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Murnauer Moos |
Following our stay in Switzerland (see following post) we opted to travel to Germany through western Austria. Bad move. We were not aware we needed a tollway sticker to enter Austria as we assumed it would be like elsewhere in the EU - you pay tolls as you go along. We were waved through by the Austrian border guards (no warning signs that we could see) and then pulled over by the Austrian police and hit with a 120 euro on-the-spot fine for not having the sticker. We were left with a sour taste in our mouths - Austria sucks!
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Murnauer Moos |
After leaving the neo-fascists following a brief drive through western Austria we entered Germany for a stay in the delightful Bavarian town of Murnau. Here I checked out the beautiful moors and grasslands of Murnauer Moos, with their dramatic backdrop of the Alps in that neo-fascist country to the south.
I looked unsuccessfully for Spotted Crake, including before sunrise and after sunset (when they are supposed to be more active at this time of year) with no success. I heard several Corn Crake, a species I had seen in Kenya, and although none showed, they were most interested in my tape recording of the Australian frog
Psuedophryne coriacea.
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Common Cuckoo |
Plenty of Common Cuckoos were about.
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Common Chiffchaff |
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Willow Warbler |
Coming to grips with the Palaearctic warblers was a challenge. I eventually sorted out Willow Warbler from Common Chiffchaff - both plentiful.
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Blackcap Warbler |
As was Blackcap Warbler, Eurasian Reed-Warbler and Sedge Warbler. A couple of Western Bonelli's Warblers showed.
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Great Spotted Woodpecker |
Great Spotted Woodpecker was about; no sign of the White-backed reported to be here.
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Fieldfare |
A couple of Fieldfare were nice to see.
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Long-tailed Tit |
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Marsh Tit |
Marsh Tit was there along with plenty of Great Tit, Eurasian Blue Tit and Long-tailed Tit.
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Nymphenburg Palace, Munich |
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Nymphenburg Palace, Munich |
After leaving Murnau we headed north to Munich to visit the historic Nymphenburg Palace on the city's western outskirts. The elaborate collection of carriages was particularly impressive.
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Greylag Goose |
Among the waterfowl on the palace lakes were plenty of Greylag Geese and a few Common Pochards.
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Common Pochard |
We decided to overnight in the pleasant village of Schleiz before confronting Berlin's mayhem. We stayed in the Hotel Luginsland, where a wall of pictures is devoted to Australian motorbike rider Roger Barker, who died outside the hotel in a 1957 accident.
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Fields outside Schleiz |
From there we drove a short distance to the village of Modlareuth, one of many German towns to be divided by the old border between East Germany and West Germany. This fine site includes a museum and remnant stretches of the border wall that was dismantled in 1989.
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Modlareuth - East German border post & fence |
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Section of original border wall that divided German village of Modlareuth |
Here also were House Martins and Barn Swallows nesting in the old buildings.
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House Martins on nest |
From Modlareuth we had a tortuous drive to Berlin, where road repairs and a couple of spectacular motor vehicle accidents (no speed limits on the autobahns) meant it took 5+ hours to travel 240kms. We checked into our hotel and dropped the car off, having clocked up almost 4000km since leaving Rome 19 days earlier.
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Brandenburg Gate |
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Checkpoint Charlie |
Berlin is a delightful city. We indulged in the usual el fresco dining and beer-drinking. We took in sites including the Berlin Cathedral, Checkpoint Charlie, Alexanderplatz, the Reichstag (Parliament), Charlottenburg Palace and the Brandenburg Gate.
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Berlin Cathedral |
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Charlottenburg Palace display |
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Reichstag |