A few holiday photos to keep you in the mood. Apologies for the photo quality. Happy Holidays to all!
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A few holiday photos to keep you in the mood. Apologies for the photo quality. Happy Holidays to all!
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Dutch News reports on how this reindeer ‘fact’ was confirmed. Infra-red photo and all. Who knew?
From Prague Post. Pop-up clubs are not new but this is an interesting variation in Prague on the ear-splitting, headache and deafness-inducing clubbing events we’ve all heard about.
The article notes that the final event was held last weekend but I hope it rises again in future. I’m still disappointed that I missed seeing Leningrad Cowboys in concert in Prague last year!
For a more traditional concert, there’s the Prague Philharmonic, which opens its 2013 season on 2 January.
Edinburgh’s 2012/2013 Hogmanay festivities now have their own FREE iPhone app. Sounds great but I hope they’ll have an Android app soon (I’m looking at a Samsung phone for next year).
Information on the strike planned for Boxing Day on the London Tube.
Even with a list of expected services, Transport for London is not making any hard and fast promises.
A good day to stay home if you can?
From France 24. Now that the Louvre’s second location is open in Lens, France, we can get a digital glimpse of what is there. Fears that this would be a second-rate installation proved to be unfounded. Click on the link and browse the collection. The video at the bottom is fascinating!
From France 24.
Chateau d’Yquem will not be putting down a 2012 vintage of their Sauternes. The reason? Lousy weather. Red Bordeaux will also be having a rough year. Better luck next year.
Actually, I never would have known. I can’t afford that d’Yquem stuff anyway.
Like many people, I’ve wanted to visit Oktoberfest for a long time. This year I got my chance. After arriving in Salzburg, Austria at 5am on the night train from Slovenia, I shoved my luggage into a locker, bought a train ticket for the two hour ride to Munich and headed for the world’s most famous drink-up.
Once in Munich, I just followed the sign and the crowds to the fairgrounds.
Oktoberfest has all the cheerful atmosphere of a harvest fair except that instead of smallish barns where vegetables await critical review or straw-filled pens corral perfectly groomed farm animals, the ‘tents’ are temporary wooden buildings about half the size of a football field, hold hundreds of picnic tables surrounding a raised bandstand in the center of the space.
There is a lot of food – sausages, roast chicken, gingerbread and candy but the only real focus is the beer.
Each building serves just one brewery’s beer, so you have to tent-hop if you’re going to want more than one brand though, to be fair, after even one liter of beer, how much hopping would you be able to do and assuming you found a place to sit, could you really tell the difference? Tables seat six to eight people; aisles are just wide enough for the women serving the beer to get through. Carpal tunnel could be a job-ender here; the beer comes in one liter glass mugs and the servers frequently carry two or three mugs in each hand. Costumed sellers roam the aisles selling huge dinner-plate sized pretzels; others sell salt and radishes. Radishes? Who knew?
Tables are numbered and marked with times when they have been reserved. Outside of those times, the tables can be used by anyone and some few tables are marked ‘Frei’, so they are available to anyone any time. These, of course, fill up early, too. All this means that finding an empty seat can be difficult to impossible depending on the time of day and day of the week as well as which tent you go to. For those who reserve a table, there is a map to help you find the spot you’re trying to find.
The first tent I entered looked completely filled, but it was hard to be sure. I took a couple of photos, watched for a few minutes to see how things worked, listened to the band playing typical beer hall tunes on a raised central bandstand, shuffled along the walls where the snack and souvenir vendors had booths and headed outside to decide on a plan of attack.
Adding to the country fair feeling is a whole bunch of carnival rides and a try-your-luck midway of games of ‘skill’ that might win you a giant cuddly toy. I never realized such things were so universal.
Lots of the patrons were dressed in Bavarian/Tyrolean clothing for the event. For the men this meant lederhosen with suspenders, chunky shoes and knee-high socks or colored knit bands around their calves. Many also sported the typical felt trilby with a feather
or other furry plume. The women wore full- or calf-length dresses in bright patterns, white blouses with short puffy sleeves, tight vests in colors to match the skirts and often a long apron over the skirt.
