Wednesday, October 19, 2005

DAYS 26-28 ICH BIN EINE JAM DONUT, Um..BERLINER

WEDNESDAY OCT 12TH
Well, I wish I was a Jam Donut. Wow.

That's all I can say. The political melting pot, the hotspot of major world events, the architecturally splendid cityscape, the place where it all happened, and is still arguably the most happening place in Europe....And we've seen it. For two and a half desperately short days. BERLIN.


Pergamon Museum


Jana arranged another private ride to Berlin from Dresden. If you're ever in Germany, and you speak German (or better still, are good friends with some Germans) you can make use of an excellent travelling web tool http://www.mitfahrzentrale.de/ where you find people who are driving between towns and you formally hitch a ride, usually for a paltry 20 Euros to cover fuel. There's usually no shortage of rides available as many drivers use it to help lessen the pain of high European fuel prices.


Berliner Dom

Poor Jana. She has been twice to Australia and we've gotten to know her quite well in that time, as a typical German with a soft center. She works very hard on a career and isolates herself as a result. We know she wanted to spend more time with us but gets driven very hard by the job.

After our sad goodbyes we headed off to Berlin with our appointed driver (another Sebastian) and one other "web-hitchhiker". We sure got our 20 Euro's worth- Sebastian was an excellent tour guide and commentator who made the trip interesting in his Volvo.

He showed us all the weird, failed economic projects of Eastern Germany on the autobahn from Dresden to Berlin. Including; what was planned as a massive Zeppelin manufacturing plant, now a health resort, and my favourite, the Euro Speedway Lausitzring, right on the A86. It has had few major motorsport events since Alex Zanardi misplaced both legs in a nasty crash. Although, there was a round of the fledgeling A1 GP Nations Series there on the same day I was killing my feet in Saxony Switzerland with Jana the bushwalking freak. No, I cannot believe I didn't go either. It must have escaped my notice.


Neue Synagoge, OranienburgerStrasse. Like all Jewish property, guarded by police. We were told, sadly, they are still neccessary after all these years. Any police protection is funded by the state of Brandenburg


And, as we motored along the Autobahns of Brandenburg, probably the flattest land in Germany, naturally I was keen to solicit from Sebastian his own tales from behind the Iron Curtain. Some of them were hilarious, including stories of highly conspicuous spies, complete with big black trenchcoats and wide-brimmed hats, sticking out like sore thumbs at theater meetings known for their lampooning of the communist regime.

He was even impressed that I knew of Karl Eduard Von Schnitzer, a notorious GDR TV personality. Von Schnitzer was the front man for the "black channel", specialising in debunking and insulting whatever was on Western TV, since the regime knew they could not stop anyone from watching it. He was famously known as "Karl Eduard Von Schni..." since that's how much of his name anyone would hear before they hurriedly changed the channel.


Museum Island


You cannot help get swept away by the Berlin fascination. This place has seen more action and notoriety, and been involved in more painful world events than anywhere. Sadly, I suppose, it owes most of it's tourism attraction to this fact. Sure there are some nice buildings (some of them REALLY old) but most come to see where IT all happened. Holocaust, Third Reich, Cold War... that's what Berlin is famous for, whether Berliners like it or not.




As Sebastian's Volvo meandered in from the south we saw the East Side Gallery, the longest remaining section of The Wall with original 1990 artwork, the famous Television Tower and Alexanderplatz, the proud centre square of communist Berlin.


Nice old building....and Lola ran across here!!


But if you can manage to see through all that for a moment you see a cool, happening place. There are SO many pubs and clubs, yet they are ALL full, all of the time. Some of the boutique art galleries were fascinating and classy, the pace is frenetic compared to the rest of Germany...this is real Big City Germany. Artists seem to thrive here, visual arts, performance, music. There is evidence of poverty but not to the point of being unsafe. There is something addictive and infectious about this city, beyond the morbid history.

Remaining section of Berlin Wall, NiederkirchenerStrasse. Not far from here, the wall was cunningly located a metre or two inside the actual "East Berlin border", enabling East German guards to arrest West Germans for walking too close to the wall!


