Thursday, 4 December 2025

Last of November and 1st Advent

The last week of November ended on the 1st Advent Sunday. I was doing various things to get ready for the season and went to the Christmas Market twice. The weather ranged from wet and cold to spring-like mild sunshine.


Monday (24 November) saw a rise of temperature above freezing level, but it was wet all morning and only stopped raining in the afternoon.

After work, I went into town to buy a Christmas present for a 15-year-old girl. The company I work for has a large Christmas tree in the foyer of our building, hung with wishes from children of disadvantaged families. Children between 7 and 15 write down what they wish for, and we can pick a card, buy what's on the card, wrap it nicely and leave it with the department in our company who organises it all. They then make sure all the gifts (none of which should exceed 30 euros) are delivered on time. 

Looking at the cards, I didn't know what half of the items were (toys? clothing? something else?) and settled for a girl wishing for a small gift set by "Rituals", a company producing cosmetics and toiletries. I knew which shop in town stocks their products, and was indeed lucky to find the exact one the girl had written on the card. It was wrapped festively for me at the shop, and I then went for a few more errands. 
I was out for a couple of hours; not a proper walk but at least I was away from my desk and got to stretch my legs a bit.
Sunset on Monday, as seen when I left ALDI.
Ludwigsburg's beautiful Christmas market opened on Tuesday (25 November), but the weather was so dismal that I imagine it wasn't quite as packed with visitors as it usually is on opening night. 
It rained basically all day, but I still managed a brief walk of just under an hour around lunch time. It wasn't pure bliss but again, at least I did get away from desk work and computer screens for a while.

Here are a few pictures of Ripon's Christmas lights, sent to me from my sister-in-law:






My usual office day on Wednesday (26 November) was followed by a first brief visit of the Christmas market. 
It had again been raining most of the day, so that both my Mum and my sister decided they didn't want to go out in the evening. Being on my own, I didn't stay long, just had a quick stroll and something to eat. It was nice to find most of the familiar booths at their usual places, but I noticed quite an increase in prices for food and drink. Still, people were eating and drinking and buying other things, obviously undeterred.





On Thursday (27 November), I was at the office again. For a change, my trains were on time, and I managed the way to work in 27 minutes - just as it should be! (More often than not, it takes me 45 minutes or even a full hour for a journey that is supposed to take 17 minutes on the train, plus a few minutes on foot at both ends.) Why can't it always be like that?
After work, I met my Mum in town, and the two of us went to the Christmas market together. It was very nice to have a look round, some food and a hot drink. 
On our way home, Mum posed for me at the shopping centre :-)
Friday (28 November) was busy; first work of course, then the weekly cleaning. I then brought up my Christmas boxes from the cellar and started on the first bits and bobs of Advent decoration.
Next, I packed my little red suitcase and set off for the station at 4:30 pm. My train to Offenburg arrived there at 7:00 pm, bang on time - hooray!! O.K. and I had fresh pasta and an equally fresh salad for our evening meal after we'd briefly popped in with his Mum to say hello.

A small Advent market was held at the village on Saturday (29 November),  and five members of the village brass band (including O.K.) were playing Christmas tunes in the afternoon.
Of course, I went with O.K., and while they were playing, chatted to some friends and acquaintances and had a look round at the few stalls. As dusk fell, the lights came on and the fires were lit, the atmosphere becoming more festive. 
Sunset over the village


It was still rather mild after what had been a day of almost spring-like temperatures, but by the time the quintett finished playing, I was glad to join O.K. and the others for a steaming hot mug of mulled wine - when you're mostly standing about without moving much, it gets inevitably cold at some stage, no matter what you're wearing.

We had something to eat there as well (prices being about half of what they charge at Ludwigsburg's Christmas market) and then went home for a relaxing evening.

The 1st Advent Sunday (30 November) was here!
In the morning, O.K. and I met a group of friends in Offenburg for a sumptuous breakfast. I don't get to see them often, and it was nice to catch up and enjoy the meal together.
Back at the cottage, we prepared everything for the family meal we were hosting later, putting up a few Christmas ornaments as we went along.

