Archive for May, 2006

Next time you touch yourself check under the bed for monsters

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Important date: June 5th 2006
(I’m back. Plz note Outrage and Save the Children tags.)

Europe 2006 Travelogue

A TOC for my trip to Europe in May 2006

Chronological

  1. May 10 2006: Twas the night before Europe…
  2. May 11 2006: Money makes the world go round…
  3. May 12 2006: London airport… waiting for Lyon flight
  4. May 12 2006: My Entry To Lyon
  5. May 13 2006: Wandering around Lyon FR
  6. May 14 2006: Day of the show in Lyon FR
  7. May 14 2006: Seeing Alcina in Lyon FR
  8. May 15 2006: Lyon FR to Entrecasteaux FR
  9. May 16 2006: Day 1 in Entrecasteaux FR
  10. May 17 2006: Day 2 in Entrecasteaux FR
  11. May 18 2006: Byebye Entrecasteaux FR, Hello Marseille FR, and Goodnight Munich DE
  12. May 19 2006: Orlando in Munich
  13. May 20 2006: Munich DE to Dresden DE and Dead Man Walking
  14. May 21 2006: Dresden DE to Berlin DE
  15. May 22 2006: Day 1 in Berlin DE
  16. May 23 2006: Day 2 in Berlin DE
  17. May 24 2006: Goodbye Berlin DE, Hello London UK
  18. May 25 2006: Day 1 in London UK
  19. May 26 2006: Day 2 in London UK
  20. May 27 2006: Goodbye London UK, Hello San Francisco CA

By category
Lyon FR | Entrecasteaux FR | Munich DE | Dresden DE | Berlin DE | London UK | All Travel Posts

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May 27: Goodbye London UK, Hello San Francisco CA

Img 3673Today was the first time on vacation that I have felt stress, and I didn’t like it one bit. My stress was all about time, and catching planes, and packing, and general travel shit.

When I was with Roy, he was very careful with time. I am almost always the person who Minds The Clock in any given group, but he was actually doing it without complaint. So I let him :)… but on my own, I had to do that, at least for this last day.

I woke up and tried to finish packing… then I had to repack. Then repack again. All I had to take home was a pile of postcards, yet somehow my suitcase was not repacking properly. That was about an hour I hadn’t planned on.

Next, I freaked out and thought I was missing my checkout time. By the time I had my clothes on and suitcase put together I was dripping with sweat. I down to the lobby, checked out, and asked them to hold my bags while I went out for a coffee.

I browsed a few of the yucky souvenir stores, but realized I couldn’t buy anything in them without feeling totally retarded (with one exception: I bought a beer mug with the tube map on it. 1) the tube map is awesome and 2) I needed something to drink beer in since I bought some at a store out of frustration of getting a good one anywhere else).

Then I grabbed a coffee, grabbed my bags, and took off. This involved walking a block to the subway and heading one stop to Paddington where I could catch the Heathrow Express (for which I had a retuirn ticket from my arrival). Once at Paddington, I started to fall apart. There were signs telling me to use specific cars for specific Heathrow terminals, but I had no idea which terminal my plane left from. I forgot to check online.

I tested my phone - once again I had no problem locating a UK service provider, but it still wouldn’t dial. Ditto with internet. And for the first time since I left the US there was not a single internet cafe in eyesight. Grrr.

I hopped on a train that was leaving and crossed my fingers. I made the assumption that given how tourist oriented all of London is, that Terminal 1 would be the primary and international terminal. I got off at the Terminal 1/2/3 stop and headed for 1, which was a leap of faith given that terminal 1 was 500m to the right and terminals 2/3 were 500m to the left. There was no signage whatsoever until after I reached the main floor, and discovered I had guessed right. Yay.

Then, the self checkin worked like it should, the baggage check worked like it should, and getting through security worked like you hope…

I ran into Dan, a fellow Yahoo while waiting to board - on the same flight even. Somehow this didn’t surprise me.

