Germany Days 8-13
Mon, Oct 16 2017 01:46
| Permalink
Day 8
We woke up today around 7 a.m. It was another rather dreary, cloudy day, but
there was no prediction for rain. Eric
had his breakfast and headed off to the convention center and I lazed around
for a while before getting moving.
I made my way down to the bakery near the hauptmarkt and
bought some muffins for Eric for the next few days and again perused the stalls
in the market. I then took my purchases
back to the apartment, ate my breakfast, and then set out for my afternoon of wandering. I wanted to try and get some more of the old
city covered, as so far I seem to keep wandering the same areas.
I discovered there was a gate that was accessible in the old
wall right near the apartment. So I
decided to go through there and see what I could discover. The wall is much larger and wider than it
looks. There is actually a garden and
park with a path atop the wall as well as a path which runs below in what would
have been the moat that encircles the entire wall/city. This was like a hidden oasis away from all
the crowds of tourists. I only ran into
a few people as I got closer to the actual castle.
There were some really pretty sections of the garden with
plantings of many beautiful flowers and of course all the trees around are
changing color and dropping their fall leaves.
I followed this path for quite a way until it reached the castle. I then hiked the steep cobblestone road up
into the castle courtyard. You have to
pay to enter the castle itself but it is free to wander around outside and take
pictures from the wall which overlooks the city.
I then made my way around the back of the castle and down to
Konigstrasse which is a pedestrian walkway (large cobblestone street) which
bisects almost the entire old walled city from one side to the other. It is lined with shops (mostly high-end) and
is pretty much a really large, long, open-air mall. I walked all the way to the other end to
Frauentor, which is one of the four medieval entrances to Nuremberg’s old
town. Just adjacent to this large tower
is the handwerkerhof (craftsman’s courtyard) where I wandered through some of
the shops.
After looking at all the neat stuff I didn’t need, I headed
back down Konigstrasse for a way before cutting off on a side street. It is really hard to get lost in the old
city. You just keep going until you hit
the old wall and then follow that around or keep going until you hit the river
which cuts the city in half. I kept
going down the side street until I came to the wall and then followed it around
until it took me back to the apartment.
All in all, I did about 6 miles of walking.
At one point I had figured I would wind my way around the
entire city by going up and down various streets, but being such an old
medieval city layout, nothing runs in a straight line. It would be very hard to zigzag back and
forth on the streets.
Eric got done at the show around 6 and got back to the
apartment around 6:30. We decided for
dinner we would try the one restaurant near the Hauptmarkt that apparently had
the best s spätzle in town—according to TripAdvisor. Spätzle is basically the German version of
macaroni and cheese but with onions added.
It was very good spätzle and there was so much we ended up
taking half of it back to the apartment.
Luckily we had an oven to heat the leftovers up. The one thing our apartment doesn’t have is a
microwave, so you have to go old school.
You just have to make sure you have about 30 minutes to heat up your
meal…
After dinner we wandered around a bit and then headed back
to the apartment. Eric was obviously
tired after working the show all day.
Day 9
After Eric had left for the show and I had a bite to eat for
breakfast, I headed out in search of a couple essentials. We needed more toilet paper (very important)
and I wanted to buy a wash rag. I now
understand why Rick Steves mentioned a wash cloth on his packing list. So far none of the places we have stayed has
offered a wash cloth. You get bath
towels and hand towels, but no wash cloth.
So I first checked the discount grocery store for toilet
paper. They had a good price of 1,95 for
8 rolls of recycled toilet paper, but I didn’t need 8 rolls. I didn’t see any bath scrunchies or wash
cloths either, so off I went to the next store.
Next, I went into a small shop that had a little bit of everything and
they had some wash mits for 1,99 (not bad).
They are big on wash mits here instead of wash cloths. A wash mit is basically a washcloth that it
stitched over so you just put your hand in one side.
I decided to explore a couple more stores before I made my
final decision. I went in what ended up
being a higher-end department store.
They had a lot of nice stuff and had some wash mits on clearance for
1,99 but they were some really wild colors, so I decided to keep looking. The last store I went in was Muller’s and
they had a two-pack of toilet paper (which was a much better size) and also had
wash mits for 1,00. So I made my 1,99
purchase of a wash mit and toilet paper and headed back to the apartment.
I ended up heating up half of the leftover spätzle for lunch
and by that time it was close to 1:30 p.m.
Today was the final day of the convention. Eric had asked if I could come down to the
convention center around 2 o’clock to help them tear down the booth and get
everything packed back up for shipping.
So he bought me a ticket for the U-bahn and I managed to make my way
down to the convention center, walked over the pedestrian bridge and then
caught the bus around to the hall where the European Microwave show was being
held.
The convention center here is huge. It would be a loooong walk from the train, so
thankfully they offer the bus to shuttle people around. I met Eric at the front of the convention
hall and he took me to their booth. The
show was supposed to be over at 4:30 today and he figured most of the booths
would probably be packing up early (like the show in Hawaii). However, most actually waited to pack up
until close to 4:30. So around 4:30 we
finally started tearing down the booth.
It didn’t take too long and we had everything put back into the large
box on the shipping pallet.
We had made reservations for four at an Italian restaurant
down by the Hauptmarkt for Tim (Radar Systems) who had let Eric (Signal
Microwave) share his booth along with Greg (CMC) who was also sharing the
booth. We were cutting it short on time by
the time we got done packing up the booth, so we all caught a cab to the
restaurant.
We had a very nice dinner and some good conversation. After dinner, we treated everyone to gelato
at the gelateria near the restaurant.
