Perogies and puzzled looks

Entries tagged as ‘germany’

Dresden worthy of a return…

January 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The following story appeared in the Jan. 11 edition of the Vernon Morning Star:

by Tyler Olsen

When one thinks of a skyline today, the mind inevitably turns to cities like New York, Chicago, Calgary and Toronto; places where giant steel and glass boxes rise out of the land to preside over their surrounding domain. But pass over the Elbe river on a clear October afternoon with the sun descending upon Dresden’s rival church towers and the Semper Opera dominating the foreground and you’ll start to question a lot of things.

Having seen Dresden (twice) during a European backpacking trip three years ago, the city had solidified its place in my heart before my girlfriend and I looked at a map while in Prague and decided to hop a train three hours north to Dresden.

“You have to see Dresden!” I proclaimed, repeating a phrase I had used many times since first stopping in the city once known as Florence-on-the-Elbe. And so we did, although, like many people on the well worn tourist trail between Berlin and Prague (between which Dresden sits about half-way) we characteristically underestimated the amount of time needed to truly enjoy the city.

With just two nights booked at a hostel in Dresden’s hip Neustadt district on the west bank of the Elbe, we arrived at Dresden’s train station with the sun-dipping behind us, making our way with much too much luggage in tow, towards our hostel. We didn’t have far to walk but our journey took us past enough youth about which one says “They listen to way too much Bob Dylan/Marilyn Manson/Nirvana/Bob Marley/Sex Pistols” that it quickly became clear that Dresden has blossomed into something of a larger version of Nelson, except here people say Gutentag and read Der Spiegel.

The next morning we rose early, bought a pair of tram tickets, lost my credit card and headed east across the Elbe River. For those without much knowledge of Dresden – or those under the impression the city was destroyed sixty years ago – the view from the river must be a shock. From the Semper Opera in the north down to the sandstone dome of the Frauenkirche in the south, Dresden’s skyline is a monumental achievement of baroque and neoclassical architecture and post-war and post-communist determination.

In one of the most controversial allied actions of the Second World War, British and American bombers laid Dresden’s core to waste, destroying nearly every building and killing tens of thousands. Among those in the city at the time of the bombing was Kurt Vonnegut, an American POW and future author who would go on to write about the attack in his masterpiece Slaughterhouse-Five. While historians debate whether the action was necessary or not, one thing is clear: the city has been masterfully reconstructed.

After hopping off our tram, we ducked into a tourist shop, bought a handy guide and started our mad rush to see everything in a day. Standing in the shadow of the Catholic Hofkirche, which was once the family church of the King of Saxony, we looked across theatre square, past the equestrian statue of King Johann of Saxony, towards the Semper Opera house, a Dresden jewel and one of the most famous opera houses in the world. Evaluating our options and the huge line leading into the Semper, we snapped a few photos, made the requisite reverent noises and headed into Dresden’s old town.

On our right we passed the Furstenzug Mosaic, a hundred-metre long mosaic of 35 Saxon kings and their rapper-sized entourage. The mosaic opens up to a square, at the centre of which sits the very new looking Frauenkirche, a stunning product of Protestant one-upmanship (it was built to top the older Hofkiche) – featuring a one-of-a-kind sandstone dome. The church was destroyed in the 1945 bombing and only recently completed. Dark black bricks, recovered from the original church, now contrast dramatically with the sheen of the new sandstone building materials. That’s not a bad thing, however, and the history behind the church and its reconstruction arguably makes the Frauenkirche even more interesting.

From the Frauenkirche we looped back towards Dresden Castle, which doesn’t look like much from the outside but which, inside, boasts a formidable array of museums, including the Grunes Gewolbe (in English, the Green Vault). Dresden’s museums may be gorgeous and boast an array of treasures, but they have a couple other things going for them. First, the price. At less than $20, one ticket covers 11 separate museums making it a joyous challenge to cram as much sightseeing as possible into one day. Which is where we get to the other handy circumstance; most of Dresden’s museums are crammed within two main buildings, the Zwinger and the Castle, which are, conveniently, a five minute walk from each other.

So with ticket in hand, we commenced dashing from museum to museum, quickly coming to the realization that one day is about three too few to appreciate everything Dresden has to offer. We started at the Green Vault, the most stunning of the museums, which contains a plethora of ivory, crystal, wooden, golden and silver treasures, all crafted in minute detail and mind-numbing in their extravagance. Dresden has to thank a 19th century King Albert for most of the treasures. We just called him “The Shopaholic.”

From the Green Vault we proceeded to the castle tower, which dramatically overlooks the theatre square and the statues that line the top of the Hofkirche. The Semper Opera commands the square below, where a few dozen tourists milled about, posing for photos. The tower also housed the coin collection itself, the importance of which, while being more than 500 years old, was lost on my loonie- and toonie- obsessed coin consciousness.