The plane was the same one I flew out on - a 747, which means 3 seats left, 4 seats middle, and 3 seats right. I was on middle row aisle, which was better than any sort of middle situation… even better, when they finally closed down the doors, I nearly started crying with happiness to discover I had no immediate seatmate. I had luxurious shoulder room on either side of me. I was so happy I didn’t even fret when our departure was delayed for an hour or so while they figured out how to make the A/C work, how to close a cargo door, and most exciting, how to start one of the engines.

Finally, we took off. The flight was much more enjoyable than my first, thanks to the extra room, and completely uneventful. I watched several episodes of Babylon 5 on my iPod, napped a few times, and had 2 really tasty mini-bottles of red wine. The food didn’t suck either.

Magically I was literally swept through security and had my checked luggage in hand in about 2 minutes. Out the door to see Mom and Gram there to pick me up.

Home at last. Yay.

My ratings (5 point scale):

  • Lyon: **** (4)
  • Entrecasteaux: ***** (5)
  • Marseille: —– (-5. nuclear bomb plzkthx)
  • Munich: ***** (5)
  • Dresden: ** (2)
  • Berlin: *** (3)
  • London: * (1)
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May 26: Day 2 in London UK

Img 3462I am starting to not like London. And since I am American enough to want to blame someone I will go ahead and Blame Roy :-D He told me several times how much he hated London, as in lots and lots. London whores everything out to the highest bidder. It is capitalism gone wrong and out of control. It’s dirty.

I am tending to agree. So much of what I have seen is geared towards tourists. Every 4th shop on any street is one of 2 or 3 chains that deal exclusively in cheap and horrible trinkets covered with the union jack, or princess diana, or mind the gap t-shirts.

Those things which I had hoped to be a bit more authentic are a bit sad and very very dirty. I spent the morning wandering the Portobello Market. The first half is clearly geared to the tourists. Very expensive antique shops, and smaller tent versions of the trinket shops. Finally, you get to fruits and vegetables which obviously target locals, but are yucky compared to the street marche’s in France. Finally you get to the clothing vendorswhere there is a huge matrix of used clothing stalls in a square. Even in the open air, it smelled and felt like a Goodwill store, and the clothing was in bad shape. At the end, it devolves into several blocks of the saddest flea markets I have ever seen, comprised almost entirely of what San Franciscan’s call “groundscores” - trash from the street. Arranged, or sometimes just emptied from boxes onto tarps on the ground. Horrible and depressing, and not anything close to what I imagined the Portobello market to be.

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I headed back to my hotel and changed clothes - I have been running around in shorts and minimal tops the entire time. But I thought it was time to sidle up to Harrod’s and head to Harvey Nicks for lunch, sweety darling. I have no timidity in saying that it was fabulous. I didn’t actually bother doing the entirety of either store.

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I headed for the food halls of both places because I find the idea of buying food at an upscale department store so utterly bizarre and humorous. Harrod’s is actually sizable, so I just wandered through the chocolate room and got the fat version of a contact high from the smells. Yum.

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Then on to Harvey Nicks, where I had a gross beer (5 GBP) and a yummy breaded deep fried bit of veal with a salad (12 GBP). The price of the meal was ok, but the beer was just silly. Especially since it was gross. I haven’t had a good glass of beer since I left Germany, and even then, it was settling. Hefeweisen is ok, but honestly it’s nothing comp-ared to the yummy spicy complex microbrewed ales you can get at any corner store in San Francisco. But the beer here is just gross. It’s funny and sad to see Budweiser being sold as an import. And it’s sadder that most of the beers sold in restaurants seem to be the UK equivalent of Budweiser. Blech.

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The only disappointment with Harvey Nicks and Harrod’s was not seeing Edwina or Patsy *anywhere*. Dear Jennifer Saunders: I want to drink your bathwater. Love, Erik. Xoxo.

It was my intention to come back to the hotel to change back to shorts, since I feel like I am suffocating in long pants, but on the way back I just ran smack into the Victoria and Albert museum, which is apparently the largest collection in the world. Not hard to believe. I only did the feature exhibit and it took 3 hours. It was called “Modernism: Designing for the future.” Utterly fantastic and engrossing look at various aspects of design from 1900-1940.

