Germany - The Professional Hobo https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/category/germany/ Traveling full-time in a financially sustainable way Fri, 10 Jan 2025 14:53:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-theprofessionalhobo-32x32.png Germany - The Professional Hobo https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/category/germany/ 32 32 Big Bad Berlin, in Two Days https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/big-bad-berlin-two-days-globaltravelernora/ https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/big-bad-berlin-two-days-globaltravelernora/#comments Fri, 11 Oct 2013 20:52:13 +0000 https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/?p=5331 There's no way you can "do Berlin" in two days. But I did the best I could; here are some of the highlights, along with another quirky 1 Minute video!

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This post is part of the Club Carlson Global Traveler program; a 3-week, 8-country adventure through Europe, paid for and compensated by Club CarlsonSM (now Radisson Rewards). During the trip, I’m exploring the world of hotel points and how to take advantage of accommodations and upgrades with various strategies.

While in Berlin, Viator also sponsored the two tours I did.

In all cases, opinions expressed herein are my own; don’t worry – I haven’t sold my soul.

This post was originally published in 2013. It has since been updated for accuracy of links and content. 

“Remember, Berlin is very big,” was the advice of the employee at Berlin airport information who couldn’t quite direct me to the Radisson Blu Hotel in Berlin, since he didn’t know where it was. I’d ascertained from my research that it was somewhere in the city centre near a main station, and in most of my previous destinations so far, that was enough to find the place.

But Berlin is big. Very big, as was astutely observed.

Knowing I had only two days in Berlin, I was spoiled for choice for what to see and do. So like the good little tourist that I am, I booked myself in on two tours that were invaluable – and of course, fun.

Berlin Segway Tour

In advance of my trip, I looked at the tours available on Viator, and on seeing the Berlin Segway Tour, I cringed – and booked it.

I’ve seen Segway tours in other countries, and I always made fun of them – and the people on them. Segways look ridiculous, and it simply screams I am a tourist! (Or at least, as a friend pointed out to me – a dork).

So really, in the name of embracing my inner tourist and getting the most out of my two days, I had no choice.

Nora Dunn on a Segway tour in Berlin
That’s me: dork on a Segway.

Once I got over myself and my misplaced sense of traveler pride, the Segway tour was ridiculously fun – in every way. Riding the Segway was a riot, and our merry band of eight people from around the world bonded immediately. We also covered waaaaay more territory than you ever could on a walking tour. (And like I said, Berlin is big).

Central Berlin Sights

You name it – we covered it. From the laundry list of historical Berlin sights, I was struck by a few experiences in particular:

Bebelplatz

This is the site of the infamous book burning in 1933. What touched me the most was the line of tables with people selling books….which they do 365 days of the year.

It’s one of many signs of how Berlin acknowledges, remembers, and then tries to move beyond their less than honourable past.

Scars remain from both World Wars in many of Berlin’s buildings, which have intentionally not been fully restored. In some cases patches have been put over bullet holes (in an almost obvious manner); in other cases the bullet holes smattering columns and facades are left untouched. Smoke damage hasn’t been sandblasted away, and in a sense, it all adds to the character.

Bebelplatz in Berlin


Gendarmenmarkt

Gendarmenmarkt is reputedly one of Europe’s most beautiful squares, and even on this grey day, it was majestic. With my musical background, I’m inspired to check out the Konzerthaus and see a performance…next time.

Gendarmenmarkt in Berlin


Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe

Notwithstanding that the Jews represent just over half of the people persecuted and killed during the holocaust, this memorial was a creative (and intentionally unenjoyable) way to honour and remember holocaust victims. The sprawling collection of 2,711 blocks of varying sizes and heights resembled tombstones to my eyes, and the undulating ground on which they sat created an environment intended to make you feel ill and disoriented as you walk through it, lose track of family and friends, and generally get lost in the experience.

Memorial to the Murdered Jews in Europe


Kreuzberg District: Culture, Food,
Street Art

The other tour I was excited about doing was the Kreuzberg District Tour, exploring Food, Culture, and Street Art.

My early research pointed to Kreuzberg as the artsy hip district of Berlin, which is right up my alley. This intimate walking tour was a great way to deepen the historical overview I got on the Segway tour, and to glimpse the happening underbelly of Berlin.

Kreuzberg street art

Ingesting and imbibing various foods and drinks along the way, I glimpsed some famous works of street art and graffiti, often filling sides of large buildings, and of course the East Side Gallery is a sight unto itself – with colourful works of art covering the entire length of the longest remaining section of the Berlin Wall – at 1.3kms.

Gentrification, and the Latte Macchiato

Gentrification is a buzz word in Berlin; something I heard repeatedly from different sources. Part of the reason I was excited to visit Berlin on this trip is because it’s a happening place among digital nomads and location independent people like me; with an artsy culture and relatively low cost of living, it begs for you to spend a few months and join the thriving alternative scene.

Berlin is the cheapest capital city in Europe; the mayor calls Berlin “poor but sexy”.

Berlin street art

But this is changing. (Enter: gentrification). It happens all over the world, starting in pockets of cities, eventually spreading to the entire city itself. It goes something like this:

An unpopular rundown area becomes home to students, artists, and people who can afford to live there – and start to make it theirs.