Sebastian dropped us at the S-Bahn just north of the famous Alexanderplatz, and one efficient and fast train ride took us right to the hostel- Circus, it was called, at Rosa-Luxemburg Strasse. Our apartment was magnificent, with views of big city Berlin from the balcony, although to find the apartment involved negotiating the bowels of the hostel complex Maxwell Smart- style.


My art teacher in Geelong had given me the name of a Berlin contact who was expecting us, apparently. Liane Richter runs the Monsters Bar in central Berlin, and her troupe build giant metal monsters. They are known as the Dead Chickens. This form of grotesque art is rather fascinating. You can check it out on www.deadchickens.de. It's quite a good site with some cool effects and some english.


The GDR were good at building crap cars and big, evil walls but hopeless at restoring nice buildings


We didn't have an address for the bar, only directions. It was located in the rear of the darkest, dingiest grafitti-covered alley in the area. But that was it's appeal. This was real, underground nightclub Berlin. The bar itself was dark and the monster sculptures made it surreal, yet the punters were a conservative cross section. Old, young, professionals...they all looked at home.

Having said that, on this particular Wednesday evening, Liane had enlisted a punk band. So, Sharon and I tactfully decided that we had a big day of sightseeing tommorrow so needed to hit the sack.

THURSDAY OCTOBER 13TH

In the morning we had a bit of a look around ourselves, using the handy S-bahn. From underground we emerged at the famous Potsdamer Platz. Once a desolate wasteland of the Death Strip, now a massive development of high-rise and shopping complexes. We wanted to look at different stuff so Sharon and I went our separate ways. I went straight to the Brandenburg Gate and just stared at it for ages. On the way, I found a film crew filming a German soapie. One of the cameramen told me it was funded by Grundy, the Aussie production group responsible for Neighbours. Naturally they politely told me to put my video camera away.


The amazing Potsdamer Platz- barely 15 years ago it was the largest expanse of death strip

But there was only so much we could learn on our own. So we grabbed a great walking tour from the hostel for the afternoon. Check out the website, http://www.brewersberlintours.com/, it's very funky. Our guide was Silvia the Canadian (not American. I gotta stop asking Canadians "Are you American??" and try "Where are you from??" instead). Her knowledge of Berlin was extensive and she was an excellent guide. Although, me being me, I always think I could do things better and quietly dreamed of how I would be a tour guide in Berlin. Then I realised, I could not do it better, I was just thinking I could because I was downright green jealous that she has a better job than me.

She didn't just take us to churches and castles. We took in the Synagogues, the memorials, the places where things happened, the Museum Island, iconic GDR locations...she even pandered to my movie trivia obsession and managed to point out the spots where Lola Ran. Everywhere in Berlin is a story.

A tasteful row of brick paving winds its way through Berlin to remind all of exactly where the city was torn throught the middle. Occasionally the paving is replaced by the real thing, remaining sections of the wall, still being chipped and pilfered by souveneir hunters.


Looking West



The original Hermann Goerring Air Force building, a dark and characteristically Nazi-looking monster which the Allies managed to completely miss with their bombs, is now the tax department, so the building is still hated by the locals. And it is here you find such an original section of the wall. Many know the story of August 1961, where Berliners woke up to see this oppressive wall being built, literally overnight. Following 1989 and the initial haste to rid themselves of this terrible scar, eventually Berlin realised there was tourism to consider, and left some of it intact.

This particular section has a big hole. During the Berlin Love Parade a few years ago some drunk revellers drove their car into it. Following this incident Berliners woke up to see... a fence built around the wall. Oh, the irony...


Checkpoint C ("Charlie") where in 1963, WWIII was almost started because some American wanted to take his wife to the opera.


Then Sylvia brought us to a nondescript carpark in between some ugly GDR apartment buildings. Everybody knows what this place is, and where it is. But no plaques, no memorials, no signs. Nothing to mark it's location. Just the occasional grim-faced tour group, coming and standing there. It is hard to imagine this was once a desolate, charred wasteland pounded by bombs, where a worldwide nightmare finally came to an end, after the waste of 50 million souls.

It was the site of a WWII bunker. The one where Hitler spoke of "Fighting and dying with his kingdom", sent 14 year old boys to fight while he cowered under 5 metres of concrete, giving the naive Eva Braun 5 minutes of marriage, then killing himself.

