Gringa in Korea

Sunday, May 16, 2010

I go walkin

I have such a love/hate relationship with this country. Spring has sprung in Germany. The tulips and bulb flowers have passed their prime, and the wildflowers are too varied to count. It's really pretty here. Except, it is mid-May and I'm still wearing a sweatshirt and jumping for joy at the rare sunshiny day. sigh. I find myself under a blanket on the couch, watching the rain and reading a book most afternoons. But I woke up this morning with sunshine on my face, and a desire to get out! When it's not raining, I love to go for walks. I have so many beautiful options here! I can walk out the back of my neighborhood and there are alpine hiking trails through the hills and woods. I see deer and farms and very few people. It's quite peaceful. My other choice is to walk into the town park which has a path that runs for miles in both directions. I could walk into Otterberg or Kaiserslautern without walking on any roads! And the paths cut between woods and farms as well, so I see plenty of cows and my favorite guard ducks. They make the biggest fuss when anyone walks past their fence. Like dogs, only funnier. :) Right now the farms are gorgeous swaths of yellow flowers because the rape seed is in bloom. From what I gather this is where canola oil comes from, but the large geometric blocks of yellow in the fields of green just make me happy. The yellow is so dense! I keep thinking I need to take pictures, but I am usually so excited to get out of the house when it is pretty that I never remember my camera. I will definitely miss being able to walk out of my house, and within five minutes, be on some sort of walking path or hiking trail, surrounded by nature. I just wish it was a little warmer and sunnier here. From what I understand, May 15th is traditionally the last cold day here, and the gardners say that it is only truly safe to start planting today. I sure hope they are right. I'm ready for some warmth. :)

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Alpsee

I spent the day today hiking around the castles of Schwangau,in the Alps of southern Bavaria, and I found lots of signs for Alpsee. At first I giggled. That's what you'd say if you tripped on a hike here. (Alpsee!) More realistically, I thought it was pointing out overlooks where you could view the Alps (Alps see). Nope. It's the name of the lake that sits between the two castles of the Mad King, Ludwig. :)

I started my day with a wonderful German breakfast at the B&B where I'm staying. I have a tiny room with a fantastic view of Neuschwanstein and the Alps. It's a five minute walk into the little town that developed between the castles for the tourists, and from there my adventure began. I started with a tour of Schloss Hohenschwangau, which is the castle that King Ludwig grew up in. Sadly they don't allow pictures of the interior of the castles here, but they were pretty neat. Dan will be disappointed that the ceilings were not very ornate, but the walls of Hohenschwangau were completely covered in gorgeous murals. They were painted directly on the walls with an egg-based tempera paint. The most interesting thing in this castle was a piano that was actually played by Wagner. This yellow castle was pretty, but fairly basic since it was actually a hunting residence.

After the short tour of the interior, I headed out the back for a hike through the woods behind the castle. There are several lakes in the area, and I became a little disoriented when I hiked down to the wrong one! I found my way back to the Alpsee and to town without too much trouble, and had a gorgeous hike in the process. Once back in town, I grabbed the tourist bus up the mountain since it's a pretty steep climb to Neuschwanstein. The bus drops you off above the castle where you can hike to Marienbrucken, which is a bridge that spans a huge gorge and waterfall. From the bridge you have incredible views of Neuschwanstein and the surrounding area. I hiked past the bridge, and was headed for the river bed that feeds the waterfall, but the climb down was too steep for me. I now have a better appreciation of alpine walking sticks. :) So I settled for sitting and having a picnic lunch in the woods before my second castle tour.

Neuschwanstein is one of Germany's most famous castles....mostly because Walt Disney used it as a model for the castle he designed for Cinderella. Also because it's beautiful. :) Ludwig built the castle as an homage to Wagner whom he greatly admired, and each room is decorated based on the theme from a Wagner opera. The castle isn't finished because Ludwig was declared mad, deposed, and two days later, found washed up in a lake (probably murdered) before it could be finished. He only lived there for about half a year in the finished portion. The finished bit of interior is fabulous. Complete with murals throughout and even a man-made grotto in the king's quarters. The singers' hall is said to be one of the best performance spaces in Germany because of the incredible acoustics. It was built for performances of Wagner's operas, but Ludwig never had the chance to host one. There was also a huge mosaic masterpiece on the floor of one of the rooms, and the carving in the king's bedroom took fourteen guys four years to complete. Awesome. The canopy of his bed was all neo-gothic flying buttresses and church spires. My only disappointment was how quickly they pushed us through. You can only take guided tours, and those only last 30 minutes. You can't take pictures inside here either, so you have to absorb the beauty as you run by. I must also take a moment and mention the swans. Ludwig loved them, so they were everywhere. Chandeliers, flower vases, door handles, wild ones outside in the lakes, and several murals depicting Wagner's operas about the Knight of the Swan. Neuschwanstein even means "New Swan Stone." The last thing you get to see is the kitchen. Modern by the standards, this castle had a kitchen that I would have enjoyed cooking in. It was huge!

