Saturday, September 14, 2019

Bavaria Daydreamin': Acht volle Tage in München

After our last trip to Europe, Mary mentioned she wanted to see the Alps next.  Therefore we flew to southeast Germany and spent 8 full days in Munich, the capital of Bavaria.  We went with our great friends, Kurt & Heather.  Kurt used to be fluent in German and Mary took the language in HS and college, so we should be good to go, right?  Not exactly.  The first waitress we asked "Sprechen Sie Englisch" fled to get her manager!  In another restaurant, a Tapas bar, the waitress was not comfortable speaking English, so I ordered for everyone en español.  I spoke auf Spanisch a couple more times on this trip: with our castle tour guide and with other tourists at The Residenz Palace.  We even heard a teacher at The White Rose Museum giving Spanish instructions to her students.  By the middle of the trip both Kurt and Mary had gotten comfortable with speaking Sie Deutsch, so Heather and I could coast and let them do the talking the few times we did not interact with a multilingual local.

We decided to stay at the Eden Hotel Wolff since it was directly across from the Hauptbahnhof, the main train station.  On most days the vendor on the left provided our breakfasts, before we boarded a tour bus or the excellent public transportation in Germany:

On the first day we headed for the Bavaria statue, since it is not near most of the places we wanted to visit.  You can climb up inside the 18 m bronze cast and from inside Kurt and I were able to take pictures of the preparations they are making for the upcoming Oktoberfest.


The next two days were sunny.  Time to ride atop the Hop-On-Hop-Off bus,

although we didn't get off until an hour later, at Nymphenburg palace:




We only toured the outside, which is free to everyone, yet all of us consider this a must-do if you visit Munich.  Back on the bus to the English Garden and its Biergarten, next to the Chinese Tower.

Since (a) it was such a glorious day and (b) Summer is almost over, we saw many of the locals enjoying the warmth of the sun, in beach attire, on this green space that is larger than New York's Central Park.

The next day was sunny as well.  Time to take Mary to see the Alps and tour the Castles of "Mad" King Ludwig II.   Ludwig was declared crazy and died under suspicious circumstances, but it seems his only issue was he was mad about Richard Wagner, best known to the readers of this blog as the composer of The Ring Cycle that inspired "Kill the Wabbit!"

The first castle we toured was Linderhof and it was the only one that was finished in Ludwig's lifetime.  No pictures were allowed inside so just imagine rooms decorated in gold leaf, then crank it up to 11.  "Over the top" doesn't begin to describe the ostentatious decor.  Here are some pictures of the outside of Linderhof:



Now it's off to Schloss Neuschwanstein ("New Swanstone Castle"), the structure Walt Disney used as his inspiration for Disneyland's Sleeping Beauty Castle.  It resides at the foothills of the Alps that divide Germany and Austria.  If you visit, please remember that it is a decent climb up to the castle.  Save enough energy to walk an extra 15 minutes beyond Neuschwanstein to Marie's Bridge, where most of the famous pictures are taken.  The bridge is crowded and some of the boards do shake.  We kid you not.

That shot above is as far as Mary went before the height of the suspension bridge got to her.  I think it is a fantastic photo and it should suffice.  That smudge in the sky above the castle is a hang-glider.  I did cross the bridge only to see that the trail around the mountainside goes on for another 3 hours.  No thanks.  Looking away from the castle you can see a small waterfall and the Alps in the background.


Obligatory "we were there" photo.  With a mom that kept taking selfies and then would check them right there (not moving out of the picturesque spot).  So I finally asked her to be in our photo and THAT got her to move away.

Neuschwanstein dominates this area so much you almost forget that Ludwig's father built his hunting lodge in nearly the same spot first.  Here is picture of Hohenschwangau plus the German Alps, looking south towards Austria, and one final shot of THE castle.



Most of the tour bus feel asleep on the way back to Munich, since it takes about 2 hours.  After a long a day that was well worth it.  That was it for our yellow star and cloudless skies.  The rest of the days were cloudy at best and raining consistently at worst.  Time to enjoy The Deutsches Museum, where most of the displays had English as well as German text.



We've made it this far and no mention of The Glockenspiel at Marienplatz.  Fine, we knew we had to go see it.  We also ate at the Hofbrauhaus and it was ... OK, I guess... but probably the worst meal we had since every other random restaurant or Biergarten that we tried was superb.  Here is the Glockenspiel, which goes off at 11, noon, and 5 PM.  If you are sadistic, it's sort of fun to continue to drink beer there and wait for all of the 6 PM disappointed tourists as they learn they "missed the bus."


On the next day I visited Munich's Paleontology Museum, which is very well-hidden on the University grounds, by myself.  Archaeopteryx was discovered in Bavaria and I appreciated the display they had for that important fossil find.





I went alone because Kurt, Heather, and Mary went to visit Dachau.  The first of the Nazi concentration camps opened in 1933.  No thanks.  No pictures were taken.  All of them came back quite somber from the experience.  We ended the night at a great restaurant that sent us downstairs to their beer cellar since we didn't have reservations.

Another must-do if you visit Munich is the Residenz Palace, next to Odeonsplatz.  Note that like many other places in old Europe, this place is not barrier free.  Also, the WC's can be few and far between, so never pass up the chance to use the Toilette.







Now it's Sunday and the entrance to the Pinakothek Museums in Munich cost only one euro (instead of seven).  We visited the Alte Pinakothek (classical art) and Pinakothek der Moderne -- which Kurt really enjoyed since he is more into the new (and weird) stuff.  We will only post one piece, by Max Liebermann, "München Bieergarten".  It is eponymously German.


Another somber place we visited was the small museum dedicated to The White Rose.  It is located where three German students were arrested (and then almost immediately executed) in Munich for leading a resistance movement against Hitler.


