Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2013

30th Anniversary-Part 2

After leaving Salzburg on April 30th, we headed to the Chiemsee. "See" means lake in German. The Chiemsee is often called the Bavarian Sea. It would have been about an hour away from Burghausen if we hadn't diverted through Salzburg.

 We stayed at a place called the Chiemsee Fischer. It was a beautiful place where their biergarten was in full bloom. The owner was a young Hungarian man. He said his parents had come with him to the Chiemsee and the three of them had worked together to refurbish this place as a hotel and restaurant. He said his parents had gone back to Hungary and he was now running it with a valued staff. I thought it was so amazing that his parents had done that for him. ...a very sweet story.  And the authentic Hungarian goulash I had that night was delicious!




 The weather was in the mid sixties and was too cool and breezy to sit in the biergarten for dinner. But it was perfect for taking pictures!
The next morning, taking a boat ride to the main islands on the lake was something that wasn't to be missed. We caught the ferry in the town of Prien.
The largest island called the Herreninsel (Man Island), has a spectacular palace on it that was built by King Ludwig II of Bavaria. (He's the one who created the "Cinderella" castle that is so famous). This one was patterned after Versailles in France. Ludwig didn't live to see this one finished and it is still largely incomplete...which in some ways makes it more interesting to me. You are able to see its "bones" and see how it was constructed. The craftsmanship is beautiful. 
We spent the majority of our time on the Fraueninsel (Lady Island)
Every turn was a perfect picture and we strolled the whole island leisurely. It has a Benedictine convent there where the nuns produce a liquor that is sold in all the stores in our home area.


Eating torten and kuchen is a favorite pastime in the early afternoons, but we avoided the crowded terraces and biergartens and ate ice cream bars and drank sparkling water. Everything was just starting to bud out nicely and the temperature hit 70 degrees.
In spite of the sunshine peeking through, there were no views of the Alps ...except an occasional vague impression or an outline of the towering peaks beyond the lake.

 

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Ruhpolding, Germany

Ruhpolding was fun!
Kimberly Archer, her son Noah, and I drove through the small village on the way to the
cable car to take us to the mountaintop above.
 Noah waited patiently in line with us.  The car was very small and a lot of people were waiting to go.  As we watched the cars travel up and down the mountain, they looked like little Easter Eggs hanging from strings! I started getting a little nervous (the mountain looked very high) but I just tried not to think about it.
 Whew! The cable car station started to look pretty small about this time.


 The views were spectacular and it was a real payoff for dangling in the middle of the air with a thin metal sheet under your feet.
 Can you see the lake in the background of the picture on the left? That is the Chiemsee which is sometimes called the Bavarian Sea. On a larger island in that lake, there is a castle built (but never finished) by Ludwig II of Bavaria. It is the Herrinchiemsee and was patterned after the Palace of Versailles in France. There is also boating, hiking, and swimming available at the Chiemsee...its very beautiful with lots to see and do.
 The area is known for sports of all kinds and in all seasons. There is a biathlon track here that has hosted world championships. Mountain biking, hiking and fishing are very popular
...that's all besides the skiing possibilities.
As we came through the town, we passed a cross country skiing school as well as a downhill skiing school where many people were taking advantage of lessons. There seem to be mostly kids on the small slope and adults on the cross country track.
 There were many hiking & snowshoeing trails available at the top, but we didn't think Noah would be up for that for another year or two!
It was all good until I realized that I was going to have to get back down. But I just set my mind to enjoy it and not think about cables snapping or anything.  It was fine, as you might guess.
When we got back to the car and headed home, the navigation system in the car stopped working! Eeek.  We are so dependant on the navi here in our temporary home area.  The roads we travel on seem like a spider web of local connections and its all very different from the US. Thankfully, I had my iPad and a mapp application. We were able to use it plus the road signs to make it back home. Kimberly did a great job as pilot and I was squeeking by as the navigator/copilot.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Berchtesgaden & Berchtesgaden National Park

 Berchtesgaden is place with an amazing history. It juts down into Austria and is even 30 kilometers South of Salzburg, Austria.  It is most associated with Mount Watzman which is the 3rd highest mountain in Germany. It was a beautiful drive there!
Since there was no snow in Burghausen this day in January, we had to go somewhere to find some!  This was the place...
Behind Billy is  the view toward the Berchtesgaden National Park which extends into 3 deep valleys.
There was a great little museum in the National Park Visitor Center showing what life was like in the area in earlier times. Daily existence high in the Alps seemed basic, but sweet and charming.
This little cottage represented inside the museum was shown as it would have been on the upper pastures in the 1930's or so. They were usually built of hewn wood beams with stone floors and wood shingled roofs. It seems these still exist and since the 1950's these have gradually been updated...most no longer have the open fire places.
 The cemetery in the middle of the town was pretty amazing,
...especially in the snow.
The stones were all unique and many had lit candles in traditional red globes,
...showing that the dead were still remembered by their families generations after their passing.

There was a beautiful palace with an attached church with twin bell towers. There was a lot of pink inside and outside the old walls. I am always amazed as you set foot in these churches.  The main stone in the doorways are always very worn down by the thousands of feet that have tread there over the centuries. I tend to think about adding my own footsteps upon the many layers of history.
 The drive home was very nice too.  It alternated between snowing...
 raining
...and clearing.
The colors of the day and the changing light was something unlike anything I'd seen in the Souteastern USA.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Visit to the Snow Church

This is our group visiting the "Schneekirche" in Mitterfirmiansreut

 It was made totally of ice and snow.  It was created in honor of the 100th anniversary of the original Schneekirche in 1912.  That one was built in protest because the community wanted a church of their own and had to travel too far to attend services in another town. They built one of their own in the way they could...totally from what they had most of!
The church was very pretty in the mist.


 Billy with the altar of the church
We ate at a hotel-restaurant call the Almberg
 On the way back, our half of the group stopped in a small town with a ski lift and some small slopes called Herzogsreut.  I got some great shots showing the magnatude of the trees in the Bavarian Forest. It was very dense too!  The snow was incredibly deep.
A red sled was brought out of the trunk for trial on the perfect sledding hill. The weather was very nice (although a bit foggy) as it was only around freezing or slightly below.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

A Pension in Altoetting

 This is an example of a Pension (Pen-see-on)
It's a lot like a "bed and breakfast" where there are rooms available in a person's home.
 This one is run by a nice older woman (Frau Moser), but she has recently turned over most duties to her daughter-in-law
 Everything was fresh and tidy!

 This is the view of the back of the main basillica in town from Frau Moser's window.
This home/pension is on the "inner ring" that circles the city.
I'm not sure about Altoetting, but many inner ring streets in German cities are where the city walls once stood.
This is her tidy little breakfast room decorated for Weihnachtszeit (Christmastime)....breakfast is included and usually consists of sausages, breads, butter, jams, coffee, juice and tea.
Its like being a guest in the home of a friend!
 I went to look at this place for our friends that are visiting in May (Hello Duekers and DeRieuxs!). It is a 2-3 minute walk to the many churches and shrines that are in Altoetting.  There are great restaurants and shopping available and you never have to start your car.
There are also many wonderful bike trails that are fairly flat and go for kilometer after kilometer...after all, Altoetting has been a pilgrimage site for centuries.
This picture and the one above are views from one of the balconies. In the distance, you can see some of the church spires on the other side of the Kapellplatz (the open square in the center of town.)
This is the type of place to stay that would give visitors a REAL local experience of the area.