September 11, 2009: Walking to Hasbergen

After finally managing to fall asleep last night at two in the morning I miraculously slept for eleven hours not waking up until one in the afternoon!  It was awesome.  I am feeling so much better now.  Getting that sleep gave my body the strength that it needed to beat back this flu and put me back on my feet.  I am still nowhere near functioning at one hundred percent but I am much improved and much happier.Me at the Bakery

I set about charging up my dead mobile phone, showering and continuing to work on picture uploads.  I did not want to leave the hotel without my mobile being ready.  After yesterday I definitely do not want to take any chances like that.  That also gave me a little time to just relax in the hotel room without stressing myself out by going outside and facing a foreign country with very little English interface here in a completely non-touristy area.

It was around three thirty when I finally set out for my afternoon hike.  I have nothing planned for today and my goal is to see some more of authenticate Germany without the slightest hit of being a tourist so I simply headed southwest from Osnabruck on one of the main roads. This is where adventure starts.

Here is a map of the route that I walked not including any little side excursions that I might have taken.Cherry Pastry at a Small Town Bakery

My walk was very pleasant.  The Germans really understand the importance of pedestrian infrastructure and have bicycle lanes and sidewalks absolutely everywhere.  It is not like the US where you are simply expected to walk on the road or to have a car, period.  This place actually plans around people using purely green and healthy modes of transportation.  It is much appreciated by those of us who like to walk to get places.  Safe and easy it is around here.

I left Osnabruck to the southwest and walked through Hellern, which is really just a suburn of Osnabruck where you don’t even notice the transition from one to the other.  From Hellern I went out into the countryside and got to experience farms and fields.  It was very nice.  Heavy cloud cover but no rain.  Very good walking weather.  I took along my rain jacket but did not need it.  I was just a little too warm but there was a nice breeze out of the north.

From Hellern it was a good hike out to the village of Hasbergen.  This is what I wanted – to actually get away from Osnabruck and experience a little bit of life in a small German village.  Hasbergen is definitely small but a real, lively little village.  Probably similar to Avon, Warsaw or Frankfort back home in New York.  It has a grocery store (an Aldi) and a little downtown area with some local shops and professional practices.  It also has its own train station which makes it a very attractive little location in which to be.  I would love to live in a small village with a train station.  What an awesome combination.

By the time that I reached Halbergen, which was almost five kilometers from the outskirts of Osnabruck where I started my walk, it had occurred to me that I had skipped both breakfast and lunch today and was getting rather peckish.  I discovered a little bakery there, part of a chain called Wellmann’s that appears to be popular around here.  I did some research and it appears to be an Osnabruck chain only available in the city and the neighbouring villages.  So I somehow managed to stumble upon a little slice of Osnabruck culture here.  Very cool.

I was surprised to find that one of the Varusschlacht memorial art pieces was here in Halbergen.  I had not really had any hopes of finding any of there and here I walked right past one today!  What good fortune.Varusschlacht Memorial in Hasbergen

I stopped in and struggled through the language barrier and ordered a piece of cherry cut cake and a cup of coffee.  I took it out to the front of the store and enjoyed having a chance to just stop and relax in the afternoon air in a small German town.  Very nice.

I was surprised to find that, at least here, the desserts are not nearly as sweet as you would expect them to be in Germany.  I had read this recently that only in the very south of Germany and in Switzerland do they really have the excessively sweet desserts that much of the outside world associates with Germany and even there, apparently, it is not all that common.  The cut cake was very good and tasty but more fruity and bready than I would have expected.  Much healthier, I am sure.

Once the bakery closed I packed up and started my long walk back to Osnabruck.  I had been thinking about stopping someplace for dinner on the way back, maybe for some pizza, but none of the places that I saw on my walk looked very inviting and it was really hard to be able to tell if any of them were really open or not.  I decided to get back to the hotel, clean up a bit and find out from the hotel where they would recommend.

Once I was back to the hotel I was quite starving.  I had seen that there was a Subway directly next to the hotel across the highway to the north and had been contemplating how simple it would be to just eat there.  I asked at the front desk and they said that there was nothing but the Subway within walking distance – I am assuming that their definition of walking distance is not the same as mine but basically it was going to be an effort to get to anything and I did not feel like spending the money to eat in the hotel again nor was the menu sounding all that appealing.  So over to the Subway it was for me.My Hotel As Seen from the West

I was surprised to find that the entire menu was actually in English.  They did not bother to translate it into German.  I was able to order by simply saying “Ein footlong tuna sub, bitte.”  Not much of a challenge.  I had been hoping to get a veggie patty sub, which they have there, but they were out.

The subs here are a little different than in the US.  They use less tuna than we do – maybe half as much.  And a little less cheese and they don’t have the different types of cheese from which to choose – just one and they put that on automatically which is fine for me but a little surprising.  If you ask for mayo, which I do not recommend, you get plenty.  Easily double what they apply in the US and it is definitely not the same mayo, not bad, but different.  If you resist adding mayo then it is a much healthier (and less costly to produce) sub than its American counterpart.  I was quite happy with it and it did not cost me an arm and a leg although it was probably about ten dollars with the cookie and soft drink (Fanta is extremely popular here.)

