Back to Yorkshire, castle Howard 1.10.14 (more photos to upload very soon)
We have been back in the UK for just over a
week now and we are camped under a large oak tree beside a lake in the grounds
of Castle Howard, the stately home which some of us remember where the earlier
TV series “Brideshead Revisited” and
the more recent 2008 were filmed.
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Camping in castle Howard 'grounds'
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Near neighbours to whom we wave
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Closer view with the replaced dome (1940 fire damage)
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Just like being inthe middle of a Constable painting!
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People are so optimistic!!
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Other neighbors, who were quite talkative, drop in for a bite
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A
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At last, a real round-a-bout!
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That Atlas is always in the shower just when we want it!
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We are having amazing autumn weather with
clear still days and the trees are starting to change colour and still have
most of their leaves……just beautiful.
Down to 9C inside the van this morning!
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"The Autumn leaves start to…"
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Other neighbours getting winter ready
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So much has happened since our last blog as
we were leaving Switzerland. We crossed into Germany at Lake Constance. This is
a large apple growing region and we camped in an orchard, visited the pretty
town of Meersburg and then drove north following some of the ‘Romantic Road’
until we got to Rothenberg. Had a good walk around this walled medieval town
where the covered walls have been rebuilt.
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Meersburg on the shores of Lake Konstanz
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'Interesting' sculpture by Peter Lenk……..
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Sculpture detail
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More Sculpture detail!
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Dresden. Luther and rebuilt Frauenkirche
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After bombing
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A conference/meeting bike…….. tourists seem to love them! Each person has a specific 'job' around the pedaling conference table
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Example of the city re build
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Example of the city re build
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Another example of the city re build from the other side of the Elbe
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Around this church buildings have been
rebuilt in the original style but behind a row of these there is just
wasteland. Had a great walk along the river Elbe and we visited the Zwinger museum
mainly to look at the baroque building, incredibly ornate. Also visited a
museum about the period of the DDR where our tickets were in the form of a
soviet era visa. Interestingly we were the only foreigners there. Local
visitors were very quiet and much discussion took place about many of the items
from this totalitarian era.
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Ornate and wonderful gardens.
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Rebuild of city - contrasts!!
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Ampelmännchen says "Nicht kreuzen"
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Ampelmännchen says………..Cross now
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Mädchen, says "Cross now"!
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We have wanted to visit Berlin for ages and
for us the whole drama of the Berlin Wall and the Cold War was part of our
growing up. What an amazing city. It seemed like a German New York with the
funky and edgy stuff and the elegant and expensive stuff side by side.
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Reichstag
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It is a city of cranes and memorials. Large parts of the former East Berlin have been and are still being rebuilt.
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Brandenburg gate….city getting ready for the Berlin marathon
Much of
the city’s history is given in posters on the street at places like the old
Check point Charlie and where old sections of the Wall are preserved. The mass murders of
WWII are acknowledged with memorials to the Jews, homosexuals, gypsies and to
the 96 members of the Weimar government who were murdered further enabling
Hitler to ‘take’ power. There were also memorials to those who died trying to
cross the Berlin Wall. We respect the effort that has gone into acknowledging
the mistakes of Germany’s past.
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The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe
(that’s its official title even though it is called the Holocaust Memorial) is
really special. The structure itself draws you in. Underneath is a very
respectful and thorough relating of the story. We have read and seen so much on
the Holocaust over the years that we initially did not plan to visit this
underground part but we were drawn to it. We particularly appreciated the room
with the stories of family groups were related. Later we undertook a walking
tour in the Lonely Planet and as part of that ended up in the old Jewish part
of the city.
Many of the memorials have been put in place since reunification.
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Holocaust museum, over commemorative concrete 2000 stelae
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Holocoust museum, over 2000 above ground stelae
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Commemoration of Polish atrocities by Nazi murderers.
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A man was demonstrating bubble wands with a
crowd around him. Such a beautiful sight to finish our visit on….almost a
metaphor of freedom in the making.
