choco_frosh: Image of the Konradigasse (former {Hof-]Schreibergasse) in Konstanz, where I lived in 2005-6 (s'gasse)
[personal profile] choco_frosh
- We had my Dad, and then Grace´s old Div School classmate Juliet Hyde come to visit last week. Naturally, the weather was awful. Having an early swim in Lake Constance was right out, and our hike was cancelled on account of snow. (though WHAT´S this about snow in Boston? It´s not like THEY´re in the Alps. Happy happy climate change...) But we hiked up Hohentwil (and got pictures of the Big Daddy Cafe), sent/took both of them to the castle at Meersburg, and discovered a wonderful cheep restaurant. So it was fun.

- Grace got home last Tuesday, after a week in Kiev with the Uni-Chor which apparently featured a disco, the last surviving in situ statue of Lenin, and spaghetti for breakfast.

- As a result of two visitors, Grace getting back from Kiev, and a week of wet weather, we´ve had masses of laundry hung up and refusing to dry.

- I´ve spent the last two days in Frauenfeld, 45 minutes south of Konstanz in Switzerland, working in the Staatsarchiv des Kantons Thurgau-. Since Konstanz shared control over the Thurgau for much of the fifteenth century, it was an obvious place to go. Of course, it would probably have been a good idea if I´d gotten a map of the town before I went...but I figured I could find one in the train station, and for once I was right.
Frauenfeld (which I walked around over my lunch break) is kinda like what I imagíne Montpelier Vermont must be like: a small town with exaggerated governmental importance that gives it delusions of grandeur. So its train station is gigantic, even though the town center is small enough to walk across in fifteen minutes. Anyway. The whole place burned down in the 18th c., so everything dates from then or later, except for the castle, perched on a cliff over the Murg.
It also seems to have a thing about automatic door openers. The one in the government building (yes, singular) where the archive is located wasn´t so surprising, but it´s a bit weird that the Evangelische Kirche has one too...
I walked into the building and located, in quick succession, a sign and the archive. As I was going in, a woman headed out. "Frau Stöckly?" I queried, to see if this was, in fact, the person I´d been exchanging emails with about my visit. It was a guess, but a) how many employees could there be in the Staatarchiv? and b) she had the indefinable air of the person in the office who answers the emails of clueless grad. students. Also, she somehow LOOKED like a Stöckly. And again, I was right.

- The weather was actually nice today, so I had wonderful views of the mountains from the train. Didn´t get a lot of reading done, though.

- Does anyone know what Ben Isecke´s doing these days? I haven´t heard what he´s doing in yonks.

Well ...

Date: 2006-06-08 08:15 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
... then our tour guide either had delusions of grandeur, or was lying to us, or I missed something (it was all in German, after all).

It's Juliet IDE, not Hyde (remember, she was looking for Idee Kaffee for her relatives?!) and how did you manage to spell "cheap" wrong?!

:) g

Re: Well ...

Date: 2006-06-08 01:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nadyezhda.livejournal.com
heh, never can tell with tour guides. Anyway, for fun or profit, here are two Lenin statues (and me) from this past spring:

In Pinsk (http://images1.snapfish.com/346%3C9%3A8%3C2%7Ffp346%3Enu%3D3238%3E2%3B9%3E369%3EWSNRCG%3D32335%3A93%3A%3B959nu0mrj)

In David-Goradok (http://images1.snapfish.com/346%3C9%3A8%3C2%7Ffp339%3Enu%3D3238%3E2%3B9%3E369%3EWSNRCG%3D32335%3A93%3A%3B97%3Anu0mrj)

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