Saturday
May212011

Xylophone in a Forest

OK, perhaps I was a little over-eager to declare the U.S. as video marketing kings after the tear-jerking Google ad.  Here is a great ad from NTT Docomo, a mobile phone service provider.  Not only does music again play an important role, but actually is at the core of the "plot".  (J.S. Bach:  Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring)

The YouTube comments clarify that it took 4 days from start to finish, and no CGI was used in the final result.  It's a great contrast to the cityscape time-lapse video too - nature oriented, minimalistic rather than bombastic.  Great result.

Friday
May202011

Springtime in Munich

I've always loved spring (and summer and fall), but I think it takes living somewhere with a real winter to truly appreciate how wonderful spring is.

Seemingly overnight we go from dark and cold to late evening sun, beautiful skies, flowers everywhere, and of course, baby ducks. I love the baby ducks....and swans and geese.

 

 The Mariensäule (Mary's Column) in Marienplatz, in front of the New Rathaus. It was installed in 1638 to honor Mary (she's the patron saint of Bavaria) after the "miracle" of Munich being spared destruction by the Swedes during the Thirty Years War.  As Herr J previously discovered, the four cherubs at the bottom are represented slaying the four plagues of humanity (represented by animal forms) - war, pestilence, hunger, and heresy.  I'm looking forward to the day that the Frauenkirche (domes in the background) restoration is complete. Since I've lived here, one dome or the other has been covered. My dream is to one day be able to take a decent picture of this Munich icon!

 

Lovely wisteria in the Schloss Nymphenburg gardens. Though I have a bit of a prejudice against wisteria (it strangles the lovely oak trees in the south, where I grew up), it does have beautiful flowers and can be a lovely decoration if it's kept tame.  One of the perks of having a full-time staff of gardeners, I guess!

 

Some early season goslings out for a morning nibble (and nap).

 

 

Spring is a great time for walks and for feeding the birds in Munich's many gardens. This boy feeds the swans and ducks in front of Schloss Nymphenburg.

  

 

 

Sadly, not everywhere let's you feed the animals.

  

 

A late tulip and colorful flower beds in the Alter Botanischer Garten ("Old Botanical Garden").  These gardens date back to the beginning of the 19th century, but were replaced in 1914 when the New Botanical Garden was built adjacent to Nymphenburg Palace.  These small gardens are now an open park by the Lenbachplatz.  The Park Cafe is a lovely bar and biergarten (Löwenbräu) that opens onto the gardens and is worth a visit.

 

 

A lovely golden green tree in front of the Salvatorkirche, a Greek Orthodox church on Salvatorplatz (behind the Fünf Höfe and Theatinerkirche) and next to the Literaturhaus (nice cafe/bistro and a program of speeches by visiting writers, such as David Sedaris and Brett Easton Ellis).  This church initially was the cemetery church for the much larger Frauenkirche, but since has been used by a variety of parishes and denominations, as well as for a depot and granary after the secularization of Bavaria. Luckily its use as storage space saved it from destruction and it still stands today on a small square amid the city center.  

  

    A mother goose teaches her goslings how to have fun in the lakes of the English Garden. 

 

 

More tulips, in front of the Neptune Fountain in the Alter Botanischer Garten.  Here, they've planted mainly red and white tulips and white daffodils.

 

 

Someone enjoys a warm afternoon read (before the rains arrive) in the gardens in front of the Bayerische Staatskanzlei (Bavarian Chancellery).

 

 

And back to the adorable baby ducks...   

Thursday
May192011

German Engineering... of facial hair!

Germany is well known for building high performance cars, crafting quality optics, and brewing good beer -- but their prowess in another area is often overlooked despite repeated world championships... in moustaches and beards!

To answer your first question:  yes, there is a World Beard and Moustache Championship, held every two years.  In fact, the first modern world championship was organized and hosted in 1990 by the First Höfener Beard Club in Höfen, Germany.  The competition has hosted up to 200 competitors from 12 countries.  Today there are at least 15 beard clubs in Germany plus there is a national Association of Beard Clubs that organizes the national championships.