There are so many restaurants and cafes in the old town area that you
could easily eat somewhere different for six months and probably still not have
tried every place. There is no shortage
of shopping in the old town either. Everywhere you look there are shops.
By the time we got done with our gelato it was nearing 10:30
and Eric needed to get back to the apartment to get ready for his trip to Stuttgart
tomorrow. He had booked himself on the
early train to Stuttgart to go visit a customer there for the day to see their
plant and talk with their engineers, etc.
So we got back to the apartment and he got all his stuff packed up for
the next day.
Day 10
Eric got up early, had a quick breakfast, and headed out to
the train station. It was a beautiful
sunny day today. I did not feel very
good and could tell I had a headache coming on, so I had some breakfast and
crawled back into bed for a while.
Later, I managed to get up and take a hot bath, but spent
the entire day in the apartment. A pity
too, as the weather was really nice. Oh
well, my feet probably needed a rest.
The day before the callus on the bottom of my right foot was getting
really sore from all the walking. On
most days I have probably easily done at least 10 miles of walking.
Eric made it back around 6:30 p.m. and picked us up falafel
wraps for dinner and brought them back to the apartment. Needless to say, he was beat and we were both
ready for bed.
Day 11
It was a beautiful sunny day today. This was the first full free day Eric would
have in Nuremberg, so we got up and headed out first thing to find
breakfast. We went to the bakery down by
the Hauptmarkt and Eric got to look around at the stalls in the market. There are obviously many more stalls set up
on the weekend as they get a lot more business then. We bought a couple things at the Hauptmarkt
as well as the bakery and then made our way back to the apartment to eat our
breakfast.
After breakfast, we decided to do a little shopping. We had seen a leather store along the river
that had some very nice belts. Eric
decided he could use a new belt since he only has one belt that he has had for
15+ years. I had also scoped out another
leather store in the craft market that had some nice belts.
On the way to the first leather store, we stopped into the
health food store and I bought my souvenir, some German-made essential
oils. It is apparently very hard to get
this brand in the United States and they are supposed to be really good.
Then we made our way to the first leather store and looked
at their belts. We then walked all the
way to the other side of town to check out the belts at the craft market. Eric ended up liking one of the belts at the
craft market, so he bought one there. Of
course, he is so skinny they had to cut it down and add about three holes to
make it fit him.
We trekked back across town, back to the Hauptmarkt and
bought some flatbread and fresh cheese spreads to have for a late lunch back at
the apartment. We had made reservations
for a late dinner at 8:45 at one of the Italian restaurants we could not get
into a couple nights ago, which is apparently very good. So we needed to have something for a couple
snacks this afternoon.
After we made it back to the apartment and Eric had a
breather, we packed up some of our stuff (in preparation for our early
departure on the train tomorrow morning to Rothenberg). After we got some of our stuff packed, we
ventured out again so I could show Eric the garden park that runs all along the
old town wall just outside our apartment and all the way to the castle.
We made our way along the wall to the castle and then down
to the Hauptmarkt and over to the other side of the old city and then back to
the apartment. I think we have done
about three laps of the old town today so far.
Then, later for dinner we get to walk almost all the way across town
again. We will easily probably have 15+
miles of walking in today. I think I have
just about worn Eric out…
Around 7 p.m. we decided to head out to see what kind of
night photos we could get from the few vantage points we had scoped out. We headed toward the castle and took a few
photos there and then down toward the Hauptmarkt area. By that time it was getting close to our
dinner reservation time of 8:45 so we high-tailed it to the restaurant. We tried a new Italian restaurant that was
very popular and rated very highly on TripAdvisor. Since it was a rather late dinner, we split a
pasta dish that was fabulous—the ratings were correct.
After dinner we made our way back to a couple other spots we
had wanted to try taking some night photos.
After we had exhausted about all the photo spots, we made our way back
to the apartment. By that time I think
it was close to 11 o’clock. We probably
made it to bed around midnight.
Day 12
We got up early, had a little breakfast, took the trash out
and cleaned up the dishes in the apartment before trekking our way down the
moat path with our luggage all the way to the main train station. We thought that taking the 9:05 a.m. train on
a Sunday would be a good choice. We didn’t
think it would be very busy. We were
wrong—the train was packed. Luckily
there was a very small first-class section which had space available. The people in coach were packed in and were
standing in the aisles.
We had a very short time to change to our next train at the
designated stop. Like the majority of
the trains on our trip so far, our current train was running late. So we did not think we were going to make our
next train which meant we would be sitting at the station for about an
hour. So Eric looked up an alternate
route on his phone. As it turned out, if
we stayed on the train we were on and changed to a different train at another
station further down the line, it would take a little longer to get there, but
it would get us to Rothenburg. That
train also had a first-class car, so we would have a better chance finding
someplace to sit if it was busy. So that
is what we did.
We finally arrived in Rothenberg around 12 p.m. and took a
taxi to the hotel. Eric didn’t feel like
hauling the 50-pound bag all the way through town, up and down hills over cobblestones. It was a good choice after we saw the route
to our hotel. It was super busy in town
as well. I’ve never seen so many
tourists wandering everywhere. You would
think it was Disneyland.
We got checked into our hotel and then went out in search of
food as we hadn’t had anything of substance since breakfast. There was an Italian restaurant a very short
walk from our hotel, so we decided to try that.
It was very, very good. After
filling our bellies, we decided to walk around town and see if we could get any
good photos and scope out any possible night time photos spots. We had plans to attend the night watchman’s
tour at 8 p.m. It is very well known and
very popular.