O.K.'s Mum, his sister and her husband arrived, and the five of us spent a very nice evening eating, drinking, talking and sharing some laughs.

After our guests had left, O.K. and I put everything back in order and then settled for our customary early night in view of Monday's early start to get me to the station.

24 comments:

  1. Christmas time is my favourite time of year. We are getting more and more Christmas markets here too and even my little part of London had one on Saturday just for the day to switch on the Christmas street lights.

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    1. I love this time of year, too. It is what reconciles me with the darkest, coldest part of the year.

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  2. The 15 year old sounds like she has her head screwed on in thinking to name the product manufacturers to guide you to a gift. Very sensible. We do not have so many Christmas markets here but we have festive lights in the small towns which give a good atmosphere for shoppers and visitors. I hope the Christmas markets in Germany are without trouble this year. Rachel (I am blogging again on this new blog). xx

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    1. Hello Rachel! It is good to see you - I have thought of you often, and asked fellow bloggers whether they were in touch with you but nobody seemed to know what happened, so I was just hoping you were fine and simply had enough of blogging for a while.
      So far, I know of one stabbing that has happened a couple of days ago at a Christmas market in Germany, but I only heard about it second hand and can't remember the name of the town.

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  3. The Christmas gifts initiative by your company sounds a lovely way to give some pleasure to those who most need it.

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    1. It is, and it's not the only charitable thing they do. There are various initiatives throughout the year, for instance a 10k run to raise money for a charity helping children with heart and lung diseases, and the opportunity for all of us to work a shift at a soup kitchen in town.

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  4. I'm sure the girl will be thrilled with your present. That's a nice thing to do.
    O.K.'s home looks so nice and inviting. What a lovely gathering you had with his family.
    Now we are rushing to Christmas. Not many weeks left to get ready! We have had snow which makes everything look festive but keeps me inside more.

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    1. No snow here yet; next week we're apparently in for another very mild spell.
      I have all the presents for my loved ones and only need to wrap them. Also, there are still some Christmas cards to write, although my sister and I have done the bulk together last night, and on Monday I took my cards to the US to the post office - hoping they'll make it on time and not arrive in February.

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  5. Lots of festive photos from different places! :) The Ludwigsburg Christmas market really does look spectacular. As I don't go out in the dark now, and only passed a few shops in town yesterday (which was a very grey day), I have no real concept of what my town's decorations look like this year!

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    1. Our Christmas market really is beautiful, and I am not just saying this because it is my hometown :-)
      It is sensible not to go out in the dark in your situation right now, but with it getting dark so early this time of year, even if I wanted to I wouldn't be able to avoid it completely, and I quite like looking at the lights; both the "official" ones and what people have put up in their windows and gardens or by their front doors.

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  6. Love your photos of the Christmas market! Can you believe it, they have even started having Christmas markets here in the US! Love those photos from Ripon also! It makes me wonder, have you ever been in England at Christmas? I only spent one Christmas there, it was wonderful. I have very fond memories of that album from 1985, "Now That's What I Call Christmas". Every single store was blasting it away, every song! Oh, and I love your Mum posing with all those Christmas decorations around her, I would have done the same. Please tell her I said hello. xx

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    1. In the 1990s, I've once been in the London area around Christmas and was amazed to find that in a metropolis like Lonon, everything - and I mean EVERYTHING - was shut on Christmas Day and Boxing Day, too. My then husband and I went for a long walk on Bexhill Heath, it was a beautiful sunny day with blue skies, but no public transport was running into London, and so we just a quiet time at home with the friends where we were staying.
      I've never been in Yorkshire for Christmas, as I want to spend Christmas Eve with my family and Boxing Day with O.K.'s family.
      Yes, I can imagine you sitting on that "sleigh" among all the Christmas deco in the shopping mall :-)

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    2. A Happy and peaceful Advent, Meike .
      Buying a Christmas Tree is a magical experience.
      It always reminds me of the scene in Love Story, when Ryan O'Neill buys a tree,
      and we hear Joy To The World on the soundtrack.
      Ludwigsburg and Ripon are the places to be right now.
      Jack Haggerty