I wonder how many residents of the surrounding apartments look out the window and see various tour groups standing sombrely here, no smiles, just ashen faces. And to remind you further why, on the nearest street corner is one of many little plaques you find around Berlin. It has a name, date of "deportation" and a deceased date. Sometimes these plaques were placed simply where the person was last seen.



It's funny, as we walked to this spot, not knowing what was coming, I got a phone call from Claudia. She rang us for no other reason than- she was tired, depressed and missing us, especially her "nurse" Sharon who spent more time with her at various medical treatments. The feeling was, naturally, quite mutual. If there is such a thing as good timing for such a call, it was then. It set the mood. After the bunker site, the next stop was the massive, recently completed, Holocaust Memorial- a sea of black monoliths on a mildly undulating block of land. You can walk through them, feeling hemmed in and oppressed.


Holocaust memorial site

Ironically, only a month later when we were back in Oz, Claudia was sent to Weimar, a place near Berlin, for what we would call convalescence- rehabilition and recovery time with other cancer sufferers/survivors. On her afternoon off, she went to Buchenwald, the main concentration camp for the Berlin area. She said it was "something I had to do" and the experience was, somehow, helpful. In hindsight, it was a very well-timed phone call, but very hard to explain why.


"Deported 1942"...all she wrote



Anyways, back to our tour and the spritely Canadian Sylvia. Last but not least, as they say, she took us to the magnificent Reichstag and BrandeburgerTor. You have to see them for real. They are amazing. The mighty Brandenburg gate stands, illuminated at night, finally freed from the wasteland of the East-West deathstrip. Again, so many stories- ranging from the poignant and ironic WWII and Cold War tales, to the ridiculous, such as Michael Jackson dangling his baby from the nearby Hotel Adlon balcony.


BrandenburgerTor. Utterly magnificent. And I betcha Sharon's photos are infinitely better than all the other tourists'


(...And the chocolate version)



Reichstag at dusk

Against the Berlin dusk and the illuminated Brandenburg Gate, the tour officially ended, but Sylvia and a couple of other Aussies kindly joined us to eat what we believed was the best Doner Kebab we have ever tasted. And we've tasted a few. We discovered it the night before near the Monsters Bar. A shared Doner Kebab is probably the best value meal in Europe. It was one of those nights that shouldn't have to end.

Berlin, even more so than Dresden, uses the novelty of the former communist regime to prop up the tourism. Everywhere a humourously painted Trabant, Ampfelmann icon (the cheery looking pedestrian crossing symbol) and bits of the Wall, still for sale. I wonder if those who were cut off from their loved ones in 1961, or families of those whose disappearance is still a mystery, can be quite so nostalgic.


Happy little communist girl says DON'T WALK...or we'll lock you up in a small steel cell and deprive you of sleep for 10 days...


And why should they be. There is more to Berlin than this. That evening, I sat in the packed Monsters Bar, near a sea of loud, crazy, packed bars and pubs, listening to a Berliner tell me how he will launch a new religion called Pastafarianism, which involves cooking and eating pasta as a form of worship. It was one of those intense, yet totally sarcastic and hilarious conversations. The humour was more Pythonesque than German. So much for our typical German stereotypes. This was Berlin. Crazy, fun, ugly, beautiful Berlin.

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

DAYS 24-25 NEVER ENOUGH OF DRESDEN

MONDAY OCTOBER 10TH


With Jana off at work we were able to bum around Dresden for a day without a plan. So, a short walk from her apartment up to the Grosser Garten (Big Garden). It is rather huge, taking up several city blocks. Dresden is not a huge, busy megopolis but it's nice to have a big park in which to walk the dog and feed some ducks. Still, even in a big public garden in these parts, you cannot go far without seeing some massive Baroque piece of architecture. Smack bang in the middle of the Garten is yet another one of August the Strong's residences. According to Sharon, with some very nice windows.


August the Strong's, um, garden residence


I marvel at how these historical characters were so presumptuous, giving themselves names like August "The Strong" or Freidrich "The Great". Still, I suppose you don't conquer and rule countries with names like "Herbert the Sufficient" or "Johann the slightly annoying but reasonably good with kids".

