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-   -   "Offbeat" Europe - Rick Steves for CNN (https://tpunk.com/showthread.php?t=15258)

DC_Jessica 12-02-2007 02:35 PM

"Offbeat" Europe - Rick Steves for CNN
 
Quote:

(Tribune Media Services) -- No one planning a trip to Europe needs to be reminded to see Big Ben and the Leaning Tower. But it's the unusual experiences that are often the most memorable part of a trip. Study up in advance and you can enjoy places and experiences like these:
http://i.l.cnn.net/cnn/2007/TRAVEL/g...rt.surfing.jpg
Surfing in Munich's English Garden

TV and the downfall of tea
London's Bramah Tea and Coffee Museum is a hit with aficionados of the brown brews. This small museum passionately tells the story of each drink. You'll likely meet the owner, Edward Bramah, who comes from a big tea family. He wants the world to know how the advent of commercial television -- with breaks too short to brew a proper pot of tea -- required a faster hot drink. In came the horrible English instant coffee. The tea industry countered with minced leaves in tea bags, and "it's gone downhill ever since."
Skinny-dipping in downtown Munich
Munich's Central Park, the English Garden, offers a variety of offbeat things to explore. Up to 300,000 locals commune with nature here on a hot summer day, many of them naked. Nudism, denoted by the code letters "F.K.K.," is perfectly legal and widely practiced here -- quite a spectacle to most Americans (they're the ones riding their rental bikes into the river and trees). And here, buried far from the nearest stretch of coast, surfers "hang ten" in the rapids of the city's little river. While seeking their thrills, they provide great entertainment for the ever-present little crowd that gathers to watch from the bridge.
Salzburg's super-soaker prince
Salzburg's 17th-century Hellbrunn Castle entertains with a garden full of trick fountains and tour guides sadistically soaking tourists. At the touch of a button, paths and benches turn into fountains and visitors get doused. It's silly fun, especially with kids on a sunny day.
Don't MissEurope's skinniest park
Paris' skinny, two-mile-long Promenade Plantee park is a narrow garden walk on a viaduct no longer used for train tracks. The elevated park, which cuts through lots of modern condos, gives a fun peek into the workaday lives of Parisians today. Staircases lead to the street level, where artsy, offbeat shops fill the viaduct's arches. The park runs from place de la Bastille, along avenue Daumesnil to Saint-Mande.
Skiing in Edinburgh
If you'd rather be skiing, the Midlothian Ski Centre, just outside Edinburgh, has a brush-skiing hill with a chairlift, two slopes, a jump slope, and rentable skis, boots and poles. While you're actually skiing over what seems like a million toothbrushes, it feels like snow skiing on a slushy day. It's open nearly year round (except, ironically, when it snows). Beware: Local doctors are used to treating an ailment called "Hillend Thumb" -- digits dislocated when people fall and get tangled in the brush.
The tide went out and never came back
Holland is twice as big today as it was 300 years ago. How? By "reclaiming" land from the sea using dikes and windmill-powered pumps. During the process, many tiny islands -- home to traditional fishing villages -- were stranded high and dry and today stand in the middle of Dutch farmland. The fishing village of Schotlan, once on an island in the Zuider Zee, is one such village. The village has a now-useless lighthouse, and you can walk right up to a buoy that once bobbed in the harbor. A bent and rusty propeller from a World War II English bomber ornaments the village square, a reminder that when farmers first tilled their new soil, they uncovered more than just muck and mollusks.
Roman pyramid
You don't need to go to Egypt to see an ancient pyramid. Standing 90 feet tall, Rome's pyramid was built in 12 B.C. as a tomb for the Roman Gaius Cestius, after the Cleopatra and Mark Antony scandal brought exotic Egyptian styles into vogue. Later the pyramid was incorporated into Rome's city wall.
Choco-sightseeing
Along with its rich culture, Europe is loved for its delicious chocolate. All day long, rivers of molten chocolate work their way through factories into small foil packages. While chocolate factory tours are rare, many welcome visitors with museums, showrooms, video presentations and free tasting rooms. Chocoholics love the Imhoff-Stollwerck Chocolate Museum in Koln, Germany. Their self-proclaimed "Mmmuseum" takes you on a tour from the origin of the cocoa bean to the finished product. You can see displays on the culture of chocolate and watch treats trundle down the conveyor belt in the functioning chocolate factory, the museum's highlight.
In my next column, I'll cover more of offbeat Europe. Whether sipping a hot beverage with a tea-vangelist or jogging with Parisians, anywhere in Europe, the unusual sights are a fun way to get some distance from the crowds and lighten up a museum-heavy itinerary.



Rick Steves writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. E-mail him at rick@ricksteves.com, or write to him c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, Wash. 98020.
Copyright 2007 RICK STEVES, DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
I think I witnessed the "x-games" in the park in Munich when I was there. If I remember correctly, we were on our way to or very near where the White Roses memorial was (maybe the building where they were detained...can't remember) when I took this picture. But it was winter, not summer!!
http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y1/...ert/munich.jpg

http://www.cnn.com/2007/TRAVEL/getaw...ef=mpstoryview

pinknic38 12-02-2007 02:45 PM

ummm I am definately going skinny dipping in downtown munich. I will let you all know how it goes. :p

mbo108 12-02-2007 08:21 PM

those should be some interesting Facebook pictures!

pinknic38 12-02-2007 10:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mbo108 (Post 174869)
those should be some interesting Facebook pictures!

:whistle::photo::naughty:

lost in texas 12-04-2007 09:15 PM

The English Garden is great. Even aside from the nudity, renting a bike and riding around the park half-drunk is probably my best memory of Munich. The river surfing is badass too! Good times.

pinknic38 12-04-2007 11:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lost in texas (Post 175086)
The English Garden is great. Even aside from the nudity, renting a bike and riding around the park half-drunk is probably my best memory of Munich. The river surfing is badass too! Good times.

dude can you get a DUI on a bike in Germany? I know someone from college who almost got a DUI on his bike in the states, which is why I am wondering... LOL

LiveFreeorDie 12-05-2007 07:45 AM

Quote:

I know someone from college who almost got a DUI on his bike
That's just wrong. Let me guess.....it was in Ohio?:lol:

Canadian Bacon 12-05-2007 08:45 AM

What the hell!! I never saw surfing when I was in the English Garden! Ahh its probably for the better anyway, I probably would have drowned after all those beer and potatoes

pinknic38 12-05-2007 08:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LiveFreeorDie (Post 175107)
That's just wrong. Let me guess.....it was in Ohio?:lol:

Of course it was in Ohio! I went to this small ass college in Ada, OH (about an hour and a half NE of C-bus) and there was some off-campus kegger and our friend was wasted as we all were, but he wanted Hardees (99 cent spicy chicken sandwich = amazing drunk food) and it was cold out so he decided to ride his bike to Hardess instead of drive so he would not get a DUI, and low and behold on his way back from Hardees the Ada Police stopped him and gave him a sobriety test which he obviously failed, and the dude was like "you know by law I can give you a DUI, right?"

I would have made fun of him for the rest of his life hadhe gotten a DUI on a bike. Only in Ohio. Actually, only in small town Ohio.

lost in texas 12-05-2007 10:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pinknic38 (Post 175090)
dude can you get a DUI on a bike in Germany?

I went on one of those free bike tours, and the guide said you could, so try not to swerve too much... :lol:

maracle 12-05-2007 10:40 AM

If you read fark.com regularly you would know that you can get DUIs on bikes, lawnmowers, scooters, and pretty much anything else with wheels :)


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