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    3. Hello Jack!
      What a surprise (a pleasant one, of course) to see your comment! It's been a couple of years, I think, since I last read from you on my blog or anywhere else. From your comment on Neil's blog, you didn't have your own computer during that time and could not access our blogs from a public one; good to know it was only that and not anything to do with massive health problems.
      I must admit I have neither ever watched "Love Story" nor bought a Christmas tree; the artificial one that is stowed away in my basement is a hand-me-down from my parents who only used it once or twice and then reverted back to real trees.
      Ludwigsburg definitely is a good place to be for lovers of Christmas markets.

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    4. I keep well and walk every day, Meike. Even when it's wet and windy.
      The final photo in your post looked like the perfect Advent feast :
      I have never seen such a magically inviting room. Gemutlichkeit is more than
      just cosy, isn't it ? I look forward to reading your earlier posts, the ones I missed.
      You still love reading. Books and Things is a vlog by Katie Lumsden, a fiction
      editor and novelist who lives in London. Her Victorian thriller The Secrets of Hartwood Hall (Penguin) is the perfect winter read.
      I have just begun Cay Rademacher's The Wolf Children, set in Hamburg 1947.
      I grew up in industrial Clydebank and worked in a newspaper office across from the shipyards, so the Blohm & Voss shipyards, on the southern side of the Elbe
      (bombed beyond recognition), is a place I can see with my inner eye.
      Jack

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    5. I won't ever stop loving books and reading, I imagine; it is just so nice that, after years when my eyes would only allow me 20 minutes of reading at a time and even that was something of a struggle, since my operations in 2021 I can read for as long as I like again (or my schedule allows).
      The Secrets of Hartwood Hall sounds familiar, but I must be mixing it up with another book, as I can not find a review of it on my blog.

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    6. Wonderful that your eye operation was successful !
      Words can loose their spell for a day or two : I understand those who don't read.
      I turn to books about painters and sculptors : Frank Aeurbach, Henry Moore, Gilbert Spencer, Martin Gayford's *Modernists & Mavericks* . A photo of Henry Tonks fascinates me : Tonks was principal of the Slade, trained as a surgeon, and drew men whose faces had been destroyed in the Somme. Tonks looks out with a stern (but not cold) clinical gaze. Pat Barker writes about him in *Life Class* .
      I'm just back from London and spent hours in Tate Britain in Chelsea.
      Jack

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    7. Frank Auerbach, German-born English painter (1931-2024).
      Biographer, Catherine Lampert.
      His Charcoal Heads is a book on its own.

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  7. The Christmas markets look so cheerful. I was surprised to find a Christmas market on the south bank of the Thames when I was out walking last week. I had no idea we had one there!

    Thanks also for posting Ripon's lights. Your posts about Ripon make me want to visit. (And I think Dave will want to go too, because Ripon features in "Downton Abbey" and he's a huge fan of that show.)

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    1. I have only watched a few episodes of the first series of Downton Abbey when it was very new, and although I enjoyed it, other things in my life took over and I never caught up with it again. But I distinctly remember that there were signposts for Ripon to be seen, and some of the staff spoke with Yorkshire accents.

      What a nice surprise it must have been to come across that Christmas market during your walk!

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  8. Just wondering, when you say you were at Bexhill Heath, was that Bexhill in Sussex on the Southeast Coast?

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    1. Sorry - my mistake, not Bexhill but Bexleyheath in Kent. We were staying with friends in Erith.

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  9. You sound to be getting into the Christmas spirit. All the lights really help cheer me up at this time of year. I'm having to have some work done in my kitchen to repair a leak so, until that is finished, there's not much point in putting up my Christmas decorations.

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    1. I have been getting into the Christmas spirit since the Saturday when we went to the garden center to choose our wreaths and listen to the brass band!
      Yes, the lights are so important to get us through the long nights and short days of winter.
      The leak in your kitchen will hopefully be repaired soon so that you can put everything back in order and start on decorating for Christmas.

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