So that was my food for the day.  One footlong tunafish salad sub from Subway with a single macadamia nut cookie and my slice of cut cake at Wellmann’s.  Pretty light eating for a day of walking.

After dinner I settled into the hotel to catch up on the picture postings and to get SGL updated.  It is really hard keeping up with the number of pictures that I have pouring in from these walks.

My plan for tomorrow is to walk around Osnabruck itself to see the historic sites.  I really want to see the Osnabrucker Rathaus where the treaty ending the Thirty Year War was signed.  Most of Osnabruck was flattened in World War II so much of the city is new but there is a part of the city, Heger Tor, that still stands and I want to take a walk through that area as well.  If possible I am hoping to get out to a real German gasthaus for lunch or dinner.  Hopefully the hotel will be able to make a suggestion for me.

I am going to be staying in Osnabruck for an extra day.  I have check with Die Bahn and they have early morning connections into Amsterdam Schiphol Airport so that I can just walk down to the Osnabruck Haptbahnhof (or more likely take a taxi as that is a long way to go with luggage) and catch an early morning train that will take me directly to the airport without any problem at all.  Having the train station inside of Schiphol was a genius move.  It really makes Schiphol a premium jumping off point for exploring continental Europe with a minimum of hassle.

In non-German news for the day, the folks at Facebook seriously, seriously pulled on over on the TechCrunch guys: Facebook Punks Techcrunch.

September 10, 2009: Sic Semper Tyrannis

Quintili Vare, legiones redde!Metal Memorial Plate Detail at Kalkriese

Today is, as best as anyone can judge, the bimillennial (2,000th) anniversary of the Battle of Teutoburger Wald (Teutoburg Forest) between Varus and his Roman Legions and the German barbarians united under Arminius (Hermann.)  More than twenty thousand, maybe even twenty five thousand, Roman soldiers were slaughtered on this day – most likely at the battlefield of Kalkriese where the modern day Varusschlacht Museum stands overlooking the ancient battle ground.

It is to celebrate this event that I am here, in Germany, this week.  My primary purpose for coming over and the only reason that I did so at this rather inopportune time is to spend today walking the battlefield honouring and remembering this pivotal moment in world history.

I woke up quite early this morning. Four in the morning, local European summer time here in Osnabruck, Germany. That was roughly seven hours of sleep. When I awoke I was having problems breathing from my sinuses being stuffy. This was roughly ten in the evening back home in New York.

I brought the laptop over by the bed so that I would have something to do without getting up.  Almost everyone that I know was online at the time, as you would expect being that it is just barely late evening at home.

I ended up talking to people from bed for several hours.  I wasn’t feeling tired at the time and I couldn’t breath well enough to be able to fall asleep again.  So I was awake for the day, it seems.

I finally decided to leave the room to get some breakfast at nine, local time.  I went down to the lobby and had the breakfast at the hotel.  I figured that this would give me a good impression of how a German hotel breakfast compares to an American one.Bus Stop at My Hotel

Breakfast was good.  Mostly foods that Americans would expect at a hotel breakfast with the addition of a large array of cold-cuts and no bagels.  The yoghurt was fantastic.  The coffee had evaporated milk instead of cream.  Gouda and brie which were excellent and a good selection of excellent breads.  Nothing as exotic as you generally find in an English or Irish breakfast.  Definitely closer to American standards.

After breakfast it was time to venture out and attempt to make it to the Kalkriese site and Varusschlacht museum.  I am being extremely brave and attempting the bus.  The regular, everyday city bus.

It took about twenty minutes waiting outside for the bus to arrive.  I took some pictures while I was waiting and got a great shot of the orange berries in front of the hotel.Orange Berries at My Hotel

I ended up on the #92 bus.  It was very confusing as the bus driver did not speak a single word of English and there was no signage, that I could find, explaining anything at all about how the bus worked.  It was mostly empty and I really did not know where we were going so I just rode along.

I started to get a little worried when the bus took me out into the countryside.  This was not was I was looking for.  I was trying to go to the train station in downtown.

The bus ended up taking me to a dead end street miles out into the country and kicking me off there.  End of the line I guess.  The bus changed its bus number and just sat there fora  while.  I stood around for some time staring at the bus schedule trying to make sense out of it and eventually gave up and started walking.  I had my mobile with Google Maps so I was not concerned about getting lost but just that this was going to eat up the entire morning.Corn Field on My Walk

My walk back to where I started ended up being 3.2 kilometers.  A good hike to start the day.  And all of that time and energy and all I managed to do was to get back to the hotel where I started! I took lots of pictures on the way and the Nikon GPS unit worked like a champ. Now from Flickr you can generate a map displaying the route that I walked. Pretty cool.

I did managed to then catch another bus and that bus driver at least understood when I said “train station” and she nodded.  That was all that she could speak of English as well, I think.  I am pretty sure that avoiding the buses is the way to go.  They are not at all used to shuffling tourists around and have no idea what to do with them.  And the bus information is all in German or you are just expected to know it so it is even that much more confusing.