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I wandered around South Kensington area for a bit - I had specifically hoped to at least take some snaps of the Royal Albert Hall, since I was too lazy to find a show to see there (actually, they were doing Eric Clapton, which was not entirely my cup of tea)…. but I kept getting lost by 1 or 2 blocks no matter which way I tried to hit it, so I snapped other interesting things and headed back to the hotel.

I intended to go out and get a bit of nightlife, but realized I was utterly exhausted, and a bit tired of travelling. I didn’t even want to go out to eat.

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I headed over to Tesco, but got pulled in to a kebab shop that had been utterly packed every time I passed but was miraculously empty at that moment. I had a yummy yummy shawerma and some desserty thing with pistachios… I went back to the hotel, packed, and then vegged in front of the tv. Big Brother (and the associated commentary programs, like “Big Brother’s Big Mouth” are trashy and wonderful.

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May 25: Day 1 in London UK

Today was all about getting encultured.

I took a tube over to Westminster and took some pics of Parliament and all that jazz. Then I crossed over the bridge and wandered along for a few miles to the Tate Modern. The Tate was neat. The south bank walk was… bleh. It was pretty cold which made for great walking weather for me. Especially since I walked quite fast because there wasn’t much interesting going on.

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The architecture doesn’t really excite me after things I have seen in Lyon, Munich, Berlin, and especially Entrecasteaux. The new buildings are safe, tame, uninteresting… they pale in comparison to some of the brilliant stuff you see in Munich and Berlin. The old buildings are not only safe and tame, but not really that old. Entrecasteaux is ancient ancient ancient. And so beautiful.

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Finally, all of the stuff that approaches uniqueness is mobbed by tourists. I was forced to wear my Tevas today as I only packed one pair of socks, and those and my shoes got soaked in last night’s walk to Soho and back. I had to be very careful and aggressive to keep my feet protected amongst the crowds.

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I got around quite a bit on the tube which was fun and relatively easy… not as easy as Berlin interestingly. Berlin is dead simple. But I also paid more attention to visual clues to get by. Here in London, it’s easier to pay a little less attention, then get surprised by slight differences in language, like “Way out” instead of exit. Makes perfect sense, but it is different and can cause minor disorientation. (The sign below says to me “Don’t do anything. Ever.”)

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After the Tate Modern, I wandered over to the National Museum where I wandered for several more hours. They didn’t have the depth of Dutch artists that I enjoyed in Berlin, but they had a fantastically wide array of Big Brand Names. :)
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All the walking pretty much put me out of commission for the rest of the day. I took a long slow walk back to my hotel, grabbed some dinner, and chilled out for the rest of the evening.

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May 24: Goodbye Berlin DE, Hello London UK

I am in London for the last leg of my trip.

Img 2396I woke up in Berlin to Roy’s alarms and got up. He had to get up a few hours earlier than I intended to go get instructions on his new flat. We got ready to go together and he took off. It didn’t really hit me till the door shut that I was quite sad about continuing my vacation without him.

He has been a gracious and talented guide, arranging all the details of our hotels or places to stay, spoke the languages of our host countries, and generally knew his way around or could easily figure it out from a map. He also handled all the entertainment details - much of which was High Art ™ and allowed me to rub elbows with the cool people creating it. It was an unbelievable experience and I am eternally grateful.

Img 3197Anyway, he left and I did a short time later. It was my intention to take public transit all the way to the airport. Seemed easy enough on paper, and especially given how easy the U/S bahn is… I was to take the U to Alexander Platz, then find a bus to the airport. I walked all over Alexanderplatz for 20 min trying to find the bus, and as if by magic no one would speak english with me. At all. No problem when Roy was there, but now I was fucked. I was starting to get sweaty and panicky (though I had given myself an extra 30 minute buffer), so I finally just grabbed a cab. It was almost 20 euros (versus 2 for the bus I wanted to take) but I was able to relax.

At the airport I was able to find the self checkin easily, which they didn’t have on my SF flight out (wtf?!) so I was checked in with about 70min to spare.

I somehow got lucky and was in one of the only rows with an empty middle seat. I hope I don’t have to sit next to an unbelievably fat person on my 9 hour trip back on Saturday.