These clothes are a regional costume in Bavaria, Germany and the national dress in Austria but we don’t really have anything similar in the US which makes these clothes seem more like party costumes than street wear. Maybe the closest we have is the ten-gallon hats, silver belt buckles and fancy boots typically associated with Texas. There are other historical costumes that are more or less unique to the US – Pilgrim dress, various types of Native American dress, but people don’t dress like that to go to the office or the beach or take a walk in the country or get married. National dress, then, takes a bit of getting used to for an American and Oktoberfest is an occasion for Alpine dress from all over the area.
As for the beer – at Oktoberfest, they come in just one size – one liter. I drank a fair amount of beer in college (tsk tsk; underage activity on my CV!) and after college as well, but nothing in that ancient past of my alcohol-imbibing experience prepared me for the task of drinking 1000 ml on the clock, i.e., before the time of your table’s next reservation comes up. In my case, that meant 45 minutes. Foof. I tried to practice before leaving home, I really did. I switched from my usual wine to beer but there’s more volume in a beer. And all that carbonation! It was hard work. Even having one beer a day during my vacation prior to Munich did little to improve my beer-drinking fitness. Expecting to have some difficulty on the day, I had planned to take all my photos before having any beer but in the end I decided to upgrade my five year old camera with a new model. Not only was the upgrade smaller and lighter but, more importantly, it had image stabilization – absolutely essential when taking photos at this world-famous beer bash.
There are signs all over the beer halls announcing that drinkers are NOT allowed to keep the mugs. There are plenty of souvenir vendors selling them should you want one. This is different from the rules for the small glühwein mugs at the Christmas markets; those can be kept since the price of the glühwein includes the price of the mug. When you consider that some eighteen million liters of beer are served at Oktoberfest, it makes sense not to let the mugs go walkabout.
The second beer hall I went into was run by Augustiner, Munich’s oldest beer brand. I decided to take the plunge when I saw some empty bench space and set off to snag a seat. Amazingly, the first table where I stopped and asked ‘ist frei?’ as I pointed to the empty seat was taken up with a very nice young American woman and her German husband and in-laws. I thought I asked her name but if I did, I failed to write it down in my journal.
This was part of an annual family visit. There was a lot of conversation in German, though she included me in English once in awhile. I didn’t mind being excluded; I kept looking around me, marveling at the whole scene and taking photos. Most of the photos came out fine and I even became adept at hoisting my beer mug whenever the bandleader on the
raised central stage called out to the crowd for a toast. Odd, though. The mug didn’t seem a whole lot lighter as the beer went from the mug into my stomach.
Finally, I decided it was time to see more of the Oktoberfest grounds while I could still manage it. I felt fine while I was seated but boy, once I stood up it was pretty clear to me, if to no one else, that a liter is an awful lot of beer and the ABV (6%) is more than what’s found in many popular American beers.
The sunshine and open space outside was a nice change. I didn’t notice anyone who was weaving or staggering but I was there on a weekday between 10 am and maybe 3 pm. The crowd in the evening might have been rowdier. Or not.
There are animals at Oktoberfest, but they weren’t hanging around in pens and they were all one species. All were horses and all were hitched to one or another brewery’s wagon piled with beer barrels. After the beer, the horses were the most popular attraction.
I strolled around, clearing my head and trying to decide whether I’d plunge back into another tent but I decided my experience had been a great one even with just the one beer, so I bought a 2012 Oktoberfest shot glass ‘mug’ and followed the crowd back to the Munich train station.
More photos coming on my next posting!
From the London Independent.
A new EasyJet route to Cornwall from London.
The Christmas and New Years holiday periods typically include greatly reduced public transportation. Here is what Transport for London says about service for the days between Christmas Eve and New Year’s Day.
There is also the possibility of a strike on Boxing Day, so plan accordingly.
Happy holidays – and for those who want to remain politically incorrect – Merry Christmas!
One of my main resolutions for 2013 will be to post blog entries more regularly. And to start learning Photoshop so I can improve the quality of my photos.
Happy New Year to all.
From the London Independent.
Now here’s a list that could be really useful next time you/I visit the British (mostly English) countryside. Country pubs! The Independent has done lists with more than ten items; surely this list of pubs could be extended to at least twenty five.
All but one of the locations are in England. I know that Northern Ireland is on a different island and Scotland has one foot devolved (even if I do think their single malt is much more drinkable than their beer) but come on! Perhaps the list needs to encompass more entries so all regions are named at least once. I can’t help but get the feeling that the Welsh listing (Monmouthshire) is nothing more than a token. Maybe I’ll have to visit a few next time and report back.
