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notamermaid

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Everything posted by notamermaid

  1. A catch-22 situation if ever there was one. Or as we say "Da beißt sich die Katze in den Schwanz". There the cat bites itself in the tail. Okay, you lot got me, I have looked up the score, 1 all now. Onto Bill Nighy - "I feel it in my fingers, I feel it in my toes". And then - my favourite swearing in a film. notamermaid
  2. Thank you for sharing all the photos of the markets. I have managed to visit two so far. Info on Andernach market coming tomorrow or Tuesday. So you went to the open day in Basel. Will there be any info on cruisetricks.de or are you sharing info via your own internet presence? Perhaps you could put info in here? https://boards.cruisecritic.com/topic/2890402-open-days-companies-show-you-their-river-cruise-ships-and-their-offers/#comment-64304474 Would like to read more on the ships now that they are on the German market. A pity that they are not international (bilingual with English). notamermaid
  3. Thank you for saying hello, happy to read you enjoy the thread. Not wanting to sound overly nerdy but it is up the Moselle. A pity you could not sail the Rhine all the way to Basel. Will you be doing this stretch this year or is it just a short bit on the Rhine? The water levels look to be really pleasant well into December, a bit on the low side for barges put no problem for river cruise ships. The Main will be okay then as well, with all the locks. Have you had a look at the thread on the Main? Some good info but not about the markets in there. I had the idea to put all the Christmas markets enthusiasm into one special thread and I am happy to see that it has proved popular. Fun to see all the photos. If you would like to send us a message from the Main especially do say hello in that thread. I have read myself that some markets will turn off the lights earlier than usual but it should not be too noticeable, like you say. I am wondering really if castles and other sights will have the spotlights turned off. A tourist sight near me (not a castle) has them off. That would be a pity as that is something you would notice seeing that it is dark by quarter to five in the afternoon. Enjoy your cruise. notamermaid
  4. Well I shall put a hand over my mouth or bite my tongue - you know I did not want to say anything. With our boys I secretly hope it was the bad sushi - or the lamb in spices was old mutton... Busy day at work yesterday, we are still one person short in the team and had one person ill, too. Christmas market visit did not go quite as planned but I had really nice apple cake this afternoon. Dinner and then I shall grab the "Love Actually" DVD. Early night tonight as I have a busy day tomorrow and give three cheers not to football but to the plumber after he has repaired my leaking boiler hopefully by tomorrow evening. notamermaid
  5. So Germany is playing Spain today. Oh well, this year - how can I say this without saying anything - I am not interested. I have almost completely stopped watching German news, German television and hardly read the papers. My favourite Google searches include local history, Rhine, ship, cruise and - that's about it. Yesterday I talked to young people standing out in the cold, okay, protected by the wooden walls of a hut, from a Christian parish offering books and giving me an invitation to a free concert of Christmas music. Really refreshing and uplifting. Have a great first Sunday of Advent. 🕯️ notamermaid
  6. Happy Thanksgiving to you over there. I have of course no connection to that holiday but guess what I got into the Christmas holiday spirit! After glum days, last night my mood changed because I saw the announcement on the internet that the "Love Actually" people are doing an interview special as a twenty years celebratory thing. I was a bit slow to catch the Christmas market and Advent spirit but last night a big smile was put onto my face. Wish I could watch it on ABC. Streaming on another channel is probably not available to me either. But I have the trailer that I can watch again and again. notamermaid
  7. @ural guy where did you take the photo of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia, in the convent? The Opera House looks grand, a pity I did not have time to go in when I was there. notamermaid
  8. Never heard of one, but like in the UK we have "forbidden zones" in Germany for army training. Perhaps the area is hiding in plain sight, in a building with number 51 on the door... Question is where. I would go for Lüneburg Heath. Talking of weird places. Switzerland has roadside villas that can kill an army. Behind the facade there are bunkers with weaponry in them. Read up on the "Toblerone LIne". Defenses built during WWII. Mauthausen. A brutal thing. I have no intention of ever going there. A pity is the fact that I can never see the town as a tourism place. I never knew a town actually existed until some years ago, for me since school it had always been "Lager Mauthausen". notamermaid
  9. I imagine us all meeting up one day on a river cruise. You at the bar, us with drinks getting all engrossed in a current affairs conversation. Suddenly there is this quiet voice in the background from the man with towel in hand and mixing the cocktails saying "guys..." I had a teacher at school being very insistent on us learning all the European countries and their capitals. Unfortunately, a few countries got "rearranged and created" so by the time I went on my river cruise I had no idea about Slovakia and Bratislava being on the Danube. Kind of weird how much has changed in Europe in thirty years. Alsace as a region probably being even more complicated. Fun fact: there is a hotel in France and Switzerland. In the Jura mountains, right on the official border, it runs through the hotel itself. It is in La Cure. notamermaid
