Tag: #FriendlyFriday

Be Cheap!

Travelling by train has just become a lot cheaper in Germany (at least, for the next three months). Our government is financing a monthly ticket for 9 Euro with which you can travel to every possible location within Germany.

There is one major restriction, e.g. you can only use it for regional trains, it is not valid in intercity and intercity express trains, i.e. a train ride from Garmisch-Partenkirchen in the South to Kiel in the North might take a while – but maybe in travelling it is more about the journey, not the arrival.

For me the attraction is combining trains with cycling. It definitely increases my radius and I’m looking forward to my summer break.

Taking a bike is better in some trains than in others. It can get very crowded. In fact, Deutsche Bahn jas already said that they will limit the bikes on a train if necessary

In fact, it is feared that trains will overload specifically on the popular tourist routes with so many Germans and visitors rushing to buy the cheap tickets.

For Amanda’s Friendly Friday Challenge: Trains, Tales and Tall Stories.

So Now I Crave Food

The contents of this “treasure chest” are not very unusual you will think – at least if you are American. But these are snacks bought at the US army commissary in Germany and our international running group is always happy when the Americans take over the snacks. Until a few years ago, crisps in Germany were plain or paprika – that’s it. And small packages were also not to come by. Cheetos are unheard of (although I’ve always preferred the South African version called Niknaks, tastier and less orangey).

Coming to think of it – snacks and foods, particularly fast foods have undergone a lot of changes in the last few decades.

Pizza only really became known in Germany in the seventies of the last century when migrant workers from Italy came to live here. I have a Greek friend who always tells of the story of bringing sacks of bell peppers back from holidays in his hometown in the sixties because you could not buy them in stores here. DĂśner was brought by the Turkish migrant (and in reality immigrant) workers, the first appearing in the seventies. Today they are a staple and even little towns have more than one Turkish DĂśnerbude. Falafel took a bit longer but are not considered unusual anymore.

So what are unusual German German snacks? How about Handkäse mit Musik (a sour milk cheese with vinegar, onions, and cummin) or in the version written on the blackboard below – crumbed Handkäse with green sauce and bread. A bretzel (not the small pretzels in packages, although they exist, but a large, freshly baked one) – it can come buttered or plain but served with a raddish cut in curls.

Friendly Friday: Unusual Snacks

Plane Spotting

When we drive up to Frankfurt we are on the autobahn A5 which passes directly under the flight corridor of one of the runways of Frankfurt Airport. Since it is a very busy airport we usually see at least one plane either taking off or landing or sometimes being directly under so we have no idea whether we are coming or going let alone whether it is coming or going. If the weather is favourable I have my camera ready and hope for a clean windscreen.

This is not taken from a car but from a small hill about 5 km away from the airport and a bit more than 15 km from the Frankfurt skyline.

Friendly Friday: Airport Experience

Looking back and Looking ahead

A curious look – but what’s the connection to my past and my future?

This valley in the Odenwald has been a favourite spot for family outings for almost 150 years. The deer come to the fences to be fed, then and now.

The young deer at the top might very well be the grandgrandgrandgrand… son of the deer my granddad was feeding in the photo on the left, taken in around 1962. The photo on the right is of our son and grandson standing in more or less the same location earlier this year. I haven’t been to that place in the intervening 60 years.

Friendly Friday: Look back to the future

Carline Thistle

The alpine garden at Schynige Platte, a smallish mountain ridge in the Bernese Alps, is at 2000m altitude and most alpine wildflowers can be seen here in their natural habitat. An amazing place.

This is a carline or silver thistle.

Friendly Friday: Wildflowers

and

one last look at silver & white for Life in Colour.