We then familiarised ourselves with Dresden's excellent public transport system. I have to say that because Jana's Dad is the director of Dresden's public transport system. On our last overseas trip we maxed out on taxis. On this one, not a single taxi was required.

We headed up to the Blaueswunder, (or "Blue Wonder") Dresden's much liked bluey-green coloured bridge (There is no word in German for "bluey-green", but if there was I'm sure it would be ten miles long). By the way, the word "Blaue" is German slang for ridiculously drunk. There's no real significance in that, I just thought I'd mention it.


Bluey-Green wonder



From there you can catch a sort of cable car up to a lookout and take pictures of nice views of Dresden. So we did. From there you get a horrific impression of how bad it must have been in 2002 when the floods hit eastern Europe.



This was pretty much how we spent Monday and Tuesday. Monday night after work Jana whisked us off to a little village in the Ore Mountains. We dined at a restaurant with lots of Christmassy things, including a highwire cycling Santa and a shop full of classic Saxon crafts, such as those funny little smoking men. It was kinda cute, but I what I remember most about the evening is that Jana drives like a maniac. Maybe she was showing off..!? If she was, it worked..I am impressed.


Dining out in the Ore Mountains


Hofkirche, Dresden



TUESDAY OCTOBER 11TH
Another day in Dresden...I never tire of the Aldstadt. The ongoing construction work is a little intrusive but it tells you that Dresden is growing and rebuilding. All the magnificent baroque sights, street buskers, and amazing history... I could spend weeks there.


Theaterplatz

Zwinger's moat


That night we met up again with Jana's Dad and Chrystal, a bubbly woman who is so excited to see us every time, for a meal at the Saxon-themed SophienKellar. This restaurant is built upon the site of the Sophienkirche, the only old 1945-bombed church which was not rebuilt (perhaps because the Communists really didn't like rebuilding churches). The restaurant is underground, within the remaining catacombs of the Residenzschloss, the castle of August the Reasonably Muscular. We had the fortune of sitting at the merry-go-round table, with chairs suspended by chains around a revolving table. You had to swing forwards to grab your beer.

Funny but annoying novelty swinging chairs


A veteran of novelty swinging chairs

It was our last night in Dresden. Jana had arranged a "Melbourne 2003 footynight" reunion after-dinner, or at least, as much as was possible with Marko being in Stuttgart and Claudi having another round of chemo and not feeling well.

But, with her rather likeable boyfriend and protector Jörgy (smarter than the average bear) Claudi still managed to pop into the SophienKellar to say goodbye, knowing we were off to Berlin the next day. At least it wasn't Auf Wiedersehen, it was Bis Später...her January 2006 Australia trip was a go-er, she had paid for her flights that day.

Great news, but still, it was hard to let go of her. What a wonderful friend.

Off to the pub district of Neustadt where we met up with Katja and the last missing footynight link, Sophie. It was a tough night for me, surrounded by four gorgeous women. I went to the loo and some guy thought he'd get lucky, joining these four apparently-single women and giving them a long, German pickup line. Sophie showed the most initiative . She just looked at him blankly and said "...in English please" which scared him off.


Hanging out in the Neustadt


We even had the talented Katja speaking almost-perfect 'Strine "I would like to speak proper English" pronounced "Oi wood loike to spook...etc" Not a bad effort for a European. Sophie and Sharon and Jana just laughed a lot. But it was all a closing chapter.

And that was just about all the socialising I had come to Germany for. Quite a fitting end to our relaxing time in Dresden, and it may well have seemed more appropriate to fly home after that. But there was still this interesting city called Berlin...

Monday, October 17, 2005

DAYS 22-23 BACHELORS FROM PRAGUE


SATURDAY OCTOBER 8TH


As much as we were looking forward to seeing Jana and enjoying some of her surprises, it was a sad good bye to Claudia and co. The Löbe family are a genuine, lovely bunch, and their hospitality was complete without being overwhelming. Their little town of Seifersdorf was a perfect place to stay and enjoy some real German day-to-day life. I really, really hope we get to see them again sometime.