Thus, it graduates from rundown and unpopular, to artsy and funky.

Then more people want to come to this funky area and soak in the funky-ness and low cost of living.

Thus, it graduates from funky to trendy.

Once a place is trendy, it needs a facelift. Buildings start getting restored and upgraded, and rents start going up. The students and artists who brought life to the area can no longer afford to stay there, and are forced to move away.

Thus, it graduates from trendy to upscale.

Then, all of a sudden, Starbucks is everywhere, and the latte macchiato rules the day.

The latte macchiato is hence a sign of gentrification in – and all over – Berlin. Although Berlin is still in the funky-to-trendy stage to my eyes, it’s a process that everybody can see happening – for better or worse.

1 Minute Berlin

The weather wasn’t grand during my two days in Berlin, but I managed to snap off some pictures and video. Here’s the result:

Click here to watch it on YouTube.

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A Week in Germany, and My Style of Travel https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/a-week-in-germany-and-my-style-of-travel/ https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/a-week-in-germany-and-my-style-of-travel/#comments Mon, 26 Jul 2010 11:00:43 +0000 https://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/?p=1908 I recently spent almost a week in southern Germany. I didn’t see any major towns, nor did I attend many tourist attractions. And although I imagine I’ll return to Germany someday, I won’t on this particular trip. And I’m not sorry about it. This post was originally published in 2010. ... Read More

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I recently spent almost a week in southern Germany. I didn’t see any major towns, nor did I attend many tourist attractions. And although I imagine I’ll return to Germany someday, I won’t on this particular trip. And I’m not sorry about it.

This post was originally published in 2010. It has since been updated for accuracy of links and content. 

One of the underlying messages in the documentary A Map For Saturday that spoke to me was that travel gets old pretty quickly. At least – certain styles of travel get old quickly. If you bounce from one major city/attraction to the next, staying in hostels and following the backpacker circuits consistently, one amazing awe-inspiring sight tends to melt into the next, and you can actually become almost apathetic about the attractions that once appeared wondrous.

Having been on the road well over three years, I don’t think I would have lasted anywhere near this long if I were on this “actively traveling” circuit.

Instead, I’ve volunteered in trade for my accommodation in at least five different places around the world for upwards of a month at a time. In between volunteer gigs, I’ve usually enjoyed some home-grown hospitality by staying with friends. Friends I’ve met in all sorts of ways, mostly in the course of my volunteering and traveling.

See also: How to Get Free Accommodation Around the World

In fact, so enamoured am I with these two modes of travel, that many of my chosen destinations (such as Germany) have been predicated on the prevalence of home-stay or volunteer opportunities, rather than the destination itself being of primary appeal.

For me, my dream of travel was borne of a desire to break bread with families around the world; to live, work, shop, and just be with people around the world, learning, laughing, and loving life together. It’s not about how many museums I visit, how many planes I board, or how many stamps I have in my passport.

I don’t profess my style of travel to be superior (or inferior) to any other styles. (That’s why I started the popular week-in-the-life series; to celebrate the different ways people choose to spend their long-term or full-time travel days).

I have the luxury of being able to travel full-time – along with the often mis-understood requirement to be somewhat consistently on my computer an average of two to four hours per day (to earn an income, research/book travel arrangements, and keep in touch with friends/family). It’s a fact of my location independent life, and one that isn’t easily accommodated if I have an active travel itinerary to keep up with.

So all this is to say that in my time in Germany, I didn’t get the cross-section of the country that would be typical in the most traditional travel sense. But I did get to enjoy the following:

  • I climbed to the top of the Munster Cathedral in Ulm – also the highest cathedral in the country at over 160 meters.
Munster cathedral in Ulm Germany
view of the cathedral in Ulm
The Professional Hobo enjoying the view over Ulm Germany
  • I visited a small town surrounded by mountains, and featuring a small pond that is the most interesting shade of blue I’ve ever seen.
the blue pond
reflections of a church in a blue pond in Germany
  • I got lost while walking with my friend along the extensive gravel roads that weave through woods and agricultural fields near Ulm.
endless fields of rural Germany
tall trees in the Black Forest
  • I watched two world cup games – one at the home of my friend’s family, another at a friend-of-a-friend’s art gallery, surrounded by enthusiastic and hopeful locals. (The second game, however, didn’t end so well for Germany, but did for Spain – a place also close to my heart).
  • I enjoyed drinks at an out-of-the-way bar with a group of friends. Anybody who came to the table to chat (and there were many, as this was a friendly bar), was instructed to speak in English for the benefit of “the Canadian girl”. This made for some very entertaining conversation at various levels of sobriety and English fluency.
  • I wandered the streets of Ulm, taking pictures, drinking coffee, eating ice cream, and shopping for clothes.
streets of Ulm
Ulm canal
the tilted house in Ulm

Last but far from least, I enjoyed the company of my amazing and beautiful friend Tanja. We made awesome coffee with frothy milk, cooked brilliant meals, watched inspiring movies, drank delicious wine, and talked about everything under the sun. And for just under a week, I got to experience what life in her neck of the woods is like.

For me, this is why I travel.

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