Unlike the week before, which was almost walkless for me, last week was quite good in that respect. Also, it started off with snow and then saw a mix of sun and clouds with some rain thrown in for good measure.
On Monday (26 January), I had a smooth trip back to Ludwigsburg in the morning. My sister had sent a picture on Sunday night with the view from her house towards the street, all covered in snow, while 150 km away, we saw not a single flake.
From the train, I spotted the first snow after Bruchsal, more than half way home, and as the train was pulling into Stuttgart, the layer of snow grew thicker. I took this picture from the local train for the last part of my trip, from Stuttgart to Ludwigsburg; I have walked along that tree-lined road many times and have posted pictures of it on my blog every now and then:
Reaching my house, this is how much snow was around the front door:The views from my kitchen and my living room:
For my lunch break I had booked a massage at the nearby day spa. I walked there cautiously; the streets and pavements in my neighbourhood were covered in snow and, where people had meant well and swept off the snow, slipperly slush. No wonder then that I spotted a man on his hands and knees, trying to get upright again after a fall, but unable to do so without help.Eventually, he was upright, still laughing and clutching my hands. I asked him three times whether he was hurting and should I call an ambulance, but he insisted that he was fine and said "Thank you for seeing me", which was a bit of an odd choice of words, but then he didn't sound a native German speaker anyway. He then walked away, carefully avoiding the slushy-slippery bits on the pavement. I watched him for a moment before I went on to my appointment at the day spa.
After work, I had about an hour left before sunset and went to the fields for a walk in the snow. At first, the sun just about managed to get through, but quite wonderfully, shortly before sunset it threw golden rays across the snow - my photos can only give a poor impression of what was truly beautiful.
Tuesday (27 January) was wet and cold with rain washing much of the snow away. It was a good day for working from home, and also a good evening to spend at the pub. This time, we did better at the quiz, coming third and leaving the pub with a bottle of sparkling wine as our prize.
My usual day at the office followed on Wednesday (28 January). It started foggy with more rain later. The local trains were in their customary chaotic state. After work, I went to my see my Mum for a chat and a snack.
| View from my kitchen just before 8:00 on Wednesday morning. |
Glad to be working from home on Thursday (29 January), another cold and wet day, I still managed to stretch my legs for a bit more than an hour after work, covering the not exactly picturesque round to Asperg and back to Ludwigsburg via Eglosheim.
Friday (30 January) started sunny and bright, with grey clouds moving in later but no rain or snow. I had a badly needed hair cut between finishing work and starting on the cleaning. O.K. arrived at 9:00 pm. While the butternut & parsnip soup I had prepared was heating, we had crackers and cheese.
My Dad would have been 84 years old on Saturday (31 January). As has become our habit after his death in 2022, we had a remembrance meal at my Mum's in the evening, eating what was one of his favourite dishes.
It was a beautiful day, and so after breakfast, O.K. and I had gone into town for breakfast and a look at a shoe shop we favour. We each found a pair of shoes we liked, but finding a place for breakfast took a while - our usual cafés were full to the brim, and we ended up at a bakery where my sister and I had had breakfast months ago and really enjoyed it.
We went for a walk on the now snow-less fields and also visited my Dad's bird marker at the cemetery.
Back home, we rested for a little before going to my Mum's for the evening.
Sunday (1st of February) was cloudy but dry, with patches of blue. After breakfast, we set off for a walk to Asperg with the castle on the hill, where we had not been in a while.
About 2 1/2 hours later, we were back home for coffee & cake. A rest followed before I started to cook. It was pasta with brokkoli and mushrooms fried in olive oil and what I intended to be a creamy sauce - it was tasty enough, but the sauce nearly entirely disappeared in the pasta due to its shape (fusilli - if you don't know what they look like, click here for the wikipedia article).
O.K. had to leave after that, and I was glad when he reported from almost home 1 hour 20 minutes later - no hold-ups on the motorway, no ice or other difficult driving conditions.
The sunset + snow photos especially are gorgeous, such views are always uplifting aren't they!
ReplyDeleteThey are, and I was so glad I went out when I did, in spite of it being mostly grey at that time. The golden hues of the sunlight were a lot more intense and luminous in reality than what my photos show.
DeleteSuch lovely photos of the sky and those bushes that are round. Someone must have the job of keeping those trimmed. Or do they just grow round like that? Interesting!
ReplyDeleteYour meal of crackers and cheese and soup looks so delicious, Meike!
Those round bushes are deliberately shaped so, Ellen. The fields at that end are part of a nursery which in turn is part of a garden center. I have photographed them more frequently in the past, when you probably weren't reading my blog yet.