There are hardly any planned disruptions to the London Tube system this weekend.
Only one station closure, Cannon Street and only one partial closure in the early hours of Sunday on the Northern line from Camden Town north to Edgware.
TfL has also announced the following plans for service – or lack of it – on Christmas and New Years. More details will be announced next week.
From France 24.
The town of Zarozje, Serbia near the border with Bosnia, is reviving an old vampire story and hoping to make some money from it. Perfect (Twilight) timing so good luck to them.
From France 24.
Now, cash-starved bread hounds in Nîmes are buying day-old baguettes to save money. What next?!
From Prague Post.
If you’ll be in Prague this month, here are some good deals at city restaurants.
I often find myself drawn to architectural details in my travels. I’m not sure why; maybe it’s just that they often provide the most visual interest. In Ljubljana, Slovenia this past autumn, doors and doorways caught my attention. Here are some of my favorites. I apologize for the uneven sizes and layout; wordpress changed its media upload process and I’m still trying to figure it out. After a couple of hours, this is the best I can do for now.
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The figures surrounding this main entry to the Parliament building are original to the building’s construction in 1959. It’s refreshing to see that this sort of decoration of a public building can remain in place without people freaking out thinking it will corrupt their children or frighten the horses!
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From London Independent (I’m woefully behind in wading through the Independent’s travel sections).
Biking, hiking, messing about in boats, er… kayaks and more. Active adventures in Britain.
From Prague Post. A bakery in Prague named Bakeshop with lots of yummy things to offer. Click on the link and watch the English language video. Located a couple of blocks east of Josefov. See the map and reviews on TripAdvisor.
I think I’ll be putting Prague on my list of places to revisit sooner rather than later.
From Prague Post. A ticket agency, yes, but if you’re in Prague this month, there may be something here you’ll want to know about. Also could be a good resource for visiting Prague at any time of year.
This weekend’s Tube closures in London are again minimal.
Cannon Street station is closed on Saturday only, the Northern line north from Camden Town is shut on Sunday and there is some disruption to London Overground and DLR.
From France 24.
Berlin celebrates centenary of discovery of Nefertiti bust.
From Deutsche Welle.
A new branch of Paris’s Louvre is opening in the northern mining town of Lens. If you are in France after December 12, 2012, stop in.
From France 24. This headline was a surprise. Still trying to decide if I’m pleased or disappointed. I’m sure the Brits are chuffed but the next Rugby World Cup in 2015 is a long way off. Stomach bugs aside, still a great result.
From Oxford Mail. Wallabies seen in Oxfordshire. It’s certainly cheaper than flying Down Under if you want to see one. Maybe someone could round them up and have a wallaby park?
From France 24. Burger King, gone from France for 15 years, has decided to open two locations, one in Marseille and one at a highway rest stop in Reims.
I wonder if the first location will have bouillabaisse on the menu and perhaps champagne at the second? Too much to hope for, I think.
After seeing this outdoor food market on TV several times, I just had to pay a visit on this last trip. Borough Market was not as grandiose as it was on TV (the downside of airing old travel shows). There is a huge mess of long-term construction aimed at improving Thames Link and other Tube stations in the area. Even in its diminished and more jumbled state, Continue reading
Apparently Hogmanay isn’t enough to get folks excited in the Athens of the North, Edinburgh is celebrating all through December with an ice rink, kids’ events, light shows, caroling and all sorts of fun stuff. Wish I could be there.
I’m particularly sorry to miss St Andrew’s Day (Nov 30 for you non-Scots) and I’m really curious about the event dubbed ‘The Lost Elves on Rose Street‘. Soooo, which pub did they go into and did they just fall into the cellar? It’s OK; they’ll turn up next time the landlord goes downstairs to change the line.
My apologies for skipping last weekend. I managed to stay off the computer for the entire Thanksgiving holiday weekend. No mall or big box store shopping either but I don’t do much of that at any time of year.
This weekend’s Tube closures in London are pretty sparse.
Station closures which serve multiple lines – Cannon Street and Paddington, the Northern line north from Camden Town and some disruption to London Overground and DLR.
From Oxford Mail.
Two pubs that have been closed for a while are finally open for business again under new owners. One is near Woodstock, the other near Chipping Norton. Cheers!
There’s also a restau in Abingdon who has opened a deli to sell his own food products. Sounds yummy.