I finished my evening up with a dinner of deer goulash with cranberries and spaetzle, which are homemade noodles, and the required german dark beer. After all that hiking, I needed a heavy German meal. :) Tomorrow, I'm headed home.
Here are some pics of the area:
Hohenschwangau

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Hopping through Heidelberg

With the impending move back to the states, it occurred to me that I have a lot of Germany to see in a very short time, especially since I spent most of the winter hibernating rather than exploring. :) Now that the snow has cleared and the weather is warming, I've found my traveling spirits again.

My first adventure was a mix of business and pleasure. My principal allowed me to take a couple days off to attend a conference about autism in Heidelberg. The conference was incredibly informative, and I actually remained interested for two full days of information dumping. After the first day, I went out to explore the town a bit. Unfortunately, the tours of the castle and the museum entrances end at 4pm there, so I was unable to go in, but I have some lovely pics of my self-guided walking tour! Heidelberg sits right on the Neckar River, and has a gorgeous bridge that spans it and cute buildings tucked all up the hill on the other side. The main church was a crazy battleship of an odd shaped structure. I just love the lopsidedness of old buildings. I'm also told that Heidelberg is fun because it is a university town. Yep, what they don't tell you is that it is one of the oldest universities in Europe....established in 1386! You can see the young spirit in some of the older structures. One of the cool old university buildings is now a series of coffee shops on a courtyard, and the bridge is guarded by a um, well endowed monkey. Sorry, I didn't photograph his hindquarters. I had a nice German dinner of lamb goulash to cap off my sight-seeing. Today, when the conference ended, I drove straight down to Hohenschwangau to see the mad king Ludwig's castles. I'm sitting looking out my hotel window at the castle that inspired Disney's Cinderella castle. I can't wait to start exploring tomorrow! :)
Here's Heidelberg:
Heidelberg

Monday, February 08, 2010

FCK!

No, you dirty-minded offended people, I am not using a cuss word. Nor am I speaking of a brand. Today, I had a true European experience. I attended an FCK football game! Now, I realize the average American is thinking of the oblong ball and the men in helmets, but European football is of course soccer, and the local team is FC Kaiserslautern, or FCK ( pronounced eff-say-kah).

We originally bought tickets to a Thanksgiving game that the LA Galaxy were supposed to come play against FCK, but the Galaxy bailed, the game was cancelled, and we were left with really expensive tickets that turned into game credit. So we decided to do it right, got second row seats right at the mid-field line, and official fan scarves to go with. It was awesome! I could see the players sweat! And you could actually tell when they were faking the foul! It was hilarious to see all the showmanship for what we clearly saw was nothing...and to even see the players peak at the ref to see if he's buying it. :) The game was really exciting too! This year, FCK has been vying for first place in their league, which means they would graduate back to the national league at the end of the season, and today they won! 3-0.

As much fun as the game was to watch, the rowdy fan section was just as entertaining. I'm guessing this section is the equivalent of Wrigley field's bleacher bums. They stood and clapped and cheered and jumped all the way through the game. They seemed to magically know when to wave scarves, flags, or napkins simultaneously. There must have been a choreographer somewhere leading them. :) I took some grainy video of them and a few pics, but I think my favorite is the "Super, super FCK!" song at the end.

I think I was most surprised by the sportsmanship. You always hear about soccer hooligans, but these players were really polite! I could tell when a collision was accidental because they would help opposing players up. And at the beginning of every game, the players take the field holding hands with members of a pee wee team. They all walk out to the middle, wave, and then the kids run off. It takes no time, and I'm sure it makes those kids feel like a million bucks. The other really cool tradition is that win or lose, the players will walk around the edge of the stadium and thank the fans. A few waves, signatures, and handshakes. The trip took them about 10 minutes, but what an awesome public relations move!

