I realized as I was arriving that it was good that the sun was rising on the unlit willows runway :)
For my 2nd track day with TTS this year, it was my 2nd time trying the 458C, this time most of a day:
But I also ran a couple of sessions with my 650S, doing the 2 mile track CCW, i.e. reverse from normal, and the jump (yes it's really a jump) and wondering if after you land you'll have enough braking power to slow down from 110mph+ to whatever is necessary to make the super sharp turn, is just terrifying. As expected, I ended up going out:
in the morning, we did some parade laps
The rest of the day, I used the 458C around the main track, and thanks to coaching from Robb, got my times down to 1:51 on the best lap of the day:
I'm not a huge fan of driving on boring public roads, but Germany was about as good as it could have been. Hightlights on driving:
2400km, not as many as the 3700km we drove in France
About food:
My other thoughts on Germany:
we saw many solar farms on the side of the road
So, despite some of the speed bumps due to over strict rules, it was a very nice trip through a country with varied history and culture, resulting in lots of different things to see. Well worth it.
As luck would have it, they were open late due to celebrating Google's 18th anniversary. That was fun and well timed :)
that sums up half the German food we ate :)
The main meeting room had a nice party:
Our first nights were at the intercontinental berlin, which had a great breakfast but wasn't super nicely located for sightseeing:
During lunch the first day, we had a quick walk to a nearby church that had been badly damaged by bombing, walking by the zoo:
One evening, we had a party next the Berlin tower and AlexanderPlatx. We had a rooftop party, but it was so cold that we only went out for a few pictures and stayed inside the rest of the time:
The first day after the conference, We went to the Deutsche History Museum, which was both unique and excellent. I had never seen a museum that recounts the entire history of a country, but that's exactly what this one did:
Next, we went to Pergamon Museum that was open late that evening, and that saved us from the usual lines they have. It's going to be in renovations for many years, but they still had interesting collections from the middle east that were visible:
The next morning, we walked to the Reichtag for a walk to the top dome. Honestly the view was nothing to write home about, but it's a nice building nonetheless:
Before doing the rest of the walk, we did a detour to the Wall Museum, with a reconstituted piece of the Berlin wall with watchtower, and no mans land in the middle. The subway also showed subway stations that got closed and became ghost stations while the wall was up (as well as escapes that managed to work out through the subway tunnels):
in some places, the pavement shows where the wall used to be
what the wall used to be like, two walls really
The walk then went to Branderburger Gate and continued the walk:
the bunker hitler finished his life in before killing himself is gone, just a plaque
Not on the Rick Steves Walk (and that is a mistake) were the German and French cathedrals by the concert hall. The French one was actually for a sect of the protestants that had to flea from France after persecution from the catholics, and the city of Berlin added a nice dome on top that one can now climb after the rebuild that happened due to WWII:
the french cathedral had a museum
just a few steps to get to the top
the church inside is very basic, as expected for protestant churches
We then walked to checkpoint charlie before going to Topography of Terror, the Berlin documentation center, with its own piece of wall too. By then, this was our 4th or 5th documentation center on what the Nazi did, so there wasn't really anything new, but we still went through it in a couple of hours since it was open from 18:00 to 20:00, a bit later than others places that had closed by 18:00:
some were disturbing: hangings...
By 20:00, the documentation center closed, but I had still time to visit the nearby "Mauermuseum - Museum Haus am Checkpoint Charlie". It had some interesting stories on how people escaped east berlin and got across the wall through various means: tunnels, self built aircraft from planes to balloons, ramming the wall with a big bus or truck (that didn't work so well), using fake uniforms, fitting in a suitcase, or a loudspeaker box, and so forth :)
incidently, East Berlin apparently only had one kind of car, for those lucky enough to have one. It's now an icon
someone even managed to hide in the engine bay of that crappy car
original sign from checkpoint charlie
I finally got done by 21:30, it had been a long day, and it was well past time for some rest :)
The next morning we went to the Berlin Dom/Cathedral which opened by 09:00 when everything else was closed until 10:00. Decent view from the top:
By 10:00-ish we headed towards museum island, starting with the Altes Museum, with a nice collection, but again we got hassled for BS like Jennifer being told she could not carry her jacket around her waist and put it on and off as needed. Either she wore it, or she had to check it in. Seriously?
we learned during this trip that Romans started making sarcophagus and mummified some of their people after learning from the egyptians
By then it was late enough to see a small original watch tower that was used to check the wall
in that location the no mans land between the 2 walls was huge
From there, we headed back to museum island to see Neues Museum, as it's actually called:
yes, egyptian stuff isn't exactly new, but it was in the new museum anyway :)
Next, in case the names weren't confusing enough, there is also an alte national gallery that isn't the altes museum:
After that museum, we went back to finish the Deutsches History Museum, and when they kicked us out at 18:00, we went to the DDR Museum nearby. To be honest, the DDR museum wasn't as interesting, but when we got out, it was night, so we went to enough the night sights and the festival of lights:
And that was it for our visit of Berlin, much to see, especially museums, and it was interesting to see what's left of the wall in person, as well as more history about it than I had learned at home.
From Nürnberg, we had to get to Berlin for my conference, and Dresden was on the way, so we spent a day there, but sadly it was a monday when most museums were closed (then again, our partial day in Dresden was pretty full as is, so we'd have had to add a 2nd day for the extra museums anyway).
