Monday, January 18, 2016

Heidelberg, Germany

For Martin Luther King, Jr. weekend we decided to take a short trip (three nights) to Heidelberg.  The drive is normally about 2.5 hours.  HOWEVER.  A snowstorm hit on our way there and we almost didn't make it.  No kidding.  There was a big wreck that completely shut down the A9, so our beloved Google Maps sent us on a detour... onto unplowed roads.  Which was great because hey... that was better than the alternative.  But trying to drive unplowed roads in a VW Jetta?  Not super smart. Just past the town of Plech (this town name always makes me laugh), we were about 1 mile away from emerging back on the A9 on the other side of the wreck, when there was this big, unplowed hill that was nearly impossible to get up.  We tried. And we slid.  And Todd cursed a bit and yelled at me.  And we backed up and tried again.  Nope.  So we went WAY back down the hill and tried one more time.  We were moving, albeit very, very slowly.  I mean, maybe we were going 2 mph.  Todd briefly entertained the idea of going back down and trying again and I told him not to... because forward progress is forward progress!  And guess what?  We made it!  I didn't get any pictures of this, but you'll have to take my word for it.  The tires were spinning.

So a drive that normally takes about 2.5 hours took closer to 4 hours.


But this was literally our view from our AirBnB apartment.  WHAT!?  The Old Bridge and Philosopher's Way!


The mansions on the other side of the Neckar River are insane.  SO. SO. German.  And I'm guessing pretty old.

 

The next morning, after our terrible drive, we went out for a walking tour of Heidelberg.  Todd had been here years ago in college, but it had obviously been a really long time.  First stop, the nearby Old Bridge and the gate to the city.


The gate to the city, but actually facing away from the city at this angle.


Although there has been a monkey statue on the Old Bridge since as far back as the 15th century, this monkey was put here in 1979.  He holds a mirror, and if you rub his fingers, it will ensure a return to Heidelberg.  If you rub the mirror, it will bring you fortune.  If you rub the little mice next to him (which is behind Natalie in the above picture), it will bring you fertility.  I let the kids rub the mice, and I stayed away from them!


Flood heights of the Neckar River!  That's some serious flooding!


If you walk across the Old Bridge and look back toward the city, you will see the massive Schloss Heidelberg up on the hill.  It almost looks fake, as if they are standing in front of a painting!
 

Walking around Heidelberg, we found the Hotel Zum Ritter.  It survived the War of Succession... and was built in 1592!  It's so pretty!  


It's kind of hard to find "student prison" on Google Maps when all of your Google Map locations are in German.  But we finally found it!  What a fun place!  Between 1778 to 1914, this building was used as a student prison for the University of Heidelberg.  It wasn't for serious offenses.  It was more for things like public drunkenness or disturbing the peace.  You could go to class, but you had to come back immediately after class.  Naturally, students covered the walls in graffiti. 


I'm not sure what they used to do all of this!  Did they allow paint and markers in the prison!?!  This isn't exactly Alcatraz!


Some of the paintings and graffiti were pretty detailed!


Naturally, my husband writes THIS and then makes the kids sign it.  "Bailey family was here.  Where do we drop off our kids?  Grant Natalie."


 Lecture hall at the University of Heidelberg.  Can you imagine attending class in a room this cool!?


 Each of us took turns lecturing to the masses.  Here is Natalie, giving us a lesson in how to care for a Baby Alive.


We continued our walk through Heidelberg and came upon the Freidrich Ebert Platz.  Looks like a place the kids could chase pigeons!


This was one of the best donut places I've ever been to.  And apparently it's a chain!  I like it tasty!


Check out that mug.  And that donut!


Everywhere we go in Germany, we find doors that are of unusual sizes.  So if they are shorter than Todd, but taller than me, then we call the Mommy doors.  If they are shorter than Mommy, and taller than Nat, then they are Natalie doors.  And if they are shorter than Nat, but taller than Grant, they are Grantie doors.  I think this was a Mommy door! 


This is a Mommy door also, but solely because it looks like a barrel of bourbon.


Hey look at that!  The Pats-Chiefs game was being shown in Heidelberg!  (Too bad we couldn't stay up that late!)