It got dark around 7 p.m. so Eric got his camera ready and
we headed out to see if we could get any good night shots around town before
the night watchman’s tour. We found a
few really good spots and managed to get some photos without people in them,
which after seeing the crowds earlier, we thought would have been impossible.
At around 8 p.m. we made our way to the town hall to catch
the tour which took about an hour. The
guy who leads the tour has been doing it for 20 years and does a really good
job and is both entertaining and educational.
After the tour, we took a few more photos before heading
back to the hotel room to get to bed so we could get up early the next morning
and attempt to get some morning photos before the crowds overtook the town.
Day 13
We got up around 6:30 and decided we would walk the entire
wall around the town. The majority of
the wall is originally, but there are several sections that were rebuilt by
donations from all over the world after parts of the wall were bombed in
1945.
It was a lovely morning walk. The sun was shining and there was a light fog
hanging over the valley as the sun rose.
We only ran into one other person on the wall for the entire 3-miles.
We made it back to our hotel room around 9 a.m. and got
cleaned up and finished packing so we could get checked out by 11 a.m. We were told we could leave our bags at the
front desk while we wandered around town until our 3 p.m. train.
By the time we got checked out, we were hungry, so we
decided to go to the bakery then to Medieval Crime and Punishment Museum. It was very interesting seeing all of the way
that they got confessions from accused people and what happened to you after
you confessed to a crime. Many of the
items on display like shame masks, thumb and leg screws, and documents were
originals, several of which were from Rothenburg.
After the museum we decided
to go back to the Italian restaurant we had eaten at yesterday as it was so
good. The weather was beautiful, so we
sat outside on the sidewalk as we watched all the other tourists walk by. There were much smaller crowds today than
yesterday. Obviously, in addition to the
usual tour groups, they must get a lot of locals doing daytrips on the weekend.
After having lunch and walking around town a bit and we made
our way back to our hotel to catch the cab we had reserved for 2:30. We wanted to make sure we got to the train
station in plenty of time. It is only a
short ride to the train station, but if you miss the train you have to wait an
hour for the next one.
When our train arrived, we climbed aboard to start the
couple hour journey through various towns on our way to Frankfurt. We made all our transfers okay and arrived at
the Frankfurt airport station around 6 p.m.
We had a reservation for tonight at the Sheraton which is actually
attached to the airport. Needless to
say, we don’t have to worry about getting to the airport tomorrow, as we are
already here.
Germany Days 6-7
Tue, Oct 10 2017 11:21
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Day 6
We woke up around 9 a.m., and after getting dressed, we
headed around the corner to the local bakery (which had been closed on
Sunday). We figured this would be a good
place to get something for breakfast.
However, as luck would have it, they were closed on Mondays. Eric needed to get going to head down to the
convention center to help set up the booth, so we came back to the apartment
and he grabbed something quick from my traveling food stash, and then headed on
his way.
After he left, I set out to see what else I could find at
the next closest bakery. There was
another bakery not too far from the apartment, near the castle. There I bought some rolls and a Danish and
headed back to the apartment with them.
After I got back, I decided I had better attempt to do the laundry. Everything on the washing machine was
obviously in German, but I figured how hard could it be. We had a Bosch washing machine for
years. I made all my selections and hit
start and every time it would just flash and then time out. I was getting really frustrated…
My next task was finding some butter or something to put on
the rolls I had purchased. The weather
was overcast today, but there wasn’t a prediction for rain until closer to
evening, so I headed out with my camera as well in case I came across any
fabulous picture opportunities.
I headed toward the Hauptmarkt (main market square), which I
had not been to yet. They have an open
air market here every day but Sunday, where vendors sell everything from
cheese, fresh produce, fresh flowers, plants, cookies and cakes, etc. There was supposed to be a discount grocery
store right next to it, so I figured that would be the place to go to find some
butter. After going into the store and
buying some butter, I perused the open air market to see if there was anything
that looked good.
The produce was all so fresh and ripe—more than likely
picked the day before at a farm down the road.
I ended up buying some strawberries.
We think we pay a lot for produce—I paid 6,50 euros for a small basket
of strawberries (probably close to $10).
I’m sure they were probably organic and they were perfectly red and ripe
and more than likely just picked. They
were very good—not like what we buy in the grocery store in the states.
After my purchases, a wandered around a bit and then headed
back to the apartment again. On my way
back I found a neat health food store that also had a café and bakery that
served organic, vegan, and vegetarian food.
I stepped in and checked it out—the food smelled fabulous.
After I got back to the apartment, I attempted to start the
washing machine again to no avail. I
finally broke down and texted the owner to see if she could come up and show me
how to make it work. A short while
later, she came up and showed me there was a valve on the sink that had to be
turned so that the washing machine could draw water…So after all that, I
finally got the laundry going. As there
was no dryer, I wanted to make sure I could get the load done and hung up on
the drying rack to hopefully be dry by tomorrow. I swear the washing machine ran for 2-3 hours
before it was done and I could finally hang everything up.
By the time the laundry got done it was probably around 3 or
4 in the afternoon. I may have gone out
one more time to wander around town before Eric came back from the convention
center. I went back and forth to the
apartment so many times, I don’t even remember now.
Eric didn’t make it back until close to 6 o’clock. After he got back, we set out to find
something for dinner. We had found a
very quaint Italian restaurant not too far away that looked really good. I had looked it up online and it said you
definitely needed reservations.