So… I got to London and decided to get a roundtrip London Express ticket. It’s a super fast train from Heathrow directly to Paddington Station, which is quite near my hotel in Bayswater, above Kensington Gardens. I took a cab from Paddington though I might be able to walk it fairly easily. I will investigate that tomorrow. I am on Inverness Terrace a block away from queensway, which is a decent little shopping area.
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Img 3208My hotel is… a disappointment. The Hyde Park Towers. At 3 stories, not so towering. I knew not to expect much given that it is quite centrally located and was between 70 and 120 pounds per night - much cheaper than anything else offered at Expedia. The internet access is only available in the hotel lobby, and isn’t working right now anyway. While I was asking after it some tiny furious italian queen started berating the desk clerk about the internet access being broken and that being the only reason he chose the hotel. She just kept repeating her party line and smiling. I think he might have had a small stroke.

I got to my room, packed all my dirty clothes in my bag and carried my laptop in its envelope out to find a laundromat and wireless access. The laundromat was pretty easy which made me very happy. The last time I did clothes was in France. Ridiculous. The wireless has been a problem so far. Only internet cafes - connect on someone else’s computer which is irritating and doesn’t allow me to post these blogs. I tried a nearby Starbucks (where I paid only 3.5 pounds for a white choco mocha. aka 6 dollars. heh.) because it had a t-mobile hotspot, and in theory i have an account. It would not let me log in. At all. No info why, which makes me very annoyed. Of course, customer service was one of the reasons i stopped using tmobile as a mobile carrier too.

After laundry I came back and showered. I headed out with the intention of locating the queer neighborhood, but didn’t really make it. I walked along Bayswater Road (along the top of Kensington Gardens/Hyde Park) and continuing west as it turns into Oxford street. I didn’t see much gayness, but saw lots and lots and lots of shops. It’s miles of shopping. Crazy.

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It was misting a bit when I started out, but was a torrential downpour by the time I gave up around Berners street. I stopped at some random restaurant to get a hot chocolate and warm up a bit before heading back. The maitre de seated me with no problems, but the waitress threw massive attitude, saying “It’s too busy to just serve you a drink. We don’t do that.” Yay for being back in an english speaking country, as I told her I had no intention of moving out of my seat, and the quicker she brought me my hot chocolate the quicker I would be out of her hair.

Then a quick walk back to Oxford Circus, where I got to experience my first London Tube experience. The signage is actually quite good, esp. given the complexity of the system. I quickly figured out which places I needed to transfer and the number of zones required to get there (just 1)… but the ticket machines were incomprehensible. There was no indication on my machine of which button corresponded to number of zones. I took an educated guess that the top/cheaper fare was a 1 zone, and the lower/more expensive ones would be higher zones, but I still don’t really know. The machines took my tickets without complaining, so I suppose it was fine. I am going to get day passes for tomorrow and Friday, as more than one or two trips justifies the price.

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I got off the tube at my stop and went Tesco to get some water, then found an Indian restaurant to grab take out. I came home, ate, and watched a bit of TV. Going to try to get some quick internet in the lobby before bed.

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May 23: Day 2 in Berlin DE

The weather played games again today. It alternated between mild and sunny to blustery and rainy and cold. We remembered an umbrella this time.

The plan was to do Sansoucci in Potsdam, Berlinomat (A Berlin clothing designer showcase), and something else (Can’t remember right now) before 3pm, because Roy needed to pick up the keys for the place he is spending the rest of his trip in. After he picked up his keys we were going to try to get tickets to the Berlin Philharmonic’s performance of Mahler’s 8th.

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Potsdam takes about an hour to get to from our Hotel in Mitte. Once we did arrive, it was absolutely huge. Walking from palace to palace (there are something like 5 of them on the grounds) took an enormous amount of time.

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After wandering for an hour or so we found a place for lunch where I had an amazing goulash that was packed with buttery chanterelle mushrooms and garnished with gorgeous little hashbrown medallions and an almond cake thing. And a beer. I should mention that I have been pleasantly buzzed the entire time I have been here. You don’t walk out the door without having a 1/2 litre of beer. Which is fine with me.

