I'm so excited about my discovery of a bit of real untouched remaining bushland right in the heart of Sydney.I won't say where it is because this has to remain a secret! :)
It was so lovely to walk there. Just look at these giant fern.
Today was Australia Day, a public holiday in which Australians show how much they love their country while enjoying the day off. I walked over the Harbour Bridge into the city. Despite the heat (it was sunny, 31°C) the streets were crowded with people, and even the harbour was crowded with boats and ships.
The children did the right thing and jumped into the fountains at Darling Harbour. I just cooled my feet in there! :) There was a lot of live music playing all day. And I must have seen more than 50 different creative ways to wear a flag on one's body or clothing...
At night I expected a big firework, and went down to a nice spot with a view, ready to capture it with my camera and tripod, but the firework was only in Darling Harbour -- too far away -- and hardly to be seen from where I was.
My last posting before the flight! Goodbye everyone in Germany and thank you so much for all your help and support. I will miss you all and can't wait to see you again in half a year.
The farewell picture was drawn by my niece Sarah (10 years old). The guy on the winner's rostrum (Siegertreppchen), number 1, is me!
Heidrun is a new friend from my home town. She was born with the same family name as me (nee Maurer) and is maybe a remote relative of me -- we are still trying to connect her ancestry tree to mine, back in the 15th or 16th century.
Alex and I went alpine skiing today - yay!
After skiing, on the way home, we warmed up in the saunas of Kristall-Therme Schwangau near Füssen. The spa is creatively decorated in the themes of crystals, grottos, swans, and King Ludwig II of Bavaria who had built the nearby world-famous castles that are now tourist magnets.
No news about my visa or flight, I'm still waiting patiently.
Winter has brought snow again to Augsburg. I tried sledding (rodeln) on the newly created 27-metre hill in Königsbrunn but it was a bit rough, we'd need a few more centimetres of the white matter for a smoother ride.
Meet my good friend Peter, who is a musician from Harburg specializing in the live performance of medieval music on festivals and events.
I went to Ulm, an hour's drive west of Augsburg, to see a friend, Gregor, who came from Mannheim to see me before I'm gone again. His friend André from Gersthofen joined us. On a sunny but freezing cold day we had lunch and then climbed the steeple (Kirchturm) of the famous Ulm Minster (Ulmer Münster). It is the tallest church in the world, with a steeple measuring 161.53 m.
To our regret the tower was only accessible to the height of 70 m. But we still had a nice view from there, down to the pretty town with the partly snow-covered roofs. The river in the background is the Danube. And look how big the old houses are: some of them have three or even four storeys under the roof alone.
Inside the minster I admired the 15th century oak wood carvings in the choir stalls (Chorgestühl). The town in which Albert Einstein was born is definitely worth a visit if you get a chance to come to southern Germany.
A very exciting year for me is over. In the Chinese calendar, 26 January 2009 - 14 February 2010 is the Year of the Ox, and I'm an Ox person. I completed 3 cycles of 12 years. My granny who was born in 1913 has done 8 such cycles: she's an Ox too, as I just realized.
The four children here are Sternsinger who visited our house this afternoon (Jan 2nd). This is a custom in Germany in the days before and around Epiphany. The kids are dressed up as the Three Magi and one of them carries a star on a pole. They sing a song, say a rhymed blessing and collect donations for charity. And they write the traditional blessing formula with chalk above your door: 20 * C + M + B * 10.