Sunday, June 30, 2013

A COUPLE OF SMALL GERMAN CITIES

                                          Interesting Small Cities

Rudesheim
            During that blistering hot summer in Europe we arrived in Rudesheim mid-afternoon where it was 104 degrees. The town is small and probably best known for the enormous 35-foot high stone statue of Germania, the female symbol of the unification of the German Empire in 1871. It towers 1000 feet above the town of Rudesheim, but it was just too hot to make the steep hike up to it.
            It only took a short while to walk the small city before we visited the music instrument museum. It was much different than expected but interesting. There were many player pianos, carnival organs, and gramophones on display. The thick walls of the old building kept it a bit cooler than outside.
            There was no air conditioning anywhere in town. Other than the usual souvenir shops there were few shops. After the museum we sat at a sidewalk café enjoying a chilled soda while dreaming of ice and something really cold. Europeans simply do not understand cold.
Since we were eating in town that evening we decided wile away the afternoon in town and meet at the restaurant on the cobbled wine alley Drosselgasse at dinner time.  The restaurant was very hot with no cross ventilation. Ceiling fans would have been nice, but are not common. A small band played good music, but it was so loud it eliminated any dinner conversation. The food was fair at best, and the service very slow and inconsistent.
We anticipated and looked forward to the cool comfort of our air conditioned river boat cabin!

Wertheim
This is where Galileo thermometers are made. In fact they are made nowhere else in the world. See post of June2
The castle sitting high up on the hill anchored walls that led from it surrounding the city like a necklace. Originally 18 gates/towers surrounded the city. We ended a city walking tour at the Plaza where the attraction was the red sandstone Angel’s Well, built 1574. From here a fellow and I hiked up to the castle leaving his wife and my travel buddy sitting by the well.
It was a fairly easy walk. We walked most of the stairs up and the path-ramps down. The view from the top was spectacular. These are Germany’s second largest castle ruins. After the castle was destroyed a new one was built below, and now that 300-year-old castle is the city hall.
The tower clock at the 1383 Gothic church is rather unusual. The tower was added 40 years later. On the town side is a normal clock with both minute and hour hands so workers would work to the last minute. But only an hour hand is on the clock facing the castle, as the rulers were only interested in the hour, not the minutes.
I need to gather the info from all the unusual clocks I’ve seen in my travels and do one comprehensive post. One day when I have the time to search through the mountain of diaries!
Having made several European river cruises I’ve really enjoyed the small towns along the way. Unlike big cities , you have time to really see the town, learn its history and visit with the people, who without exception, I’ve found friendly and anxious to tell us about their hometown.

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