Saturday, May 28, 2016

Wildpark Hufeisen, Veldensteiner Forst, Germany

While Mommy was away and galavanting around Madrid, Todd took the kids for a morning of fun at the Wildpark Hufeisen in the nearby Veldensteiner Forst.  The Forst (or Forest) is only about 15 minutes away and has a little park full of "wild" animals.
 

But first... the night before, they went down to downtown Auerbach and grabbed some Eis with their friend Isabella.  THIS.  What a mess!
 

Anyway, back to the Forst!  And what's a Forst without a biergarten!?!?
 

The kiddos spotted some boars.
 

You can have some cute deer eat directly out of your hand!  (Don't worry mom, I'm sure they washed their hands!)
 

Grant's turn to feed the animals.
 

What's up goat?  (Or whatever you are eating out of my daughter's hand!)  **Editor's Note:  Todd has informed me that this is actually also a deer, and not a goat!**
 

Time for some rope structure fun!  Grant looks confused here ha ha.  Keep climbing, buddy!
 

Kiddos in a wooden stick tee-pee!
 

I really LOVE this picture!  How cute are they!?!  They sent this to me when we I was in Spain and it made me sad!
 

Todd sent me this picture too and titled it something like, "Hansel and Gretel in the forest..."
 

And then he wrote, "I gave them some bread and sent them on their way.  That's okay, right?"  HA!  Silly Todd!  These walking sticks even made their way back home and are sitting in our foyer as we speak.  Mommy can't wait to join them on their next animal adventure!

Until next time Wildpark Hufeisen!

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Bamberg, Germany - Take Two

When people come to visit us, which hasn't been that often, we like to go to Bamberg.  We visited Bamberg back in October, but it was cold and gray on that day, and it was warm and sunny on this day!  It's a pretty well preserved Medieval walled city that was first mentioned in 902 AD, with plenty of canals that sometimes travelers call, "The Venice of the North."  


As we tried to find the tourist office (because you know Todd, aka: Rick Steves, Jr. loves a good tourist office!), the kids spotted a playground.  Of course.  We must play for a bit!


Right near the Geyerswörthstag (a bridge that crosses the Linker Regnitzarm) is a small iron statue depicting the city. The kids thought this was cool, until we got overrun by a bunch of elderly German people! (You can see them coming across the bridge ha ha!)


On the Geyerswörthstag with Helen, with the Rathaus (Town Hall) in the background. It's built on an island in the middle of the river, and legend has it that in the mid 1400s, the Bishop of Bamberg did not give the town any money or land to build a town hall, so the local people built it right in the middle of the river!


Helen and Todd at the Bamberg Rathaus.


Our next stop was the famous Schlenkerla, for their famous Rauchbier.


Have you ever had a Rauchbier?  Some people really love it!  Todd (see above) enjoyed his.  Helen and I actually ordered wine because I CANNOT STAND RAUCHBIER.  It's like drinking liquid smoked sausage. SO nasty.  Admittedly, this rauchbier was a little better than the one I tried in Washington DC years ago with Chip and Dara Dirth... but it's still not good enough to order one and drink the whole thing.  Rotwein, bitte!


Meanwhile, this was going on.  Something tells me Nauni is going to be a bad influence in a few years ha ha!  Don't worry... Natalie is just smelling the wine!


Grant was whining that he was starving and we arrived at Schlenkerla not realizing that they didn't have much for little boys to eat, so we went over to the Hofbräu to eat lunch. They gave me this teeny tiny Heinz ketchup! It reminded me of the ones they used to give you in first class on Delta!


Ahhh I love German color and architecture!


After some quick Eis, we decided to take Helen to the Bamberg Cathedral.  March on, troops!


Here is Natalie with what used to be a lion!  Ummm, ok?


Yep.  This is about right for him.


Cuties saying prayers for Miss Carla at the Bamberg Cathedral.


"Don't forget to look up, because there's so much to see!" If I didn't follow my own advice, I wouldn't have noticed these gremliny looking guys on the ceiling.  They are there to ward off the evil spirits!


Lots of colors and half timber in Bamberg.


