Once upon a time there was a prince who liked to travel and to garden. In the lovely landscape of Anhalt which is now part of the state Saxony-Anhalt in Germany, he installed an unrivalled garden kingdom with palaces, quiet lakes, little woods and gardens and it is open to the public.
One sunny fall morning we drove of to Wörlitz the little town that hosts most of the garden kingdom. It is cloce to the river Elbe and in the middle of green fields and meadows and woods. Prince Franz ruled Anhalt from 1758 until 1817. He had one son with his wife Luise and ten other children "around". He loved to travel and from a journey to Italy, England and France he brought so many great ideas that he startet to built the garden kingdom.
It is now part of the UNESCO World Heritage and dozens of gardeners and staff members maintain more than 150 square-kilometers cultural landscape including little palaces, sculptures, artificial caves and even a man-made volcano which erupts on special occasions -- and peaceful places like this pavillion.
We really like to walk here although on sunny days it is crowded by people as the entrance is free. The kids love the swans.
And we take a gondola ride on the lake and through the little canals that are crossed by little bridges -- each of a different kind. Charlotte is busy watching Mattis who is still too brave so close to the water.
Another great thing are the look-throughs that are planned by the prince. Some of them even have a political backround to show the wisdom of their builder. This is the "tolerance-view" -- from here you see the synagoge on the left for the Jewish religion and the Christian church on the right -- both should be equal in the eye of the visitor.
It is amazing to see the grown culture here. It must have been very different in the first days but the prince had this great look in the future although he knew he would never see the parc finished in his lifetime. There are also little mazes and climbing rocks and it is worth to stay close because the area is huge. I especially enjoy the water lilys.
You can rent bicycles and stay overnight in little parc houses -- it is really a little paradise, a planned one which makes it very German.
BBQ has a very strong tradition in the US and it just fits our German meat
love. First we reanimated the bacon-breakfast we used to have almost every
weekend.
Then Michael was looking for the best grill almost since the day we arrived. He
made his mind about the advantages and disadvantages of coal and gas grills.
You all know it is mostly a philosophical question but for me not of
importance. So Michael was in charge and decided to invest the money.
Now we are proud owners of a gas grill and only its appearance on our balcony
makes Michael very happy. So we tried all the great receipes we used in the US
-- pork chops Ukrainian style, burgers American style and honey-mustard chicken
Michael´s style -- and it tastes just fine.
Since we also learned that having a BBQ is double the fun with friends we
invited some of our oldest. Sebastian was Michael´s classmate and is now a
great cocktail mixer beside his job as an expert in economic sciences.
He, his lovely spouse Annett who is a successfull bio-chemist and daughter
Johanna visited us just four weeks before we moved back to Germany and live now
only some blocks away. Together we really enjoyed fine burgers the way we
learnt to make them in the US.
Anyway, Michael is very keen on grilling every weekend now. But good beef is
almost not affordable in Germany so there are still things we miss even if we
now own a great American grill.
Since the kids and especially Mattis had almost no kontact to the rest of the family, they all had to get used to each other. Stubborn Mattis first was not very friendly but then realised that it is really great to have grand-parents around.
Michaels grand-parents were very happy to have them back. And the great-grand-children didn't let go (don`t miss Charlottes shoes).
And best of all: there are gak-gaks near the grand-parents house. Mattis loved to look at them.
Moritz hugged his grampies but found out that none of them is really keen on running around on a soccer field. None of the younger ones ... my grand-father (age 85!) kicked a good match with Moritz, impressing him with tricks from a life-long passion for soccer.
Great-grand-Ma knew another great trick how to get close to little Mattis who was still overwhelmed by all the new faces.
And here they are walking along the river.
Family United -- first and most important step back home. Check.