We took an early train at 07:30 from Nürnberg and had a 4H trip to Dresden, including a dicy train change that ended up working out as our train arrived late for the 3mn connection but thankfully the other train waited 2mn for us to let us transfer and make it. We arrived around 11:30, put our luggage in a locker, and went out in Dresden for a city walk under the rain.
That day also turned out to be German Unity Day, so there were both festivities under the rain, a fair amount of people protesting about various things, and lots of police everywhere to ensure there would not be any terrorist acts. It was a bit weird but I can't blame the Germans for being worried at this point.
Dresden was also heavily bombed during the war, most buildings had been rebuilt already:
the way from sorrow to violence is shorter than from Dresden to Heidenau
poor church was reduced to rubbles
sadly the celebrations on theatreplatz were kind of wet
We then went in the main museum that thankfully was not closed that day: Residenzschloss in Dresden. I has a famous "green vault" where the most valuable artifacts are stored, and for which we had a reservation. The items are stored in a vault where as expected no pictures were allowed. It was a nice collection, but it was a bit annoying that they made it that special and with those extra requirements. On the plus side "the new green room" inside the main museum had artifacts that were just as nice, where access was not restricted, and where pictures were allowed:
The 3rd floor of the museum had other collections:
Nice coin collection:
The nearby church was accessible via a special access path for royalty, but because we weren't royalty, we were not able to use it:
when the museum closed at 18:00, we had a quick look at the nearby museum complex that was closed, and went back to the train station to catch the last direct 2H train to Berlin:
Because it was sunday, virtually nothing was open before 10:00, so we started by going to Rally Grounds walk around Dokumentationszentrum, and arrived there at 09:00 to do a one hour walk around the grounds. To be honest, outside of the Zeppelin Field, the rest of the walk was a bit boring, there isn't really much left to see today outside of that, and the amphitheatre that the Dokumentationszentrum is in:
we arrived at 09:00, 1H before it opened, so we took the time to walk around the grounds
overview of the grounds, including parts that were never built due to lack of funds/time after WWII started
A huge street meant for marching and displays between monuments
Congress Hall, the only monument that almost got fully built (some were planned and never started). It was supposed to get a roof though, but that didn't happen
Zeppelin Field was used for huge Nazi rallys
now it's an overgrown field used for sports
part of the outside of the field is actually used as a race track a few times a year, with grand stands
A bit after 10:00 when Dokumentationszentrum opened, with did the tour with the audio guide:
A bit after 2H for the visit, we took a bus back to downtown for a city walk
the church, like most of the city, was heavily damaged by WWII bombing and a lot was rebuilt
We were supposed to do a 14:30 guided tour of bunker tunnels were a lot of art was stored to be protected from bombings, but it was run badly by a company that didn't really care, and we got incomplete information which ended up with us showing up early and being told there were no spots left for the only tour of the day that's maybe in English (or not). Instead, we just had a quick walk up to Kaiserburg, the Imperial Castle, which we just had a quick look at without going in.
The city view from there was a bit underwhelming, sadly, the view was a bit underwhelming:
So, since it was close to 15:00, we opted for doing to the Deutsches Museum, a great museum that happens to contain a church inside of it (!). I barely got to see all of it in 3H, and at normal pace, it's likely worth most of a day. It has a very varied collections, from caveman artifacts, to middle ages, to church history, to science instruments, musical instruments, old paintings, new paintings and art, nouveau art, and more:
I then went to the church inside the museum
how many museums have a church inside of them?
We then had dinner in downtown and want to get some sleep due to an early train to Dresden the next morning
We left Rothenburg early-ish in the morning and drove to Weikersheim, a nearby town where we went to visit Palace (Schloss Weikersheim and went through its gardens before it opened at 09:00. We then got lucky to have a private tour from their guide when they opened at 09:00. It's a nice palace that was built by another person with too much money who was jaleous of Versailles and wanted to at least match it :)
Pictures were kind of restricted inside, so I sadly only have a few shots:
We then drove to Würzburg's train station and finally dropped off our car:
2416km driven, not as much as our French trip, but not too bad :)
From the train station, we went to Residenz Palace in Würzburg, it's a beautiful palace, were very annoyingly so pictures were restricted too. By then I was really starting to get annoyed at this. When Germans go to Versailles, we let them take all the pictures they want, it's really not right that they are preventing pictures without flash in some of their nicest palaces and castles...
Another thing to know was the that palace was heavily damaged (like most of the city) by WWII bombing, so they spent a lot of time and money rebuilding it, and the rebuilding job looks really good. Anyway, these are the pictures I have:
And 3rd party pictures I had to waste time looking for, thanks again to the restrictions Residenz Palace in Würzburg had:
In the same location, we went to the Court Chapel, which was beautiful:
Next, we went through the gardens:
We then started our Würzburg walk:
We then went for a walk up to Marienberg Fortress for a guided tour that was going to leave at 15:30, and we made it up just in time:
after a pretty steep walk up, we got there
good view from up there, keep in mind the city was mostly levelled by bombs and rebuilt
We then went to visit the main museum that's part of the Fortress:
By 17:00 the museum closed, so we walked back to the town towards the train station and took a train to Nürnberg: