BootsnAll Travel Network



Articles Tagged ‘East Germany’

More articles about ‘East Germany’
« Home

JANUARY 2, 2007: BERLIN TO MANNHEIM

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

We checked out of the hotel and started driving on the Autobahn south. We thought about stopping in nearby Potsdam, a very historic city made famous for the conference that divided Berlin into four parts after the war. But it was raining again so we drove on. As we drove, Peter explained that in the days when Germany and Berlin were divided, there was a two-hour stretch of road outside of Berlin where West Germans could not leave their car because they did not have a visa to be in East Germany. The road conditions were deplorable then as well. Now there is only a brown historic sign indicating where the border between West Berlin and East Germany had been.

Lutherstadt-Wittenberg

About an hour outside of Berlin we started seeing signs for Lutherstadt-Wittenburg, the town where Martin Luther nailed his 95 Protestant theses to a church door. I had wanted to see the town, and Peter wanted a stop, so we got off the A9 and headed east for 14 km.

The town was charming in the style of Rothenburg ab Tauber, but Peter said for him Wittenburg felt more real and less touristy. We saw the church and then walked down the main street. We stumbled on a museum which showed daily life in the DDR (the East German Republic). We saw typical kitchens and bedrooms from the 1920s, 1950s, and 1960s. Peter said he could see the stark contrast between an East German and a West German kitchen. I could only see household goods that reminded me of things I still see today in Ukraine such as washing machines and “schkaffs” (large living room cabinets for books and china). We also saw a replica of a 70s nightclub, and realized that the 70s were tacky everywhere.

For lunch, Peter found a café that had real German home cooking. We each had a meat dish served with Kloesse, a bread-stuffed potato dumpling from the Thuringen region of Germany. We had just seen a news report on TV about how attempts were being made to trademark the Thuringen Kloesse in the vein of Champagne and Greek Feta. I can only wish them good luck for that. It was also served with traditional cooked red cabbage. I liked it–it was surprisingly sweet.

After lunch we finished our circuit of the two-street downtown section, had Peter’s 4:00 coffee and hit the road. We hit traffic on the A9 and the A4, so we didn’t get home till nearly 10:00 p.m. It felt good to collapse.

DECEMBER 28, 2006: LEIPZIG

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

Peter picked me up at the airport in Frankfurt at 7:30, and then we hit the road. The sun joined us around 9:00.

Our first stop was Leipzig. Peter found parking on the street downtown, then we walked towards the Thomaskirche, where Bach is buried. We only stayed a few minutes, long enough to hear a bit of the choir practice. We then walked through the downtown shopping district. We ended up having lunch at Karstadt, a national department store chain. I wasn’t impressed with the offerings at first, but Peter said the Leipzig Karstadt was nicer than the Mannheim one. Also, I was really starting to suffer from jet lag (or pure sleep lag) plus hunger so I realized I probably was not in any condition to go restaurant shopping. In the end I’m glad I tried the pasta with salmon and pesto cream sauce, even if the salmon was overfried, the pasta was greasy, and the service was slow. Peter got a vegetable buffet plate that was pretty good. Most importantly, the buffet area was clean, nicely decorated with dark wood tables and red plastic chairs, and had large bay windows so that we could look out and see the beautiful snow falling. This was the only snow we saw on the whole trip, and I was happy to see it.

The snow didn’t deter us from sightseeing. We walked to the Nikolaikirche, where the 1989 uprising against communism began in Germany, then walked through the Madler Passage to see Auerbachskeller, the restaurant where Goethe hung out when he was a student. However, the continuing falling snow meant it would not be a good idea to drive on and stay for the night somewhere closer to Berlin. The only place I knew in Leipzig was the Sleepy Lion Hostel. I had stayed there on my first visit to Leipzig in 2002 and loved it. Peter hated the idea of being in a hostel, but I assured him it would be comfortable. The worker was very nice—she gave us a quiet 6-bed room to ourselves for the price of a double (42 Euros).

We brought our luggage in from the car, fed the meter German style (put more money in, got a timed ticket on it, and put the ticket in the car on the dashboard), and went to the coffeeshop around the corner for 4:00 coffee. Then we took a 3-hour nap and headed back to Auerbachskeller for dinner. We both had Rouladen, thin strips of meat wrapped around onions, bacon, pickles, etc. Peter was shocked that this meat dish was served cold; he’d never had it cold before. The other shock of the night was a live play performed in the restaurant by a man pretending to be Mephistopheles, with another man playing the bewitched maiden. Oy.

After dinner, we stopped at one more café for gluhwein. This was the first time I’d been offered gluhwein with fruit in it. It wasn’t bad.