I had a super time. Wunderbar!

FCK game

Sunday, January 31, 2010

snow treks

It has been a long, cold winter here in Germany, and we have a couple months of it left. Fortunately we get reprieves from time to time, like today, that make me love winter again. The problem with winter is how dark it is. The days are short and the clouds are thick. I am overjoyed at what they call sunbreaks; moments of sunshine between the clouds. It makes me smile to see it peek out. Today my face might crack with grinning because it is truly sunny. Not just peeks, not patches of blue sky, but whole swaths of it. Just a few clouds blowing past. It was so gorgeous that I was actually enticed outside!

They called for twenty inches of accumulation this weekend, but thankfully, we only ended up with about five inches and sunshine, so I bundled up and headed out. There are several Nordic walking paths that connect to my village, and I even found a park and a restaurant up behind it! The best part is that each little village is nestled in farmland, so it only takes five minutes walking to be in smooth, open, beautiful fields and hills of snow. I made a snow angel, threw some snowballs, and watched the neighborhood kids sled down some favorite hills. I was bundled well enough to even crash in the snow for awhile and just enjoy the sunshine. You'll notice I couldn't resist taking a picture of my own new sparkly against the sparkly snow. (Yes, I know it's on the wrong finger. I'll get it sized when I come home. :)

A gem of a day today. And the sun is still shining!

Otterbach

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Rome if you want to!

I realize I have the wrong "Rome" in my reference, but that didn't stop the B-52's from invading my head when we traveled there. Besides, it seems appropriate given the amount of roaming Dan and I have done around European cities this year. :)

After Christmas, Dan and I took a four day trip to Rome. We arrived pretty early, so we decided to take the metro into the city and just walk around a bit. Walking around was one of the most enjoyable things we did because we kept stumbling onto really cool stuff! We started our exploration at the Triton Fountain by Bernini that sits just outside a metro stop. From here it was a short walk to Trevi Fountain. Now, I knew that Trevi was a huge tourist attraction and supposed to be impressive, but when I think of fountains, I think on a smaller scale. I was not prepared for the gorgeously carved scene that covered an entire side of a building with multiple cascades over rocks into a huge pool. It made my jaw drop. The mob that was photographing the fountain was also so impressive that I took a pic of them too. :)

From Trevi, we intended to walk to the Pantheon, but on our slightly circuitous route, we ran into the MASSIVE monument to Vittorio Emanuele II. It was not on either of our lists of sights to see, but it was so large and interesting that we detoured to go see it. I wandered up to a little park area across from it to take some pictures, and here we noticed some ruins and a big column. Dan checked the map and realized we had found Trajan's forum and column! Those were on our list! whoops. Perfect. Our now fortuitous route to the Pantheon also took us past Minerva Square where Dan took some posterior pictures of a super cute elephant sculpture by Bernini. We sort of missed the Michelangelo sculpture located inside the church on this square, but we must be forgiven our ignorance. There's just too much cool stuff in Rome to see!

Just past the Elephantino, we finally found the Pantheon. The pillars outside and the weathered facade are impressively ancient looking, which makes the rather immaculate interior a bit jarring. Don't get me wrong, it was beautiful, with tiled floors and statues recessed on the walls, and the dome was impressive. I was also surprised to see that it is currently in use as a church. I shouldn't have been. Even though I associate ancient Roman gods with the Pantheon, it has actually been a Christian establishment since the seventh century. :) From the Pantheon we strolled to the Spanish steps, which other than being pretty and in some movies, were not actually that noteworthy. At this point we were exhausted from our wanderings and our early start, so we headed back to the hotel. We ate all of our dinners in the Italian restaurants around the hotel, and they were all quite tasty! I was pretty sure we were going to turn into a carbohydrate by the end though...or possibly salami.

Day two was rainy, so we hit the Capitoline museum, which like many of the museums in Rome, is housed in a former palace. Each room had a name and featured some bit of prominent artwork (and of course the floors and ceilings were works of art unto themselves), but my favorite room was the duck room. It had a pair of ducks flanking a metal bust carved by Michelangelo. I was also quite taken with the statues here. I took several pictures of some beautiful and some sassy ladies, and I really enjoyed emperor bow head. An emporerer with his hair sculpted on top of his head in the form of a bow! Hilarious! Bow head was even funnier than the equestrian sculpture we found in the Borghesi parks of a king wearing a duck on his head. King Duck head! Sometimes I think I'm too immature for fine art, but the sculptures of the ladies were amazing. These were truly the first ancient portrayals I had seen that had attitude! One arched eyebrow, a satirical smile, I loved her!