I did make it to the train station but once here, like everything else involving the buses, I could find nothing whatsoever that would inform me as to how to get to the Kalkriese from the train station.  All of the guidebooks say to come here to get the bus going there but there was nothing anywhere with anything mentioning that site.  Several people mentioned asking a bus driver but obviously that is not an option either.  There is no information booth or other bus-related person working at the train station.  This is crazy.

I finally gave up and paid a taxi about fifty dollars to drive me up there.  That cut the travel time in half from what it is supposed to take the bus and my day was getting shorter by the minute so it did not seem like all that bad of a plan even though it was pretty expensive.Luxemburg Mask from Below

After all of the trouble and expense getting into the museum was just nine Euros or roughly fifteen dollars.  Because of the anniversary there is a special exhibit called “Konflict” that shows northern European warfare through the ages.  It was a good exhibit but almost entirely in German.  The big items had English translations but none of the individual museum items.  So I did not spend too much time there.

After going through the “Konflict” exhibit I headed out to see the battlefield itself and the archeological works.  This is what I really came to see.

From the museum area you pass through a small sliver of trees maybe fifty feet deep and then you step out into the clearing.  I believe that this area has all been cleared since the battlefield was discovered in the late 1980s and now is a very open location.  The battle itself, though, would have taken place deep within the forest, I believe or, at least, in far more wooded conditions than exist today although some homes did exist on the spot as much as a hundred years prior to the battle taking place.View of Battlefield from Museum Tower

It is truly astounding to think of the thirty to forty thousand soldiers who lay buried here and even more amazing to think about this battle’s import on the world stage.  Such a remote location.  So forgotten.  The battle was so poorly known that it was “discovered” in ancient texts by monks in the fifteenth century.  The site was only discovered in the late 1980s and it has not been completely determined if the site at Kalkriese truly is the site or not although it is most likely to be it.

The battlefield is filled with large metal plates.  I believe that these are to mark the progress of the Roman troupes as they marched through the forest.  The entire museum complex is rather artistic in a very European way with a lot of abstract or semi-abstract memorials to the battle.  At the opening of the clearing there stands a camera obscura.  You can go into and and see the entire battlefield upside down and in miniature with tourists walking around.  Rather strange.  All of the museum buildings are made from rusted metal so it is all a dull orange.

Many of the plates have information written on them in German.  Most everything at the museum is in German only so if you do not speak and read German much of it will be lost.  There was an audio walking tour as well but as all of the information about it was in German I assumed that the audio was German as well and so did not bother to partake which is too bad as I am sure that it was very nice.  Lots of people were using it.  The people at the front ticket booth new that I was an English speaker and did not offer me the audio so I am pretty confident that it was not an option.

In the middle of the battlefield is live archeological excavation going on.  There were probably ten people or so working.  Some actively digging, some moving dirt around and some sifting through the sand looking for artifacts.  It was interesting to see a real world dig.  I have never actually seen one before in real life.Working at the Sifting Table

Beyond the dig was more of the battlefield and another freestanding exhibit – this one showing a movie about war between organized professional armies and civilians.  A poignant and wordless reminder that this battlefield on which we are standing was fought between the world’s largest, most well trained, highly paid and insanely well equipped army’s most elite units and a group of farmers and light militia with little or no training, no money being spent and barely any weapons and likely no armour.  These were incredible odds.  The risk undertaken by the Germans was truly astounding.  Not only could they have been wiped out right here at Kalkriese but the Romans would have been in a position to not only subdue but to depopulate Germania practically overnight.  This was the ultimate gamble.  It is no wonder that its ramifications arguably outweigh the outcome of any other military event in history.

The outcome of this battle, that happened right here under my feet, determined not only the outcome of a single war but fundamentally changed the global balance of power for the rest of history and wholly redefined Europe’s role in the world.  One of the signs hanging at the Kalkriese says, roughly, “Celebrating European Freedom”.  That is exactly what this battle represents.  Free Europe.  Had this battle swung the other way, had Arminius and his men fallen here instead of the Roman infantry, it is most likely that Rome would have run roughshod over all of Europe sweeping away people after people into one massive, totalitarian Imperium.Active Dig Work in Progress

What would the world look like if Rome ruled Europe?  What if European sensibilities about the immorality of subduing other peoples never emerged from a principle player in world events?  Rome would have controlled its own most dangerous borders and been able to focus all of its energies like never before seen on eastern expansion into Persia, India and China.  Given a Rome twice the size that it ever was, would any people have been able to withstand Rome’s staying power?  A war of attrition with Rome would have been a losing war.  Slowly but surely it seems that Rome may actually have conquered the known world.  But this battle ended that dream for Rome and sent the message to the Caesar that the days of Roman expansion had ended and the fall was beginning.  Caesar Augustus would lose his mind when he heard the news of the defeat – he, probably more than anyone, knew that once Rome stopped expanding it would begin dying.  Rome’s entire economy and social order was based upon constant, never ending expansion through military dominance.  Now Rome could not only not expand but it now lived in perpetual fear that Germania would itself begin the process of expansion with nowhere to go but south into Roman lands.  It was now Rome who waited with baited breath for the day when an army would sweep down from the north to sweet it away.  For the day that Germania decided that it would fight with an army instead of with farmers.Painted Mask Exhibit at Kalkriese

After walking the battlefield I went to the museum which is in a very modern structure that is so abnormal that I had a hard time figuring out that it was even the museum.