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We continued wandering the grounds of Sansoucci as I pondered what was to stop one from living in Germany full time. There doesn’t seem to be packs of bratty kids running around breaking things and cramming chewing gum into machinery. The adults are polite to eachother on the subway. There are shocking numbers of artistic and historical venues to keep you entertained. Roy said that for him, it was The Rules. It feels like veryone follows The Rules to the letter. And if someone doesn’t The Rules, then everyone around them will make sure they know they are not following them and try to get them back in line. It makes people a bit nosy and self righteous.

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I got a taste of The Rules on one our tour of the Orangerie, which in addition to vast halls to keep the orange trees warm during the winter, has guided tours of about 6 guest rooms. The tour guide spoke German to the other three folks and mostly left me to my own devices while I read my little Book For Retarded English Children and shuffled around in my felt slippers (to keep the floor clean, undamaged, or possibly both)… We were in a room with some fantastic wooden furniture that had been heavily inlaid with metals and stones. I bent down to inspect the side of a table (which was not behind a rope, and I was obviously not touching it) and the tour guide immediately snapped into English mode: “Please move away from that, your bag is too large”. Yes I was wearing a messenger bag. And it was in no danger of touching anything. WTF ever.

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Img 3107-1After the Orangerie, we realized we needed to head back for for Roy to get his keys. He had to pop off the subway to transfer elsewhere while I stayed on and headed back to the hotel. I needed to book my room for London, as my friend Sean isn’t making it back in time to meet me. Internet access is has been grossly expensive. 24 hours costs around 30 euros. Or you can choose to get 1/2 hour for 4.50 euros. I bought a two hour ticket and found my hotel and relaxed a bit.
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Roy gave me a call to let me know he had obtained (standing room) tickets, so we arranged a time and place to meet. I left relatively late, because I planned to grab a sausage at the subway station. That sounds gross but it isn’t. Many of the major S- and U-bahn line junction stations have entire malls inside of them, each with a handful of food places. I had an amazing something-wurst (veal) with mustard (and a beer) and wanted one of those. Annoyingly I had my stations mixed up, so the Potsdamer Platz station - near the Philharmonie - was just a station. I headed above ground to find food.

The other main feature of this area is the Sony Center - a freakyhuge complex of buildings, that is very very American mall like at the bottom. I knew I could get something there, but wanted to stay as German as possible until the angels started singing to me. As my stomach was grumbling I found the most beautiful sight of my life: A Dunkin Donuts.

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I love Dunkin Donuts. Those of you zombies who have aligned yourselves with the Krispy Kreme can go pound fluffy, airwhipped, tasteless, sugarglazed dough up your hoohoos because Dunkin is where it’s at. I last had a DD about 4 years ago when I had to travel to New Hampshire for business. Before that, the Last Luscious Taste I had was in ‘96 before I left the east cost for good.

Finally, halfway across the world, I got a taste of Dunkin Donuts Butternuty goodness.

After putting myself into a diabetic coma i continued on to the Philharmonie and met Roy. He stuck around all day to try to score actual seats, but no dice. Standing room only. We made sure to get up as quickly as possible so we would have a place to lean. I’ll start with the irritating, then go to the good, then on to the hilarious and evil.

The irritating: There were probably 100 vacant seats throughout the auditorium. And because of The Rules, and needing a ticket to access the particular staircases, they could not be had. Standing room and the nosebleed seats were packed of course. Worse, Mahler’s 8th is a 90 minute piece in two movements. My leg survived fairly well, but it’s not an experience I want try regularly ;)
The good: Super venus, super orchestra, super choirs. Roy described the piece as hard rock decadence of classical music. In addition to full orchestra, there was a choir of about 80 people, an additional boys choir of around 20, an additional brass section that sat way up high in the auditorium, and 8 or 9 soloists. The shorter 1st movement was just there. I didn’t connect with the music, and it was going full tilt boogie with every single musician. Spectacular and hard to listen to. The second movement had some really beautiful moments in it and made it all quite worthwhile.

