Monday, February 15, 2016

Salzburg, Austria

For President's Day weekend (which they don't celebrate here in Germany, obviously), we decided to take the train down to Salzburg, Austria for the long weekend!

Naturally, the Griswold's didn't pay attention to what track our train would be on going from Neuhaus to Nuremberg and the train left without us.  It was very unusual, in our defense, because the train is Neuhaus, so it was on the little-used track one.  Lesson learned: ALWAYS check what track your train will be departing from!  (Sounds pretty obvious, but we clearly didn't!)

The ride down was fairly uneventful.  Once we got to Nuremberg, Todd had to go find someone to change our train tickets for us.  Good thing the guy is pretty handsome, because the lady at the office was sweet on him and allowed us to change our tickets for free!  WHEW!


Natalie had never been on a train with a restaurant car.  (Or she had but we never told her).  So she and I went to get a snack!  The windows were bigger and cleaner in the food car, so we had some pretty views of the Bavarian Alps!


We were about an hour late getting into Salzburg because of our mishap in Neuhaus, but thankfully the VRBO host was kind and waited for us.  Whew again! We stayed across the river from the downtown area, but the location was still good and within walking distance to everything. Above is the Salzach River with Schloss Mirabell on the north side.


Me, with the Salzburg Dom behind me (aka: The Salzburg Cathedral).  Up on the hill is the Schloss Hohensalzburg.  More on that later, as we visited that later in the weekend.


Our very first stop was the Salzburg Dom.  I can't even express how much I loved the ceiling in this joint. 


The details!  (Passes out from fainting)  The Salzburg Cathedral was originally built in the 700s (yes, I said 700s) but was destroyed and rebuilt a few times before the current one was built in the early 1600s.  The central dome (see below) was destroyed during World War II but was rebuilt before 1960.


The star in the central dome of the ceiling of the Dom.


We got to Mozart's birth house not long before it was closing and didn't want to pay all the money to go in and not be able to see it all.  Boo!


Potty humor is HUGE among the 8-year-old crowd.


We stopped at a place near Mozart's birth place for some lunch.  We were kind of dumb and didn't really read the menu outside before we went in and there was literally nothing on the menu that the kids would eat.  Except sorbet.  So, sorbet for lunch, it is!


Salzburg has beautiful signs hanging outside of the shops.  Even the Golden Arches are beautiful here!


The night before we left for Salzburg, we watched The Sound of Music.  If you go to Salzburg with kids, you MUST watch this ahead of time. So much of Salzburg is featured in the movie, and it was really fun finding some of the locations we had seen the night before.  Maria and the Von Trapp kids walked by here during one of the musical scenes in the movie.


This concert hall (although closed) was also featured in the movie where the Von Trapp's sang at the end before they escaped to "Switzerland."  (In real life, they went to Italy, and eventually to New England).


We walked up the stairs and went up to view the city of Salzburg in the evening.  Looking east toward the Cathedral.



The lights of the city started to come on before we had to head back to the apartment!  Thankfully there was a great restaurant right next to our apartment (Steinlechner Jedermann's Wirtshaus if you're ever in the area). 


The sun rising from the east the next morning was beautiful over the Alps.  This was the view of the Festung (on the right) and the Alps (on the left) from our apartment! Can't beat that view!


We booked (in advance at home) the morning Sound of Music tour for our second day.  We had to walk to Schloss Mirabell in order to pick up the tour, but it was well worth it.  On the bus, we traveled to the south side of Salzburg and were able to see some amazing views of the Festung from the back side.


I feel like Grant is somewhere very exotic in this picture.  Meanwhile, he's just on the shore of the Leopoldskroner Weiher, which is a lake in the southern suburbs of Salzburg.


Todd took this cute pic of Grant and we really liked it.  My new camera is awesome!  He got this new US Airways jet for Valentine's Day.


On the shore of Leopoldskroner Weiher, the kids pose with the house where most of the backyard scenes were filmed in The Sound of Music.  If you recall the famous scene where Maria and the kids fell out of the boat, this is where that was filmed.


The gazebo from The Sound of Music where Liesl sang the famous song "I Am 16 Going On 17," now located at Schloss Hellbrun. There were actually three gazebos used in the movie, and while this one was originally back at Leopoldskron, too many people were trespassing on the grounds of the former castle, so they had it moved to Schloss Hellbrun.  All of the interior shots were actually filmed in a studio, but the exterior ones were shot using this gazebo.