We stopped in and asked if they had a table for two (with no
reservation). We were sat in the back
corner of a table that was already made out for seven people. We had a very nice meal and about half-way
through, a party of four that had made a reservation was sat at the table with
us. It was a very small restaurant and
they obviously utilize every bit of space.
After our dinner, I took Eric down to the Hauptmarkt to show
him some of the sights and shops I had seen/found during my day’s
wanderings. A lot of the churches and
parts of the old wall, bridges and castle are lit up at night, which are very
pretty. The nice thing about wandering
around after dark is you kind of have the city to yourself as most of the tour
groups are long gone by that time. We
found several spots that Eric will definitely have to come back to get some night
shots.
I showed Eric a short-cut I had found along the river that
took us back to the apartment and not long after getting back, the rain
began. It rained quite heavily and more
than likely rained all night long.
Day 7
We woke up close to 7 a.m. (that was after a couple phone
calls in the middle of the night, one a solicitor and one work-related), so not
sure how much sleep Eric actually got. For
breakfast Eric ate the rolls I had bought for him at the bakery the day before and
then he headed down to the convention center.
It was a very dark and dreary day again today. It seems they have a lot of those around
here.
After Eric left, I set out to try out another couple
bakeries to see who had the best rolls.
I bought a couple at the shop near the apartment and brought those back
to the apartment and then headed down to the bakery near the Hauptmarkt to get
a couple more. I then checked out the
stalls in the market again and bought some French sheep cheese (yummmm). I figured I would have a cheese sandwich for
lunch along with some of the strawberries I had left over as well.
I wandered around a bit and took a few photos on my phone
and then it started to rain, so I figured I had better get back to the
apartment. I got back just in time and
then the rain really set in. It rained
off and on all afternoon.
I piddled around on the computer (amazing how much time you
can spend looking at stuff) and hung out at the apartment. The weather is supposed to get progressively
better and warmer each day—and of course, I’m sure our last day in Germany will
be perfect…
Eric got done at the show around 6 p.m. so I told him I
would meet him at the Hauptmarkt. We saw
a falafel stand their yesterday that looked really good, so we decided to do
that for dinner. He decided to get off
the subway at a different station and he called me from in front of one of the
churches trying to figure out which direction to go. I told him to meet me at one of the bridges
over the river and then we made our way back to the falafel stand in the market
square.
We ordered our falafel wraps and took them back to the
apartment for dinner. They were really
good and more than likely the cheapest meal we have had so far at 3,50 euros a
piece. We will probably do those again
for sure.
It was a long, but productive day, for Eric so he was
anxious to get his shoes off and relax a bit before heading to bed to do it all
over again tomorrow.
Germany Days 4-5
Sun, Oct 8 2017 03:36
| Permalink
Day 4
We got up around 7 a.m. this morning and got ready for the
day. The weather was supposed to be
better today with no prediction for rain.
There were still a few clouds around when we got up, but as the day went
on most of the clouds disappeared and the sun came out. It was still cool out but at least it wasn’t
raining.
After breakfast we took a short hike to Lecht Falls, which
was just a short ways outside of town. Eric
got a few pictures and then we made a loop and came back into town. On our way into town we got a small snack and
went back to our room to figure out the plan for the afternoon.
We finally decided we would attempt to take the bus to the
Tegelberg lift, but instead of taking the lift to the top of the mountain, we
would see if the summer luge ride was open.
We caught the bus at the train station.
(With the use of the Füssen card provided to us by our bed and
breakfast, the buses are free.) We took
the bus to the Castle ticket area, which was the end of the line for the bus we
had boarded. We could have waited around
for a while for another bus to come along that would go all the way to
Tegelberg, but we decided to walk instead.
We found our way across the parking lot through the throngs
of tourists to the road that led to Tegelberg.
We walked along the road for a ways and then a trail cut off toward the
mountain. We took the well maintained trail
through the lush green pastures and forest and zigzagged our way over to the
lift area. When we arrived at the lift
area, we were in luck, the summer luge was open.
We bought a shared ticket for a total of six rides—so we
each got to go down three times. It was
really fun and you could go as fast or slow as you wanted. Obviously, each ride got progressively faster
as we became more comfortable. Eric’s
top speed was approximately 26 mph and mine was about 23 mph. We had our Strava app running the whole time
so we could figure out how fast we went.
After our fill of bobsledding, we wandered over and waited
for the next bus to take us back to Füssen.
The buses to the lift obviously don’t run as often as the ones to the
castles, but we only had to wait about 20 minutes for the next one. The bus ride back to town didn’t take long,
but once we reached the outskirts of town we were just creeping along, so we
went ahead and got off. We figured it
would be faster to walk.
We walked into town and got a gelato and then made our way
back our room to have another afternoon nap—after all, we are on vacation!
After our nap we decided to go back to the café where we got
the spaghetti the day before. The
spaghetti was so good, we decided we would do that for dinner again. One order was the perfect size for two
people. We ordered our spaghetti and
took it back to our room to eat before packed up our stuff so we could get up
early the next morning to head toward Munich.
Day 5
We got up around 6 a.m., got cleaned up, and got the
remainder of our stuff packed so we could pay the bill for our stay at the bed
and breakfast and then make our way to the train station to catch the 8 a.m.
train. It was a bit dreary again today
with light rain and heavy dark clouds.
After we paid our bill and had a quick bite to eat, we
grabbed our bags and wheeled them through the deserted cobblestone streets to
the train station. The view from the
train platform was beautiful of the snow covered peaks in the background. The day we arrived there was no snow anywhere
and viola, the next day there was snow.
It was actually very pretty.