After the Capitoline, it was a short walk to the Colosseum. The guidebooks indicate that you can skip the interior of the Colosseum and the Roman Forum, but I wouldn't. Besides, you get access to the Palatine Hill with the same ticket, and that is definitely worth going into. I must say that I wish there was some sort of floor still in the center of the Colosseum. It is really cool to see all of the innards from above and to read about how things were lifted to the surface back in the day, but it made it difficult to get a good scope of the place without a center. It was also interesting to note that while the walls were mostly intact, all of the seating was missing. While much was left to the imagination, it was, well, colossal! End of day two!

Day three took us to the Vatican. We started with just a walk around St Peter's square, which was a sight in itself. It is massive, and the columned, covered walks that stretch around the sides are impressive. From the square, we headed through security (the day after the Pope was tripped) and into St. Peter's Basilica. This was probably my favorite stop on our trip, and maybe Dan's too. It was just...Oh, I'm tired of fancy words for large and beautiful. This post is too full of them. I spent the whole time smiling with my mouth open and sighing with pleasure. How's that? Ceilings, floors, walls, statues, paintings. All things to behold in amazement. There is a touch of humor near the entrance though where you see an enormous manger scene complete with ducks, a moving water wheel, and an LED starred sky. While really neat, it was definitely in juxtaposition to the rest of the interior decor. :)
The only sad thing here was that we breezed too quickly past the Pieta.

We had to exit St. Peter's square to get to the Vatican Museum entrance, and the line wrapped half way around the wall surrounding Vatican city. Despite the length, it only took about an hour to get in, and entering the museum is necessary if you want to see the Sistine chapel, which is the main attraction. I'm sad to say that of all the things we saw in Rome, the Sistine was the most disappointing. Beautiful paintings are usually in beautiful settings, but I guess when they are on the ceiling, you are stuck with the given surroundings. It is too bad that so many master works, so many iconic scenes, are relegated to the ceiling of a cattle car. I'm not kidding. The Sistine Chapel is small and rectangular and completely empty so that they can cram more tourists in. Guards are there to herd you toward the interior (and to guard against picture taking) so that more folks can squeeze in behind you. And sadly, the room is dim in order to preserve the paintings. sigh. I was so sad. I wanted goosebumps and some proximity to God, but I experienced neither.

The museum itself had an overwhelming amount of sculpture and some nice paintings...quite the treasure trove. We finished our tour in a garden with an enormous head and a giant pinecone. :) Sitting in the sun, we realized that it would be great weather to finish exploring the ruins, so we made a mad dash across town to the Palatine Hill and the Roman Forum to make the last entry. You can see most of the ruins of the Roman Forum from the road, but Palatine hill was fantastic. As you walk back you see the faces of some old churches, but the coolest part is going up on the hill where there are some well preserved ruins and fantastic views of the city. There's even a little garden up there. And the best part was that it was warm enough to take off our coats! :) End day 3.

Our final day in Rome started out at the Castle San Angelo which was huge and old and very medieval feeling. Again the best thing here was going to the top for the views of the Vatican and the city. We strolled along the river a bit, and then accidentally walked back up to the Spanish steps. Fortunately, you can walk through the metro here and reach the Villa Borghese and its surrounding gardens. The Villa is another museum, which is supposed to have some impressive works. Strangely the banner out front when we visited announced, "Caravaggio Bacon" I'm familiar with Caravaggio, but the bacon part eluded me. I'm hoping it's somebody's name. Made me giggle though. We were sort of museumed out, so we didn't go in, but chose to roam the 148 acres of park that it sits in. We found many pretty statues and fountains, and we even found King Duck head here. This was a short day for us because it was New Years Eve and we wanted to rest up before the festivities.

To celebrate the New Year, we decided against all the crazy expensive set menus on offer, and we raided the grocery store instead. We picked out some fresh bread, deli salami, and a variety of stinky cheese, and we complimented this with some bubbly and some boxed wine. Now, before you scoff at this, consider, we were going to spend NYE on a huge square outside with a bunch of revelers and needed drinks we could tote in our pockets.....what better than juice boxes of wine?! I'm not kidding. They looked like kiddie lunch box fare, but they were truly wine, and actually better than some vinos I've had from a bottle. :) Thus armed, we ventured out into the party atmosphere, which was a little too electric due to a huge thunderstorm. We had an umbrella but were soaked in minutes anyway. The other revelers were all huddled with us under awnings and in store windows. We stuck it out for a while, watching wet young people set off fireworks and dodge puddles, and watching God's fireworks display which completely drowned out the noise of the mortal version.