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The hilarious and evil: This ties back in to The Rules again. I was standing at a counter thing immediately behind the last row of nosebleed seats. About 5 minutes into the 1st movement I flipped open the program to check out the soloists bios. A Great Self Important Lumpen Turd (see fig 1 and 2 below, referred to as The GSILT hereafter) in front of me whipped around and glared at me each time I flipped the page. Apparently he has very sensitive hearing.

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(Fig. 1 Back view of The GSILT; Fig. 2 Side view of The GSILT)

A few minutes later the woman standing to my left adjusted her arms on the counter and made a slight wisping sound. The GSILT whipped around again a few times and glared. When she did it again, he reached behind him under the counter and grabbed (perhaps her arm, I didn’t see) and shook her, then mouthed something furious and made silent shushing movements with fingers and mouth. She, her partner, and I shared a smile over this silliness.

A few minutes later I flipped my bag over to get access to my cough drops. I did so very quietly but the zipper pull made a teensy jingle. The GSILT whipped around again with a murderous look in his eyes to let me know he was reaching The Limit. He turned back around in his seat and shook his head angrily for about a few moments.

In the second movement, a man sitting a few seats down got into the music. He was following along with a tiny score, and was air-directing from his seat. Every so often he would turn the page, which pissed off The GSILT each time. Finally, The GSILT’s boyfriend reached over and pinched him which seemed to calm him down.

I had a very hard time paying attention to the music, because this guy was making such a fuss in such a hilarious way. I kept imagining The GSILT trying to go to a movie at the Metreon, or ride a bus in San Francisco or something else requiring much greater tolerance. He. Would. Have. Exploded.

We came back to the hotel and I had a steak which put me in good spirits. The bartender was stupid cute. We were molested by some sweet rummy old aussie who wanted to talk politics. In another mood and by myself I might have engaged him, but I wasn’t in the mood to humor him. I kept glaring at the stupidcute waiters who had been babysitting him (and getting him drunk) all night. One of them actually laughed at me with an obvious “He’s your problem now” look. I still couldn’t help tipping 3 euros, which is outrageous in germany.

I got everything packed up (including a suitcase mostly full of dirty clothes) and we went to bed.

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May 22: Day 1 in Berlin DE

Img 2398Berlin is an amazing city. It’s incredibly huge, and I would need weeks just to see the major points of interest. But it has such an amazing and simple transit system that gets you as far away as Potsdam without requiring any brain power that it’s not overwhelming. We stayed at a place called Art Hotel, which was quite decent.
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Like my odd and somewhat obsessive interest in France’s market’s, the Berlin transit system will likely be one of my strongest impressions. I was reminded of first getting to Boston, being completely scared of a big new city, and realizing very quickly that it was mine for exploring courtesy of this well thought out mode of transport. (OK seriously what is it with the furry obsession, Germany?)

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The boys here are just as outrageously cute as in Munich and Dresden. To be in any random place, like the u-bahn, or a street corner, or standing in line for tickets and to see handfuls of people who you want to have a 1-hour long term relationship with (sometimes at the same time) is an odd experience. I spent hours marveling at people, and Roy would nudge me to point someone else out and I would realize my receptors were worn out. We came up with a phrase which was some variant of “There needs to be an off switch for the boys now” when we were too tired to even smile, but they kept coming like a tsunami.

We saw walkinfukkin
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Standinfukkin
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Multibikkenfukkin
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Skatinfukkin
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Andy Warhol
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And gaggles of others and different variants.
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Berlin is getting a facelift right now, courtesy of Adidas, Hyundai, and hundreds of other sponsors of the FIFA World Cup. Everywhere we went there were signs of massive new construction and ‘improvements’. Roy wandered around saying “that’s new, that’s new, that’s new, that entire block is new” from the last time he was here.

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The Brandenberg gate seemed like a likely place to start. There we found a Starbucks, and a huge steel sculpture of a football being erected.
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We also wandered to the Reichstag to see machine gun bullet holes. Those had been patched, and there was some sort of Adidas arena construction in front.
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It’s a good thing I am a HUGE HUGE soccer fan, otherwise I might find all this irritating.

I kept my time in Berlin relatively unstructured. I was kinda overwhelmed generally with being away from home for so long, and didn’t want to go crazy with travel agendas.