Roaming the streets, looking for our Gondola.


AHHHH I was obsessed with these roses!  I mean, LOOK AT THEM!!!!


Strolling along the Linker Regnitzarm (just a split off of the Regnitz River).


This bicycle fascinates me.  How did it get here?  Clearly it was in the water, but why?  How did it get IN the water?  And who pulled it out?  Why was it just left here?  I totally love it!


To go to the other side of the river, you can take the little ferry (on the left).  We didn't take it but what a fun little way to travel!  There aren't really any nearby bridges in this area, so this is convenient for people.


Wait... what is this doing here!  Yep.  A gondola ride!  Brought directly from Venice!  We booked the next ride and then went off in search of some water!


Walking along the empty streets along the Linker Regnitzarm.


We found water!  And kisses!


Ok so you know how my husband is obsessed with creepy baby doll heads?  Well as we were walking back to the gondola area, Helen spotted THIS.  THIS.  I mean, does it get any weirder than this?  What's with the weird utensil leg?  Or the random hair taped to the other leg?  This one might win the prize for most bizarre.


On a gondola, floating down the Linker Regnitzarm with Nauni.


This part of the river was so quiet and peaceful.  Much moreso than in Venice!


We passed by this little place that was having a wedding reception.  The two ladies that were on the gondola with us yelled in German, "KISS HER!"  Todd said, "Is that like the German version of clinking your fork on a glass!?"


Todd just looked incredibly handsome in this picture, so I wanted to share it with you!  Just lounging around on a gondola....


Kind of loved this bag, even if I love eating cows!



Pastels, galore!  Another fun time was had in Bamberg, and we got to see some things we hadn't seen the first time!  (Note to self: NO MORE RAUCHBIER!)

Until next time, Bamberg!

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Grant's Track Meet in Ansbach

Grant had another track meet in Ansbach on May 14.  We felt bad because he missed the meet in Grafenwoehr on the 7th because we were in Venice.  This weekend, I couldn't go to his meet because I was in Nuremberg at the CrossFit L1 seminar (I passed! Yay!), but Daddy and Nat got to go root on our little buddy!


Grant and Natalie, Ansbach, Germany.


Here is my little man getting ready to run the 6-7 year old 50m dash, heat one.  So there were two heats, of about 8 kids in each heat.


And WHAT?  He came in second place!!!!!!  He's so fast! I can't even believe it!  I'm so incredibly proud of him, although I'm still not certain where he gets this!!!!

Monday, May 9, 2016

Venice, Italy

Todd had to go down to Vicenza, Italy for work training, so at the end of his week down there, the kids and I flew down to join him for a couple of days in nearby Venice.

Yes.  This means I had to fly down with the kids from Munich to Venice by myself.  


Who are we kidding.  My kids (and Samantha the doll) are professional flyers.  They were great.  And I can't recommend Air Dolomiti enough.  They were fantastic!  I love Embraer jets (for as much as I can love jets) and you get free drinks (soda, water, wine or champagne) on the flight!  


And WHAT A VIEW as you approach VCE!  I spy a little St. Marks Square!


Once we got to Venice, we had to haul all of our stuff down to the docks.  Yes, there are docks at the airport, but they aren't very close.  Please note I am making the little one carry a bag.  But the boat ride is a fun way to get to Venice, even if it takes a little while.  It dropped us off at Arsenale, and Todd (who had already met with the owner of our VRBO apartment) was waiting for us there to help us carry bags back to the apartment.  Our apartment was awesome... one of the best we have ever stayed in.  However, it was NOT meant for anyone over about 6'2.  Todd literally had to duck the entire time we were there!  But it was beautiful, and in a more quiet and less touristy location, but still really close to all of the fun.


View right when you walk out of our apartment.  Blue skies and laundry.


This was the entry way to several buildings (including the one we were staying in).  Graffiti is a way of life in Italy. 


Naturally on the first morning, we went directly to St. Mark's Square.  We met up with Todd's coworker (who works at K-Town), Marji.  She was super nice and fun, and we've made plans to hike Mt. Kilimanjaro in a year or two.  I feel kind of bad that I hijacked her, when she's really Todd's coworker but she's just a lot of fun!


