It was an early start today as we had to be off the ship
by 6:45 for our train ride into Berlin. The
trains in Europe are so nice. They run
on time, they are comfortable and the ride is smooth. The weather really welcomed us. The sun was shining and very little
wind. I did not even wear a jacket.
The county side was very interesting. We passed small villages, beautiful lakes and
woods. Even saw a deer lying in the sun
on the edge of a woods. Judi said that
now she knows why so many Germans settled in Minnesota, because the land looks
pretty much the same.
The train stopped to let us off at the Oust Berlin
Bahnhoff. That translates into the East
Berlin Train Station. We spent most of
the morning touring around what was the GDR, or East Berlin. The guide poured out a lot of information and
my sponge was not big enough to grasp everything she said. We visited the Berlin Wall, and checkpoint
Charley. This is where the diplomats
crossed and prisoner exchanges took place.
It was in the American sector of Berlin.
There were four sectors, Russian, American, British and French. Berlin was actually in Russian territory, but
Berlin was divided into the four sectors.
Being surrounded by Communist territory is what caused the Berlin
airlift, when Russia closed the access roads into Berlin. The American Air Force came to the rescue and
flew in thousands of tons of supplies to take care of the Berliners. Russia wanted to drive the west out of
Berlin.
We visited and walked through the Brandenburg Gate and
drove pass many of the government building.
We learned that the Reichstag is a building and Bundstad is the
government inside. They have two houses
just as we do. The Prime Minister runs
the country and the President is head of state and takes care of official
functions.
We had lunch at a nice restaurant with more German food
than we could possibly eat. Potato soup,
pork slices, sausages, a pork patty, sour kraut, two kinds of potatoes,
vegetables, bread, wine or beer and apple strudel. I tried, but could not eat it all. It was however very good.
Leaving the restaurant we went for a boat ride on the
Spree River. It was very good and it
kind of brought everything into perspective.
We had been driving around looking at the buildings from the front and
then sometimes from the back. We were in
and out of East Berlin and West Berlin to the point that I never knew for sure
which side of the wall we were on.
Speaking of the wall it is still standing in a couple of places. The governments commishioned artists from all over the world
to paint scenes on the wall. Where the wall no longer exist the side walks show
where it stood. There is a row of cobble
stones on one side a sidewalk, then the sidewalk and then another row of cobble
stones. This signifies the two walls and
the killing zone in between. East
Berliners thought if they got over the wall they were safe; however there was a
road with patrols, dog and other devices waiting for them as well as another
wall. Others thought if they got over
the walls they could swim the river Spree, but the river was in the Russian
sector.
We saw where JFK made is “Ich bin ein Berliner” speech
and where Regan told Khrushchev to tear down the wall.
We returned by train to the Emerald, where it was now
raining. The train furnished us with
snacks and drinks on both trips, so we did not eat when we got back. Besides it was eight o’clock and we were tired. The tour had lasted over 13 hours.
As we sailed out of Warnemunde, which is the port we used
for our Berlin trip, a band was playing, fireworks were going off, pleasure
boats, tour boats and lots of people lining the banks. Quite a send off.
The sea was good to us last night and is suppose to be
the same tonight. That makes sailing a
lot more fun.
The pictures were again 'outstanding'. Nothing much going on here. We're transitioning from spring into summer. Lots of sun. oh wait, there's always sun in Cali : )
ReplyDelete