Jewish Quarter – Prague

Are you tired of Prague yet?  Probably.  You have no idea how many pictures I took.  I used to think I would pursue portraiture once I had a clue how to use my camera, but I have become captivated by street photography both taking it and viewing others' work.  

This is a walk through the Jewish Quarter one afternoon.  If you make it to the end there are some of my favorite images (and a short video) of an old gentleman who was performing in the square.  These old European cities have awesome street performers. 

 

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Sunlight through Shadows

Friday morning found me a little groggy and road weary.  Allen was traveling and I had been glued to my mail and phone for 48 hrs so as not to miss an update. Grandpa, the only father I've known, entered hospice care and died soon after.  

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There would be no more news on funeral planning for several hours due to the time difference between here and there.  I briefly considered crawling back into bed but the sun was beckoning and little people were getting cabin fever. Some days you just know you will be more rested when you wear them out.  So we packed up the blanket, packed water bottles and sunscreen, and met our friends at the Seewoog.

Maria is one of those friends I don't see often but, when we do, words spill out easily. The time passed is quickly bridged and there is great comfort found sharing with another soldier's mom.

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( I suggested sunscreen…)

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(the men in this family take ball sports seriously!) 

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  The boys ran themselves ragged playing ball in the open fields.  The ant mound drew them not surprisingly, and plans were made to begin an ant farm.  (and just as quickly laid aside ; )) The little girls, too, fell right back into step.  With clasped hands they roamed the reed strewn banks with their brothers, bringing us lily fronds and fish eggs, daisies and dandelion.  We left filled to the brim.  Just what the day called for.

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Lunch at Cafe Lorrain

Every year my husband's German coworkers host a hike locally.  This year we walked across the border into France, lunched at a local cafe, and then hiked around the sandstone rock formations.  Perhaps because I am editing out of order or perhaps because I am still astounded that the lunch portion of this event lasted FOUR hours, we will begin here. 

Four hours. 

Did I mention that part?  

Apr
The cafe is about the only show in town for the hikers hitting the halfway point on the round trip from Germany and through the bluffs.  Additionally it is where the local population of less than 700 gather after funerals and such up at the (single) church, conveniently located a bit further up on Rue de l'Eglise.  (Church Stree)

Apr 2012 web Pirmasens Border Hike-49-Edit

 

The place was at capacity today representing the full range of humanity from the owner's granddaughter wandering between the tables with her pacifier in tow to the old ladies in their pastel polyester suits.  None of them batted an eye as the dogs hiking with us walked on in and settled under the tables.

Apr 2012 web Pirmasens Border Hike-41-Edit

an aside: That is mineral water in the bottle by the way.  Table water is not common in Germany nor France. You can order it, however it will usually be carbonated. 

Apr
After a leisurely wait, beverages started circulating and orders were placed.  Then we waited.  And waited.  And waited. About two hours or so.  I have to give props to my boys because while they are totally not used to food delays, and would normally consider that to be a culinary emergency of sorts, they sat perfectly still and quiet.  For two hours.  Or so. 

Apr
My guys ordered jagerschnitzel – they aren't real adventurous. For instance, although they had several varieties of escargot on the menu, the closest we got to them was through my zoom lens.   On each table were family style bowls of salad, platters of mixed veggies, bread baskets, and shallow silver bowls of pommes frites.  Once again I was reminded that Europeans make far better tea than I ever do at home and this is possibly due to water temperature.  Need to master this. 

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So the dining part lasted another hour after which the check was called for.  After another half hour the dogs and the boys decided to wait outside.  I wandered the village with my camera and finally the rest of the party emerged from the cafe.  We learned later we should have read this review first.  It wasn't just us.  Still, it was a lovely place, a delicious meal, and it allowed us to rest up for the spectacular climb that was to follow.  Since that part lasted a few more hours, we had another hour ride home, and a little man here is making his First Communion tomorrow.  I am hitting the hay.  