The kiddos doing a very, very classically Venetian thing... chasing pigeons around St. Mark's Square.


I don't remember going into St. Mark's Basilica when I was in Venice in 1989.  Maybe I did, but I don't remember it.  It was July, and very hot, and we went on a gondola and bought funny hats, but I don't remember much else about it!  This church is unbelievably beautiful on the outside, and even moreso on the inside.  The entire ceiling is made of mosaic tiles.  Can you imagine how long it took to put these together!?  It was built in the late 1000s and early 1100s.  Other than a fire in 1106 that destroyed a lot of these mosaics, most of the church is pretty much the same from this time period.


St. Mark's Basilica houses the Pala d'Oro, or the "Golden Cloth."  It's about 10 feet by 6.5 feet wide and tall, and consists of 1,927 gems, including pearls, garnets, emeralds, sapphires, amethysts, agates, rubies, topazes, carnelians and jaspers.  It contains images of the Life of Christ, as well as images from the history of St. Mark.  It's really beautiful, but you can't take pictures of anything in the church.  I just stuck the camera up and took this picture, hoping it would sort of turn out.  Not bad!


Again, this is just facing up, no real direction or attempt at anything... just trying to show that there are a ton of little, tiny gold tile pieces making up the mosaics on the ceiling.  My pictures don't do it justice.  It's so sparkly!


(Photo courtesy of Dennis Jarvis via Planet Ware).  Mr. Jarvis does a better job than me in capturing the color and shine!


The kids were hungry so we were trying to get out of the St. Mark's Square area to find some more reasonably priced food.  The kids stopped to watch the gondolas go by underneath our bridge.


The Bridge of Sighs above me and Todd in Venice.


Pizza crust faces.


Boo.  The Rialto Bridge was under construction and wouldn't be completed for another 6 months!


No Mafia!  Venezia e' Sacra!  


The Rialto area (the bridge is just to the right in this picture).  High water (always) and gondolas (always!) all over the place!


I saw this little round window with an iron gate and a bottle of what seemed to be unopened champagne behind it!  Prost!



Marji taking pictures in the Campo Sant'Anzolo.  We just kind of allowed ourselves to get lost this day!


The beauty of Venice.  The back "streets" are serene and quiet.



Picturesque Venetian canal.


Even the bricks in a dark alley are colorful!



Balancing a beer bottle between his mouth and the uber low ceilings in our apartment!  Loved this apartment, despite this!


This is our view out the window of the apartment.



Before dinner, we decided to head out to the Venice Giardini park so the kids could run around on some of the playground equipment.  Here they were trying to do a little Parkour (perhaps unsuccessfully!)


After the first playground, we decided to keep roaming around and found yet ANOTHER playground area.  Natalie was ecstatic to find this one had a zip line!


Grant played tag with some Italian kids, who spoke only a little bit of English.  Then this older kid, maybe late middle school age, was walking around with what appeared to be a knife and making weird faces and talking to himself (and us) in Italian!  We were kind of freaked out, but no one else seemed to mind him, so we just left!


Trees and late day shadows down in the Parco della Rimembranze.



Big Boy and even Bigger Boy walking along the Via Giardini Pubblici.


Walking back to the neighborhood we were staying at, I saw this quiet canal.  I just love Venice!


Wait.  You were worried we weren't drinking enough wine on our trip because the kids were with us? I assure you, we had plenty!


When is a clock not a clock?  When it's painted onto the side of a building!



The weekend we were in Venice happened to also be the Festa della Sensa, or the Feast of the Ascension.  They celebrate by holding a boat parade that ends with the "Marriage of the Sea" to Venice.


Grant watching the rowers work hard.


Mama and her baby ducklings.


When I was here in 1989, I went on a gondola ride with my parents, wearing a funny hat.  When Todd was here in college, he couldn't afford a gondola ride, so even though the gondola ride costs 80 Euros for 30 minutes, you just have to do it!


The Cap'n and his sister are ready to depart!


The Grand Canal, as seen from my gondola.