The members of the White Rose used leaflets to advocate nonviolent resistance to the Nazis.


Very moving experience learning about those brave students that did not die in vain as their story spread throughout the Allied countries.

As we are getting ready to leave we saw blue skies again.  So here are two more pictures of the Glockenspiel.  There's a story behind Heather and Mary making the peace sign.  You're going to have to ask us to tell the tale in person.  In order to protect the Internet reputation of a young lass who was having the darndest time getting herself photographed.  Barely edging out the "jumping Madre" who wanted her señor to snap a shot of her in the air in front of the Glockenspiel.  In the words of John Lennon: "most peculiar Mama".



A thoroughly enjoyable trip.  Best Wienerschnitzel any of us have had in a long time.  Obviously tremendous sausages, particularly the white sausages.  The Tapas bar was great and so was the one Italian restaurant we tried.  Even the two times I had Thai food it was very good.

We saw many churches; St. Paul's, St. Michael's, St. Peter's, the Frauenkirche Cathedral, and Asamkirche.  All of them are beautiful inside and don't exactly encourage photographs.  You can climb to the top of St. Peter's for 3 euros, but we decided our time has passed for doing tons of corkscrew stairs.  We end this blog post with a shot of Asamkirche and say auf wiedersehen.




UPDATE: received over 500 photos from Kurt's phone.  Some spectacular pictures in his collection.  Here's a sample -- classic German fare, the river that runs through the English Garden,a sobering picture of shaky Marie's Bridge from The Castle, one shot inside Neuschwanstein Schloss, "Das Boot", a model of The Red Baron's plane, the Siegestor arch, two more photos of the Residenz Palace (one of them a little gorgony ... err ... gory) and the ceiling of St. Peter's.













Finally, one last look at the Alps.  Thanks for the pics, Kurt. Danke schön!





Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Land of Enchantment, indeed

We traveled to New Mexico over 25 years ago, just to see Carlsbad Caverns.  Truly one of the toughest-to-reach National Parks in the lower 48.  It really is in the middle of nowhere.  Our kids were too young to remember the caves




or the northern end of the Guadalupe Mountains that we visited around Christmas time.


Fast forward a quarter century and now our son and his wife are living in Santa Fe.  Since he was graduating as a UNM Lobo with an MBA we figured springtime would be a fine time to revisit the Land of Enchantment.  Now I get it.  The northern part of the state is really special.

Hard to go wrong if you decide to stay in downtown Santa Fe.  The view outside our room (and in every other balcony for miles) was decorated with red chiles

and the hotel was around the corner from the Cathedral of St. Francis of Assisi

Fun fact: that hard-to-see white statue to the left is Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, the first (and I'm guessing only) Algonquin–Mohawk canonised by the Roman Catholic Church.  She only reached the age of 24 when she died in 1680.

I knew before our trip that one of the best Triassic fossil beds in existence was about one hour West of Santa Fe, in Ghost Ranch.  The site that Georgia O'Keeffe fell in love with so many years ago.

Can you blame her?  Five stars.  It's a must see.  We booked their Paleontology hiking tour and one of the O'Keeffe bus tours and they were both well worth the time and money.





There is a small museum there and it is quite a treasure if you're into dinosaur bones.  Ghost Ranch is where over one hundred well-preserved specimens were found of the official state fossil, the small early raptor Coelophysis.


They are still discovering specimens in one of the newer Ghost Ranch quarries.  The best example is Tawa hallae, a man-sized theropod, shown below, drawn with Charcoal at the site where it was recently excavated.

The best part of the O'Keeffe tour was when the bus would stop at one of the points-of-interest that inspired the artist to paint some of her later works.





It did rain on us during both tours, but it's impossible to mind when (a) the locals are giddy that they're getting any precipitation at all and (b) your shirt dries almost instantly after the cloud passes and the New Mexico sun resumes beating on you.  At the beginning of this year we spent a week in Amsterdam and felt nary a rain drop.  During our 5 days in the 47th State it rained and/or snowed every day.  Go figure.  During the one day the snow canceled our plans to go to the mountains we instead explored an old bowling alley kindly purchased by George R R Martin and transformed by Santa Fe artists into Meow Wolf. Wow!  Interactive Art meets The Twilight Zone.  We all enjoyed it.




At this point we will remind you of the main reason for our trip: our son's graduation.  The University of New Mexico is quite the beautiful campus and it even has a decent duck pond.



Back to downtown Santa Fe.  Strolling out of our hotel they are having a festival.  Like they do every weekend.  Take in some Low Rider culture:

Look for cheap (as well as super-costly) turquoise jewelry.  Go to a street vendor and order a tremendous $5 Fajita (or even deadlier to the arteries, a Chicharrón Burrito).  When they ask if you want red or green chiles make sure to answer "Christmas" for both!  Check out the San Miguel Mission, oldest church in the country, built around 1610.


Walk into one of the many portals around downtown and find historical plaques, such as the one commemorating the secret "shuttling of scientists" to Los Alamos.

Visit the Loretto Chapel, where the sisters had their prayers answered and an architecture marvel was mysteriously created: a spiral staircase was added, by one person, after the chapel had been completed.  It's quite the story, so much so that a movie was made about it.  Fellow tourists said it's a decent movie and IMDB agrees that you should see The Staircase (1998).


There's also dozens of art galleries to see around Santa Fe, from the very expensive to the obscenely expensive.






We end this post with our last day visiting New Mexico, when our daughter-in-law and the rest of the Santa Fe Concert Band gave a free Mother's Day concert two blocks from our hotel.  Here she is on flute as the band plays Weather Report's classic "Birdland":


Land of Enchantment, indeed.  We look forward to a return trip so we can go hike their mountains .