Our train arrived and we boarded for the 2-hour trip to
Munich. I think Eric and I both caught a
couple Z’s on the train. There is
something about riding on a train that just lulls one to sleep.
We arrived in Munich and decided to take a few hours to
explore a little. After figuring out how
to store our luggage in a locker at the train station, we set off to figure out
where the starting point was for Rick Steves’ Munich city walk. We finally figured out how to buy a ticket on
the local subway and headed for Marienplatz (Mary’s square).
For a thousand years, The New Town Hall has been the center
of Munich. The building was built in the
late 1800s and survived the bombs of World War II. Most of the other buildings around it were
destroyed and had to be rebuilt after the war.
The New Town hall was built in a Neo-Gothic style and is famous for its
glockenspiel. Every day at 11:00 and
12:00, the tower chimes a tune and the colorful life-size figurines dance and
spin for about 10 minutes, telling the story of a noble wedding that took place
in 1568.
After watching the 11:00 glockenspiel show, we sat down at a
café table in the square and had a light snack before continuing on with our
walking tour. The next stop was St.
Peter’s Church. We checked out the
outside of the church and then decided to hike the 306 wooden steps to the top
of the spire on the very narrow one-lane staircase for two-way traffic. Luckily when we got to the top it wasn’t
raining, but it was very crowded because the 12:00 glockenspiel show had just
started. We hung out for a while and
took in the sights and snapped a few photos and then headed back down.
When we made it back down to the bottom, we decided to step
inside the church. Sunday mass was going
on, but we stood at the back and enjoyed the ornately decorated interior of the
church.
The next stop on the walking tour was the Viktualienmarkt
(closed on Sunday) with the landmark maypole in the middle. Too bad the market is closed on Sundays, it
would have been a neat place to wander around.
The market sits on some of the most expensive real estate in town, but
locals love it, so the city protects the old-time shops. Apparently, Müchners consider the produce
here to be top quality.
Then we walked past the Ohel Jakob Synagogue and made our
way to the Asam Church. This is a tiny
church (30 feet wide) built by the Asam brothers in 1740 and wedged between two
houses. The Asam brothers were
architects and originally built the chapel as kind of a showcase church to
display what they could build for those looking to have a church designed and
built. It was quite something to
see.
We then made our way back down the Kaufingerstrasse. For the 1972 Olympics the street was turned
into one of Europe’s first pedestrian only zones. We followed the street for a while and this
led us back to Marienplatz. As we were
running short on time and wanted to get back to the train station to catch our
train to Nuremberg we decided to cut the city walk short. There is obviously a lot, lot more to see in
Munich, but we just didn’t have that much time.
We got on the subway and made our way back to the train
station to collect our bags and get on the high-speed train to Nuremberg. We had not reserved a seat on this train, but
managed to find a couple unreserved seats.
By the time the train left, though, first-class was packed. It was only an hour and 10-minute train ride
from Munich to Nuremberg. I enjoyed
watching the speed posted on the overhead sign board. We actually got up to 300 km/hr. That is obviously the fastest I have traveled
in anything on land. The trains are so
smooth and quiet, you don’t even feel like you are going that fast.
We made it to Nuremberg and then had to figure out how to
get from the main train station to our VRBO apartment we had rented within the
old walled city. We finally got our
bearings and took the subway and then the tram to the stop just outside the old
city wall where our apartment was located.
Eric then had to haul our 50+ plus bag up four flights of stairs (it is
an old building with no elevator—which I knew when I rented the apartment).
The owner greeted us at the door and handed over the keys
and oriented us to the apartment. The
owner actually lives in the apartment one floor below. It is an amazing apartment with two bedrooms,
one with a king size bed and one with two twin beds, a large living and dining
room, a kitchen, and a bathroom. As it
is on the top floor of the building, we have amazing views from three sides. We look out one side just over the top of the
adjacent old city wall—pretty cool.
As we were quite hungry when we arrived, we decided to go
out exploring to see if we could find food.
Most shops and a lot of the restaurants are closed on Sunday, so there
weren’t a lot of options. We managed to
find a small place where we could get some fries and I had a roll with
sauerkraut. They are very big on meat
such as sausages and brautwurst here, so sometimes it can be tough to find
something vegetarian.
We sat in the small café and ate our food. Several other customers came in after us, one
of which was an American grad student from Michigan who was also here for the
European Microwave week. He was
apparently here as a speaker at the show.
He sat with us at our table and we had a nice chat with him.
After we finished eating, we decided to wander around the
old city for a bit since it wasn’t terribly rainy (yet) and was still
daylight. It looks like there will be a
lot of shops and streets for me to explore.
As the sun was finally starting to set, we made our way back
to our apartment to settle in for the week.
Germany Days 1-3
Fri, Oct 6 2017 12:07
| Permalink
Day 1
For once we did not have to be at the airport at 4 a.m. to
leave on vacation. Our flight wasn’t until 11 a.m., so we actually had time to get
up and get some last minute packing taken care of before we had to leave for
the airport.
We used Lyft to get to the airport (only the second time we
have used Lyft). It is pretty handy and
much cheaper than a taxi. Thankfully we
were traveling light (baggage wise) this trip as well. There is a lot less luggage with a non-dive
trip. We only had one checked bag and
after getting that checked in, we made our way to security. Luckily we both had TSA precheck, so the
security line didn’t take long at all.
However, they did pull my backpack aside and took the items out, as my
nuts apparently looked suspicious. I had
a bag of cashews, which are apparently too dense for them to see through. After my nuts got the all-clear, we headed
to the United Club to hang out until it was time to board our flight.