The museum was well done if small – there is only so much to show about a battle about which we know so little.  There were several exhibits of finds from the site just outside and lots of history lessons on the walls around the museum.  Much here was in English but still much was not.

One really neat exhibit was a tiny scale army, made using little lead miniature common in war gaming (the same scale made popular but Dungeons and Dragons and similar games) with literally a one to one representation of what we believe that the Roman army marching through Kalkriese would have looked like including the marching order.  It was massive.  Looking at the troops in that way really put into perspective the scale of the battle.  The lines would have stretched for miles it seems.  Capturing them and holding them in Teutoburger Wald must have been a serious challenge for the Germans.

There was another exhibit where the question is posed, “If the 26 year old Arminius and the 51 year old Varus, who had known each other in Rome, were to face each other today, what would they say?”  Since the two leaders knew each other and there is no record of there being ill blood between them we wonder what must have been going through their minds as they faced each other at Kalkriese.  Arminius, having been taken captive as a child to Rome as an effective slave and separated from his family and his people, had every understandable potential to harbor a hatred of Romans that could not be overstated.  The Roman plan of capturing important German children and raising them in Rome counted on Stockholm syndrome to kick in before the children were allowed to return to Germania as adults.  Generally this worked.  But, as we see here, it only has to fail once for the damage to be insurmountable.  The wrath of someone made a slave is a significant potential and if Arminius dedicated his life to preparing for the moment when he could enact the most painful revenge we see the possibilities begin to form.  A gambit of not epic but epoch changing proportions is something that only someone in this horrible position could really contemplate.  And apparently he did.  This was not a quick decision but a lifetime of planning and preparation coming together at a single moment – planning on a scale that even an empire like Rome could not attempt to replicate as only someone dedicating their entire life to the enterprise could truly be this prepared.

From the top of the museum building, roughly ten stories up, there is an observation deck that looks out over Lower Saxony and down at the battlefield giving you a complete view of the forest and the excavation site.  Very cool.Kalkriese Museum and Tower

I visited the museum gift shop and bought a baseball cap from the museum (I have been looking for a cap to buy since coming to Germany because I need one and we lost my old one) and also two books.  One book is a tiny book in German that is a collection of all of the ancient texts talking about the battle.  The second book is called “Arminius, Varus and the Battlefield at Kalkriese” which is an overview of the battle and talks about the work that is going on there – it is printed by the museum itself.  There were tons of books at the museum that I would have really like to have purchased but they were expensive and I have no way to transport them home.  These two were very small and I definitely wanted something from there as a permanent souvenir.

I learned at the shop that I had an hour and a half to wait until the last bus of the day would arrive to take people back to Osnabruck.  I had come by taxi but had no real means of getting another taxi to pick me up.  I had gone on the assumption that I would “figure something out” in order to get back.  This was extra risky as my mobile phone was all but dead.  I had left it off for most of the day just in case but after this morning’s problems I had used most of the remaining battery getting myself to Kalkriese in the first place.

So I took the remaining time and just walked through the woods at Kalkriese.  There are paths going all over the place and some excavation work even out in the forest.  It gave me a chance to just reflect on the day.

While waiting at the bus stop I had a chance to talk to an eighty year old German history buff.  He had come in from Hanover today to go to the museum.  He was the only person that I know came in for the anniversary.  There were one or two others throughout the day that I suspected were there for the anniversary but this is the only one of which I was sure.  There were a few hundred people at the museum today but mostly they were school groups on field trips (what a great field trip – I really hope that we get to bring Liesl here someday!)  He did not speak much English but we tried and took some time to discuss the battle.  It was nice having someone to talk to.  I am pretty sure that I was the only non-German native who came out to Kalkriese today.  That really surprises me.  I would have thought that a handful of people from around the world, like me, would have taken the time to come in and honour this day.  Am I really the only one?

The bus ride back took much longer than did the taxi ride but it only cost me about three Euro fifty (can that be right?)  It was so cheap.  I thought that it was going to be like eighteen Euro.  I told the bus driver that I wanted to go to Neumarkt and he repeated it (one of the few place names that I know that I can get correct) and I have him a twenty and he gave me gobs of change.  Maybe I just don’t understand how much it is supposed to cost.  Anyway, its a bargain if you can figure out the bus.  The buses are comfortable and clean too.  Much like in England but only one deck.

I got a few pictures of the bus ride, mostly windmills in the country for dad.  The Nikon D90 with the VRII on the lens really does do a great job of allowing me to handhold shots out of the windows.  Quite impressive.

I never managed to figure out when we got to Neumarkt so I ended up riding to the end at the Hauptbaunhof which is only slightly farther away from the hotel.  Maybe ten or fifteen minutes longer by foot.

