Tuesday, 24 September 2013

These are a few of my favorite things...

Well, it seems that summer has officially finished. All that hot and sunny weather I've been boring you with for two months is gone, and how better to spend a cool and drizzly day than updating a blog?

I'm determined to stay roughly chronological, so today I'll show you around my temporary home town some more, before we launch into some Eastern European travels in the next posts.

When we arrived in Berlin, one of our first stops was to the Mauer Park flea market to buy a couple of bikes. Gertrude came first.

Me & Gertrude!

Staying in my lane!
Gertrude was soon joined by Mark's bike, also procured at the flea market, which he steadfastly refuses to name (the bike, not the flea market!). No Name and Gertrude (this should totally be the name of a band!) get on like a house on fire.

This is the only pic of No Name, because I'm a bad wife and photographer
Biking around Berlin is so easy, because there are designated bike lanes everywhere, and the traffic is really slow - Berlin drivers don't seem to hate cyclists like they do in Sydney. So, even though I haven't been on a bike in like, 10 years, I happily pedal around the city.

We often ride our bikes to the Tiergarten, which has a lovely beer garden on a lake, Cafe am Neuen See. We've spent many a happy afternoon, playing cribbage and drinking beer here.

All lakes should have a beer garden

Mmmmmm - pretzels....
You're gonna share that pretzel, right?
I've got another favourite beer garden, you might be surprised to learn. Pratergarten is where I learned to love green beer! It's a tradition, apparently, to add a cordial-like syrup to a light wheat beer, making it taste a bit like soda. The green one is woodruff flavoured - supposedly more herbal than the red, fruity option, and very delicious. Plus, you get to drink it through a straw out of a fish bowl!

A fish bowl of green beer!
We've also made our way to a few lakes around Berlin. You can take your bike on the train, as long as you buy it a ticket.

Gertrude is totally legal
On our first train/bike trip, we went to Schlachtensee, a lake with - you guessed it - a great beer garden!

Lovely Schlactensee

The beer garden here was pretty spectacular, so much so that even I was happy to sit in the sun.

Sudoku and pretzels - what a life!
Happy Mark



Another thing I like to do while I'm pedalling around, besides drinking beer in lakeside beer gardens, is look at the street art. Berlin is an amazing outdoor gallery! In the former East Berlin, artists often took over disused buildings and used them as collective housing and impromptu galleries. Some groups of artists lived in the same buildings for years. After reunification, however, these properties are in what are now very desirable neighbourhoods undergoing gentrification, and the artists are being pushed out. Some groups hang on, and all leave their mark.

We all remain




An actual outdoor gallery is the East Side Gallery, where a section of the wall has been retained and serves as a giant art installation. On one side, the paintings are permanent, if somewhat damaged by graffiti and weather.


Currently, the other side is an exhibit about walls that continue to divide us around the world. I was sad to see pictures of the US/Mexico border looking so like the walls in Gaza.



Despite the depressing images, there's something inspiring about seeing them on a wall that was successfully (and peacefully) breached by a city that refused to remain divided. I was left with a feeling of great hope.


The day we visited the East Side Gallery, we also rode over to Tempelhof Park. This former airport was famously used to keep West Berlin supplied with food and other necessities during the Soviet blockade in 1948-49. Now it's a giant park in the middle of the city, where you can fly kites, ride your bike or just laze around in the sun.



You can also buy a beer from the hippies who run a kind of community garden/dance party in the corner of the park. Instead of telling you what you owe, they'll ask you to name a price you think is fair. Be cool, man.


Wherever we go in Berlin, we see these giant pipes painted in bright colours. Mark's working theory is that they are used for gerbil transportation, as it's too dangerous for them to try and get around the city using the crosswalks. 
Go gerbils!

Others more knowledgeable about the city tell us that they are used to drain water away from construction sites, as Berlin has a very high water table. You pick the explanation you like best.

And finally, for my friend Sophie, my one and only loyal follower, are some more pictures of German food. I'm coming around to the idea of a German breakfast, which consists of cold cuts, cheese, fruit, and lots of fresh bread, with a strong coffee. I like the breakfasts best, I think, because a) they're not brown and b) there aren't any dumplings at breakfast.



Can anyone (I'm looking at you, Sophie) tell me what this orange fruit is? It's been on many breakfast plates, and I can't figure it out. It has a papery husk, like a tomatillo almost, but it's sweet and tangy.


Well, this has been a bit of a hodgepodge, but I think it nicely summarises our Berlin summer. Next up, visitors and we get back on the road!

4 comments:

  1. Pneumatic gerbil transport? Don't be ridiculous! They are CLEARLY a stockpile of parts for potato guns!

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    1. Thank you, Leighana, for a much more multi-hued and even, most would agree, appetising food shot! I could happily enjoy that breakfast, but I'm at a loss re your husky orange accompaniment. I shall conduct some serious (a.k.a. Google) research and get back to you if I find anything...

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    2. Café Berlin's online menu lists papaya - could that be your mystery fruit? Please report back when you work this one out!

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