Obviously, it wasn’t a full flight to LA and we got upgraded
to first class. The flight to LA was
smooth and once we arrived there we tested the information Eric had found on
how to make it to the International Brady Terminal without leaving the secured
area. It is quite a walk, depending on
what terminal you arrive at, but it is possible to get to the International
terminal without having to go back through security—a big plus!
We made it to the International terminal and made our way to
the Star Alliance lounge. It is probably
one of the nicest lounges we have been to in the U.S. We had a few snacks there, Eric took care of
some work-related business, and then we headed to our gate. We were flying from LA to Frankfurt on
Lufthansa. Eric had booked us seats in
premium economy. They were very nice
seats. We even managed to board early
with Eric’s Star Gold, but by the time we got to our seats the overhead space
was already taken. Luckily we managed to
squeeze our stuff into the bin in the row in front of us.
We took off on time and the flight appeared to be going
smoothly until part way through when the crew made an announcement that they
had a passenger that was not feeling well and if there was a physician on board
to please let one of the crew know.
Apparently there was a physician on board and later on in the flight we
were informed that we would be making an emergency landing in Manchester,
England so that the passenger could receive urgent medical attention.
The crew hastily prepared for the landing in England. Immediately after landing, the plane was
directed to an area just off the taxi-way and the steps were brought up to the
door of the plane. The emergency crew
was already on the ground waiting and quickly boarded the plane. Just before we had landed, we saw the crew
racing around with the first-aid kit, oxygen, and what appeared to be an
AED. The woman in front of us said she
had seen them doing chest compressions.
It took the EMTs a bit of time, but they finally removed the passenger,
a woman who appeared to be in her 40s-50s.
She was on oxygen and may have been unconscious. They rushed her off to the hospital—we are
hoping she was okay.
It then took a little while longer before we could take
off. They had to receive the new flight
plan, refuel the plane, perform their inspections, etc. We finally took off again and headed for our
original destination, Frankfurt, Germany.
It was only about an hour and we were preparing to land in
Frankfurt. Because it was such a short
flight, we did not receive what would have been our second meal (breakfast),
but I don’t think anyone was too upset.
After deplaning, we made our way through passport control
and then collected up our bag. We stood
at the baggage claim area for quite a while before our bag slid onto the
carousel. We were beginning to wonder
what had happened to it. Thankfully it
did arrive and it was in one piece—always a bonus.
After retrieving our bag, we wandered around the airport a
bit trying to find an information booth to ask what the best way was to get to
our hotel we had booked. We finally found
the information desk and of course the person working the desk had no idea
where our hotel was—it is a brand new hotel near the city center area. We had the address, so he suggested a route
via the train that would bring us near the hotel.
So we made our way to the train. We lined up at the ticket kiosk to buy our
tickets. When it was our turn, Eric
inserted his credit card and of course then it wanted a PIN—which we didn’t
have. Europe uses a chip and PIN credit
card system and the U.S. uses a chip and signature card system. Luckily we had some Euros on us so we used
those to get our tickets.
The train arrived shortly after that and we boarded and rode
it for about seven stops where the man at the information desk suggested we get
off. We didn’t think it would be far to
walk from there, but it ended up being a bit of a walk—especially when you are
dragging a 50-pound bag. Good thing we
had new bags with new wheels that were in good shape.
We finally made it to the hotel and got checked in around
1-2 in the afternoon. We had intentions
of going out and wandering around a bit, but we were so tired all we could manage
to do was go downstairs to the hotel bar and order something to eat. We then came back upstairs and had a “little
nap” before we crawled into bed for good for the night.
Day 2
We got up around 5:30 so we could get cleaned up and head
out to look for some breakfast. We
wandered down the street a ways and found a bakery and got something to eat and
something to take with us for our train ride to Füssen. We made it back to the hotel and packed
everything up and headed down the street a short bit to buy a tram ticket. We found out after we made it to the hotel that
the tram that runs right in front of the hotel goes all the way to the train
station (which if we had known that yesterday would have saved us a long walk)—oh
well! We bought our tram tickets and
made our way to the main train terminal in Frankfurt.
We had purchased rail passes before we left home, which we
needed to get validated. We made it to
the train station early just for this purpose.
After our tickets were validated we bought a juice and waited near our
track for our train to arrive. The
trains don’t sit around long once they arrive.
They arrive, you have maybe a few minutes, if you are lucky, to get on,
and then it leaves. We had wanted to
take a later train that only had one stop/transfer on the way to Füssen, but it
was already booked up for reservations.
So we took an earlier train which had about four transfers. We made to make all our transfers without
incident and completed our approximately 5-hour journey and arrived in Füssen
around 1:30 in the afternoon.
The countryside is so beautiful with lush rolling green
pastures and a multitude of crops being grown or in the process of being
harvested. Füssen is in the end of the
train line and is right on the border with Austria.
We made our way off the train with everyone else and stopped
just outside the front door of the train station to figure out where we needed
to go to get to our bed and breakfast.
It ended up being just a short walk from the train station. The owner was waiting for us and gave a quick
orientation and handed over the keys to our room. The weather today was beautiful and was
almost warm compared to Frankfurt (which seemed strange because Füssen is in
the alps region with high mountains).
She suggested if we wanted to see the castles we do it today because the
storms were supposed to move in later in the day and begin raining.
