• Shared today on Facebook

    I know this one’s going to hit you hard, brother. Hugs.


    Does it destroy our foodie cred that nearly everything on the lunch table is Gut & Gunstig store brand? 😂❤️ #lecker


    Attempt #2, this time with a complete square! Still a bit wonky, but I don’t think the bebe will mind… 🧶 #crochetkris



  • Photo Post

    Attempt #2, this time with a complete square! Still a bit wonky, but I don’t think the bebe will mind… 🧶 #crochetkris

    Attempt #2, this time with a complete square! Still a bit wonky, but I don’t think the bebe will mind… 🧶 #crochetkris


  • Photo Post

    Does it destroy our foodie cred that nearly everything on the lunch table is Gut & Gunstig store brand? 😂❤️ #lecker

    Does it destroy our foodie cred that nearly everything on the lunch table is Gut & Gunstig store brand? 😂❤️ #lecker


  • Shared today on Twitter

    RT @darkosubotica: We are looking for a Senior Developer Advocate to cover the MENA (Middle East And North Africa) region! 📣

    If interested…


    The reality of the fact that I’m presenting at 7am tomorrow Germany time has just smacked me in the face. @larsklint and @meliss_houghton are lucky I like them. 😩☕ #NDCMelbourne



  • Shared today on Twitter

    @liviainberlin A German friend recently told me he thinks that strong data privacy laws are also part of the cause. If you don’t put information online, you don’t risk breaking any of these laws.


    Night Kris spends an hour manually trying different algorithms and colour patterns to plan out blanket for Greatest Baby Ever. 😩

    Morning Kris spends two minutes repurposing an existing Granny Square colour generator to create the design. 😎

    Sometimes technology doesn’t suck! https://t.co/OajUNxRNv7


    @malynmawby No hidden code. Just trying to arrange 10 colours + white in a random yet pleasing way. Will be crochet, but I’m not actually doing granny squares. It’s a motif on background, so this approximates it well enough. Generator: https://t.co/X2FAJXFL7g


    Attending my first @PyDataHamburg and @pydataberlin meetup tonight! Really friendly and fun group, and they’ve already given me some tips on visiting Hamburg next weekend. ❤️ You can watch online! https://t.co/hSwtpnICdB https://t.co/if00ByDtHk


    I’m lucky in that I had @the_snook for conversational and emotional support, but otherwise a lot of this is spot on with my experience moving from Sydney to Munich in the middle of the pandemic… https://t.co/kETTpX43kx


    3 down, 117 to go. 😳 I can’t believe I’m CROCHETING in cotton. (You’ll find that square on your End Times Bingo Card, right between “Plague of Locusts” and “Kris Knits a Lace Shawl”.) https://t.co/8xFy2ElFRw



  • Shared today on Facebook

    3 down, 117 to go. 😳 I can’t believe I’m CROCHETING in cotton. (You’ll find that square on your End Times Bingo Card, right between “Plague of Locusts” and “Kris Knits a Lace Shawl”.)



  • Photo Post

    3 down, 117 to go. 😳 I can’t believe I’m CROCHETING in cotton. (You’ll find that square on your End Times Bingo Card, right between “Plague of Locusts” and “Kris Knits a Lace Shawl”.)

    3 down, 117 to go. 😳 I can’t believe I’m CROCHETING in cotton. (You’ll find that square on your End Times Bingo Card, right between “Plague of Locusts” and “Kris Knits a Lace Shawl”.)


  • A Trip to Freiburg im Breisgau

    We have been so lucky to get to travel! Another short trip was to Freiburg im Breisgau on the edge of the Black Forest. It’s only a couple hours from Munich on the train, so we headed there on Friday evening.

    On the train to Freiburg

    Along the way we passed through Ulm and got a glimpse in the distance of Ulm Minster, currently the tallest church in the world. (It’ll be overtaken by the Sagrada Família in Barcelona someday if they ever finish it.)

    Ulm Minster

    It was a very pretty train trip, and the sun was setting as we arrived in Freiburg…

    Sunset

    We checked in to our hotel and eventually met up with our friend Scott, who drove down from Düsseldorf.

    Snookums and Scott

    On Saturday, we ventured out for breakfast. Freiburg is a very beautiful city, and it has a really interesting system of gutters called “Bächle“. (The word comes from “Bach,” which means “brook.”) These are fed by a nearby river and run all along the edges of the streets in the pedestrian area of the old town. There’s a legend that if you accidentally fall in one of the Bächle, you’ll end up marrying a Freiburger!

    Snookums over a Bächle

    The cafe where we had breakfast was actually called Bächle and it was, of course, right alongside one of them.

    Breakfast
    Our first destination was the Münsterplatz (Cathedral Square) around Freiburg Münster. As it was early Saturday, there was a market happening all around it. We checked out the architecture of the cathedral and watched the locals go about their shopping. (The Snook would like to draw your attention to the gargoyle in the upper-left of the 4th photo, where the rainwater comes out of a statue’s bum!)