Unsure of what we were ordering for dinner, I got some handkäse.  This was the grossest thing I have ever eaten in my life!  It looked nothing like cheese.  So much so, that I wasn't even sure what it was when it arrived at the table.  (I'm thinking, "Did I order this!?")  But I'm generally good with most cheeses, so I tried it.  Oh. My. Goodness.  It looks like potatoes but had the consistency of gelatin, and tasted like smokey death.  (I gotta give props to Todd for the "it tastes like smokey death" cause that part was all him!)  To quote Wikipedia, "It is a small, translucent, yellow cheese with a pungent aroma that many people find unpleasant. It is sometimes square, but more often round in shape."  Ok, I'm not the most adventurous eater, but I do like to try new things and I can only think of three things in this world that I absolutely hate, food wise (For the record, the other three are cilantro, shrimp and limes, so ceviche is completely out of the question) but I'll generally try anything.  Let's now make that FOUR foods that I simply will not eat!  Somewhere in the back of this restaurant, I'm SURE the wait staff was laughing at our misfortune!

 
The next morning, we ventured up the funicular to Schloss Heidelberg.  It's a pretty steep ride up, with the second stop being at the top of the mountain, or the Königstuhl above the Schloss.


The first train to the mid point (or the Schloss Heidelberg) is in a very modern funicular.  From the Schloss up to the top of the Königstuhl, you get to take a more old-timey funicular.


The view at the top is amazing though and thankfully the clouds weren't too thick and we could see most of Heidelberg!


Kiddos at the top of  the Königstuhl.  There was obviously more snow up there than down at ground level.


What?  You mean I have to go down THAT!?  Said the girl who is terrified of heights.


The next stop was the Schloss Heidelberg.  This is the view from the top, over historic Heidelberg.


Most of Schloss Heidelberg is in ruins, but there are some inside sections that can still be visited.  As with many historic sites in Europe, they don't always know the exact construction dates, so they rely on historic records to provide information about the age of the structure.  In this case, Schloss Heidelberg (or Heidelberg Palace) was first mentioned in 1225.  It's been built, destroyed by various things such as fire, lightning and wars, and rebuilt many times.


 This gate is known as Elizabeth's Gate.  This was built for Frederick V's bride from England, Elizabeth Stuart, who was the granddaughter of Mary, Queen of Scots.


We stopped in for a visit at the German Pharmacy Museum, which was pretty cool.  They even had self-run projects for children, and Natalie got to make some tea.  Making tea wasn't really Grant's cup of tea, as he didn't want to partake.  (See what I did there!?)


The Heidelberg Tun is a massive wine barrel - you can see Todd and the kids up at the top, and other visitors at the bottom.  It holds nearly 58,000 galllons of wine!   Unfortunately it rarely holds wine.  However, there's plenty of bottles of German wine for sale just outside of this room!


The Castle Powder Turret was partially destroyed by an explosion.  So interesting that they have left it just as it was.


Todd by the remnants of the Heidelberg Palace, way up on high.


Next up it was time for a late lunch. But wait... a sauerkraut-orgie!?  No thanks!


During this same lunch, we let Natalie order a margarita.  JUST KIDDING.  It's sorbet in a margarita-looking glass.


This was in the lobby of our apartment building HA HA HA!  I think we all know what the rest of the world felt about him!


Not long after our late lunch, the snow ended and the clouds parted and we were able to hike up Philosopher's Way!  The first part of the walk is incredibly steep, and you can see how Natalie struggled (with Mommy and Grant up ahead because Grant was full speed ahead!)


The views along the way are stunning.  Schloss Heidelberg is pictured above, which is where we had been earlier in the day.


Look how happy we are that we completed the toughest part of the hike up!  Raise your hand if you are worn out!


 The rest of the hike isn't as steep and it's mostly in the trees.  We wanted to go to the top, but the way is not lit with any lights, so since we knew the sun would be setting soon, we had to cut our hike short.  I definitely would love to come back and do this in the summer!


Back down at the Neckar River with Heidelberg and the sunset behind us.


Looking east from the same location, the river is held back by the barrage Heidelberg, which controls the flow of the river (there's a lock here as well, not seen in this photo).  You can tell things were quite a bit more calm on the east side of the barrage!

Next stop, the Technik Museum in Speyer, Germany!
 

Thursday, December 31, 2015

Rome, Italy (Day 6)

Welcome to the last day of 2015!  What a year it's been!  And we closed out the year with our last full day in Rome.  It started off with me and the kids checking off YET ANOTHER new country... Vatican City!  First stop, and in retrospect, it should have been the last stop, was the Vatican Musuems.  I could have spent ALL day there, but not with two very bored kiddos.  Uh uh.  No way.  But when in Rome, one must see the Sistine Chapel!


We've never done audioguides for the kids, but they actually had an English version of a children's audioguide. Grant, age 6 was probably still too young for it.  Natalie (age 8) seemed to enjoy it though!  I like audioguides, particularly for art museums because otherwise, I'm only seeing a part of the story.


We all got this really funny idea to touch the top of St. Peter's from the courtyard of the Vatican Museums.


And of course, then Grant had to do it.