We quickly got our stuff put into our backpacks to hike our
way to the castles. It was supposed to
be approximately a 1 hour and 20-minute hike to the castles from where we were
staying. It was a beautiful hike, though
a bit steep at times. We made our way
through the woods and down a mountainside to a lake. We hiked around that lake, with views of the
castles in the background, and then around another lake with more great
views. We were making our way closer and
closer to the castles—as the clouds overhead became thicker and thicker.
We finally made it to the parking area/tourist shop/visitor
center for the castles. Then it was
another steep hike up to Neuschwanstein castle (the castle that the Disney
castle is modeled after). We made it to
the castle and then made our way around to the back side where the trail to Mary’s
bridge was to be found. The bridge has
probably the best vantage point for castle photos. It was nearly 6 p.m. by the time we made it
to the bridge. We got some photos and
then decided to wait for it to get dark and try and get some night shots.
A few stragglers came hiking up after sunset but by the time
it got dark we were the only ones around.
It was VERY windy and getting colder and colder, but we persevered and
braved the bridge in the dark to get a few good night photos of the
castle. It then began to mist so we
decided we had better start making our way down the mountain. We stopped along the way and took a few other
photos before it began to really rain.
Luckily we had our large umbrella with us, so the two of us
made the probably 4 mile walk back to our hotel huddled under our umbrella in
the dark and the rain. By the time we
got to the bottom of the hill there were obviously no buses running and pretty
much no one around. It was kind of like
a ghost town—very different from when we came through earlier. Luckily we had brought our headlamps so we trudged
onward in the rain and finally made it back to our room around 10 pm at
night. It was very quiet walking through
town at that hour of the night as well. We
had no trouble passing out and going to sleep after we got back. I would say we probably walked close to 10
miles yesterday, some of it was very steep.
Day 3
This morning we slept in until around 7:30 and then got up
to go across to the other building to get breakfast which was from 7:30-9:30.
It had been raining off and on all night and was probably in the 30s-40s. After breakfast, we decided to wander around
town a bit and take Rick Steve’s self-guided tour of some of the sights in
town. While we were out, we noticed the
peaks of the mountains all around town had accumulated quite a bit of snow
buildup overnight. Yesterday there hadn’t
been any snow on them whatsoever. Toward
the end of our tour it began to drizzle again, so we decided to get something
to eat at a bakery and take it back to our room to eat it.
Our room, by the way is very nice. It is basically half an old house. We have a bedroom, a sitting/dining room, and
a very large bathroom—not bad for the price.
It also includes breakfast every morning with a very nice spread of
freshly baked breads, cereals, fruits, jams, cheeses, yogurt, juices, etc.,
etc.
This afternoon, after I typed up the blog, we had a nice
long nap while it drizzled away outside and likely snowed some more on the
mountain tops. We finally dredged
ourselves out of the nice warm bed around 7 p.m. to see if we could go find
some food in town. Most places were
closed, but the little shop where we bought slices of pizza for lunch yesterday
was still open. So we went in and
ordered one serving of spaghetti Napoli to go.
We took our pasta back to our room to eat at our little
table. Oh my gosh, was it some good
pasta and for only 7 euros was a really good deal for two people. I had a piece of Mediterranean focaccia I
bought at the bakery for lunch left over, so we split that as well. It made for the perfect dinner.
We are hoping for a bit of better weather tomorrow so maybe
we can get out and do a little more hiking or exploring. We might try taking the Tegelberg gondola if
the weather isn’t too bad.
Comments (1)
Indonesia Days 12-13
Fri, Apr 14 2017 03:53
| Permalink
Indonesia Day 12
Today was our next to the last day of diving, so we decided
to take full advantage and do three dives, two in the morning and one in the
afternoon. Yesterday a new guest, Peter,
arrived at the resort when Hinne left.
Peter flew directly from Denmark so was a bit tired when he arrived
yesterday afternoon and was not sure if he was going to feel like diving
today. However, he said he slept very
well and was ready to go out and do the first two dives of the morning.
After we all had breakfast together, we left around 8 a.m.
for the first two dives of the day. The
first dive was at Fukui. I am running
out of words to describe the dive sites.
They are all so beautiful with lots of colorful coral and tons of fish
and turtles. We had a very relaxing dive
gliding along.
The second dive site was at Likuan 2, which we have done
before, but is very nice also. Of course
we saw more turtles than you can count along with tons of fish. This dive site got a little busy after we jumped
in, but I’m sure it can get much busier in high season. We have just been spoiled having most of the
dive sites completely to ourselves.
After the second dive we made our way back to the resort and
got cleaned up in time to have lunch at 1 o’clock. Peter decided he was going to take the
afternoon off, but Eric and I were going to do the afternoon dive at 3
o’clock. Following a nice relaxing lunch
and good conversation with Chi, Spencer, and Peter, we made our way back down
to the dive shop to head out for our final dive of the day.
Our last dive of the day was at Muka Kampung. It was another very nice wall dive. At several points during the dive we had some
pretty good current, so we were flying down the wall with turtles coming at us
from above and below and head-on. I have
so much turtle video by now we could probably make a couple hour documentary on
turtles.
Eric had so many problems with his strobes on this trip he
finally packed them up yesterday and called it quits on the photos. One strobe flooded and then the other one was
having so many issues it only worked half the time, so he just decided to take
the Go-Pro out today to get some boat shots and some shallow water shots when
possible.
Day 13
Today was our last full day in Indonesia. I woke up this morning feeling like I might
be coming down with a bit of a head cold, so I decided to skip the diving and
just rest. After breakfast, Eric and the
other guest, Peter, set off to do the two morning dives.