Apr
Pictures to follow, as always.  Probably out of order.  As always.  : ) 

Smile because it happened

There she was, that nanny goat, as we turned into the marketplace full of Easter revelry. She arched her blonde neck to nibble the last bits of grain from one wrinkled hand.  Moira and I tried to coax the little girls in close to feel that soft nose, to see the sleepy burro in the straw.  Oh, they stepped in a bit.  Tentatively.

Mar
They don't remember. 

Their world is so new that their memories don't reach back beyond these cobblestones. Tess talks of loving to ride the horse, but it is not our horses she speaks of.  It is the pony ride tent she recalls.  For a minute my knees are weak.

Mar

It wasn't so long ago.  I sat on an upturned bucket and ran my hand along the side of doe like this one, coaxing milk from a warm udder and knowing exactly how long I had to work before the feed was eaten and she'd stomp impatient. If I close my eyes I can feel the metal handle of the water bucket, hear the bleating of goat kids in the stall nearby.

Mar
 It wasn't so long ago.  And it was good.  

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Things are different today.  We stand here with these girls peeking between old boards. Another farmer will gather this flock in tonight.  My husband and I will gather our own little flock into a yellow house at the edge of  a village some 5,000 miles from a barn in Colorado.  While they sleep we pore over pictures of houses in yet another country, wondering which we will find ourselves in this summer.

Mar

This too is good. 

Mar

 

Jan 2010

Perhaps the most important lesson I have learned these past two yrs is that happiness is not wedded to a place nor a circumstance.  It is not frozen in time. It is fluid and changing and can pour out of its old containers to fill up entirely new spaces.  Even to overflowing.  I think I didn't know this for sure until I left. 

 

Aug 2009

I leave here with something I didn't have when I came.  Faith.  Faith that happy isn't just a fluke.  It can happen again.  And again.  Just like challenges.  I don't know where we are going exactly but I feel sure there is good there and we will find it. 

 

Apr 2010

Still, I hope that just maybe, there will be another day when I turn a corner a England and see a nanny goat.  

Mar 2012

Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened.  - Dr. Suess

Evening Walk on the Karlův Most

There was a break in the misty rain that second night in Prague.  Our apartment was quite near the Charles Bridge, close enough that after the littles were tucked into bed with the big girls we could step out for a short walk together.  

The Charles Bridge connects the Little Quarter in Prague with the Old Town across the Vltava River.  By day, vendors line the sides of the bridge with souvenirs and artwork.  After nightfall, there is a hush over all.  Couples stroll quietly, looking across the gently flowing water towards the illuminated landscape beyond.  

Walk with me, and I will show you…..

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Palm Sunday

It is Palm Sunday already and we have spent nearly 7 hrs of it on the road returning from a near perfect trip to Prague.  I am still processing it all and likely will be for some time – figuratively and literally since we took some 400 pictures of that magical city.

I realized this morning that it has been 2 yrs now since we have braided palms in this family.  As this article explains this is a land without palms. Instead, we receive blessed bundles of herbs or branches from flowering spring shrubs. We discovered today that it is the same in the Czech Republic.  Still wonderful, still a reminder of that magnificent procession into Jerusalem so long ago. It is just another of those different things I didn't know before we came here and thought you might not either. 

(You can see more pics here and here)

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Whatever is gracing your altars this year, may they bless you greatly. 

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I will be sharing as we can in coming days but they promise to continue to be full.  We are so very pleased to be preparing to host the son of our dear friends for the rest of his spring break from his semester in Florence. 

Postcards from Luxembourg

For many centuries Luxembourg was one of the great walled cities of Europe. The massive fortification began in the 12th century although excavations show the area had been settled since the 4th century. The walls were enlarged yet more in the 15th through the 17th centuries, thus earning it the name The Gibraltar of the North. There are still a number of casemates remaining underground but sadly they were not open when we were there. We hope to return someday with more of the little ones. It truly was a fairy tale city. 

