I arrived in Nuremberg yesterday from Frankfurt; my DB train was only 35 minutes late!!! Apparently that’s really good. And the announcements were unintelligible so I feel like my experience was complete. I was so tired from not sleeping that I walked around like a zombie for a couple hours, ate some food, then fell asleep. At 1AM, I woke up (that’s my current problem) but opened the window; I was asleep a bit later and feel much better today. The open window was key.
When DH and I travel, we have a plan, and he keeps me moving. When I travel alone, I often have a list but no plan… I assume I’ll do what ever I feel like doing. The problem with that is when I’m zombie tired, then I don’t want to do anything. So… A plan.
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| Sebalduskirche, inside |
Sebalduskirche, all dressed up Advent. I did see it the night before when I did my zombie walk, but it nice to see it in the daylight (sunset at 4:20). I had watched them decorating the altar.
Lorenzkirche
Kaiserberg: I love fortifications! But all the normal signs were not present. I wonder if it had been destroyed in WWII bombing and not rebuilt?
Albrecht Drurer house: I saw it from the outside but didn’t go in
Tiergärtnertor: this was pretty interesting, but would not photo well. What was interesting to me was that the gate exited parallel to the wall and moat.
The wall, and some huge ass tower… I don’t know exactly what the tower was. I’d started walking along the wall, figuring maybe I’d walk the entire perimeter *6-7KM) but when I got to the tower, I decided I was cold and I abandoned to go see the Lorenzkirche.
Two knit shops: I asked about local wool, and was informed that there are a lot of German brands, and they can’t carry everything, so why was I asking. I thanked them very much and left.
Frauenkirche: I actually saw this the night before, in the dark, as they were getting ready for the Market opening. Lovely church.
The Market opening was nice to see. First they turned off all the lights; then lit the front of the church. A children’s choir sung, there was a small brass band, the Christmas trees were lit and the Christkindl read the traditional poem before the lights were turned on again. I had a bad angle to the stage so there might have been other things going on… It took awhile for the sizable crowd to disperse. (The crowd had its advantages… I was a lot warmer when I was stuck in the middle of a sea of bodies). I’ll check the online video footage of it later to see if I missed anything.The Market stalls were open in the afternoon, so I was able to walk through… I bought some super warm mittens!!! I was delighted to see that the offerings were different (and better) than what I saw in Frankfurt; I was afraid they’d be the same from city to city.
On Saturday, I checked out and went to find the Germanisches Museum… On my way I dropped back into a booth at the Christkindlesmarkt where I’d seen this darn cute little ornaments… I decided to buy them because there was no one at the Markt! Not so when I walked back, it was super super crowded.
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| I brought some home... |
The Germanisches Museum was good… they claim to cover 60000 years of germanic history. I was delighted to see the Stone Age, Bronze Age, Chacolithic, and Iron Age artifacts. Yes, there were spindle whorls and damn small ones, too; those are made for very fine threads. My favorite artifact was the bull from Hallstatt. A lot of the collection on display was ecclesiastical stuff from the Middle Ages which is not my thing. The 20th century collections were interesting.
We then went to the castle where I learned some interesting things about the fortifications, and how to tell which parts of the wall were rebuilt and which were original (if there was a hole in the middle of the stone, it was original). The stone masons would put the holes in the blocks so that they could be lifted with calipers on a pulley system.




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