I'm thinking about bringing the family to visit Munich during the upcoming Easter holidays.
is it a good time of the year to visit Bavaria?
does anyone know some nice, family-friendly place to stay?
What is mandatory to see while in town?
it would be a 500km car trip from where I live, so I'm pondering eventually a train trip, but this would limit my movement options: is the city easily navigable for a tourist with a car, or is it better to use public transport?
Other questions when they'll come to my mind.
Thank you
Never been to Munisch, but I've been warned that it's full of Bavarians.
I've not been in Munich for at least a decade, so I can't help you either.
The Deutsches Museum is quite interesting for kids as there is lots of stuff to try yourself.
Jawohl, the Deutsches Museum is interesting and good entertainment for a whole day, basically. Do an early lunch then visit it.
When I spent two weeks there, I found most of the sights to be easily accessible through the S-Bahn lines. There is a palace-like thingie on the outskirts for which we had to took the tram, but it was okay.
So even if you go by car I would opt for booking a hotel around the center of the city, and then s-bahning your way around.
Check the S-Bahn map, there are like 4 or 5 stations where all 8 lines meet, that's the center. :) For hotels as I well, it would seem, the decent ones anyway.
All in all I enjoyed myself very much there, but it was more about living higher than usual on company money. :P While there are some nice things to check out, I am quite convinced you can find similar stuff in almost all major cities (aformentioned Museum excluded), so I am not sure about it being the optimal choice for the hole holiday with kids angle. :hmm:
I do know a nice Italian restaurant though. :P
If you DO go, make sure, ABSOLUTELY sure to find a restaurant which has Augustiner beer. They don't export it outside of Bavaria, and that is a crime against humanity. Absolutely excellent beer. It even makes it worthwile to deal with traditional Bavarian food (which is characterized by a complete lack of any taste).
I had a hamburger at the train station once.
Quote from: Tamas on March 24, 2012, 06:01:52 AM
I am quite convinced you can find similar stuff in almost all major cities (aformentioned Museum excluded)
Not the Englischer Garten with its nudists.
Quote, so I am not sure about it being the optimal choice for the hole holiday with kids angle. :hmm:
Oh, okay. :P
QuoteAugustiner beer. They don't export it outside of Bavaria, and that is a crime against humanity. Absolutely excellent beer.
You can definitely buy it in other parts of Germany.
QuoteIt even makes it worthwile to deal with traditional Bavarian food (which is characterized by a complete lack of any taste).
Eh?
Easter in Munich? Do they still have the traditional "Beating O' The Jew" festival there?
Only place I went in Munich was the Hofbrauhaus, monumentally touristy German beer hall with oompah band. It was perfect, exactly what I needed, except the serving wenches didn't have their tits all jacked up like St. Pauli Girl.
BTW, what do you call an oompah band in German?
Quote from: Admiral Yi on March 26, 2012, 04:39:00 PM
BTW, what do you call an oompah band in German?
I don't know, Johnny...what
do you call an oompah band in German?
Blaskapelle
Ok, I postponed it to the weekend of the 1st of May, the weather will be sunnier (here Easter was a complete tragedy, temperatures around 13°C, thunderstorms, etc.).
I've found a hotel on the east side of the river, not far from Museuminsel and a S-Bahn station. The town centre should be reachable in a 20 minutes stroll.
Thanks for the info.
L.
Quote from: CountDeMoney on March 24, 2012, 06:45:17 AM
Easter in Munich? Do they still have the traditional "Beating O' The Jew" festival there?
They would have to hire outside Jews for it.
Quote from: The Brain on March 24, 2012, 06:13:58 AM
I had a hamburger at the train station once.
A hamburger in Munich? That's like having a frankfurter in Cologne.
I heard of a girl who took a tramp in the woods. Don't know if he was from Hamburg.
Munich is really a nice city. Except for the Muncheners. Go figure the other germans...
Beer is really excellent, in every different place I've drunk it.
Museums were closed on May 1st, :glare: but we managed to go to:
Deutsches Museum, fantastic place filled of everything science related. Too big to do in one day, but we did a couple floors; there's a real and functioning scale model of a brick factory, at the end of the cycle you can buy a freshly made minibrick stamped with the museum symbol :lol:. There are innumerable areas where people can interact with the exposition, and the kids were crazy about it.
The Antikensammlungen (antiquities collections) and the Glyptothek, the kids were not that crazy about them :P but we adults loved them.
The Munich Zoo, everyone loved it, except for the animals.
We've been extremely lucky with the weather, three days of wonderful sun and perfect climate; the only overcast day we were inside the science Museum.
More in some hours
L.
"Munich is really a nice city. Except for the Muncheners." :hmm:
I have also found Bavaria to be far less welcoming than other parts of Germany. I wonder if it just bad luck or characteristic?
Quote from: Richard Hakluyt on May 02, 2012, 06:49:20 AM
"Munich is really a nice city. Except for the Muncheners." :hmm:
I have also found Bavaria to be far less welcoming than other parts of Germany. I wonder if it just bad luck or characteristic?
A couple of my colleagues there are non-bavarian Germans and they told me that they had an awful time getting accepted, especially the one who initially moved to a village/small town near the city and commuted from there. He was always an outsider on the account of not being Bavarian