And, of course, seeing Claudi again was priceless. If she was tired, lethargic and a little down at times, it didn't show. If I didn't know better I'd say she was as happy to see us as we were to see her. She spoiled us rotten.

The beautiful Schloss Moritzburg, good friends, and a ripper German pastry. What more could you want...

But, travels don't plan themselves so it was off to Jana's in downtown Dresden. First up Jana, her Dad and his partner Chrystal whisked us off to the Czech republic to see Prague. It's a whole different thing, going from Germany to a real "Eastern Bloc" country. Prague shows plenty of signs of opulence, thanks to hordes of tourists. The drive in through the rest of the country says otherwise. Unlike even East Germany (with it's high unemployment) the CZ Republic shows real poverty and hardship.


our loyal tour guides

The only hardship I experienced was a 2 hour drive on slow, windy roads, squeezed in between two women in a little Renault Laguna. Although, Jana's Dad is a jolly man and he makes every little trip as jolly as possible. He had much to tell us but his daughter found the translating a chore.

But not to be outdone by anyone, Jana played tour guide, describing Prague as "A nice city. It has lots of really old buildings".

Wow, we just don't pay her enough! It doesn't just have a LOT of old buildings, they are REALLY old. She spent the rest of the trip saying something about being "just a translator machine".

Prague is , most definitely, a tourist highlight. It does not quite have the baroque splendour of Dresden, but the classic architecture is spread as far as the eye can see. Around every corner is a cobbled market square, surrounded by an ancient church, town hall, theater or palace. And all this goes for miles. A slight bohemian feel in some less-restored areas simply adds to the character.

All this, I suppose, is just another way of saying...it has lots of really old buildings....



I saw my first Pagini Zonda in Prague!

I've lost count of the number of well known movies shot in Prague. It really is worth seeing, but I secretly wondered what it would be like to venture deeper into old Eastern Europe and get off the tourist trail. Bucharest, Budapest, Zagreb...maybe next time...


Me and my translator machine, Czech Republican Presidential Palace grounds


Prague's most famous brigde- "The Charles", built in 1357.

Another highlight of Prague was the hordes of Dutch soccer fans in town for the NL v CZ World Cup qualifier. We lunched in the main Market square to the sound of thousands of loud, funny raucus orangey-dressed people and the sight of soccer balls bouncing off cars, people, and really old buildings. About the time we were driving back to Dresden, Prague was probably being painted orange as I believe the score was NL-1, CZ-0.

the game wasn't until the evening. Some of these people would not have made it that far


St John of Nepomuk, one of 30 statues placed along Charles' Bridge. With literally thousands of Saturday tourists on the bridge, many of them touching the base of the statue for good luck, as per an old superstition, it took Sharon forever to get this photo

The crucifix and calvary statue. The first crucifix was 14th century, but this current one was actually made in Dresden in 1630. The Hebrew text around the crucifix reads Holy Holy Holy...Lord of Hosts and was put there in the late 1600's to punish a local Jew for defacing the statue!


The drive home was as uneventful as the one over. Uneventful except for the bit where Jana's Jolly Dad did an illegal u-turn across and bridge and got sprung by the good folks from Prague's reputable constabulary. Now, I know the iron curtain is long gone but I couldn't help but sweat a little waiting for the raised voices, loud pleas of innocence, finger pointing at the westerners in the back seat, the frisking, the being carried off to some dark cell to be interrogated about what magazines I'd brought over.

It's not quite like that anymore, however, Dieter had to barter them down from the proposed fine of 2000 Czech kroner (about 80 Euro) to around 350 kroner. It seems the weekly wage of the boys and girls in Blue sometimes just isn't enough.

So, we waved goodbye to the friendly Prague Police as they headed off, doing an illegal u-turn in the process...

Back to Dresden, we were lucky to have Marko and Betty back in town just for the weekend so I went out with the boys. Marko took me to the Neustadt of Dresden (meaning "new city" but is just as old as the "Altstadt") which is the traditional pub jaunt for students.

