We had a day left on our Eurail pass and a day in Berlin with nothing planned, so we decided to head north to see the Ostsee (Baltic Sea) today. We didn't really know where to go, so we picked out a couple of seaports on a map and looked them up online and managed to find Stralsund, a little port town whose Old City is an UNESCO World Heritage site, so we decided to go there. It was about a 3 hour train ride away, so we set out around 9:30 and got there just in time for lunch. We had no map of the town (this seems to be our M.O.), so we headed in the direction of the big church steeples we'd seen as we came in to town. The Old City is situated on a bit of land surrounded by lakes and an inlet of the Baltic Sea. We found a pedestrian/bike path and bridge out to the old city which led us directly to one of the two remaining gates in the 14th century wall. We walked straight through the center of old town to find the sea and got lunch at a little cafe. I had the daily special which turned out to be fillets of three different kinds of fish (neither I or the waiter could interpret what kinds of fish :)! I didn't realize they were all different, so I filled up on the first kind, which was really good, and I wasn't too sad I didn't have room for the others because they weren't my favorite. The waterfront was undergoing lots of construction for a new events center, so it wasn't exactly peaceful, but mission accomplished :).

As we left the church, we checked our watches and saw that we had about 18 minutes before the next train left for Berlin, so we power-walked to the train station (first hurrying we'd done all day) and made it in plenty of time to by some beverages and snacks, catch the 3:39 train and be back in Berlin for dinner with John and Kristen. Perfect day! The scenery between Berlin and Stralsund was mostly farmland, (including lots of "wind farms" for power) and it could have been scenery from the Midwest except for the very German-looking towns (if you could ignore their "Golden Arches") and the poppies growing wild along the fields. We were wondering if they harvest the poppies along with crops...opium for the cows?
So going back to yesterday...sorry that we're out of order here but I thought I'd start with what was fresh.
Yesterday we slept in a bit, had breakfast all together, and then Kristen took Abbey and I
around Berlin a bit to find some souvenirs. We started out at the Kurfursterdamm shopping area, which was mostly worth seeing for the Keiser Wilhelm Memorial Church there. The church was bombed out in 1943 and the congregation elected to leave the ruins of the bell tower. It's now open to the public as a testament to the destruction of war, as well as to the call of Christ to forgive those who have sinned against us. It's a powerful testament indeed.


So we fly to London tomorrow evening. Thus begins our travel home! Hard to believe our time here is almost over. The biggest challenge remaining may be repacking our bags and keeping them under the weight limit. We're not too excited about hefting those again, but it's the home stretch. Literally. I had to laugh today...on the train ride back from Stralsund, it smelled like something was burning and Abbey's response was "Well, if the train's on fire, at least I don't have to heft my bag!"
1 comment:
Berkompas, the street I live on is named "Baltic" because of how beautiful my grandparents remembered it to be when there were there. Did you find that to be true?
Also, I thought of you yesterday when I passed one of our Italian restaurants here at home. Their sign said "Watch the Euro Cup here!"
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