Grant, photobombing his parents.



This little sign sits on the wall nearby the gazebo.


The Leopoldskron castle is now used as a hotel and a conference center. (Well that's boring!)




When Maria got off the bus to go to the Von Trapp house for the first time and is singing, "I Have Confidence" as she skips down this road.  Naturally, we felt the need to recreate this.  I promise, the beer didn't come until later.


Beer on the Sound of Music tour?  You know I'm not complaining!


The front yard scenes from the Sound of Music were filmed at this house.  However, it's private property and we were not allowed to go there. 


In the middle of nowhere in Austria and we drive by the Red Bull World Headquarters.


Heading to Mondsee, we briefly stop in St. Gilgen, which is a town on the shore of the Wolfgangsee (that's the lake you see here).  This is the town that Mozart's mother came from.



The fam in front of St. Gilgen, Austria.


We were heading to the town of Mondsee, which is located on Lake Mondsee.  It's the town where Maria and the Captain got married, in the Mondsee Abbey.  In the movie, they are married at Nonnberg Abbey, but the Cathedral in Mondsee (St. Michael's) was used for the interior shots.


St. Michael's, also known as Mondsee Abbey.


Grant, inside of the Mondsee Abbey.


I wasn't expecting this church to be so beautiful.  The detail in the carvings on the wall and ceiling were amazing. 


 

OK, this Christ of the Crucifix was a bit too lifelike for me!



After we visited the Abbey, we had some time to get some crisp apfelstrudel! With ice cream!  For lunch! In Mondsee!


Back on the bus, we went back to Salzburg, and were able to go to the gardens where they filmed a lot of the Do-Re-Mi song in the Sound of Music.  These are the steps they all hopped up at the end!


Remember when the kids marched around the fountain during Do-Re-Mi?  Here are my kids doing that!


Hopping up the stairs, it's Maria and one of her charges. 


In the movie, this trellis was covered with greenery and Maria and the kids skipped through it.  That is what my kids are attempting to do here!


Another Sound of Music reenactment by the Bailey's!  Love the random tour group behind us, ha ha.


The birthplace of the guy who came up the Doppler effect! Science geeks, unite!  The Doppler effect describes the phenomena that (to quote Wikipedia who explains things better than I can), "is the change in frequency of a wave (or other periodic event) for an observer moving relative to its source It is commonly heard when a vehicle sounding a siren or horn approaches, passes, and recedes from an observer. Compared to the emitted frequency, the received frequency is higher during the approach, identical at the instant of passing by, and lower during the recession."


Pretty locks on the Mullner Steg bridge as we crossed the Salzach River to head back to the old town area.


 Next stop, the impressive Festung Hohensalzburg!  The Hohensalzburg was originally started in the late 1000s, but gradually it was expanded until it was abandoned in the 1800s.  It was since used as a prison for POWs in WWI and WWII.  Nowadays, it's just a fun castle to visit and they've worked hard on refurbishments ever since.


As with most impressive castles up on the sides of mountains in Europe, you have to take a funicular to get to the top.  The views of the Alps facing south are insane.


Facing south, panorama of the southern side of Salzburg (the northern side is where the river and the downtown area are).  From this picture, you can see (if you squint) the house on the lake that we had visited earlier in the day where they filmed the backyard scenes in The Sound of Music (it's just to the right of the middle of the picture).


I'm enjoying the views on top of the Festung and I turn around and there's a little group of people having a snack.  They were all huddled around peeling hard boiled eggs!




Double fisting!  Whoot!  We stopped into the one restaurant up at the Festung and grabbed something to eat.  As usual, it was a very late lunch, topped off with "a couple of frosties," as my dad would say.


My giant overlooking the giant Alps.


Here we are at an amazing fortress, and my kids are playing Minecraft.



"I want to climb on this cannon, Mommy."



 A little hand on a cannon from 1857.


Todd, pondering which way to bomb the enemy.


There has been a train system here since perhaps the late 1400s or early 1500s and some believe that this *may* be the oldest operational railway in the world!  


We went inside for a bit to the museum that was inside.  It was mostly dedicated to all things war and fighting.  You know, the usual stuff:  armor, torture devices, weapons and gold.  The doors in Europe continue to stump us as we found one that Grant's size.


Yet another Grantie door! Although I believe we called this one a Greta door (named after their younger cousin) because even Grant was too big for this one!


You can see the original medieval walls inside of the museum.  