They made the bit longer journey over to the other island,
Manado Tua (the volcano-looking island) to dive two sites on the south side. Eric said the first dive site had a lot of
current and the visibility was not great, but of course they still saw a ton of
fish. The second dive site was a bit
more relaxed with a lot less current and better visibility. At second dive site they saw two sea snakes
hunting—which we had been wanting to see.
After the two morning dives, they made their way back to the
resort and we began the process of attempting to get all our dive gear dried
out and start packing everything up.
We will be taking a boat back to Manado, Indonesia tomorrow
morning around 9 a.m. The boat ride can
take anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour, depending on how rough the ocean is,
and then it is about a 30-minute to an hour car ride to the airport, again
depending on traffic. Since it is Easter
weekend, we aren’t sure if the traffic will be light or heavy. Our flight leaves Manado airport for Singapore
around 2 p.m.
If everything is running on time, we should arrive in
Singapore around 5:30 p.m. and we already have dinner reservations at the
Italian restaurant we ate at and really liked, Rosso Vino. We will then be spending the night in
Singapore and fly out the next morning for the 16-hour direct flight from
Singapore to San Francisco.
This vacation has gone by way too fast.
Indonesia Days 9-11
Tue, Apr 11 2017 03:44
| Permalink
Indonesia Day 9
Fish, fish, and more fish.
Today we did three dives. Per the
usual routine, we woke up around 6 a.m., got ourselves and the camera ready,
and headed to the dive shop to analyze our tanks before heading to breakfast at
7 a.m. We have really enjoyed talking
with Hinne, Spencer and Chi at meal times.
Unfortunately, Chi was not able to join us for breakfast this morning as
she has been fighting an ear infection which got worse during the night and she
was in severe pain. Hopefully she gets
better soon, ear infections are no fun at all.
After another lovely breakfast and some good conversation, Hinne,
Eric and I headed out at 8 a.m. for the first two dives of the day. This morning’s dives were at another island
named Siladen. The first dive site was
Siladen Utara and the second dive site was at the jetty at Siladen. They were both wall dives, as it the norm
here.
They were both very nice dives with tons of fish. The visibility was not the best on either
dive as there was not really much current.
On the first dive we saw a bunch of blue spotted stingrays and a
ginormous trident snail that was eating a blue starfish. On the second dive we saw a huge school of mackerel
along with all the other macro life like orangutan crabs, bubble anemone
shrimp, soft coral crabs, black coral crabs, and the list goes on and on. The numbers and variety of fish here are just
unbelievable. You usually don’t see just
one fish of a certain type, it is generally in a huge aggregation.
After the first two dives, we made the approximately
30-minute trip back to the resort. We
arrived back around 12:50, so we raced up the 79 steps to our bungalow and had
a quick shower before coming back down the dining area for lunch. We were scheduled to do a third dive today,
so after lunch we headed back to our room to have a quick rest and download all
the video off my memory card in my camera before coming back down for the 3
o’clock dive.
On the second dive I maxed out the memory card in my camera,
so was unable to get any video of the ribbon eel at the end of the dive. Hopefully, we will see another one as that
was the first one we have ever seen and now we have no proof! I’m sure we will see another as they are
apparently fairly common around here.
The third dive was at Likuan 2. We again saw tons of fish and lots of macro
life, some dogtooth tuna, but at the end of the dive we came across a VERY
cooperative turtle who was positioned perfectly for me to video. I got a very long and very close-up
video—probably the best turtle footage I have ever gotten. It was the perfect end to the last dive of
the day.
We made the short five-minute trip back to the resort and up
the 79 steps to our bungalow to get cleaned up, download video, and then make
our way back down to the dining area for dinner at 7 p.m.
Days 10-11
Lazy days…Yesterday I took the day off from diving. However, Eric went out with Hinne and did
three dives. They did Likuan I, Alung
Banua, and Likuan III. The first two
dive sites were on the morning dive and the last dive site was a night dive. I believe Hinne said he had only done one
other night dive before since he had learned to dive, so he decided to try
another one and he really enjoyed it.
There was apparently very little current, which was nice, and of course
lots of crabs and shrimp and eels come out to hunt for dinner after the sun
goes down.
Today, Eric, Hinne, and I went out for the two morning dives
with our guides, Eric and Winston. Our
first dive was at the adjacent island (Manado Tuo) at a dive site called Negeri. The coral reefs around the island are very
beautiful. We did a relatively short
shallow dive along the top of the reef, which was really beautiful. We saw a leaf scorpionfish, mackerel,
orangutan crabs, about three or four different types of shrimp, and I think
this one reef must have about a quarter of the worlds anemonefish. I swear there was an anemonefish every two to
three inches for as far as you could see.
I don’t think I have seen anywhere near that many anemonefish in all my
years of diving combined.
The second dive was at Likuan. I decided to sit this one out and had a
little nap on the boat while Eric and Hinne went diving. I guess there was quite a current at this
site today and they had a fun ride whizzing along the reef. Apparently, as with most dive sites, they saw
turtle after turtle as well. After the
dive we returned to the resort.
It was full moon yesterday and the low tide this morning was
quite impressive. When the tide is that
low, they can only get the boat a short way into the bay and then you have to
get out walk quite a distance to get up to the resort. It is an interesting walk, though, as you get
to see all the starfish and hermit crabs wandering around.
I believe Hinne went out and did a third dive today as he
will be leaving tomorrow afternoon to go back to Manado for an early morning
flight the next day. Eric and I took the
afternoon off and had a nice long nap.
These naps are getting to be addictive.
I don’t know what I am going to do when I get back to work…