified gates on the roadways. Unlike Bamberg, with its colours and Baroque/Rococo flourishes, Luebeck was austere Calvinistic simplicity, and still is.

    The Dom in Luebeck has two huge cathedral bells in pieces on the floor after a 1942 bombing raid and subsequent fire. It was almost as dramatic seeing them this time as in 1975… except it is the first church we have visited so far that sells tickets at the door. Hardly the dour Protestant approach… or maybe it is.
    Lots of walking around to find a restaurant off the very strong tourist track, but we could not find anything other than kebab shops, so we had dinner by the river with the hordes. It wasn’t bad at all, apart from the tip-demanding waiters with attitude.

    16,000 steps, 12.1km and 7 flights.
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  • Lübeck

    16. Mai 2024 in Deutschland ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    We had breakfast at the hotel at around 8:45am. The original idea was to save time, but it was also very good. Perhaps the best yet, apart from not quite having the personal touch of the people in Bamberg, and having a table of noisy, probably Chinese women. It was a large room, but ignoring them was easier said than done.

    Having seen some of the centre of town yesterday, we walked anti-clockwise around the town, starting in the greenery along the river, then we criss-crossed the town just being impressed by the buildings. One large church – St Giles (in English) – was not touched in WW2, so it still looked as it had in the early 1800s, and largely as it was in the 1600s, and parts might have been similar to the 1400s or even when it was built in brick in the 1200s. At some time in the distant past the inside was whitewashed, and in patches the old wall paintings are visible, but they have left that for future generations. It was one of the lesser churches - but this was in Luebeck, a city powerful enough for its army to defeat the armies of Denmark in a battle in around 1227.

    Then the Cathedral, which was bright and huge. It was started at the same time as Notre Dame in Paris, and is still an engineering challenge. The 115m high towers are not straight. The right tower leans to the right (2m!) and the left to the left (1.8m), and both a bit forward (2m). When one looks at the other towers in the photos, none of them are straight, and it is not an optical illusion. There is no stone in the ground here, so the foundations must sit on clay. It also means they build with bricks and mortar, and the mortar weakens and cracks over time (as do some bricks). There were engineering displays in the Cathedral showing the age of the different area of brick, as well as the angles and cracks. They were almost as grand as the old altars and the 500 yo tombstones underfoot, and the bells at midday. Curiously, the cathedral's towers are not the city's highest, even though it was always the most important building for the pious. One of the other churches has a tower that is slightly higher after some age-old local political power struggle.

    Lunch in a park by the river, then we walked around the other side of the town, saw Germany’s oldest station of the cross (12th C), and at 5:45 we met Wiebke.
    Anne’s (and my) niece, Fiona, has a German partner, Philipp, who grew up in the middle of Germany. On the train yesterday Anne messaged Fiona and mentioned we were heading to Luebeck, as decided 12 hours earlier. It turns out that Philipp’s younger sister, Wiebke, lives in Lubeck, but is going away tomorrow. Many messages later, the arrangements worked and we met in a café at 5:45. It is a small world, as they say. Wiebke is lovely. She speaks wonderful English, having lived in NZ for a year, and being a teacher of English in primary school. It was nice to hear about her family, and all the dirt on her brother Philipp.

    Dinner afterwards in a small Italian restaurant she recommended, and an early night.

    29,471 steps, 23.1km, 6 flights.
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  • Lübeck / Neumünster and Boostedt

    17. Mai 2024 in Deutschland ⋅ 🌙 14 °C

    Leisurely breakfast, short walk to the bus station next to the Bahnhof, waited for the 10:13 bus to Bad Segeberg, showed the driver the ticket DB had emailed, 42 mins through fields, solar farms, wind farms, woods, villages and an autobahn, walked 200m to the two- carriage local train, and we were in Neumünster at 1135.

    It was a 12 min walk to the hotel, which is called the “old steelworks” and was built near where my main 1975 host father (Erhard Meyn, Max's father) had a cast-iron foundry. We then went back into the own to look around, then the hotel and a 10 min walk to see Elke Voss, another former host parent, whose husband, Peter, had had his dental practice almost next door to Max's family's house... NMS is not beautiful, but a quiet wood, blue skies, green trees and gardens and millions of flowers made it different to usual.