From the Hauptbaunhof I walked to Neumarkt and on our to the west side of Osnabruck where the hotel is 4.1 kilometers.  A pretty decent walk after my impromtu walk this morning followed by an entire day of walking around two museums and an entire battlefield over and over again.  I estimate that I walked a minimum of five kilometers at Kalkriese and easily a lot more.  I walked the perimeter, through the middle, on all kinds of paths, up the tower, around both museums and more mostly multiple times!  I was there, on foot, for about four hours.

I took a lot of pictures on the walk back to the hotel.  Nothing spectacular but I wanted to get a real cross-section of the city so that Dominica and other people back home could get a feel for what a real German city was like and not just pictures of important structures or famous places.  Most everyone that I know is very interested to know what Germany is actually like.  The real answer is that it is a lot more like home than you would think.

I did get to walk by Osnabruck University which, strangely enough, is located on Martinistraße – yes, the university is on Martini Street!!  It is a really cool looking university.  I got some nice pics of it.Window Detail at Osnabruck University

The sun was getting low when I got back to the hotel.  I was exhausted.  I have not slept for even seven and a half hours since leaving New York and I worked a full day before leaving New York!  I have been awake with like eight o’clock on Tuesday morning and I have had the flu since arriving (I started getting the sniffles right as I left New York.)  So  I am really in rough shape.

I showered and caught up on stuff from the hotel room.  Ended up doing some work, uploading some pics and working on SGL for a little bit before going down to the dining room and getting the cheese spaetzle again.  I was so busy today that I had completely forgotten lunch and did not even realize.  I only just made it for dinner before the kitchen closed!  I had one sandwich in the airport in Dublin and have had just three meals since arriving in Europe – all three being at the hotel.  I need to get out and eat some.Steeple Under Construction from West

After dinner I went back up to the hotel room and managed to fall asleep for about fifteen minutes.  That helped a lot but it also made me not so tired so I was awake for quite a bit longer.  I ended up staying up until two in the morning talking to people and working on uploading pictures.  I only just began to get them uploaded from all of the ones that I took today.  I took almost two hundred and fifty pictures!  It was quite a good haul, photographically speaking.

At two I was feeling just enough better after figuring out that drinking hot water was helping my congestion that I was able to put on my CPAP and after a few tries I fell asleep.  Finally, real sleep.  It has been a long, difficult but utterly memorable and very important day.  Today was the reason that I made this trip and it worked out very well.  I will definitely always remember coming to Germany and visiting Kalkriese on the 2,000th anniversary, to the day, of the Varusschlacht.

September 9, 2009: Arriving in Europe

My flight on Aer Lingus from New York’s JFK airport to Dublin, Ireland went really well.  We had an eight mile per hour tailwind and completed the Atlantic crossing in just five and a half hours.  It went by really quickly.  I barely noticed it at all.  I had a nice Irish lady sitting beside me and we chatted for a while helping to pass the time – she had been in New Jersey visiting her grandkids.  Aer Lingus has free television (like Father Ted and Fawlty Towers) as well as movies that you can watch.  So I took advantage of that and watched the shows mentioned and an episode of Hannah Montana as well as Ghosts of Girlfriends Past which was pretty good.  I also watched Wolverine:XMen Origins or something like that.  It was not too bad but way too heavily.  I was not expecting such a serious drama from a comic book movie.  I’m not into XMen at all so the back story was not very important to me so having this heavy drama for a story I don’t particularly like wasn’t the best choice.

I did not manage to sleep at all on the flight over to Dublin.  The sun starting coming up about halfway there which is weird as it had just gone down before we left New York.  Ireland is five hours ahead of New York and once I reach Amsterdam I will be six hours ahead.Morning at Dublin Airport

It was eight in the morning, local time, when we touched down in Dublin.  What a quick trip.  We can, apparently, fly from New York to Dublin in about the same time that it takes for Dominica and I to drive to dad’s house!  That does not take into account the drive time to JFK or the wait time before the flight, of course, but it does indicate that doing a three day weekend in Ireland is really quite doable as long as we are living in the New York area.  If we flew to Shannon rather than Dublin that would cut a bit of additional time off as well as it is on the west coast of Ireland rather than the east coast.  Dublin is more useful for jumping off to Amsterdam, like I am doing, but for visiting Ireland Shannon might be far better.

Overall I was very happy with my Aer Lingus flight and I am absolutely planning on use them again, and often, for our excursions to Europe.  Their prices are by far the best that I have ever seen and we were really afraid that that would mean that flying with them would be really uncomfortable but that was not the case at all.  At least not on this flight.   I have three more flights to go with them this week so I will get a fair amount of experience with them all at once.

It was a stunningly beautiful morning in Ireland as we flew over.  Clear and crisp and bright sunlight spilling everywhere.  I even got to see a castle or large manor estate as we flew over the island.  I got to see the Dublin Ferry taking commuters over to Wales or England too.

Since I am transferring in Dublin getting there early did not do too much for me.  It left me with three hours to kill before the next flight for Amsterdam takes off.  This is where the exhaustion started to hit.  Three hours with no sleep and nothing to do will make you very, very sleepy.