World Beard and Moustache Championship, 2009, held in Anchorage Alaska

(Interesting note:  its name in German -- 1. Höfener Bartklub -- is structured just like many soccer teams in the Bundesliga.  For example, 1. FC Köln being the first football club of Cologne, 1. FC Nürnberg, 1. FC Kaiserslautern, and 1. FC Mainz.  They seem to take moustaches and beards as seriously as soccer!)

The world championship has moved around since its beginning, having been held by moustache clubs in Norway, Sweden, Carson City (Nevada), Brighton (UK), and even Anchorage (Alaska)!  The local passion seems to be a southern German thing.  Höfen is in the Black Forest, in the state of Baden-Württemberg, and many of the top German representatives come from this region or Bavaria.  One exception is the 1. Berliner Bartklub (moustache club) which usually sends strong representatives to competitions.

Berlin Moustache Club team for the 2004 German Championship

Here are the winners from the above photo with their awesome trophies!  (Good photos from the 2009 World Championship can be found here.)

 

The World Championships have 18 categories across three groups:
- Moustaches (Natural, English, Dali, Imperial, Hungarian, Freestyle)
- Partial Beards (Natural, Fu Manchu, Musketeer, Imperial, Sideburns Freestyle, and Freeatyle)
- Full Beards (Natural, Natural with Styled Moustache, Verdi, Garibaldi, Freestyle, Best in Show)

The official web site of the World Championship has the category descriptions and examples.  For instance...

English Moustache - "Slender, beginning from the middle of the upper lip with the hairs extremely long and pulled to the side.  Tips may be lifted slightly. The hairs are only allowed to start growing up to the end of the upper lip.  Aids are allowed"

English Moustache category depiction...            ...and 2009 champion Lutz Giese from Germany

                          

(Lutz is the founder and President of the First Berlin Beard Club)

 

Dali Moustache category depiction...                   ...and 2009 champion Tony Papai, Swabian Beard Club, Germany

                               

 

Imperial Moustache                    Hungarian Moustache                          Freestyle Moustache

                    

 

Before we get to the beards, a few other interesting categories:

Musketeer (partial beard)...                                     ...and 2009 champ Jürgen Draheim of Berlin, Germany

                                 

Sideburns freestyle (partial beard)...                       ...and the King forever of this category, Elvis

                       

 

The partial beard Freestyle category is known from some interesting entries, like the 1st through 3rd place finishers in 2007 (these are partial beards???):

                      

Of course it's the full beard categories that have the largest and most extravagant entries.  The star of the show is Full Beard Freestyle, because basically anything goes (entrants may use styling gels and other aids, but no wires and pins).  Here are 2009 contestants prepping themselves with hair dryers and hairspray...

                         

The perennial favorite in this category is Elmar Weisser from Brigachtal, Germany (also near the Black Forest).  Elmar is a hairdresser and takes his sister and stylist to the championships -- styling takes up to 5 hours on competition day.  He even has a fan club!

Elmar took the title in 2005 (held in Berlin) with his beard formed like the Brandenburg Gate, and then again in 2007 (held in Brighton, UK) with his beard in the structure of London's Tower Bridge.  Here were his winning entries:

               

When his beard isn't styled, it falls down to his waist and "it is sort of folded up". He probably took some inspiration from Gerhard Knapp, who is president of the Pforzheim Beard Club and often considered the grandfather of the sport and inventor of "freestyle bearding".  Here is Gerhard, also a two-time champion:

                 

This year in Trondheim, Norway, 160 contestants participated.  Historically, Europeans (especially Germans) dominate the competition.  Germans won 36 of 57 total trophies in Carson City/2003, and 14 of 17 first-place category winners in Berlin/2005.

But in recent years the U.S. "is fast becoming the world's new facial hair superpower".  The American team now has its own blog too, called USA Beard... although the last post appears to be from March 2009.  Some of this newfound success is attributed to recent home field advantage, as the U.S. showed better in Anchorage (2009) winning 12 of the 18 categories.

So what happened in 2011 in Trondheim -- neutral ground?