From the castle it is a couple minutes’ walk to the magnificent neo-classical Zwinger. We ducked into the porcelain collection, being housed in the Zwinger wing (Zwing?) closest to the castle. And while I couldn’t tell a Tschirnhaus from a Gottner, it quickly became obvious that the collection houses one of the more impressive porcelain collections in the world. That’s not surprising, given Dresden gave its name to an entire movement of porcelain design. Unfortunately given our time constraints and complete lack of knowledge, there was no way we could give it the attention it deserves, with this realization, we made sure to look at, if not appreciate, every piece and left the collection to more knowledgeable visitors.

It’s worth noting that somewhere we had lost that handy guide we bought at the start of the day.

Thankfully, we entered one museum that requires no special knowledge, background or learning to fully appreciate its collection: the Rustkammer, or armoury. With a collection of medieval weapons, armour and other instruments of self-plumage and enemy-destruction lavish and extravagant enough to send a nine-year-old into convulsive shocks, the museum is one of the most distinctive in Zwinger. From a fully-assembled mock jousting event (with stand-in, fully-armoured riders and horses) to 10-foot pikes and early guns, the museum offers an insight into how Europeans (or at least European nobles) went to war hundreds of years ago.

By the time we were done with the armoury and had moved on to the Old Master’s Picture Gallery, which boasts enough information to please English visitors, enough paintings to keep visitors dry on a rainy day and enough big names (Rubens, Raphael, Canaletto) to please those who may have recently visited Berlin or Paris our feet were numb.

After paying our respects to the masters, we mustered our remaining energy and dragged ourselves into the Zwinger’s massive and breathtaking courtyard, a work of concrete art worthy of the treasures housed inside the building’s museums.

Our day was hardly finished – we would later experience, but fail to understand, the Museum Fur Volkerkunde and would cap the day with a biere in a chic Neustadt lounge – but sitting on the edge of a fountain, the mist cooling my sheeks, the sun dancing a rainbow across a fountain and the Zwinger looking like it had never been destroyed, I was re-evaluating my advice.

“You have to see Dresden,” I will say when I return, “but please, please, please, give yourself more than a day.”

Categories: Places · Travel
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Dresden done (photos)

October 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Over three seperate visits, I’ve spent a meager four or five nights in Dresden and, it’s very possible, not met a single native Dresdener (if that’s what they’re called). Still, the city is one of my favourites, not just in Germany or Europe, but anywhere.

It no doubt starts with the fact that one of my favourite authors, Kurt Vonnegut, set his most famous novel, Slaughterhouse-Five in the city, revolving around the 1945 firebombing that killed thousands and leveled most of the structures in what was considered one of Europe’s jewels.

But my fondness for the city, three visits in, now goes beyond a curiousity for a place about which I’ve read. It starts with the skyline, dominated by the huge coppola of the Frauenkirche. It, and many of the other majestic buildings in town, have been rebuilt from scratch but maintain the grandeur of their predecessors. This is done not only in meticulously recreating the destroyed buildings but by, when possible, using remains from the old structures, even if it is just a blackened brick here or there.

(Above: The Frauenkirche)

Then there are Dresden’s museums which are interesting, varied, centrally located and accessible by purchasing a single, reasonably-priced ticket. There is a museum stuffed with renaissance and later era paintings (including a masterpiece by Raphael), a museum of personal combat artifacts, from chain mail to crossbows to engraved swords and jousting horse-and-riders. Another museum boasts more porcelain than you ever want to see while the Green Vault includes intricately carved treasures of any and every sort. A quick side note: while August the Strong, a noted King of Saxony is responsible for many of the buildings and other treasures in Dresden, a better name would seem to be August the Shopaholic. Most of the pieces in the vault seem to have been bought by August who had a week spot for everything gold, bejewelled, carved, painted…well, you get the idea.

The Green Vault is located in the Dresden Castle, but many of the others are found in the Zwinger, itself a monumental feet of art with a central courtyard the size of a couple football-fields and dominated by several fountains. You could spend a couple hours just hanging out in its interior, surveying the hundreds of statues, relaxing by the fountains or seeking refuge from the shade.

And once you’re done with all the old stuff? Dresden boasts streets lined with bars, cafes and hippy joints and enough posters for cultural events to make you want to learn a couple words of German. While we only had the chance to sample a drink at a too-trendy-for me bar, all the culture and downright cool things to do add up to a place I could see myself living, or at least re-visiting for a fourth time.

The Semperoper, a large opera house has been rebuilt a few times in the past couple hundred years.

Dresden has been called Florence on the Elbe.

Categories: Places · Travel · photos
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Dom and Domer

September 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The following was written in the Cologne-Bonn airport prior to boarding a Germanwings flight to Dubrovnik. I think I briefly touched on that earlier….

Another day, another horde of schoolchildren; elementary, high school kids, you name them, they were there, flocking around Cologne’s Dom. Which, to be clear, isn’t really a dome, it’s actually a massive cathedral built god knows when (I don’t have easy access to internet and didn’t want to shell out a Euro for a pamphlet.

Still even with the kids, even with street theatre “artists” acting like statues, and even with a homeless man sitting against the coal-black exterior petting the saddest golden retriever you’ve ever seen, the cathedral was still impressive. Without a wide-angle lens I couldn’t fit it into one, or even three photos. I think I needed four. Hence the lack of an image below (probably). One thing against it: the Cologne Dom seems to be a blatant rip-off of Prague’s massive cathedral. In today’s world there would be a copyright lawsuit before the first hundred years of construction were finished.