SUNDAY OCTOBER 9TH
After a good sleep and foot-resting, it was up at 8am with Jana to catch the train to the local hiking and mountain-climbing paradise, Saxony Switzerland. It's not actually in Switzerland, it's just called that for reasons I did not research so too bad if you want to know. Jana, ever the nature loving bush type, drove her little Renault unimaginably fast from Ackermanstrasse to the train station, as she didn't want to miss the early train. Her driving scared me more than being on a turbulent plane infested with tarantulas.

We missed the early train anyway and, being a beautiful Sunny Sunday it was packed with other nature-loving bush types. Being 9am I remembered the Bathurst 1000 would be just about be run and won so I texted Aussie land to find out that Mark Skaife won. Pity I couldn't share the news with anyone!



It was arduous walking, especially with my newly-discovered feet deformities, but stunning scenery. It's a little like the Grampians, but more dramatic, and in Europe. It is a hit with rock climbers. When you reach the lookouts, you can see the rock-climbers dotting the mountain faces like lots of colourful, slightly nervous-looking starfish.

Total and absolute nutters, every last one of them


The forest was fairy-tale like. It was so cute, I'm sure I saw a little hut and heard some bears complaining about their breakfast. There is an open air theatre here- classic stuff.


are we there yet

Open air theater. Off season, unfortunately. So I didn't see why I got told off for trying to get onto the stage


Sunday night, Jana solved the problem of how to show us the magnificent Dresden Opera House, the Semperoper. It was hard to get the timing right for guided tours during the day. So, that night we all went to the Opera! It was in the nosebleeds, but, who cares. This is one of the most prestigious opera venues in Europe.


Inside the magnificent Semperoper


Macbeth was playing. It was a modern interpretation. Since it was my first time to the Opera since Mum forced me, at age 13, to see Dame Joan Sutherland, I must say I was surprised at the nudity, sexual themes and violence. I suspect if more blokes knew about this in Australia there would be more people at the opera. But this was Dresden so the place was full of businesspeople, teenagers and middle-class. There was only one hitch in the production- after a scene with lots of gore and dismemberment, a stage hand forgot to remove a severed arm so it stayed there for the rest of the show. But overall it was quite an experience- the sheer opulence.


The Semperoper


The chicks who took me to the Semperoper. We were all a little underdressed

Friday, October 07, 2005

DAY 21 PM- TRABANT FÄHREN

The trouble with blogs is sometimes you need people to read the previous one first. Do that if you haven´t already, then return to this one.

So my fascination with all things GDR and post- wall nostalgia (and I haven´t even been to Berlin yet) is warmly received here in the beautiful East of Germany. Nostalgia for the former east (Ostalgie) is alive and well, especially in rural Germany. From ugly mass housing, run-down bohemian neighbourhoods, to a unique, hat-wearing, happy looking green walking men on the pedestrian traffic lights, these things are all quirky, retro-trendy icons of GDR life.


But the most well-known representative of GDR-chic is the Trabant. For those who don´t know, the Trabant was East German communism´s answer to the Volkswagen (which actually meant "people´s car", this being like a red rag to a bull for the communists). The socialists were desperate to demonstrate their commitment to the convenience and well-being of their "loyal" citizens. They had to give them something to make them feel as though they, well, had something.



So the socialist gift to the people was...the Trabant. The body was plastic, the engine was a small two-stroke pollution-generating horror putting out 26 horsepower. And the looks...even in 1952 they looked awful. Even the good little socialists had to wait anything from 10 to 18 years from ordering to delivery.

I had been told by our city-dwelling friend Jana, some time ago, that Trabants were not to be found much more in daily use. My main chance of seeing one was in captivity. But since arriving in Dresden I have been lucky enough to see the ugly little socialist duckling in it's natural habitat a few times. At the train station in Dresden on Wednesday, I even saw a hotted-up one.

somebody found a good use for a Trabant

Our beloved Claudi has thrown all kinds of surprises at us, from BMW´s to traditional German foods and an assortment if things that she knows we will like. She and her friends and family have gone above and beyond the "let´s just take them to some castles" approach, which is what we do in Australia- take the tourists to pat some kangaroos, and so on. Here, they have spoiled us with German life, whilst still being themselves.

All I have been able to offer Claudia in return is a B & W sketch of her (pre-chemotherapy, a look she prefers) and boyfriend Jörg, which I finished prior to our travels. At least it was well received, and I may be taking orders from various Germans...