- Germany:         7 category winners, 9 category placed
                           (including all top three in Full Beard Freestyle and 5 of 6 partial beard categories)
- United States:  6 category winners, 9 category placed
- Norway:            0 category winners, 5 category placed (for the home team)
- Switzerland:      2 category winners, 2 category placed


And what about the Best in Show 2011, the ultimate achievement in facial hair grooming?  A picture of a (Norwegian?) elk says it all:

Congratulations again to Elmar, winner of Full Beard Freestyle and Best in Show!

Wednesday
May182011

Fünf Höfe Photo Fun

On the way home from a Sunday photowalk through the English Garden, Herr J and I cut through the Fünf Höfe, one of Central Munich's shopping centers.  I've always liked the architecture there, particularly the modern and airy passages in the middle of a historic city block. But we were shocked to realize what fun photo opportunities were in there. All of the textures and reflections were great fun for playing around with HDR photography. 

 

"Fünf Höfe" means "Five Courtyards" in German, an appropriate name for the building spanning a block with passages full of cafes, restaurants, and shops.  And, as a typical German real estate asset, it has offices and apartments on the upper floors. Sitting between the Frauenkirche and Odeonsplatz, the building has an important history as the home of HypoVereinsbank, one of Munich's oldest banks (its roots trace back to the late 1700s). As is often the case here, they sought to keep the historical facade of the building while building something modern and new inside.  According to the center's website, the design was inspired by the courtyards of the nearby Residenz palace.  I often take a shortcut through there as a nice change of pace - it's usually peaceful and with comfortable "weather" inside.

It's quite a nice place to spend a rainy, wintry Sunday afternoon, visiting the Hypo Kunsthalle art museum, followed by coffee in one of the cafes or lunch at Vapiano (reliably good and open late and on Sunday).  During the week, you can shop at a variety of clothing, home, and art stores, as well as Munich's Muji. (Muji is a Japanese home/small good store that's worth a browse, if you've never been in one.  Their focus is on no-brand, minimalist products, usually made of recyclable materials. But they have a great blend of form and function, so that you'll have a really hard time walking out without finding several things you "need"). 

The museum entrance is on the Theatinerstraße side and, though small for a museum, often has good exhibits. There have been a wide variety of themes, artists, and time periods, with the exhibit changing every few months. The Mark Rothko retrospective a couple of years ago was particularly good.  As it's an exhibition gallery rather than one with a permanent collection, you'll need to check periodically to see what's there.

In addition to the open entrances to the passages, there are other areas with open roofs, blurring the boundaries between indoors and outdoors.  

As the complex houses the small museum that Hypovereinsbank sponsors, they also integrated art into the architecture. The hanging gardens through the Salvatorpassage actually are a living installation by Düsseldorf artist Tita Giese.

They blend in so well that they almost escape notice, but you'll also find 12 laser-printed panels throughout the building. These are prints of photos by German photographer Thomas Ruff, meant "give onlookers the impression that they are floating over cityscapes and the countryside." These scenes are of nature, the Munich area in which the Fünf Höfe sits, and Manhattan streets.  You'll see one on the floor in the picture below (bottom right corner).

And the most noticeable art piece hangs in the Viscardihof - a giant steel lattice-work sphere by Olafur Eliasson, an Icelandic artist. The shape and structure is supposed to represent "global openness and worldwide networks."

 

 

 

source - Fünf Höfe website

Tuesday
May172011

How to Build an Igloo

Late in 2010, Frau A and I had scheduled a vacation to Japan for the Spring of 2011.  Unfortunately, a couple weeks before our scheduled departure, Japan was struck by the Great East Japan Earthquake and resulting tsunami.

So we had to cancel the trip, but send best wishes that the recovery and rebuilding process continues successfully -- we can't wait to visit in the future.

Given the last minute options, we decided to have one more winter adventure... in Finland!  We went all-in, flying to Helsinki and then on to Kuusamo, which is only 37 miles (60 kilometers) below the Arctic Circle.  The specific destination was a small site called Basecamp Oulanka, just outside Oulanka National Park.

We'll have many more posts on our vacation, because each day we did a different winter sport or activity including ice climbing, snow shoeing, cross-country skiing, and more.  But on the first day, we built an igloo and slept in it that night!