  10. The MS Swiss Ruby is back on the Neckar! At least she will be in 2023, this time not chartered by Riviera Travel. The vessel has moved on and is in the fleet of Viva Cruises, next year sailing the Dutch and Northern German canals and rivers. But she will also be doing stretches on the Rhine mainly combining other rivers with it, like Rhine, Moselle and Saar for example. On the Neckar she will be sailing like this: https://www.viva-*****/en-us/cruiselisting?destinations=all&departures=all&dates=all&ships=MS SWISS RUBY&adults=2 It is Stuttgart to Saarbrücken and the reverse, in autumn and focusing on wine. The two directions differ in the ports and while both are great, I would recommend Stuttgart to Saarbrücken. notamermaid
  11. The gentleman of the authorities talking in the video was really pleased with the rescue operation. He says that the captains communicated well and the river worked in their favour as well. Basically, the ship ended up docked where it had intended to - just eighteen hours later. So, to the good news and the new river cruising itinerary. notamermaid
  12. Thank you for your detailed answer. That sounds great. I think I could not sail or be away from home over Christmas but New Year's Eve I would like to spend on a boat. notamermaid
  13. The authorities stopped fully loaded ships for longer and I am not sure if they are back sailing yet. The ship was freed yesterday and traffic as such is running. It has been raining, nevetheless the river is a little on the low side. Essentially, the locks keep the navigation channel deeper than in some stretches of the Rhine that are free-flowing. The Neckar and with that the sections that are old branches are much cleaner now than they were in the 70's. Here is a video of the ship being freed and turned with the help of the river's flow: https://www.swr.de/swraktuell/baden-wuerttemberg/mannheim/schiff-blockiert-verkehr-auf-dem-neckar-bei-eberbach-100.html notamermaid
  14. Thankfully not as long lasting. While the Neckar is a much smaller trading route than the Rhine, nevertheless some companies depend on the smooth running of shipping along the Neckar to the ports of the Rhine and to customers. Not sure how they could have possibly managed to put the thousands of tons of goods that were held up onto lorries at short notice. The lorries themselves are often the smaller problem the much bigger thing can be finding enough drivers. Salt - which the stranded ship carried - is a typical load on the Neckar, statistics say last year 18 percent of the freight transported was salt. The main goods are the sector of building materials and earths which made up 41 percent last year. Overall, 5.1 million tons of goods were shipped on the Neckar in 2021. notamermaid
  15. A barge loaded with salt got stuck in the Neckar and the river was closed to traffic. Earlier today the ship was freed and others can now pass the spot but only sailing empty. The authorities want to check the riverbed with sonar imaging first but allowing traffic to fully resume. Here is an article with photo (and German audio): https://www.hessenschau.de/panorama/festgefahrenes-schiff-auf-neckar-bei-hirschhorn-befreit-v3,schiff-in-neckar-festgefahren-100.html No chance passing it with that angle towards the river. You can see that the river is so much narrower compared to the Rhine or Danube. The ship is only about 100m long. But for actual sailing of river cruise ships the width of the river is not the real problem, ships with a length of 110m and 11,40m are allowed on the Neckar. 11,40m is the standard maximum length of almost all river cruise ships in Western Europe. As mentioned before, the locks restrict the length more than the regulation of 110m does. But there is good news for international river cruisers as there is a new offer available. I will get to that shortly. notamermaid
  16. Castles and palaces are such brilliant settings for markets. Hopefully I can get to one this year. Some markets are only at weekends so are not so easy to fit into a river cruise schedule. In the Rhine Gorge, a castle does such a weekend event. It is Burg Rheinstein: https://www.burg-rheinstein.de/en/ There are many others across Germany, Austria and I am sure other countries as well. Regensburg Schloß Thurn & Taxis is one you can reach on a river cruise easily and it is open all week. The Reichsburg in Cochem has its market from 10 to 12 December. I would love to see a moated castle, or Wasserschloß as the later and bigger version, in North Rhine-Westphalia. There are some really attractive ones. So far I have only been to one (private) winter event in a small one near Bonn. A great experience. As pontac has recently posted a fascinating review of their narrowboat trip, I was wondering @Canal archive have you ever read about or done a winter event trip on the canals in England? Perhaps a bit cold. Do people spend much time on the boats in winter other than the ones they live on them? There are some great markets now in England, I mean theoretically one could sail through the canals into Birmingham or Manchester to see the markets. notamermaid