And Sassy McSassalot had to do it.


And not wanting to be left out, Todd had to do it too.


One of the more famous paintings is Raphael's Transfiguration.  It's in a very dark room and you can't use a flash so pardon the darkness of this picture and the next. 


Grant, pondering the works of Raphael, part 2.


I love the story of Saint Peter, who was crucified for pushing his religious agenda, but requested to be crucified upside down because he didn't feel he deserved to die the same way Jesus did.  This painting is by Guido Reni.


The kids loved this mummy. 


 

We all really loved Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden by Wenzel Peter.  The kids loved pointing out the different kinds of animals they saw.  Of course, the scientist in me is thinking... this isn't even a small fraction of all of the actual animals on earth!


The Gallery of Maps. OH. MY. WORD.  I found this to be more impressive than the Sistine Chapel!  It's an enormously long corridor with the most beautiful ceiling I have seen this side of St. Paul's in London.  And there are MAPS aligning both walls!  Did you hear me?  MAPS!


Me and a cool map! Hooray for Geography!  Boo for people photobombing my picture!


This is absolutely hysterical. I have no idea if it's real or not!


The staircase when you leave the Vatican Museums is insane.  It's a replica of the original Bramante staircase that I think is over in some private quarters of the Vatican.  But it's beautiful.  It looks like a snail to me.


Outside in the Piazza di San Pietro, we were excited to see beautiful St. Peter's.  But when we went to try to go inside, we got told that it was already closed for the day.  And we are leaving for home tomorrow.  So I missed my supposed one and only chance at seeing the great St. Peter's!  What!?  I was so, so, so, so disappointed. 


 Panoramic of St. Peters Square. 


The Pope's living quarters. He sometime makes speeches from the window that is second from the right on the top floor.  I kept hoping he'd come out to say hello, which would totally make up for the fact that I didn't get to walk through the Holy Door and go into St. Peter's. But nope. He didn't.


Since we couldn't get into St. Peter's, we decided to go over to the Castel Sant'Angelo.  It's a 2nd century fortress that has a long walkway all the way to St. Peter's.  Former Pope's would use Castel Sant'Angelo in times of trouble.  Hadrian had it built as a mausoleum, but it has since become a fortress and now a museum.  You can see the angel on the top, from which the castle gets its name. It was originally told that the Archangel Michael himself appeared to rid the city of a plague in the 6th century, hence the name the Castel Sant'Angelo.


We immediately went to the top of the Castle to check out the views.  Hey, wasn't I just there!?  We got a nice view of the Terrace of the Chariots. You can see tiny people on the top of it, showing just how massive the structure is.


 Me and my babies on the top of the Castel Sant'Angelo, New Year's Eve 2015.


Once we started to walk down, we realized of course, that it was New Year's Eve and was snack time/ happy hour, which had to be done prior to going back to the apartment for a quick nap so the kids could make it to midnight.  On our way to the little restaurant that is at the Castle, Grant was playing a game of hide and seek with this pigeon!  He thought it was the funniest thing!  He would see the pigeon and then the pigeon would go behind that column, only to pop out on the other side of the column, where he would find Grant waiting for him. And the whole game would begin again.  Over and over and over!


Somehow, some people were leaving this seat and we managed to snag it.  BEST seat in the house!  Looking over Vatican City and St. Peter's. 


I mean, you can't go to Vatican City and get two of the most inappropriate souvenirs EVER, right!?!  A Pope shot glass and a "Popener!"


Now THAT is a fine way to end 2015. 


After a decent nap (maybe an hour and a half?), we went out to a late-ish dinner.  Me and my little man sat close to the heater!


Additionally, wine and Limoncello will help keep you warm!


 From there, we decided to head over to find a spot on one of the Tiber's many bridges to ring in the New Year and watch the many firework displays that Rome has going on.  We passed the Castel Sant'Angelo (lit up, above) and went to the bridge in front of the Palace of Justice to celebrate New Year's.


We found our spot, got our New Year's drinks and got this party started!


I love this picture.  It shows their personalities perfectly.  The Palace of Justice is in the background. Also, please note our bar set up on the bridge wall to the right.  This sort of thing is not at all frowned upon in Rome.


 Partying on the bridge, as fireworks begin to go off above the Palace of Justice.

 
More New Year's Eve fireworks.


The clock had just struck midnight and everyone was celebrating.  Some American students studying in Rome were next to us on the bridge, and they took our picture as the fireworks were going off.  We kept saying, "Remember that New Year's we spent on the bridge in Rome!?"  What a blast! I'm sure the kids won't remember all of this one day (especially Grant) but I know I certainly will!  Ciao, Rome!  Until next time!

The Bailey Planet

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