In other Cologne-related news. We spent most of the day fretting about how we were going to get our combined 60 kilos of luggage onto the plane without having to pay surcharges.  Right now, I’writing this having just checked in said bags in about 15 minutes. They didn’t even weigh our check-in baggage. Of course this seems like peanuts to someone at home so just take my word, it’s a huge relief right now.

And after a day and a half of train travel, I’m reminded how superior rails are to other modes of transit. Let’s make a quick list why…
1. Leg room, namely an excess of it unless the train is packed, which it never is. And not only can you stretch your legs out, if you want you can even stand up and take a walk. True, sometimes you can do so on a bus as well, but you’re liable to hit your head on an overhead compartment if there happens to be enough room.

2. They’re smooth – I’m talking Sunny Delight smooth. No turbulence, no potholes. No ups and downs, no motion sickness, nothing. Just sit back, grab a book and take it easy.

3. Trains are worry free. You’re not in control of the ship and you generally don’t see directly where you’re going. You wait for it to stop and if you need to get off, you get off.

4. They’re safe. Really safe. You don’t have to worry that the driver’s going to have a lapse in concentration, you don’t have to worry that your flight is going to make headlines and forget weather concerns. As a simple test, name three train crashes. Exactly.

………

Writing from Split:

We also happened to visit Cologne’s Chocolate Museum which, despite early indications was actually interesting, tasty and not one big advertisement for Lindt, the museum’s main sponsor. Some highlights included eating chocolate, learning about chocolate and watching chocolate get made. Also some interesting chocolate related artifacts along with a mini-jungle that I guess replicates the climatic conditions needed to make chocolate.

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A little Rhine and cheese

September 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The posts are going to come very frequently these next couple days. For the next four nights we will be staying at a hostel in Split (more on that to come) with free Wi-Fi.

I’ll start with some catch-up posts, then some pictures. So here goes. This was written way back earlier this week when we were in a nice hotel in St. Goar:

I can’t imagine I looked like a native Frankfurter. Beyond the piles of bags stacked at my feet (including one with a Canadian flag stuck to it), I was in an airport suffering from the kind of jetlag you get when your normal bedtime back home is 8:00 a.m. at your place of arrival. And yet, within the space of 15 minutes, while waiting for a train to whisk Magda and me away from Frankfurt airport, two different men approached me and asked me directions or something. I have no idea. They were speaking German, I most definitely was not. I’m not sure what this proves beyond the fact that Germans are significantly more predisposed to asking where they need to go than your average North American man or, as the past days have shown, me (although, maybe that is just a stereotype; we did offer train advice to some kind Texans with whom we were the only ones waiting for a train in a small town called Oberwesel in the Rhine Gorge).

Other notes:

Again, I’m reminded about the lax attitude towards alcohol here. McDonalds sells beer and in your local grocery store, or even Shopper’s Drug Mart-like pharmacy, you can buy a 500ml Becks for the equivalent of $1.50.

The weather was mild, and while it appeared to have rained for the first few hours of our arrival – when we were still confined to the airport and train station, by the time we got moving towards the Rhine, the temperature rose to the low-20s and the threat of rain lifted.

After the aforementioned plane ride – 12 hours, including an hour layover in Calgary – and the accompanying train ride, we badly needed a place to stay. St. Goar was the destination, as the town seemed promising and boasted a hostel. Upon arrival, however, it was revealed that every single school kid from Germany was here, and they were alls staying at the hostel where we had hoped to sleep. In my defense, the German hostels (or Jugundherberge) are nearly impossible to book. Their websites are a maze and reservations seem impossible, at least to me.

Finally, after trying another couple pensions (budget hotels), we landed a mid-range room in the Hotel Hauser, just off the main street here. The room overlooked the river and offered a stunning view of valley cliffs, St. Gaurhausen across the Rhine and, on the hillside above the town, the Burg Katz, or Cats Castle. Down the river, apparently, lies the Mouse Castle.

View from our Hotel rooom.

Categories: Places · Thoughts · Travel · Uncategorized
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The plan (now with maps!!!)

September 19, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Tuesday morning we’re flying from Vancouver to Frankfurt, with a brief stopover in Calgary. We arrive in Frankfurt Wednesday morning, twelve hours after departing Vancouver.

(Frankfurt is at the very bottom of the map below)


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From Frankfurt we plan to take a train through the Rhine Gorge (also known as the upper-middle Rhine Valley). The valley is between Bingen am Rhein and Koblenz.


View Larger Map

We’ll stop in a hostel and, from there, make our way to Cologne (Koln on the map below), from where we will fly to Dubrovnik Thursday evening.

In  the map below Koln is in the top left corner and Dubrovnik isn’t labelled, but it’s located in the very southeast portion of the map just to the left of the ‘C’ in Crna Gora.


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Here’s some info on Dubrovnik. Other peoples’ photos.

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