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Super bubble maker, his daughter in the foreground….also a bubble meister!
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Instant street hotdog chef with 'mobile kitchen'!
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Overall we have spent about 3 weeks in
Germany this summer. It is a very easy country to visit. The autobahns are
really well designed with regular picnic areas with toilets, you only have to
get used to the lack of a speed limit and cars flying passed at over 200km per
hour with a ‘recommended’ speed of 130kph! In all that travel we did not see
any major crashes.
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Our 2km forest walk to Fangschleuse rail station
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Super modern Berlin
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Super modern Berlin
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Old berlin wall watch tower
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Many people speak English although we found
in former East Germany there were understandably not as many. The people are
really welcoming and helpful and will go out of their way to make sure you are
OK. An example of this is once when we were low on fuel and our GPS was giving
us mixed signals about the location of petrol stations a man we approached for
help drove out of his way to guide us to a petrol station through rush hour
traffic. We had fun with the language and lots of laughs with our
misinterpretations.
After Berlin we headed for Belgium and
visited the beautiful city of Ghent and went to the cathedral to see the famous
painting The Adoration of the Lamb which over the years has been stolen by the
French and later the Nazis (it featured in the movie, “The Monuments Men”).
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Ghent, music and modern sculpture
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Ghent, architectural contrast
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Having a coffee with sights like this!
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Ghent's famous graffiti street, for about 400m!
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It was a very hot day and as we walked
around the town all the people were out enjoying the sun with lots of street
music. In one part of town near the maternity hospital the streetlights flick
on and off each time a baby is born. What a cool place.
We drove to Brussels
and had a great stay with Sarah and as it was the week of her birthday she
invited friends around for curry and drinks on the roof. Wonderful to meet all
these interesting people. The temperature was still very warm and after
watching the sunset from the roof we were able to watch an electrical storm on
the other side of the city.
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Soiree...Sarah, Marg
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Sarah's Soiree
Depressing the next morning to watch as the NZ
election results came in. We had to leave early on the Sunday as once a year, (we
chose the 1 in 365 days!!) Brussels has a carless day so we had to be out of
the city boundary before 9am. |
Our ferry was leaving from Dunkirk the next
day so we took time to visit Ypres in Flanders. This town was in the middle of
the trench warfare in WWI and was completely destroyed. After the war
discussions were held on what to do about the town with Churchill suggesting
that it be left as it was as a memorial, another suggestion was that a modern
town be built but the people of Ypres wanted their medieval town back and that
is what they got. Completely rebuilt.
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Menin Gate, last post at 8pm every night.
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Fountains and games in the rebuilt square.
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Rebuilt city hall that houses the museum
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Visited an impressive museum about the
battles around the town. We thought it would be too sad to visit the big
military cemeteries but we did visit the Menin Gate, the memorial in the town
to some of those who were killed.
Nearly 55,000 names are listed on this gate. The Last Post is sounded
here every evening at 8pm.
Our campground that night was on the beach at
Dunkirk and the caravans were parked around the old overgrown gun emplacements
from WWII. Odd to think that where walked could have been where Colin’s Dad
could have been evacuated from back to England………..from this very beach in 1939
at the very beginning of WWII.
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Dunkirk beach, 15 mins fast walk to the water, no Stukas etc impeding our progress.
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Moody Dunkirk, made Colin really look at the place.
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We headed for Harrogate and have been
staying with Doug and Isabel. It has been a wonderful opportunity to stop for a
bit and get the van cleaned, glasses fixed etc.
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Autumn sunrise in Harrogate
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Enjoying being back where we
speak the language and know some of the shops. Although we can’t get over how
crowded the UK seems after the other countries. Maybe that is why we are
enjoying this current campsite, which is so relatively far from anywhere that
we have no phone reception, no internet and the only radio station we can get
is the local one!
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This time Colin's sold the van and bought…….????
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Oh dear... 41 pages of colour hemorrhaging the work printer (posting to Mum). Oh well ;)
ReplyDeleteAn awesome update - we just love it :)