Monday, December 24, 2007

That Wii Feeling

Kate had her students over for a night of great cooking and serious Wii competition. Kate whooped them all at boxing, including me. Had some great laughes with a great group of people - although I wouldn't recommend introducing Germans to American cuisine by simultaneously offering them chilli, egg nog, and pumpkin rolls.

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Saturday, November 10, 2007

φιλοξενία...

...Hospitality in Greek - and that's just what we came across every single day. The people are what made our trip to Greece, such as the Cretan wiseman Jhannis of Axos, who played the Lyra and sang to us, served us Greek wine, "Raki," and peanuts, while giving us a short history lesson about the country and his family.


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The creatures of Crete kept us on our toes as well: Donkeys, cats, camels, horses, dogs, lamas, chickens, and annoying geese. The kitties were the hightlight, who slept in our stone bungalow and ate us out of house and home.


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The beaches in Crete were almost as accomodating. Each one was different, with its own charm: pebbly shores, sandy strands, craggy coves, lucid waters - we had to hike a few kilomoters or brave narrow gravel roads just to get to a few of them.


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Sunday, October 14, 2007

Road trips with the Jeep


My German 101 professor, Dr. Jeep, staid with us for a month while he taught the students on the exchange program I took part in 10 years ago. We headed to Dinkelsbühl in Bavaria and hiked through the Odenwald.


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Kayaking down the Altmuhl

Deac and Matt braved a long flight to brave an even longer Kayak tour down the Altmuhltal - an ancient valley spotted with medieval towns and old mills. We paddled a total of 30 miles in three days, camping on the riverside sites when the sun fell, going out for some traditional cuisine and tasty beer after a long day on the water. Deac got to show off his iPhone to the locals (see pic).
Here's a video of us coming in to our final destination: Eichstätt - followed by a selection of pics from the voyage.



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Sunday, September 02, 2007

Waat iz dat?

Yes, the first installment of the Sams' Family Vacation in Europe took place here in Germany from July 19 - August 12. Three weeks of road-tripping, beer-sipping, and autobahn-ripping. Bavaria, the Rhine valley, the Neckar valley, Austria, castles, farms, mountains, funiculars, violin museums, suaerkruat, spaghetti icecream, sausage, knödel, betty blaring, back seats, dairy farms, trains, towers, rivers, bridges, walking, whiplash, fast turns, dictator get-aways, memorials, musicians' cribs, strong coffee, B&Bs, pipe organs, wood cuts, gardens, street performers, rude French, rain, shine, rolling hills, hopps, schnitzel, and - of course - Füüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüssen!

It was simply a grand time with true road warriors. The following pics are just a selection from the Sams Family photo archive. Kate and I can't wait til they come back next year.

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Sunday, May 06, 2007

All Over the Tuscan Sun

Our VW, since christened "Betty," got a work out: gravel roads, hairpin turns, and Italian drivers - even through downtown Florence. Whether fending off the reckless moped drivers in the cities, stopping at as many vineyards in the Chianti region as we could, or scrambling at dusk for the nearest "agriturismo," Kate and I put a lot of Tuscany behind us - looking forward to going again when the sunflowers are in bloom.

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Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Easter near Eiger

Faced with free gas and two holidays to kill, Kate and I headed to Germany's southern neighbor for a bit of R&R Swiss style. We put the GTI to the test for the first time on the German Autobahn, flirting with its top speed (no comment for the sake of parental sanity) until the speed limit signs at the border (and the rumors of five-figure fines for speeding) brought us out of sixth gear to a leisurely 90 miles per hour.

The Alps greeted us from behind a blanket of haze, which had materialized from the unseasonably hot sun sizzling the snow-capped summits. We put our sport suspension to the test, braving the narrow switchbacks and loose stones on the ridge above to make it to our home base for the next three days: Beatenberg.

Interlaken, Bern, Basel, Kandersteg, Brienz, and all the roads in between - thanks to our new GPS (who we named Betty on account of the annoying female British voice telling us to watch our speed), we were able to pack in a hefty number of destinations in those three days. The pictures tell the rest.