    At 5:45 Wim, another 1975 host-brother/friend, picked us up and drove us to his family’s thatched cottage in Boostedt, a nearby village. It is in its own small wood and was surrounded by green - and once again the sound of cuckoos. We had dinner with Wim, his sister Jule and her husband Tschorsch - Tschorsch cooked. White asparagus, potatoes, butter sauce and prosciutto, with semolina flummery and strawberries. And to top it off... his home-made Korn.

    14,430 steps, 11.1km, 6 flights
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  • Inside Churches: Bamberg to Neumuenster

    18. Mai 2024 in Deutschland ⋅ 🌙 14 °C

    In Germany - Bamberg is Catholic and untouched by WW2, but not Luebeck (except St Giles) or NMS

  • Neumünster, Einfelder See

    18. Mai 2024 in Deutschland ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

    Very late breakfast, but breakfast at the last hotel on the trip could rank as the best. We walked into NMS and saw the Meyn's house (36 Roonstrasse) with my old window (the left side in the two attic windows), then the school I first went to in 1975. After that we went shopping for a few presents. We can report that NMS has only one shop selling Australian wine and only one shop selling a particular type of marzipan, and they are both hard to find. Google Maps is no help.

    At 2pm Jule and Tscorsch (a nickname - real name Joerg) picked us up and we drove to Wim and Dorit's' house on the Einfelder See (lake) - about 15 mins. Checked their heritage-listed Bauhaus-style traditional red-brick house, had Kaffee und Kuchen, walked around the lake (8.2km), which meant going past another house I had stayed in for a few weeks as i did the rounds of many kind-hearted Rotarian families in 1975, saw the house that one of Dorit's sons is building 100m away, had a swim in the lake (with the 15 deg water slightly brown from the peat swamps) and then dinner in the late evening sunshine. Great fun all afternoon, and mostly in English. We left a little early (8:45pm) when it was still sunny, but Wim and Dorit are driving to Holland with friends tomorrow for a 1 week cycling trip (50-90 k per day).

    23,835 steps, 18.6km and no flights.... except tomorrow at 3:30pm. We will get a bus from the NMS railway station straight to the airport. It takes 50 minutes.
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  • Neumünster, Hamburg, Dubai, Home

    19. Mai 2024 in Australien ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    Normal start, then a serious debate about hotel breakfasts. These are the topics that capture the greatest minds on tours like this. The winner, based on atmosphere, is… Bamberg.

    It rained as we had breakfast, but the road was dry when we walked to the Bahnhof and bus. The HH airport bus came early, left on time, went down Roonstrasse on the way to the autobahn (sad that the trees on both sides and cobblestones were ripped out in the 1980s or 1990s to make it a main thoroughfare), past windfarms, solar farms and a few deer, and arrived at Hamburg Airport 5 mins early… 45 mins before Emirates opened its counter.

    It was cool and sunny again when we arrived, so went up to the airport’s observation deck. From there we saw a luggage-loser Air France plane. Poor passengers. I am sure the flat truck behind it as it taxied was collecting - or not - the cases dropped from the hold.

    We leave at 1530. It is 6h25m to Dubai, 2h20m stopover, then 13h50m to SYD, arriving Monday 20 May at 2205. The trick is to convince ourselves it really leaves Hamburg at 1130 pm.

    The plane landed 15 minutes ahead of schedule, but the real excitement on the way was a bottle of Korn handmade by Tschorsch in Boostedt. At Hamburg airport they wanted to confiscate it (over 100ml) - but it was okay if we went through a different scanner, so Anne went through German customs twice. At Dubai all hand luggage was hand- searched, and it was given its own sealed cardboard box and taken in the hold. It was a simple collection in Sydney, but then the box was left on the train when we changed at Central. Lots of talks with helpful passengers and staff, who knew the same train was back at Central 20 mins later.. but when the carriage returned, a Sydney Trains man on the seat we had had said it had just been handed in at platform 1 at Town Hall. So we went to Town Hall … and there it was. Only effect in the end was that we were home a little later than planned... but it was still Monday.

    12,800 steps, 9 km and 2 flights. End of journey.
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    Ende der Reise
    20. Mai 2024