Here's how it went...

Step "0":  Get some up-front instructions from the local guide.  Of course, the rough-sketch diagrams are drawn in the snow (a "Finnish whiteboard," if you will).  He described the end result and process to get there.  One interesting aspect is that the entrance should start right on the ground, but then have a small "step" up to the sleeping area.  The sleeping area should be a foot above the ground so that cold air does not easily flow into the structure.

 

Step 1a:  Start shoveling snow into a big pile.  A lot of it.  Because the temperature was so low, the snow was still "crisp" rather than wet.  Therefore we were not using blocks to build the igloo (that's another technique) but rather piling the snow and (later) digging out the inside.  The diameter of the dome's base has to be enough to fit the number of people you expect to squeeze in there.  In our case, we planned to sleep four people.

 

Step 1b:  Keep shoveling...  Even with four people working hard, it took us three hours to get the pile head-high.  Luckily, the sun was out (beautiful weather, actually).  It's hard to see here, but we are making the igloo on a frozen lake -- on top of ice a meter thick!

 

Finally finished with the snow pile!  Here is Frau A, triumphantly posing atop the mound that theoretically would house four of us overnight...

 

Step 2:  After you've patted down the snow pile (to remove air pockets), insert ceiling markers.  The ceiling of the igloo ideally should be about a foot thick.  This is the right thickness for strength, but not so much mass that there is a danger of it collapsing.  So, while the snow is still freshly piled, we took wood pieces about a foot long and inserted them into the dome, about 2-3 feet apart.  (Maybe 30 in total, around the entire dome)  Later, when digging out the inside, we will stop when reaching these markers and automatically have the right ceiling thickness.

 

Below is Frau A inserting more ceiling markers.  Because you have to have them everywhere, you must climb on top of the pile too.  That's OK, because we need it to settle down and this just helps the compacting process.

 

Ta daa!  The pile of snow is now complete, the ceiling markers are inserted, and you are officially tired after 3+ hours of work.  This is what it looks like:

 

There were a few other small groups with us on the adventure trip, and human/competitive nature dictates that we spy on them and see what and how they are doing...  (Note:  all the other piles are old igloos from vacationers in the previous months.  Still there, and still holding strong.)

We were a little ahead of the other group (our South African and British partners shoveled snow like machines) so we decided to add some creature comforts... a snow bench outside!  We're hoping it increases the resale value, of course.

 

Step 3:  Wait.  You need to let the snow settle for a good 3 hours.  Fortunately, the sun was strong and that warms the snow and helps it compact.  In this time, the entire group went show-shoeing along the local river.  (In Summer, vacationers go white-water rafting here.)  Here are Frau A and I taking a photo stop along the snowshoe hike.

Step 4:  Dig out the inside.  It's now later in the afternoon and it's been a pretty active day already, but we took another 3+ hours to finish the structure!  Naturally, an experienced Finn could probably do the equivalent work in half the time.  Start by choosing an entrance point facing leeward -- you don't want arctic blasts coming in the front door.  This takes most of the time, because as you enter further into the snow mound, it is harder to excavate in a tunnel with such a small diameter.

 

The next photos are a better illustration of the difficulty in clearing snow from a small entrance - you have to work yourself inside and slide it past yourself, while someone outside removes it.

x      

Below you can see the finished entrance.  We also cleared the snow down to the base of lake ice.  Gotta keep up appearances so the neighbors don't complain!

 

Once you have removed enough snow from the inside to fit a couple of people, the rest goes quickly.  Two of us were inside, scraping snow until reaching the ceiling markers (you can see them in the photo below) and the other two were helping remove it through the tunnel.  When finished, this is what it looked like shuffling yourself through the entrance.  Notice the ramp of snow, up from the ice to the sleeping level.  Not only does it help prevent air flow with the outside, but it's more comfortable to sleep on snow vs. ice.

 

Done!  Time for a well-deserved break inside the igloo.  The structure did fit four people, but of course is a little cramped.  Stray arms and legs invariably send scraped snow falling from the dome above, but overall it worked well.