I got a great tip in my travel guide that if we wanted to avoid the lines at the Reichstag (which were huge), we could book lunch in the restaurant at the top. Which we did. We slipped right past the entire crowd and had a nice lunch before wandering around to see the Berlin skyline. On our way out it started raining hard, and naturally we forgot an umbrella :) Img 2827
The rain didn’t stick around long so we just kept wandering. Next up we wandered over to the Stasi headquarters - the state secret police.

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Finally we headed to the Deutsches Theatre where we saw Volpone by Ben Johnson - in German. I brought Roy a copy of the english play so he could get a feel for it, and he kindly gave me the Cliff’s notes version (which was sadly unavailable. I looked.) The storyline is detailed and silly: A rich man has lots of greedy pseudo-friends who want his inheritance. He pretends to be sick and dying or dead or none of those at various times to fuck with them. Seemed like it was acted very well, but as it was in German, had been widely reinterpreted, and had many parts and characters cut out I only had a small idea of what was going on.

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After the theatre we stopped at an italian restaurant to grab something to eat. I ordered a steak with roquefort and discovered that my tastebuds were starting to go. Boo.

Home and bed after that.

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May 21: Dresden DE to Berlin DE

We woke up, packed our bags, checked out, and stowed our luggage with the front desk. There was fun getting the bill sorted out:

  1. we had to get a refund on the internet service which never worked
  2. we had to get breakfast charges removed, since we didn’t eat any
  3. we had to get the room price adjusted, since they told us it was a free upgrade, then tried to charge the full rate anyway

Thankfully Roy is fluent in German so it was sorted out quickly.

Next was the train station to book tickets to Berlin - the train left at 2pm, so we had several hours to kill.

We headed to the Staatliche museum back in the theatre district. We were hoping for a proper breakfast at a restaurant/cafe inside the museum, but they weren’t serving until 11am. I settled for a carrot cake and cafe americano. It turned out to be a good choice… it was more of an orange bread than a carrot cake, and instead of a cream cheese frosting it just had a light glaze. The carrot decor on top was a tasty bit of marzipan.

The Staatliche is jam-freaking-packed with masterpieces. Rembrandt, Poussin, and even *the* Botticelli painting with the seriously over-exposed bored cherubs at the bottom. There were tons of interesting dutch things, which all have an interesting edge over the other crap. One painter kept doing “still life with…” over and over again. By still life, it was a table of freshly killed animals. There was always one or more dogs fighting with each other and drinking the animal blood, and almost always there was a monkey somewhere in the painting. Too funny. The other side of this heap was weaponry. Guns, knives, swords, armor, jousting poles, horse armor, children’s armor, spring loaded knives that you pierced with then opened to do massive damage. Oh the fun we had. It was really nifty.

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We had hoped to go to the Hygiene museum, but we were both a bit tired, and would only be able to spend about 45 min there. We opted for a beer and sausage before heading back to the hotel for bags, then on to the train station.

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Dresden is bleak. It was flattened during the war and rebuilt. It screams East Germany. It’s beautiful, but feels sad and worn out. There is obviously nowhere near the money Munich has, and it shows not just in the shops and streets, but in the public services, street cleaning, and transit. It’s also a tad overrun with tourists, even in the cold weather.

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May 20: Munich DE to Dresden DE and Dead Man Walking

Had breakfast in the funny little tea room of our hotel again this morning, then packed and headed out. Roy picked a hotel that was mercifully close to the train station, so we only had to walk for a block or so. I ran into a pharmacy there to check into heavier drugs for my cold. After we determined she spoke english I went right to it: “I need ibuprofen and something with pseuephedrine in it to dry my head out”… done and done. I also got some fisherman’s friend cough drops. Yay.

Then it was on the train to Dresden - about a 4 hour journey. Once again I am floored by the trains in Europe. Electric all the way across the country, and such a smooth ride. You don’t have to worry about bottoming out in the seats and cracking your tailbone going across a “pothole” like you do on Caltrain.

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Sadly the full kitchen was not available in the diner car, but there was the ever present beer and Spargle - Asparagus. Roy chose a stew thing that looked disgusting but tasted pretty good.

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