From the stadium, I set out to find a hill called Teufelsberg. Teufelsberg is the biggest hill in Berlin (115m). On top there is a old US spy station used in the cold war to monitor, um..., something. Now it's all abandoned with broken windows and holes in the fence surrounding it. There's also a pretty exciting looking dirt bike track going down the mountain, and in winter there's a small skiing area. You have to be careful of wild pigs apparently, too. But none of that is what makes this hill interesting. What I found fascinating was that there's a nazi military school underneath this mountain. And on top of the school is 12 million cubic meters of rubble from the second WW. That's right, the highest hill in Berlin is completely man-made. There are trees and dirt and stuff now, but there are still bricks and concrete sticking up out of the dirt everywhere. Apparently, most cities in Germany have hills like this, Berlin has several.
This weekend, I went to the Karneval der Kulturen (Carnival of Cultures) in Berlin. This is a big (~2 million visitors) parade and party all weekend celebrating the diversity of different cultures in Berlin. Berlin is definitely very diverse - the parade yesterday went for 9 hours! Here are some (quite poor) pictures from there:
Can't remember what culture these people were, maybe from Peru I think.
Actually representing a culture was kind of optional, most floats were just people having fun playing music, beating drums, dancing, or whatever.
Yes, and here you have the culture of assorted animals.
Just to make you feel a little better about the horrible weather I hear you've been having in NZ lately, just after the parade, it started pissing down like a tropical monsoon. We managed to find a spot under a bridge, and wait it out, then it was all on again.
And I happened to be standing in this torrent of water. At least only my feet got wet.
That's all the news I've got at the moment, hope you are all well, looking forward to hearing from you.
2 comments:
Awesome, must be fun experiencing the new culture.
Hey,Adam. Note that I'm following you now. (sounds stalkerish)I've set up a new blog- which i'll try to keep updating-http://slaidback.blogspot.com
On the man made mountains- a history channel doco here said the mts in germany were built to cover nazi buildings that allies couldn't completely blow up or pull down signa.
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