Janet and Jogy

Last night (Thursday 6th Oct) she threw a big party with Hungarian Goulasch, real German wursts and good friends. The conversation degenerated into a laughing match over "proper" German and the much- taunted Saxon accent (which, I happen to think, is quite nice to listen to. So much softer than the "Hoch Deutsch") Claudi's best friend Janet gave the uncle (goulasch chef) a spirited ribbing over his "country" accent, likening it to some redneck hillbilly dialect. He reminded her that her more polished accent still sounds just as weird to Müncheners...

...And so it went. We were in love with this bunch.

Of course, I was a little late for the party. It was my last evening with the BMW, and I'd spotted a nice looking windy road between Seifersdorf and Dippoldiswalde during some earlier sightseeing around the string of little villages. And I had a few minutes to kill. And some kilometres to burn. Sheer driving pleasure indeed!



The Goulasch was making me coy...



Today, after the State Library visit, we went riding on Claudia´s showjumping horse, Sanny Day. She's named after a 70's Dutch Folk Singer... a piece of trivia which not even Claudia knew. Ha!!

The stables are down the road from her house, and the riding paddock out of town in the other direction. Rather than worry about trailers Claudi trotted off down the main street of Seifersdorf on Sanny leaving us to drive her car in pursuit.


Two girls reunited


Problem was, Claudia left the car keys hiding in a tack room somewhere. By the time she texted to tell us, she was long gone. It was all good fun driving around Seifersdorf looking for a lone woman on a horse.

The session made me appreciate how difficult a skill is horseriding, let alone jumping. But the less said about our riding the better- we really wanted to see Claudia ride. She has done one competition since her operation, but since has been rendered weaker through chemo. Notwithstanding, she rode and jumped Sanny, and it made us happy to see her happy. It seems to give her a boost of energy.




And, she´s not half bad at this showjumping thing either. Very impressive. Apparently Sanny Day, herself suffering from tumours, seemed to behave a lot better after Claudi's operation. It's almost as if she knew...

In any case, watching the big Sanny with little Claudi unleash a powerful racehorse gallop for a few minutes was magnificent. Those two clearly had a lot of catching up to do.

Me warming up the horse for Claudia.


Shortly afterwards Claudi, feeling a little drained, entrusted me with driving duties (!) for a visit to her Grandparents in Reinholdshain, another cute little village in the hills south of Dresden. It was much like a visit to anyone's grandparents- namely, being overfed with yummy cookies, cakes and coffee. They didn't speak any English which made the afternoon more fun. Her Grandpa builds little wooden pyramid ornaments, a well-known Christmas decoration. They're very elaborate. We received one a few months later when Claudi arrived in Australia- a thoughtful gift from the Grandparents.



The neighbours like model trains

Shortly after that it was off to visit her riding buddy Henry, at his family's multi-million-Euro equestrian complex. It made me wish we had brought Naomi. Again, Claudi's number one love is Horses and she bounded through the complex like a gleeful little tour guide.

But this busy day was running out of hours, and clearly our dear Claudi had one more thing to squeeze in. Another little surprise for me, she said.

Sure enough, a few doors down from her house, a friend of her mum´s gave me a special audience with his Trabant. A mint-condition 1986 model, which of course is exactly the same in every possible respect to the 1952 model, right down to the plastic body, hardly-visible 2 stroke engine and frontal fuel tank, The owner was a genuine Trabant enthusiast. And, he was one of the lucky ones. It only took him 8 years for his Trabi to arrive after ordering.


No longer did I need to ask anyone about communism. Everything I needed to know was right there

Although Claudi did wish he would shut up for a bit...

It was dusk, but he actually let me drive it. After years of fascination from afar, I got to experience one of the most iconic symbols of recent European cold-war history first hand. A dream come true, thanks to wonderful friends. We bunnyhopped around narrow dirt lanes in the hills above Seifersdorf. Mr. Trabant, Claudia, Sharon and I squeezed into this little piece of nostalgia, squealing and giggling like children as I grappled the ridiculous column shift 3 speed.

I drove a Trabant. It was awful. I loved it.