DeleteI love crackers and cheese, and there is nothing like a hot soup or stew for a winter's evening, is there!
I really enjoyed your snow pictures and called Gregg over to look at them too! It looks like we got similar amounts of snow, doesn't it?
ReplyDeleteThank goodness the man you helped wasn't hurt. Sliding down can make you feel silly (as long as you're not injured!) and I'd have probably laughed at myself, too. I always forget that you speak German in your daily life. Your command of English is so good that I forget it's your second language.
Your cheese and crackers and soup all look delicious! Perfect winter food. :)
Yes, it looks like we had more or less what you have, only that you had those beautiful icycles which we didn't get, as it was nearly all gone the next day.
DeleteI was ready to call an ambulance and stay with the man until they'd arrive, but he really seemed well, not even his trousers where he'd been on his knees looked torn or anything. And I watched him walking away to check that he was steady on his feet, and he was.
Perfect winter food in my book, too!
It's good that you were on hand to help the faller. I'm sure he appreciated it. Any kind of locomotion in snow and ice can be troublesome - on foot, there's a danger of falling, in a car there's a danger of crashing. Mostly, we survive.
ReplyDeleteHe thanked me, and we both had a bit of a laugh with sheer relief that nothing worse had happened. His choice of footwear wasn't ideal for the day, but then he probably had not expected there to be so much snow still on the roads and pavements by lunch time; often in town it disappears within a couple of hours.
DeleteGosh, you have had a lot of snow. So kind of you to help that man, as you could have fallen too. So sorry to hear you lost your Dad too.
ReplyDeleteMe again. I thought I'd solved the Anonymous comment!
DeleteOur area got nowhere near as much snow as other parts of Germany, but it was certainly enough for the kids to go sledging on the field behind a block of flats - it was nice to see and hear them enjoying themselves!
DeleteMy Dad died at 80 in 2022, he had been very ill for some time.
A walkless week ? Scotland's winds & rains bring walkless days. Sad lonesome days.
ReplyDeleteOn such a day I got no further than my local Tesco where I bought a National Geographic,
with a feature on Ghana's great swimmers who are also fishermen. That was pre-Covid.
Bruschal is romantically beautiful. Just visited it via YouTube.
*Thank you for seeing me,* a haunting remark. Man fallen in the snow. Gratitude.
So rain washed away the freeze ? A remembrance meal for your father. January gone.
Routine can save us. It has its own liturgical rites. How quickly blue skies returned !
I enjoy your walks and delicious little feasts and those far horizon photos.
Today in Oxfam I bought The Idea of the Holy by Rudolf Otto.
Born in Peine in Hanover in 1869. Died, Marburg-on-the-Lahn 1937.
Bruchsal has a beautiful palace, not quite as big as Ludwigsburg, but worth a visit. Although I have visited there in the past, in recent years I only ever see it from the train which passes right next to it on my way to and from O.K.
DeleteThe week before this one was almost walkless in the sense that I didn't go for a "proper" walk, meaning at least an hour, meaning at leisure and not merely to get from A to B. The 10-15 minutes it takes me to get to my Mum, 5-10 minutes to get to the train station or the supermarket etc. don't count as walks for me, although I am of course walking there and back.
Thank God for trains & buses & taxis and women & men who drive them.
DeleteOn days of heavy winds and rains I can use my free bus pass and go into the city.
I can visit The Lighthouse a strikingly rebuilt design centre on 4 or 5 floors.
They have a top floor cafe. We abound in coffee shops and old fashioned pubs.
There's an art cinema and a multi-screen place, bookshops & Oxfam Books.
The sadness I speak of is a Scottish melancholia which I quickly shake off.
Byres Road, Hyndland and the West End are difficult to access on stormy days.
All in all I think your weather is kinder. And your towns & cities are stunning.
The Lighthouse / Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Glasgow Scotland Part I. 2020.
DeleteYouTube. Sarah / Food & Gems.
An Afternoon in Glasgow / Scotland vlog.
Shawna Explores.
What beautiful photos of the snow and soft light. I'm glad the faller was not hurt, though it's always a shock to be upright one minute and sprawled on the ground the next!
ReplyDeleteThat soft light on the snow felt like a special treat, unexpected and just beautiful!
DeleteYes, a fall can harm us more than just physically. It can also erode someone's confidence, so that they become reluctant to go out unless they absolutely have to. In this case, I hope the man did not suffer any pains and bruises afterwards; sometimes it is only the next day that we become aware where we've hurt ourselves.
Your photos are beautiful and captivating. Warm greetings from Montreal, Canada ❤️ 😊 🇨🇦
ReplyDeleteThank you, Linda - and equally warm greetings back from Ludwigsburg to Montreal :-)
Delete