Extent of the place |
On the grounds |
Early August, most everything still in bloom |
Lily pond |
Closer up |
Mexicohaus |
I love bromeliads, cycads |
Tree ferns, like New Zealand |
And a visiting exhibit from Yunnan and Sichuan |
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Extent of the place |
On the grounds |
Early August, most everything still in bloom |
Lily pond |
Closer up |
Mexicohaus |
I love bromeliads, cycads |
Tree ferns, like New Zealand |
And a visiting exhibit from Yunnan and Sichuan |
Entry signage |
A bit, but a representative tiny bit, of the Hirschgarten |
The Hirschgarten's old-style Pisshof |
Help yourself to a mug; maybe give it an extra rinse |
The cafeteria-style food area; I had my favorite bratwurst mit currysauce and pommes frites; and bier; Vicki had my pommes frites and a gelato, a balanced choice |
Of course, we ran into a wedding |
Nymphenburg, the main building--actually it is a huge ellipse all around the lake |
Main hall |
How paintings get restored; how chiropractors get clients |
Royal bed-chamber |
Queen's bed-chamber, original furniture, where Ludwig II (Loonie Ludwig) was born |
Part of the Hall of Beauties--Ludwig I had portraits done of 40 contemporary women he regarded as great beauties (no word on what the Queen thought of this) |
Nymphenburg Palace from the gardens |
The Amalienburg, the Queen's hunting lodge |
A bit of the interior |
All solid silver, of course |
The kitchen, beautiful tile-work |
A way-old place, re-built twice since the war, but to generally the same specifications
|
Most people head to the bier garten
|
Or the ground floor halls
|
But we headed to the upstairs Festsaal, with its entertainment and
buffet meal of Bavarian goodies |
Including bier; 1 liter is the only size available (at least
that's what I told Vicki)
|
There was the old German band
|
And dancing, including slap-dancing and whip-dancing
|
And, most memorably, this card, stuck to the ceiling above the stage at the
head of the hall, 30 feet up there; none of the staff conceded any knowledge of it |
Yes, we are in the land of super-sized pretzels |
One of the twin domes of the Marienkirche; the other was under scaffolding |
Interior of the church; rather dull, I thought |
The Augustiner, one of the older brewhouses |
Street scene; the Starbucks dates from 1328... |
Another...all this undoubtedly re-built; Munich was fairly flattened by bombing in 1944-45 |
The very famous Rathaus |
With its even more famous clock |
The joust, at the critical moment |
Followed by the dancing of the apprentices or someone else |
My attempt at going native ended successfully |
Dokumentation Center |
A painting of the Berghof; the "romantic," nature-loving Hitler was part of the story sold to the public |
Evidence of the Hitler craze |
Large map showing all the known concentration camps, "murder factories," and other such places |
Below, the Dokumentation Center connects to the maze of concrete bunkers and tunnels in the Obersalzburg; fortunately, the Alpine Redoubt never took place |
Map of the tunnels and fortifications |