Lead Adventure Forum
Other Stuff => General Wargames and Hobby Discussion => Topic started by: Hammers on 12 October 2015, 01:52:29 PM
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I am heading to Preussia at the end of November with some friends to celebrate on of them turning 50. What should we not miss, preferably something not easily found in the usual tourist guides?
Also, where do I find the best curry wurst, this kasier of schnell food, in Berlin?
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Battlefield Berlin. You have to see it. Nothing to eat but a lead heaven.
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Battlefield Berlin. You have to see it. Nothing to eat but a lead heaven.
What is that? A big crater?
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What is that? A big crater?
I am shitting you, Alex. I had forgotten about it, but I will definitely head there. :-)
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I definitely second Battlefield Berlin and raise you the German Historical Museum in the Friedrichstrasse. Germany through the ages features many militaria.
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"Curry 36" and "Konnopke" seem to be the most famous Currywurstbuden in Berlin.
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I spent a few days there recently. The weather ranged from tolerable to awful but my planned stops were mostly indoors so no major harm done.
Yep, Battlefield Berlin is great. Even though everything can be found online too, it's just so fascinating to browse it all in person. Unfortunately (or fortunately for my finances), I only managed to reserve one hour for the visit, which wasn't enough at all. The contrast between its tiny store front and the shelves inside which go on forever is striking. One does not simply walk there, but Gneisenaustraße U-Bahn station (line U7) is about three blocks away.
From there, I tried my luck with Modellbahnen am Mierendorffplatz (http://www.modellbahnen-am-mierendorffplatz.de/), allegedly one of the best railway stores in the city. U7 takes you there quite conveniently in something like 15 stops and 25 minutes. It was well-stocked indeed, although very H0/N-scale heavy with nothing in O scale (for 28mm purposes, obviously) apart from a tiny bit of rolling stock. You can get almost any kind of scatter or tree kit ever produced there, though.
There are various Berlin WelcomeCards, which can buy you unlimited public transport and e.g. three-day access to the museum island. The discount is not massive but the concept was convenient for my purposes. Altes Museum has one large floor of Greek items and another of Etruscan/Roman stuff. Neues Museum has fascinating Egyptian things, "Priam's Treasure" (or whatever remains / has been replicated after Soviet looting), old German history, and many floors of stone/bronze/iron age exhibitions which get quite exhausting after everything else. Nefertiti's bust is neat but maybe hyped out of proportion.
Pergamonmuseum is currently 2/3 closed and even the Ishtar Gate and Market Gate of Miletus are partially covered by ugly scaffolding. It makes the place mercifully fast to visit, however. I was happy enough when I found the Assyrian water basin with priests of Dagon in fish costumes sprinkling water:
(http://dolmot.net/mini/ref/dagonbasin-600.jpg) (http://dolmot.net/mini/ref/dagonbasin-1200.jpg)
(I painted one such priest for LPL8 ancients round (http://leadadventureforum.com/index.php?topic=65925.0) as a clever transition between cultists of earlier rounds and fishmen of later rounds. Even the shields were Dagon-themed. I still don't know if anyone got the reference.)
Visiting every exhibition of the the island museums, even briefly, will probably take several days so plan and pick accordingly.
Brandenburger Tor doesn't offer much more than a billion tourists and a mile of souvenir shops. Checkpoint Charlie is along the route to Battlefield Berlin (U6). There is also a Berlin dungeon in Mitte, which I skipped due to lack of time and it looking like a cheesy tourist trap. I may be wrong, of course.
Currywurst keeps you going but I actually preferred a Weihenstephaner biergarten (fully aware of the fact that the brewery is really in Munich area and the place thereby Bavarian-themed). Every variant of Berliner Kindl I sampled was poor in comparison. I guess it's OK with currywurst but nothing to write on LAF about.
Anyway, it's a huge city with a lot more in every direction. Even well-known essentials may be >10 km away from the centre. You have to prioritise heavily, based on your preferences. Fortunately the place is notably tourist-friendly and well-organised*. Deciding where to go is the difficult part. Getting there is usually easy. Any kind of food and drink is available basically around the clock for reasonable prices (from a Nordic perspective) so you shouldn't have other problems with that either than choosing. Note that shops (such as BfB) are closed on Sundays. Reserve that for museums, strolling or something similar.
Very lively city. Would visit again.
*But seriously, they should get their act together with the airports, train service and museum renovations...
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I lived in Berlin for two year and went back for a visit just before Xmas last year. What are you looking for military stuff or touristy stuff off the beaten track? Where are you staying? How much time do you have?
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I lived in Berlin for two year and went back for a visit just before Xmas last year. What are you looking for military stuff or touristy stuff off the beaten track? Where are you staying? How much time do you have?
We have four days. We are 5 people, 4 of us 'hosting' one day each for birthday boy (and the other 3) Each one of us will come up with a not too ambitious program for each day. The four themes are High Culture (the Berliner philharmonics, the museum island), Cold War (Checkpoint Charlie, die Mauer etc), WWII (Holocaust memorial etc) and Low Culture. Guess which one I am hosting... Yes, you are right.
So, I am thinking a curry wurst place for lunch and some varite/cabaret/burlesque at night. Anything else of a plebeian or slightly naughty, Weimarish nature you can suggest for some light slumming?
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Ah, there you have me. I could advise on Cold War and WW2 but apart from rumours of a strip club called Mon Cheries on Stuttgater Platz I'm not too well versed in the low culture :D
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Ah, there you have me. I could advise on Cold War and WW2 but apart from rumours of a strip club called Mon Cheries on Stuttgater Platz I'm not too well versed in the low culture :D
Well, contrary to appearances, I am not one for strip clubs. Anyway, I could pass some advice onto my fellow travellers, if you would be so kind to share them.
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Apart fro the curry-wurst recommendation, any tips on a fine eateries?
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Apart fro the curry-wurst recommendation, any tips on a fine eateries?
If you want a fine dining experience Try Pauly Saal:
http://paulysaal.com/
And yes that is a rocket hanging on the wall. :o
I went there a couple of years ago and it was an excellent meal, although not so good for your wallet. ;)
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If you want a fine dining experience Try Pauly Saal:
http://paulysaal.com/
And yes that is a rocket hanging on the wall. :o
I went there a couple of years ago and it was an excellent meal, although not so good for your wallet. ;)
A rocket you say? Sold.
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A rocket you say? Sold.
I kid you not:
(http://leadadventureforum.com/gallery/23/86_10_11_15_1_43_25_0.jpg)
:D
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I kid you not:
(http://leadadventureforum.com/gallery/23/86_10_11_15_1_43_25_0.jpg)
:D
My buddy, me unknowing, had booked us a table at Pauly Gall, Nick. I was duly impressed by the rocket and the bar, but the food was not as much an experience as you might have expected.
Battlefield Berlin, however... What a cornucopia. I wish they carried more of the classics, but it is a terrainbuilders paradise!