Next door was a marionette museum!  Here we have the traveling Mozart family arriving home after a long trip.


Naturally, any museum in Salzburg MUST feature the Von Trapp family!


Todd's latest crazy is creepy doll heads.  He likes taking pictures of them, and for some reason, there are so many of them all over Europe.  Here we have a collection of creepy doll hands.


You can even practice your marionette skills!  This is a very small, but very cute little museum!


Outside of the museum, as you get ready to board the funicular to head back down to the Old Town area, you can see a river running down the mountain.  This is the Alm Channel Network.  There's a small, historical museum here dedicated to Historical Water Architecture (or as we know it in America, floodplain management!)


Much like in Rome, you can drink the fresh water right out of the wall.


And then you can walk through the Love Grotto!  One kiss in the Love Grotto and your love will be everlasting!  (Not sure what this has to do with Historical Water Architecture but it was fun anyway!)


I kept seeing signs for Brokeback Mountain, the opera.  I can't even fathom what that must be about.


In the Kapitalplatz at the base of the Festung, and on the side of the Dom, you can see the Man on the Golden Ball.  No, he's not real! But he looks real!


We took a nice stroll back to our apartment along the north side of the Salzach River and our long weekend was complete.  Until next time, Salzburg!

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Natalie's Perfect Attendance

I'm only posting this because this is likely the one and only time this will ever happen ha ha. 

Natalie got perfect attendance for second quarter.  She only didn't get it for the whole year (so far) because we moved here in September.  Somehow, she never got sick, which is kind of a miracle and I'm certain as soon as I hit "publish," she will come down with something terrible.  Also, I already know of a couple of days we will be pulling her out of school to travel, so she won't be getting it for 3rd quarter!


Here's Nat accepting her certificate from Mr. Finley, and a brag tag from Mr. Jordan.



Standing with other third graders holding up their certificates.


Larry the Lion presenting all of the 2nd quarter third grade kids who had perfect attendance.  Of the three third grade classes (not including the multi age classes), there were only 11 kids with perfect attendance!? 


Keep up the good work, Natalie!  (Ok, until your parents MAKE you travel to Zurich and Venice!!)

Saturday, January 30, 2016

Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Germany

Rothenburg ob der Tauber, one of Rick Steves favorite German cities, was pretty even on a cold winter day!  In which I forgot my hat. And Todd let me borrow his, which then he didn't have one.  Ain't he the greatest!? 


In typical Bailey fashion, we didn't get there until almost 11 (and it's only about an hour and a half away).  Rothenburg is on the edge of western Bavaria, near the border with Baden-Württemberg.  It's a walled city, and although it was founded in 1170, people had settled here several hundreds of years prior to that.  It's full of half timber buildings and the wall that surrounds the city is walkable with some great views.


 We went immediately to the Marktplatz and were greeted with the fun little Meistertrunk display which happens on the top of the hour.  (Well timed for once, Baileys!)  I love the story behind this guy who drinks his wine every hour.  Travelsignposts.com tells the story well:  "The setting is the Thirty Years’ War and after some bitter fighting, the Catholic imperial troops under Count Tilly had just taken control of Protestant Rothenburg. The town folk of Rothenburg did not give in easily and Count Tilly was enraged by their violent resistance. He gave orders for the town to be plundered and destroyed and for four of the town Councillors to be executed. Pleas for mercy fell on deaf ears and the Mayor was ordered to fetch the hangman.  Meanwhile, the count was offered the finest of Franconian wine served in a huge tankard which holds 3.25 liters. In jest, he promised to spare the town if one of its Councillors could down a full tankard of wine in one go. A former mayor, Bürgermeister Nusch took up the challenge and amazed Tilly by draining the tankard in ten minutes. Tilly kept his promise to spare the town, the folks of Rothenburg were jubilant and Mayor Nusch was said to have slept for the next three days."  So every hour, on the top of the hour, we all get to relive Mayor Nusch, drinking his 3.25 liters!


A treat that is popular in Rothenburg is something known as the Schneeball (Or snowball, in English).  Rick Steves wasn't a fan of this, but we all certainly liked it.  It's a round, very dry, kind of hard crunchy pastry that is covered in your choice of topping.  The traditional ones are covered in powdered sugar (hence the name schneeball), but you can get them covered in chocolate, nuts, or even with a bit of filling (I chose one with a vanilla filling).  They were pretty good, but it literally took us all day to eat them!  VERY messy too.  NOT for eating in the car or around hungry pigeons.