Eventually we decided that sopping wet pants are No fun for New Years, so Dan and I headed home, boxed wine in pockets, to count down the Italian New Year in our jammies....warm, dry, and giggly from our adventure. I think the most fun was riding the subways. They were packed and the mobs would try to enter and exit the trains at the same time causing quite a mosh pit. This could have been volatile if everyone hadn't been cheering and laughing the whole time. Good, old-fashioned, full-contact fun to celebrate the New Year.

Rome, Italy

Sunday, January 03, 2010

A church, a museum, a palace.

Not necessarily in that order. Dan and I started our Christmas vacation together with a quick exploration on Germany's train system. We spent three days visiting Munich and Salzburg before returning to Kaiserslautern for our Christmas festivities. We had so little time, and there is so much to see, so we decided that minimally we should see a church, a museum, and a palace in each city. Honestly, that was satisfying for Salzburg, but Munich was too big for that.

We arrived in Munich a little later than we anticipated because our first train was cancelled. I grumbled a bit about missing Korea, but it only really set us back an hour. We started with a walk through the museum district to the Pinakothek Der Moderne where we saw works from Dali, Picasso, Warhol, Kandinsky, as well as some really crazy naked video exhibit by a contemporary artist. :) After the museum, we headed downtown to the Christmas market for some mulled wine and dinner. We had our first glimpse of the Neues Rathaus, or the New Town Hall. This baffled Dan because the building was totally gothic, and definitely way old. I guess it is still younger than the old Town Hall, and it was a beautifully dominating presence on the square.

The next morning we got up early to visit a couple churches before the Munich Residenz (or palace) was open. First we went to the Frauenkirche with its twin onion domes and status as largest church, and then we went to St. Peter's with it's gorgeously restored ceiling frescoes and title of oldest church. The Residenz was kept by the Wittelsbach dynasty who ruled the area for almost seven hundred years. With so much time to build and decorate, the palace is stunning. The ceilings and walls are covered with paintings, gold leaf, and gorgeous moulding, and the crown jewels are quite um large. Dan said no to all of them. :) It is interesting to see all of the huge set gems alongside the paste stones that replaced jewels that had to be sold.

After our run through Munich, I was left wanting to see some of the other museums and palaces there, but Salzburg awaited. Salzburg is not quite as intense as Munich. The most impressive thing about Salzburg is the scenery, and we spent most of our time walking around here. After settling into our hotel, we started out on foot to stroll through the Mirabell palace gardens, sight of several scenes from the sound of music. It was not quite as picturesque in the dead of winter, but it was still a fun place for a walk. We exited the garden near the Mozart house/museum. It is a restoration of the home where Mozart grew up, and it has instruments, family portraits, letters, hand written musical compositions, and the audio tour of this is accompanied by works from Mozart, his father, and even his sister! The next morning we went to explore the downtown a bit before heading up to the Hohensalzburg castle. The downtown is gorgeous! There are beautiful buildings everywhere, cute market streets, and we even walked through St. Peter's cemetary, situated right in the middle of the city. The walk would have been even more pleasant if we hadn't been freezing our tushes off. We rode in a cable car up the castle that sets on a hill overlooking the city. The place was originally designed as a fortress to deter enemies from attacking, so the inside is rather sparse, but you can tell from some of the ceiling paintings and artifacts that parts of it were more beautiful than utilitarian. The views from up here of the city were incredible, and we accordingly took obscene quantities of pictures. In many of these pics you can also see the Alps. :)

Munich.Salzburg


We came down from the castle to visit the Salzburg Cathedral, which is in the baroque style. It was one of the lighter, more airy churches we visited. Not as imposing, but to my eye, more beautiful. After the church, Dan took us to a little tavern for a large Austrian/German lunch. I had a schnitzel stuffed with bacon and mushrooms that was out of this world. With a belly full of lunch we got back on the train for Kaiserslautern and Christmas Eve in my own little house with presents under the tree. Our trip was a wonderful prelude to Christmas.