  17. Thank you. Never read about this. Of course, here in Germany the authorities grew very suspicious of British foreign nationals - among others - during WWI and WWII. But I have not looked into any stories, i.e. if people where detained or relocated. notamermaid
  18. Agree. Looks great as it is, cannot wait to see what it looks like when flipped. notamermaid
  19. Perhaps you can teach me something in return: what are "relocation" camps? Does it have something to do with the POW from Europe? Until a few years ago I did not know that Germans had been brought to America during WWII. Apparently there is a restaurant with museum in a former camp in Illinois. One report that I have found says that there were 150 (!) camps in the US. Apparently the prisoners worked mainly in agriculture. Makes sense when your own men are over in Europe fighting. notamermaid
  20. Lovely. I am already falling behind you with visiting. Had to work and have not been to one yet. Mind you, few were open before today. But I was able to get a trip into the hills in yesterday. The Westerwald hills, to a workshop that makes the huts, houses and landscapes for nativity scenes. You know, a "Krippenbauer". He buys the figures and ornaments in. Many from Italy. Spoiled for choice, oh the decoration, the smell of wood in the workshop! Will get back to the place shortly in another post. Today it was household duties, tomorrow it is time to start decorating. Deck the halls - but not with bows of holly. notamermaid
  21. Thank you for sharing your adventure. I have seen the narrowboats on the canals near Manchester in the Peak District and the crew operating all the lock gates. Fascinating. Would like to be on a narrowboat for a bit, not sure that I could handle such a long trip, though. notamermaid
  22. I just meant that one story is repeated over and over and stays in memory and the other story is forgotten. With the camps around Remagen and with other POW camps (and many other aspects of war history) and the bridge it is such a case. I am an example of that, it also works with my memory. The bridge story I have known for decades, probably since school, know the famous photos and so on. It makes perfect sense as the significance for the advancing of troops East is undoubted by historians. I only learnt about the camps about twenty years ago when I went to the Peace Museum for the first time. Perhaps I should have chosen a better word. Not saying it is deliberately forgotten. Another aspect that has been overshadowed by Remagen bridge, again for the same significant reason, is Urmitz bridge and also the reconnaissance flights in the area, not sure if that is the word, where the troops took journalists after May 1945 in planes so they could take photos of the damage caused by bombers. I have only learnt this in recent years. With so many years that have elapsed now, more is in the public domain and I have been able to obtain such a photo myself via the internet. Exactly. Not for very long, less than a year overall in fighting in France, etc.. Within Germany, not sure, not within the modern borders of Germany. I do not remember what happened when in Belgium and Lorraine. The troops mainly supported the French and the British and as an independent army operated only a short time. Nevertheless, at the end of 1918 there were more than two million American soldiers in Europe. A huge number stayed in Germany (mostly the Rhine area) as an occupying force until 1923. The reduction in numbers there was gradual. The first left in 1919 and the last ones left the Rhineland specifically in 1923, fully handing over to the French occupying forces. I am not sure if there was a large military presence anywhere in Europe after that. Details I am sure are on history sites on the internet. With WWII still closer to us in years and the stronger and prolonged presence of the US military it is natural that it should be much more present in people's minds outside of Europe. The airbase Ramstein, is sometimes in the television news here, in the regional ones called SWR. notamermaid
  23. Glad to read it. Christmas markets, snow and sailing with APT. I can hardly think of a better combination. APT has the great exclusive events. On the Rhine you will visit Namedy castle, a fantastic small venue with such a pleasant host. I hope I can go there this year on a day trip. River looking good, Pfelling high enough for pleasant sailing and Passau low enough to get through under the bridge. notamermaid
  24. I think that Remagen bridge and the camps nearby are a perfect example of looking at one thing and blending out the other. No real criticism in this - it happens. Good to learn about it. Thinking about it, I have only just realized that people from the US who I meet through work almost always ask me about WWII and my area's history, so several years ago I made sure I learnt the basics to be able to answer questions (apart from knowing general history about the war through school). But they so far have never asked me about WWI. notamermaid
  25. It has been a cold day today and we did get snow in the high hills in North Rhine Westphalia. I think it just missed Rhineland-Palatinate (more or less), having drifted from the Northwest towards the Southeast via Hesse. Due to the rain and a bit of storm - finally - the trees have lost a lot of leaves. But the Christmas lights will brighten up places from Monday. River levels are rising but Maxau in the Upper Rhine valley has already peaked. It is likely to remain at a good, not high, level for some time, meaning there should be plenty of water for the Rhine Gorge into the beginning of December. notamermaid
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