While at the Dublin Airport I got to see the Guiness Store. Andy would be excited. I took a picture for him that is available on the Flickr stream. I was depressed to discover that there was a Starbucks at the airport. You can’t even escape them in Europe.

I had mistakenly not requested a vegetarian meal for the flight last night (I did not know that we were getting a meal at all so I had no idea) so I did not have much to eat.  I hadn’t eaten too much at all yesterday just to make sure that I could handle all of the traveling today – the flights are just the beginning of my journey.  So I was pretty much starved.  I got myself my first cash in Euros at the Dublin Airport – this is my first time ever having Euros at all actually – and once I had cash I hit the little coffee cart in the terminal where I was awaiting my next leg.I Can Has Euros

I decided to avoid caffeine.  I don’t want to make myself even more exhausted later on when I might really need the energy plus I have a really bad cold developing and that did not seem like the right approach.  Liesl has had a cold for two days and I caught it yesterday.  I could feel it coming on throughout the day and it finally turned into something last night on the flight over.  So now I am traveling with a cold 🙁

I got myself a fruit smoothie and a tuna salad and cucumber sandwich.  It was tasty.  Quite good for airport food.  I sat for a while longer and decided that I needed something more so I got an orange juice and an apple turnover.

The flight to Amsterdam was uneventful.  I had an aisle seat, like I did last night, and this time no one directly beside me so it was quite comfortable.  Last night my camera had not fit into the overhead compartment so I had had to fly with it on the floor by my feet but it fit on this leg so that was convenient.  Nothing to watch here so I attempted to rest as much as possible.  I dozed off just a tiny bit and might have gotten twenty minutes of a nap at best.  Not much but it will help get me through the day.

I had been nervous that getting to Amsterdam and dealing with figuring out the train situation and everything else would be complex and difficult since I know no Dutch.  This was not the case at all.Buildings in Amsterdam from Train

The first thing that I realized as I stepped off of the plane into Holland is that everything, and I mean everything, is in English.  And I don’t just mean that they include English everywhere in addition to the Dutch but that English is the primary language and most signs have the same thing, but small, in Dutch below the English.  But somethings are English only.  Weird.  I had heard that speaking only English wouldn’t be a problem in Holland but this I was not expecting.

Once I was through customs, I know have Irish and Dutch stamps in my passport book, it was time to figure out the train situation.  From the US I had thought that I was going to need to take a train from the airport, Schiphol, to the city center and from there catch the train out to Osnabruck, but this was not the case.  It is actually easier to get a train directly from Schiphol to Osnabruck!  DB (German Road) Railway comes right into the airport.  It could not possibly be easier.

It was so easy, in fact, that it was actually easier dealing with getting an international transfer railway ticket in a foreign country where I don’t speak the local language at all than it is getting tickets on any American railway system of which I know including Amtrak, Metro North, NY Subway, NJ Transit, etc.  Just walk up to the counter and say, I would like a ticket to Osnaburck.  First or second class?  What’s the difference?  Internet access and thirty Euros.  I’ll take second then.  Yeah, that’s what everyone does.  Okay, so track three?  Yup.  Thanks.

That was it.  Had I already known to just get second class it would have reduced the entire conversation to “Osnabruck please.”  “Here you go, thanks.”

The timing was perfect.  I went down to the platform, which was right in the middle of the airport, and waited just about ten minutes before boarding the DB for Berlin.  The ride takes about four hours on high speed rail as there are numerous stops along the way.  But it was comfortable and relaxing.  It gave me a really good chance to see the entire east to west cross-section of the Netherlands.  What an amazing beautiful country!  Small and yet packed full of interesting stuff.  Very verdant and agricultural while remaining highly populated.  Just gorgeous.  I got to see several major cities along the way including Outer Amstel (the south side of Amsterdam) then out to Amersfoort and Apeldoorn.  That stretch was very much urban although there was an amazing amount of trees, parks, fields, etc.  Tons of little neighbourhoods through which we passed were just adorable and I could totally see living here.

The main impression that I got in The Netherlands was that it was a bit of a blending between what we experienced in England in 2007 and what we are used to in the US.  It actually felt a little less “exotic” than England does.  At least to me having grown up in the aftermath of the New Netherlands colony in New York and coming from a partially Dutch background.  So maybe others would not see it as much of a “comfort” location as I do but most Americans would certainly find it to be only mildly exotic and foreign in comparison to most foreign destinations.

I really wish that I had time to get off of the train and explore this beautiful country.  Not on this trip, though, I am afraid.  I will have to save it for another time.  But from the looks of what I am seeing I think that Dominica and Liesl will be very interested in spending a season living in The Netherlands – most likely in a smaller city and away from Amsterdam itself.  Dominica is not a fan of huge cities and there is so much awesome stuff in these smaller towns that there is no reason to limit The Netherlands to its large coastal cities of Amsterdam and Rotterdam.

