Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Day Tripper


View of Hamburg from across the lake
A cool aspect of living in Århus is that you can nip off on a four and a half hour train ride to the third largest port in the world (next to London and New York). Nine hours of trains for a weekend trip might sound rather intense, until you consider how long is a bus ride to Swartz Bay, a ferry across the channel, and a subsequent bus/train ride to downtown Vancouver. Here one might not see orcas nor eagles, but the rural Danish/German landscape has its own charming appeal.

The multi-layer eis in Andrea's handAndrea and I both love visiting Germany. The cities are overwhelmingly large, and it seems that everything else is correspondingly large, as well.  For 1.89 euro, you can find Ritter Sport bars the size of a dinner plate.  Cups of ice cream come with three flavours and a mountain of whipped cream.
And there's always a spectacular Botaniske Have.
A view from outside the solarium at the Hamborg botanical gardenIn Århus, we live beside the Botaniske Have, and it makes for a very pleasant twenty minute walk to make one's way around it's perimetre.  In Hamborg, we ventured through for about 90 minutes, from roses to cacti to olive trees, and still missed the majority of what was to see.  But we had little choice, if we were going to walk the hundreds of rooms of Picassos and Cezannes at the kunsthalle before it closed.

So, really, given the nature of these cities, it's good that we're only there for a weekend.  Even by the end of that, we're starting to feel a little "groß" (pronounced "gross") ourselves...

PS. Can you spot the difference between these two photos?


Andrea at a bridge over the canal in Nuremberg in October 2011 Andrea at a bridge over a canal in Hamburg in October 2013
Nürnberg, Oct/2011 Hamborg, Oct/2013

4 comments:

  1. I'm really enjoying reading the blog and getting a feeling for where you are. The Botaniske Have (botanical gardens) sound wonderful. Nürnberg looks much less industrial than Hamborg. Which city has the better Oktoberfest?

    Love Mom

    ReplyDelete
  2. I don't believe that Ritters sports are as big as dinner plates. Post photos. Or better yet, send me some proof. :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hey, since anonymous didn't leave his/her name, you can just send me that giant Ritter Sport :-) Love the photos and the stories. Thanks for the vicarious travel adventures!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well, we're not equipped to say, because we've only been to Oktoberfest in Munich and Hamburg. Nuremberg is much closer to Bavaria, so, it could be more likely to host a good Oktoberfest, or else it could be more likely to migrate to Munich in late September...

    ReplyDelete