Marco Polo's childhood home!  There's some debate about when and where he was born, but he definitely lived here.  Our gondola driver (which we picked up at the Rialto Bridge) was good and gave us a little history and insight into the different buildings along the canals. He explained that most of the buildings were either of the Byzantine or Gothic periods.


Todd asked me to take this picture.  Caution:  Gondolas!  (Believe it or not, other boats also navigate these canals!)  Some are even motorized, so these signs are warranted.


The Bailey family on our parked gondola in Venice.


Next we had a little lunch and went to visit the Teatro la Fenice.


I personally liked the inside of the Teatro la Fenice MUCH better than the Opera in Paris, but Natalie disagreed.  It turns out she actually LIKES the Chagall ceiling in Paris!

"La Fenice" means "The Phoenix" which implies it has risen from the ashes, which it literally did as fire destroyed it three times.  The most recent fire destroyed the entire inside area in 1996.  It was rebuilt and completed in 2004.  It's really unbelievable that this sort of work was done in this day and age!  It cost $90 million to replace it, so perhaps this is why this kind of beautiful work is seldom done today!


I think the ceiling at the Teatro la Fenice is MUCH prettier. To each his own, I guess!


They were preparing for a play!  Below the stage, you can see the orchestra area.


Cool shadows made by the lighting crew.  I believe this was Verdi's La Traviata.


For some reason, these goofballs decided that they needed to do the foxtrot in the back rooms of the Teatro la Fenice!  (Please note Todd's amused face in the mirror).


After lunch and the Teatro la Fenice, we met up with our boat that was to take us to Murano, Torcello and Burano.  Grant passed out hard core on Mommy on the very first boat ride to Murano!


The first stop, Murano is home to the famous Murano glass.  We got to see a quick (maybe 10 min) demonstration on how it's made.  They start out with a mixture of (mostly) silica sand and some other stabilizers (like lime and soda... which kind of sounds like the beginnings of a delicious drink!), along with some minerals for color (you know... cobalt for blue, etc.) and they heat it up to an unbelievable 1500 degrees Celcius to make it liquify.  At this point, he molds the glass into what he wants!


Voila!  A pretty vase!  (Please don't ask Todd about the vases we bought... that's a sore subject!)  This man is one of the fewer than 1000 Murano glass makers left in the world.  An interesting side story... Glass has always been a big export in the Venice area.  They moved all of the glass makers to the island of Murano in the late 1200s because the threat of fire burning down Venice was much higher with all of the glass makers there.  So they moved them all to Murano!


The Bailey family in Murano, Italy.


Our next stop was the island of Torcello.


As we walked along the island, we came across this little restaurant that had a beautiful grassy area and some playground equipment.  Looks like the perfect place for a snack, some drinks, and some playtime!


Natalie got to feed some goats!  What's up, goat!?  Say hello to ya mutha for me!


Oh Captain, my Captain!

*Forewarning:  You are about to see many, many pictures of Burano.  The colorful buildings are so fantastic!*


Approaching Burano, the colorful houses and the leaning church bell tower.  While the island is mostly known for it's lace products, it's also known for the brightly painted buildings.


Bright colors and boats.


The leaning church in Burano, the Chiesa di San Martino, which was built in the 16th century.  The bell tower (built in the 18th century) has got a nice lean to it, approximately 1.8 meters!


Can't. Get. Enough.


Hashtag alllll the colors.


Orange and blue, surrounded by red and pink.


One of my favorite pictures from Burano.


From the boat, you can certainly see the bell tower leaning to the right!


Coming back into Venice, you really get a much better wide angle photo of St. Mark's Square.


The Bridge of Sighs, as seen from the water.  Named by Lord Byron, not for it's breathtaking beauty (ummm...) but for the fact that the view from this bridge was the last one that prisoners saw before their confinement (sigh!)


Time to eat again!  Pasta, wine and bread!  Pasta, wine and bread!  Pasta, wine and bread!  Here are my children on their "cell phones."


And of course, a trip to Italy wouldn't be complete without some limoncello!  One last glass and conversation with the hubs before we headed back (separately) to Germany!

Until next time, Venice!

The Bailey Planet

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