    We continued to wander the old town…

    The old town in Freiburg

    Even the manhole covers were pretty!

    Freiburg manhole cover

    There are also canals that come off the river and feed into the Bächle. In one of them is a famous stone statue of a crocodile.

    Freiburg is in a famous wine-growing region, and near the city museum was a public garden that had lots of different grape varieties and flowers.

    At lunchtime we piled into Scott’s car and headed towards Schauinsland, a nearby mountain in the Black Forest. The name literally means “look-into-the-country,” and to get to the top of it we took the Schauinslandbahn, Germany’s longest cable car (3.6 kilometres / 2.2 mi).

    Schauinslandbahn

    The journey takes about 15 minutes, and the view kept getting more amazing the higher we went.

    Scott on the Schauinslandbahn

    Schauinslandbahn

    For the last part of the trip, I set my iPhone up on the window and made a time-lapse video.

    The trip was well worth the view!

    Schauinsland

    Us on Schauinsland

    We had lunch at the restaurant on top of the mountain and then headed out for a hike. It turns out that silver, lead, and zinc were mined from the mountain for hundreds of years, and there were miles of mining tunnels beneath us. This tunnel was near the mining museum, and I believe if you go on a tour you may also get to go inside.

    Mining tunnel

    The boys quickly realised that the hike I was taking them on as a little more strenuous than they anticipated! We clambered up and down rocky paths around the top of the mountain for the better part of an hour.

    Hiking path

    One landmark on the mountain is the Engländerdenkmal (Englishmen’s Memorial). Basically, in 1936 a bunch of British schoolboys and their group leader went on an ill-advised hike over the mountain when a blizzard hit. Despite the efforts of the townspeople to save them, several of the boys died from exposure. A few years later a memorial was set up. It’s  a fascinating and tragic story

    Engländerdenkmal

    It was a pretty spot. I took a photo of the view from the wall.

    View from the Denkmal

    We continued our hike. The Snook was, as ever, concerned that he would get a tick bite. (Ticks love him.) (He didn’t.)

    On the hike

    We kept hearing bells all around us on the mountain, a constant soundtrack. What’s with the bells? Then we figured it out. 🐄

    We also found a sculpture path on the mountain (“Pfad der Sinne” – “Path of the Senses”) that had some really cool carved wood sculptures. You can see some of them online. This one was called “Der Geist des Waldes” (“The spirit of the forest”).

    The Spirit of the Forest

    We eventually returned to the Schauinslandbahn and rode it back down to the bottom, then headed back to Freiburg. We had a dinner reservation at local restaurant called Gasthaus Zur Linde that was recommended in the Michelin Guide. It was very nice, and we sampled quite a few local wines as well.

    Dinner at Gasthaus zur Linde

    Breakfast on Sunday was at Sam’s Cafe in Freiburg, and I went with the traditional “Freiburger Frühstück.”

    Freiburger Frühstück

    After our hike the day before, we felt like we deserved some pampering. So we got back into Scott’s car and headed for the nearby Keidel Thermal Baths. This large spa area had many heated indoor and outdoor thermal pools, and we spent a few hours swimming and floating and chatting in the sun. (No photos as I locked my phone up in the changing room!) As we were leaving, we noticed a sign pointing downstairs to an area where you can actually see the mineral hot spring that supplies the water.

    Hot spring

    We went for a final wander through Freiburg to check out the Bächle once more. It was a warm day, so there were often kids splashing or walking in it. I also saw several with little boats on a string that you could pull alongside you as you walked. (I’m still kicking myself I didn’t get one at the market as a souvenir!)

    Bächle

    More Bächle…

    Freiburg

    We had just enough time for a late lunch and round of beers at the Hausbrauerei Feierling Biergarten before we had to head to our train and Scott had to start back to Düsseldorf.

    Feierling Biergarten

    Lovely little excursion to yet another beautiful German town! ❤️


  • Shared today on Twitter

    RT @larsklint: Join us for #ndcmelbourne this Thursday with @shanselman and @web_goddess and many others. It’s free!
    https://t.co/8jtMtwDv…



  • Shared today on Twitter

    Freiburger Frühstück. 🥐🥚☕️ @ Sams Cafe https://t.co/v5YZBG8u3V


    We spent the morning swimming at thermal mineral baths(!), so it’s time for a final refuel before heading home. 🍻 (2021 Biergarten Count: 12) @ Hausbrauerei Feierling https://t.co/apzL0PUSzc




ABOUT

My name is Kris. I’ve been blogging since the 90’s. I live in Sydney, Australia, and I spent most of my career in the tech industry.

No AI used in writing this blog, ever. 100% human-generated.


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