Natalie, Grant and I ate our schneeballs on the steps of the town hall!


Next we walked around the town, enjoying the architecture of the half timbered wood frame homes and buildings.   

  
We walked over to the Burggarten (or the Castle Garden) on the west side of Rothenburg.  This is looking southeast toward the southern section of Rothenburg.  You can see the Kobolzeller Church just behind the tree in the center.  There are some amazing views from up here, but it was very windy and cold, so we didn't spend too much time here (I will say it again- this is another town that will be so much fun to visit when it gets warmer!)


There's a small church (which wasn't open) called the Chapel of St. Blaise located in the Castle Gardens, with a memorial stone out front dedicated to the first mass murder of the Jews in Rothenburg in 1298.  They were burned to death by a group of angry residents.  There was an earthquake here in 1356, and while every other building in Staufer Castle (which had been located here) was destroyed, this building was renovated and turned into a church.  So basically it's a castle garden without a castle!


At the Burgator (or Castle Gate) entrance to the gate on the west side of the town, near the Burggarten.


 Walking back down the Herngasse toward the Marktplatz. I just love these buildings!


I had read some good things about the Deutches Weihnachtmuseum (basically a museum about this history of Christmas ornaments!) so we decided to swing in to get out of the cold for a bit.


Todd loves any kind of insanely creepy doll head Christmas ornament. Quite frankly, I'm surprised he didn't buy this.


And of course, we had to have a late lunch and play a game of Spot It! The inscription on the wall behind Natalie talks of Mayor Heinrich Toppler who was mayor between 1373 and 1408. I translated it to say (literally word for word): "Him the common man so nicely that when he him 30 or 40 citizens accompanied by the church came."   Toppler was a common man (as in he was not of the nobility) but he was wealthy and many considered him the "King of Rothenburg."


A Crime and Punishment museum right after lunch?  OK!  We got there right when it opened, as it's only open for a few hours in the afternoon on Saturday's in the winter.  I like to go to places like this with my kids and tell them I'm going to use these weird devices on them if they act up!


Sorry Todd.  You can't go any farther.  You're too tall for 1576.


Hey look!  It's a real Iron Maiden!  Yikes!  Hashtag not the band.


Please excuse me for being in the background of this picture.  Grant was just a wee bit short!  


Colorful buildings of Rothenberg. 


Todd in front of the most famous building in Rothenburg, the Plönlein.  The website Tourismus.rothenburg.de, says, "A narrow half-timbered building with a small fountain in front, it is framed by the Kobolzeller tower and the higher Siebers Tower, with lovingly restored townhouses to the right and left, creating a charmingly picturesque effect.The word “Plönlein” derives from the Latin “planum” meaning “flat square. 


In order to get back to our car, which was on the north side of the town, we decided to walk along the fortified medieval wall.  This is the view of the Kobolzeller Tower.  


Heading south along the wall (we went the wrong way!!)  You can literally look into the windows of people's homes or into their backyards.


 I spotted a couple of cuties along the medieval wall!  


On our way back, we had to get off of the wall at one point since we went the wrong way.  But thankfully we did because we spotted this really neat covered bridge! 

 

We finally made our way back to the wall near the Rödertor.  We also got to climb (for a small fee) Röder Tower which provided great views of Rothenburg.  I highly recommend climbing this tower, since there is a super friendly guy who takes the fee at the top (SUPER chatty, loves kids and does this as a volunteer job) and a great display about the bombing of Rothenburg during WWII.  While about 40% of the city was destroyed, the US Assistant Secretary of Defense wanted to spare Rothenburg, so he (through passed-down orders to the soldiers) cut a deal with the local military leader (who ignored orders from Hitler himself to defense the city at all cost!) and the city was mostly spared.  Job well done on preserving history, guys!  The city was quickly repaired using donations from all over the world.  Little plaques along the wall show all of the donatees and where they were from.

 Looking more north from the Röder Tower, you can really see the wall here!  Not long after as we got to our car, it started raining!  Until next time, Rothenberg!

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

A Recent Grant-ism

You know my 6-year-old is the funniest kid ever.  And he never makes sense and always leaves us scratching our heads or wondering if we had too much to drink.  Here was his recent joke, that he made up:

Grant:  Natalie, what's cheeseburger plus A?
Natalie:  I don't know... A cheeseburger?
Grant:  Noooo! (Laughing) It's EYEBALL!!!!!!!

The Bailey Planet

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