The train went on through Deventer which was one of the most gorgeous looking towns that I have ever seen.  It sits on a river and, at least near the train line, it is just full of parks and paths and great buildings.  Just amazing.  I tried grabbing some pics from the train but it does not do it the least bit of justice.  I was on the right side of the train so my view was southbound.  Just amazing though.  I definitely want to come back and explore that town.Deventer, The Netherlands

After Apeldoorn the views definitely became much more rural.  Nothing in Holland or The Netherlands is as rural as what we call rural in America but the cityscapes fell away to villages and cute country homes.  We traveled through a series of small villages and tiny cities before making the crossing into Lower Saxony in Germany at the town of Bad Bentheim.  Here we had to stop for twenty minutes while the police inspected the train and the Dutch crew was replaced with a German one.  Then it was on through Germany.

It was not long before the famous windmills were visible.  Northern Germany has become world famous for its electric generating windmills. They have become the new symbol of the country.

Lower Saxony was definitely less heavily populated than Holland was and the architecture changed towards a more rural feel and, I think, closer yet towards what would feel natural to Americans.  The countryside is definitely very familiar feeling but once in Germany the use of English dropped off significantly and the feel of being in a non-English speaking country started to exist.

We went through Salzbergen and the Rheine – the first real city inside of Germany.  Once we went east of Rheine we were actually traveling through the Teutoburger Wald (Teutoburg Forest) which Osnabruck lies directly in the middle of.

Arriving in Osnaburck I was greeted to an amazing central train station loaded with shops and food.  I stepped outside in the fresh German air and sat down in the plaza to figure out how to get out to the hotel.  The train station is just east of downtown and my hotel is quite a bit to the west of town – still in the city but far from downtown.  I took a picture, Twittered my status – which I have been doing all day as well as uploading camera pics to Flickr – and then decided to just get a taxi to take me to the hotel.  I was really, really exhausted and did not need to get lost trying to walk across the city with all of my luggage.Osnabruck Trainstation

The taxi ride was quick and relatively cheap.  I got to see downtown Osnabruck in a flash.  I was amazed at the roads full of BMWs and Mercedes Benz.  People really all do drive these here!

We arrived at the hotel and I got checked in.  Pheww.  Finally the travel is over.  Now I can relax in Germany.  I got up to the room, took some quick pictures and jumped into the shower.  Boy did I need that!  I was feeling pretty gross after all of that time on planes, trains and automobiles.

I wanted to keep tonight simple so I just went down to the bar and ate there right in the lobby.  They have some vegetarian (but not vegan) items on the menu which makes it easy.  I got the cheese spatzle which is a lot like the baked macaroni and cheese on which I grew up.  Having had my mother cook spatzle as a kid as well really made this just a delicious comfort food for me.  It really was good.  I enjoyed it very much.  I also got a bowl of tomato soup which seemed to go with the spatzle really well.  I also got a local beer – which comes in a half liter size.  Very good as well.Cheese Spatzle

One things that I love about Europe is that people are so outgoing and friendly.  The other guy sitting at the bar started a conversation with me and we chatted for at least half an hour or longer.  He is a German from Schleswig-Holstein near the Danish border.  This was his first time down to Osnabrucker Land as well.  He was not here to see the Kalfriese, as the battle is known here, but just to explore the history in downtown including the famed signing place of the treaty that ended the Thirty Years War.

After dinner I went back up to the room and got my Internet access enabled.  That is not cheap but I can make telephone calls through it which easily makes it cheaper than using my mobile for anything here.  My mobile Internet access is unlimited but calls are a dollar a minute!

I got my VoIP phone set up and called Dominica. It was about eight thirty here but only two thirty back home.  She and Liesl were just on the road up to Frankfort to visit her parents for the week.  We talked for about half an hour.  Liesl got upset being able to hear my voice in the car while they were driving.  I talked to her a bit and I could hear her trying to talk back to me.  Boy do I miss my little baby 🙁  I really wish that my family could have come over here with me.  This is going to be a very lonely trip.

After the call I set up my CPAP and did some uploads to Flickr so that people would have something to look at until I have a chance to point this entry.  I have been trying to upload pictures throughout the day from the mobile phone but only every so often does one actually get posted and I can’t verify that easily until I am back to my laptop so you get what you get during the day.My Hotel Room in Osnabruck

I went to bed really early by local standard.  Probably around nine although I was losing track of time by then.  I am really looking forward to some sleep tonight although I am concerned that my cold may prevent me from being able to sleep.  Needing to have a CPAP in order to sleep is very difficult when your sinuses get stuffed up.

I have set up a “set” for Germany 2009 on Flickr that you can check out to see how things are going here in Osnabruck this week.

September 8, 2009: Leaving New York for Europe

Today is my big day, traveling from New York to Dublin to Amsterdam to Osnabruck in Germany where I will be spending the next week celebrating the German victory at the Battle of Teutoburg Forest on September 10th, 9 AD a whole two thousand years ago.  I have been planning this trip for almost a decade now.  I took the time off from work when I first interviewed at the bank in February of 2006!  Everyone at the office is amazed that I am actually taking this trip after talking about it for so long.

I had to work all morning for the office. I started on the early side today to get as much done as I could so that I could get as much work cleaned up before leaving as possible.  So I worked like mad all day long.  It was a truly crazy day.  I had literally no time at all for the entire day.  It was quite frustrating but several good things came out of the day so no complaints – just feeling really worn out.

