Tag Archives: Weimar

Summary of Week 5: April 24th – April 30th

This week, we took the train to Leipzig, then rented a car and drove across the country to Kassel to visit the Grimm Brothers Museum. However, once we got there, I discovered that since I planned my trip last summer, they had closed the museum and instead opened an interactive, hi-tech, ultra-modern museum called “Grimmwelt” that was more focused on their linguistic work. In the end, the museum was fun and worth it, but I was still rather disappointed.

Berlin officially has the most psychotic weather. Last week, it was sunny and warm T-shirt weather, today it is hovering around 0c and it might snow tonight. And the reason everyone wears “The Scarf” is because the wind here is like opening a walk-in freezer. Was thinking about going to the weird flea market in the derelict building where the artist commune is, but it’s freaking COLD out there. Still, it would be beyond awesome to see Berlin in the snow…

Berlin. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Berlin. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Well, instead of a romantic dusting of snow in Berlin we got about 20 minutes of freezing cold Sky Slurpee. It’s so stinking cold here, but these super old buildings with their Soviet era refurbishments are built like bunkers and we haven’t had to turn the heat on today yet.


Video: Berlin Diary: The Movie

Topography of Terror Museum, Berlin. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Topography of Terror Museum, Berlin. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Hey, you know what isn’t a fun way to spend a Sunday afternoon in Berlin? The Gestapo museum. Required viewing if you come here, but now I just want to sit under a tree and cry for a week. Also, Americans have no sense of respect or solemnity. One does not take selfies with Hitler and flash a super kawaii peace sign and duck face. Seriously.


Gallery: Topography of Terror Museum


Me in Gorki Park Cafe, Berlin. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Me in Gorki Park Cafe, Berlin. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Video: Scarlett Hates It


So we went out and had the most awesome and perfect day in Berlin today. Beer and radlers in Viktoriapark, doener at Mustafa’s in Kreuzberg, wandering in a gorgeous old cemetery, buying liqueurs at a small distillery (after liberal sampling of their wares first), a crazy and eccentric book shop run by a British ex-pat who was a total character, pulled pork and sauerkraut at Markthalle IX, gelato for dessert, then off to a totally amazing little bar that was playing incredible music from the 80s for legit absinthe, then stopping for more beer at Gorki Park across the street. Come home and Prince is dead. Well, shit.

Ben and me, Kottbusser Tor, Berlin. Photo by Elliott Cribbs
Ben and me, Kottbusser Tor, Berlin. Photo by Elliott Cribbs

A Glorious Berlin Sunset


A Recipe


In watching the tv and listening to the radio in Germany, it seems that they are obsessed with the late 70s/early 80s. Also, SO MUCH FOREIGNER. Seriously, we’ve hear “Juke Box Hero” like 5 times in the last 2 days. And you haven’t lived until you have heard a radio station play Dolly Parton’s “9 to 5” followed by Rammstein.

Leipzig. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Leipzig. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Gallery: Leipzig


Weimar. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Weimar. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Gallery: Weimar


This was the site of an ancient Pagan religious center with multiple altars, where animals — and occasionally humans — were sacrificed to their gods on very special days.

Opfermoor Vogtei. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Opfermoor Vogtei. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Gallery: Opfermoor Vogtei


Video: Bog of Sacrifice — Opfermoor Vogtei


The Grimm Brother’s Museum. It was very… German.

Grimmwelt, Kassel. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Grimmwelt, Kassel. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Gallery: Grimmwelt


Kassel Diary – Day 29


Externsteine was awesome. I climbed up 90ft to stand at the top and immediately freaked the hell out and had to crawl down on my ass like a crab (I have SEVERE agoraphobia and literally can’t stand on a step ladder without getting scared, so I am proud I did it). Hameln is beautiful, friendly, and oddly full of children, and a great way to end the trip. Oh, and I yelled at a duck. Videos coming soon, back to Berlin tomorrow. I am actually homesick for it!

Externsteine. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Externsteine. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Gallery: Externsteine


There is a farmer’s market in the lot next door to our hotel. Damn, people are friendly in Hameln! Seriously, if you ever come to Germany, make sure you come here. Especially in the spring. Also, American English sounds Linda from Bob’s Burgers to the rest of the world. And Germans will point this out to you- in a good natured way, of course.


Gallery: Hameln


Geismar is one of the supposed locations where St. Boniface cut down Donar’s sacred tree in the 8th century. He later died when he though he was über enough to block a sword with a bible. He wasn’t.


Geismar. Photo by Scarlett Messenger
Geismar. Photo by Scarlett Messenger

Gallery: Geismar


OMG, HOME!! Got my Berliner Pilsner, my Döner from across the street, the sun is shining, and I can hear the bells of the Berliner Dom ringing for evening Vespers in the distance. Ahhhhhh. Next best thing to being at home on the island!


Ugh, all this “carpe diem” is wrecking my body. I am nothing but bruises and blisters and abrasions from head to toe. My knees are on fire, and I haven’t been able to feel 3 of my toes for weeks. Tomorrow is May Day, which is a big deal in Germany. I will hate myself if I don’t go, but my body hates me for even thinking about it.

Gallery: Weimar

We stopped in Weimar on our way from Leipzig to Opfermoor Vogtei. Weimar was a charming Thuringian city in Central Germany, home to literary icons like Goethe and Schiller, the Wiemar Republic, Bauhaus, and a town idealized by the Nazis as a ideal of German culture. It is also home to Buchenwald Concentration Camp, which we did not go to. One of the more interesting things Elliott and I noted in Weimar was a noticeable lack of small children.