 

Step 5:  Set up for sleep.  In this case, we had thermal camping pads underneath warm sleeping bags, and wore winter clothes inside the sleeping bags too.  Just our heads were sticking out, and hats stayed on.  Headlamps ("head torches" to our UK friends) are very practical -- but you really don't want to have to go the bathroom outside during the night.  Inside, it was a consistent 0 degrees C (32 F).  Outside, the temperature plummeted to -25 degrees C! (-13 F).  The igloo really worked.  The main challenge was getting comfortable with the equipment.

 

The alarm went off at 7am... it was a great experience.  The snow wasn't incredibly comfortable, and one of our partners decided to head inside after a couple of hours.  But Frau A, our South African friend, and I stuck it out the whole night.  Once the adrenaline dies down and you adjust to the sleeping bag constraint and lying on stiff snow, you can sleep pretty well.  The toughest part was leaving the sleeping bags in the morning and heading back to the lodge!  It was a great start to a fantastic vacation.

And thanks to our friends Mr. B and Ms. S too!

Monday
May162011

Google Doodles Quiz - Part 3...Composers & Musicians

In this prior post we briefly described Google Doodles and had a quiz.

Now it's time to guess the Composers and Musicians whose birthdays were recognized with a Doodle:

#1

#2

#3

#4

#5

#6  (my personal favorite of the group)

#7

#8


#9

 

 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Answers below:

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

#1    Ray Charles
#2    Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (The Nutcracker)
#3    Michael Jackson
#4    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
#5    Dizzy Gillespie
#6    Igor Stravinsky (Firebird, Rite of Spring)
#7    Luciano Pavarotti
#8    Antonio Vivaldi (The Four Seasons)
#9    Sergei Prokofiev (Peter and the Wolf)
 

Sunday
May152011

Munich Day Trip - Spitzingsee

Yet another nice one-day hike near Munich is to the Spitzingsee.  As usual, the day starts by driving south... but this time we stop short of the Austrian border and remain in southern Bavaria.  (And as usual, leaving early helps avoid traffic on the weekends, but the autobahn will be packed on the way back.  No way to avoid it.) 

 

I found a nice map of the lake and surrounding mountains (click on it for a full-size PDF) on a local tourist web site (German, sorry).  You can see the Schliersee in the middle, a small town at the foot of the lake on the left, and two ski-lifts flanking the lake on each side.  I've never been skiing here, but we're not in the "big" Alps yet so slopes will be gentle and short.  The lifts are also open in summer for hikers who want to take it easy, or those that stayed too long having beer at the huts(s) and need to get down quickly.

 

On this day I took the path that starts at the base of the Stümpflingbahn at the upper right corner of the lake in the map above.  In the morning, I took the path "up" from the lake going towards the Becksteinhaus ("north" on the map), then veered right ascending to the Roßkopf.  The first photo below is on the way to the top, looking back into the valley and lake.

 

I think the next photo is looking in the other direction, away from the lake this time, over the background peaks.  As usual, it's cool in the morning but with good sun you're soon in t-shirt only -- but bring the fleece in any event.  The lake itself sits at over 1000m elevation, but the surrounding summits max out at 1600m, so it's only a 600m difference.  The hike therefore takes maybe 4 hours round trip, depending on the duration of the pause at a hut for food and drink.  The paths are clearly marked here, almost impossible to get lost, and enough fellow hikers that there's always somebody else around just in case.

 

In the third photo, it's clear that we're in Autumn -- nice fall colors!  You can see on the hiking map that the path criss-crosses the ski lift a couple of times (from the Roßkopf, go down and then left).  You can see a lot of people on the lift, heading up to the Jagahütt'n.  I didn't get a picture there, but it's a pleasant view for lunch.  The colors of the leaves aren't quite as dramatic and beautiful as where I grew up (Western New York State) but they are nice!

 

In the final photo, I was just about back down to lake-level and this house came out of nowhere.  They're lucky to have this view!  Overall this area feels smaller and quieter than most Alpine towns that lure outdoorsmen (Wikipedia German says there are only 200 inhabitants).  And although the trails around Spitzingsee aren't the most challenging and might not appeal to thrill-seekers, they're even closer than the hiking options in Austria and are a great Munich day hike.