At four this afternoon I turned on my Out of Office and called it a day.  There is no more work coming from me today.

My German phrasebook and dictionary arrived just an hour or so we had to leave.  Talk about cutting it close!  At least we got it and were able to pack it in time for the trip.  I am planning on studying that pretty intently while on the flight.  I really have no preparation for my time in two countries where I do not speak the language.

There were a couple of things that I needed before leaving for Germany so Dominica, Liesl, Oreo and I piled into the X3 and drove out to Walmart to get what was needed.  I got a USB SDHC card reader because the built-in card reader on the laptop that I am taking with me (Dominica’s HP Compaq 6515b) is slightly damaged and damages the cards when you put them in and the USB card reader that I have doesn’t read HC cards.  So we had to do something so that I would be able to upload pictures from the trip.  I also needed a light jacket as it is supposed to rain pretty much the entire time that I am in Europe.  We looked for a new cap too but couldn’t find anything that wasn’t ridiculously white trashy at Walmart so we skipped that.

We did pretty well on our shopping trip and we packed up the new stuff while in the parking lot and headed out for the airport which is not a short trip.  We ended up leaving right on time… to the minute with my original plans.

The drive to JFK in Brooklyn did not go as quickly as we had hoped, luckily I allowed for tons of time.  The GPS unit was all confused again and sent us in circles and tried to make us go the wrong way on to highways and stuff.  The BMW GPS unit is definitely up to par at all with Garmin units.  BMW really needs to step up their game there.

We arrived at the airport at six twenty which was three hours and twenty minutes prior to my departure time.  This gave us enough time that Dominica and Liesl were able to come into the airport with me and get me checked in and out to security.  We had plenty of time as the checkin literally took just minutes so we hit the McDonald’s inside of the airport and had a quick dinner together before I went through security.  This gave me another half of an hour with my girls before I left for the next week.

Security took just five minutes.  America seems to have finally gotten the security thing figured out at most airports and it seems to flow pretty smoothly now.  For the last year or two every time that I fly it has been pretty good.  It doesn’t hurt that all of the people going through the security checkpoint know what to do now so the people are a lot more efficient than they used to be too.

Once I got into the terminal (term 4 at JFK, gate A2) I decided to pick up Internet access.  It’s not cheap but it passes the time very quickly and lets me catch up with things that I need to do like get SGL up to date so it seemed like a good idea.  I am going to be wanting to spend all of my spare time in Germany out checking Osnabruck and not writing back information on SGL.  So today’s update as well as the last few day’s updates were written from the airport.

My itinerary is that I am flying out of NYC’s JFK International airport tonight at nine forty.  That flight is direct to Dublin in Ireland.  I have an hour and a half layover in Dublin where I will transfer from that flight to a shop puddle jumper to Amsterdam all on Aer Lingus.  Once I am in Amsterdam airport I will catch the short local train down to the city center.  In central Amsterdam I will catch a long distance Eurotrain to Osnabruck.  If I am lucky I will be able to get an express train to Osnabruck as that will save several hours of travel.

If I am lucky it will be only evening in Germany when I finally get to the train station in Osnabruck and try to work my way to my hotel which is all of the way across town from the train station.  I have no way to sleep before then and no plans for being able to get food (or cash.)  It is going to be a long trip without sleep.  I am going to be exceptionally exhausted by the time that I arrive.  I will Twitter when I can.  Check back often for updates.  Remember that Dublin is five hours ahead of Eastern Time and Osnabruck is six hours head of Eastern.  So it will easily be exceptionally late by the time that I get to the hotel.  It will be almost ten in the morning when I get to Dublin and probably well after noon when I get to Amsterdam local time.  The scheduled time with no delays is to arrive just after two in the afternoon.  That means that it will be six in the evening at the very earliest for me to get to Osnabruck if I get an express and have no delays anywhere whatsoever and never have to wait for a train.  Ten at night is a more reasonable estimate.  (That is four in the afternoon Eastern time for those of you in New York.)  That is almost twenty four hours of travel if it actually takes that long since we left home to go to the airport at five in the afternoon eastern!

Okay, it is almost time for my flight to board and I need to shut down and get ready for the flight.  Hopefully I will have some updates for everyone soon.

Getting onto Aer Lingus Flight 108.

September 7, 2009: Last Day at Home

Today is my final day at home for over a week.  It has been great having a few days off or basically off from work and then tomorrow I kick off my actual holiday!  This is amazing.  Finally a real break from work.

We did a little last minute prep today for the trip but basically today was a complete “hang out with Liesl” day – as much as it could be.  Liesl and I are really going to miss each other this week so I wanted to get as much time with her as I could muster today.

I did end up needing to work for a few hours this afternoon.  I probably worked for about four hours.  Far less than a normal day.  No complaints.

Today is Labor Day and originally we had thought that maybe we would have some people up for a BBQ or something this evening but that ended up not happening.  Probably for the best as we got some time to just relax and hang out as a family.

No real news today.  The adventure begins tomorrow….