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Monday, April 02, 2007

30

Kate got me. I guess when you turn 30, you let your guard down a little. That's the only way I can explain how she totally sideswiped me with a surprise birthday party. I had just come from a work-related event in Sardinia and wasn't expecting a thing. Somehow Kate got me to recommend that we take a look at a bowling alley in town...when I saw all the folks there, I thought we had stumbled upon someone else's party...my first reaction was: "and they didn't even invite us!" What a sucker!

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

AmDam
Kate took me up to Amsterdam for my birthday last year...this post is a little over due. We did what most do in AmDam: rode bikes and wore wooden shoes. Here's a quick slide show of our antics.



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Sunday, March 18, 2007

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Pack It in!

Deac and Jane came to Europe - and set a record for the number of kilometers driven in one two weeks. Their trip took them to us, the Black Forest, Italy, Austria, and along the Neckar valley to a few medieval towns in lower Bavaria. Kate and I got to join them for some of the excursions, our most favorite, of course, being Titisee (notice the mashed potatoes). And when they weren't traveling, they were out exploring Heidelberg or turning our kitchen into a Christmas cookie war zone.

We meandered through the lower and upper Schwarzwald (killer pics of foot hills turning into mountains, mountains into the peaks of the Alps in the distance); stopped by to see Ernst, Laurie, and Shai; chowed down on some Rippchen (German ham chops) and sauerkraut; sang Christmas carols; and read some verse. We then swung through Freiburg, ventured out into the Alsace region of France and brought it back home via the A5. That was about 1/8 of what Jane and Deac did.

Anyway, enjoy the pics.


Friday, January 19, 2007

Warning: Goats!

As we looked out of the plane window, Fuerteventura, one of the larger Canary Island specimens, was a craggy moonscape. It wasn’t until we hopped in our blue Citroen, exchanged less-then-friendly words with our travel agency on account of the cockroach-infested accommodation, and made it to the coast that we understood why beach enthusiasts from all over Europe storm these strands throughout the year.

In fact, these weren’t beaches per se, but rather fields of sand that bordered on the ocean. The sands swept by the strong winds from Africa peppered the landscape each day, forming rolling dunes and carving deep furrows into the cliffs. Countless years of sand barrages made it possible for you to walk almost a half-mile out into the surf with the water reaching no higher than your waist.



Couldn’t sit still…well, I couldn’t, and we hit the roads to various beaches on all points of the compass. Dodging the random goat, we made our way to various parched destinations in the island interior and sojourned at an eclectic mix of culinary pit stops. The cuisine catered to the two main groups of tourists who frequent the island: the Germans and the British, both of which seem to be striving to take over the Americans in the obesity category.

During one visit to the beach, we were over taken by a pair of middle-aged men. Once they advanced from our peripheral vision, we noticed that each held two ski poles, striding valiantly and briskly along the surf and donning beige T-shirts, rucksacks, sunglasses – and nothing else. Nordic walking nudists! Their sun-burnt posteriors had recently visited the cosmetologist, and the confidence in their gate betrayed two facts: they were German, and they were of the other sexual persuasion. What made the whole episode that much more hilarious was that Kate and I saw the line of tourists making their way toward us, who also beheld the spectacle and fell like laughing dominos as the semi-nudists frolicked down the beach.

Kate and I fled the tourist rush by heading out to “the open sea,” trying out some scuba diving, jet skiing, and deep-sea fishing, and visiting the volcanic precipices of Fuerteventura’s northern neighbor, Lanzarote. On a particularly touristy day, we retreated to a Sauna, where we squatted in overly heated saltwater and where Kate enjoyed a one-hour massage. We spent a good deal of our time chilling back at the bungalow, where we played host to the odd stray cat.

Eleven days we spent on the island, purging the hard work of 2006 from our minds – playing card games on the terrace and partaking of the cheap-but-good cerbeza de las Canarias.