Hotel Bayrischer Hof
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Travel Blogs from Wels
Grüß Gott from Linz!
... and coffee. Stephne also found some irresistible sweaters that are hard to find at home. The quality and selection of colors here really suit those of us who are of central European decent and it is funny to find whole department stores full of stuff that looks like it was made for you! And the fact that the sales women in the store are, themselves wearing drindles, just underscores the point: this is our culture! More Linz tomorrow and then we will drive on to ...
Categories and numbers ...
... appearing prisoners on the top rungs set over a range of racial/ethnic and national origin "types" such as Czechs, Poles, Russians, Hungarians and Dacians (a category of people from Romania/Bulgaria). Colors were also recruited to help distinguish people: among the rows of dilapidated, overcrowded barracks one could see red patches on political prisoners and pink cloth used for the patches of gay men. The patches, colors and letter designations ...
Linz and Cesky Kromlov
... travelled through the countryside on two lane roads, The scenery is beautiful with all the trees turning colors of yellow and red. It is pretty cold today, only in the mid fifties. One thing we did not bring enough of was warmer sweaters and jackets.
On the way we stopped in the town of Budweiss which is named after the family that started Budweiser beer in Europe. They sold the rights for ...
Day 15
... with good footwear and a filling meal it was still a difficult climb! We left a little quiet and weary, headed toward Munich. No tent setup tonight as they're all prepared for Oktoberfest which gave us a taste of what to expect in a weeks time. BYO toilet paper on site and €1 to have a hot shower. Joy. A walking tour of Munich was brief as we ducked into Hofbrau House and were greeted with a multi storey eatery with live Bavarian music ...
Mauthausen - concentration camp
... help them eg. Most of them could not eat! I stood in the gas chambers and also went through where they 'slept' and where they cremated their bodies..... Really disturbing few hours!!! I was very shocked by the size of the camp (I always imagined them very large!) and also by how modern the buildings were... It's very hard to imagine that it only happened 60-70 years ...