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Mainz Madness – Fasching 2012

Fasching 2012 was a bit more um, colorful, than Fasching 2011.  At least for us.  Husband had read about the parade in Mainz and heard it was second only to the celebration in Koln.  It isn't all that far away and it seemed like something to to check off the bucket list while we were here.  

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I did mention it to my German friends a few days earlier to which they both responded, "Why? They'll all be drunk," with a shake of their heads. Honestly, we took that with a grain of salt.  For one thing, all German festivals involve a fair amount of alcohol.  While drinking and driving is dealt with severely here, open intoxicants and drinking and walking are not considered a problem. So we expected some of that. But "all" sounded like an exaggeration.  Yeah.

It wasn't. 

Feb

I am just going to interject here that the little people generally get dressed up cute when going out in public. But sometime in those last minutes before we get out the door Brendan usually reworks at least part of his outfit. Today it was his cold weather gear. So. Back to your regularly scheduled programming…

We arrived an hour or so before the parade was set to begin and immediately found a parking spot.  Rare events such as these always make us pause and go, hmmmm <g> After scouring the street for signs to the contrary, we assured ourselves it was, indeed, a legit spot.  We headed down through the park to the city center. It wasn't hard to find.  You just follow the noise. 

Feb
The parade route was lined with beer trucks and pommes vendors, beer and french fries being standard festing fare.  People were milling about and just beginning to line up streetside. We took spots ourselves and settled in.  That lasted about 20 minutes, at which point a crowd of "young people" (ok, did I just say that?  I did.  I think I am very old….)  could be seen carousing down the street in our direction.   When they gathered on our corner and decided to stay I smiled pathetically at Husband and he moved us further down the road.  Right after I taped them. <g>  It's terrible video because you know, there is a fine line between getting footage of drunken revelry and being noticed getting footage of same. 

Untitled from Starry Sky Ranch on Vimeo.

 You get extra points if you can identify the song on that one.  If you watch international soccer you might recognize it.  Give me an H!

 

Feb

So we set up again and waited.  A long time.  Two more hours actually.  Which required some pommes to convince Abbie it was going to be worth it.  

Feb

The crowds grew to massive size by the time the parade reached our end of town. Like, massive. Like, the kind of crowds you see on the news massive.  The rest of the event could be summed up thusly: music, costumes, and public drunkeness.  All in large quantities.

Feb
You might think you have a visual, but if you haven't been here I am venturing to say you probably don't. I am not posting all my pics here (though several will likely end up on the website by the end of the week) because some were a little over the top. Like the guy dangling the little girl out of the window ala Michael Jackson.  Or the old folks in the parade chugging tiny shot bottles of vodka as they marched.  Or the bottles and broken glass that literally covered the streets like peanuts at the Organ Grinder.  (Did I just date myself?  Someone tell me there are still Organ Grinder restaurants someplace?)

Feb (this was my little space before things got rockin'.  The dirty clogs are mine, the vodka wasn't though)

Don't get me wrong, it WAS a cool thing to say you got to see in person.  Still, we did form a human chain and got outta Dodge before the parade was over. Seemed better to leave before the crowd no longer had something to focus their attention upon.   Our German friends said this year was particularly rowdy and the news was all about it last night.  So Tina, if you are reading this – you were right!  

Feb

Anyway, I was pretty pumped that I did get to see those giant puppet head guys finally.   The kids mostly had fun – if sometimes in a deer in the headlights sorta way.  Always an adventure in this family. Always an adventure.  They will never be short on stories!

If you want to get a feel for the place and the day I made this slide video. The music is one of the party songs you hear at all these things.  I apologize in advance if you are singing "La, la, lalala" all day now. If it makes you feel any better it is stuck in my head now too.  "So a schöner tag…"  Remember I already explained this event so you know that this may be a PG show ok?  Ok. 

Untitled from Starry Sky Ranch on Vimeo.

Enjoy!  As for me it is four minutes to lent now.  Probably my cue to go to bed instead of sitting up snacking as though I was storing up til April.  Even if I maybe was. <g>   

If you want to learn more about Fasching in Germany you can check out last year's posts here and here.