Welcome Visitors

Welcome to my personal blog. I have another blog, Herbert's Place, but that one limits me to what I sometimes want to publish, because it is mainly used to promote my books. As it says in the header, I want to use this blog to write about things that have nothing to do with my books. There is no real theme here. I'll be writing about anything that causes me to either be happy or somethings that concerns me. It could be political, travel, a hobby, or anything else. So come and visit me sometimes.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

#Being Screwed

I hate deception. It seems wherever you go you are being deceived. I'm talking mostly about stores. It is not only how they try to make you buy something with false promises, it is also how certain merchandise is described on the package or more precisely what they omit to say, either knowingly or unknowingly. Mostly knowingly.

We bought 6 LED light bulbs at Costco yesterday, mainly because the Hydro have a program where you get up to 50% off the high price of these bulbs, and they are expensive. They are supposed to last 22 1/2 years, but in small print it says: based on 3 hours a day of use. So that estimate is already not quite correct, because most lights are on longer than that, especially in those long and dark winter evenings.

On the package it says that they can be used with dimmers; then in small print somewhere else it says that they may not be compatible with all dimmers and they suggest to go to their website to get a list. Well, how can you go to the website when you are in a store looking at the lights deciding if you should buy or not? Not everyone carries an Iphone or a tablet to connect to the internet.

We decided to buy them and paid nine bucks for three after the rebate. At home I discovered that LED lights cannot be used with 'Touch-dimmers' and motion detectors. They stay on at all times. They can only be used when you switch off the dimmer and cut the power completely.

Most of the bulbs in our house inside and outside are those spiral ones. Now we are told they are not safe and may cause fires. I've had them for years and I am happy with them. Okay, they cannot be dimmed at all, but they save me a ton of money on power consumption, especially the ones over my aquariums which are on for many hours. We use the old regular incandescent light-bulbs in the lights we dim. I only hope that they never stop making and selling those 'old-fashioned useless power-hungry bulbs'. I also hope that the government in its forever overzealous goal of protecting the citizens from harm doesn't make them illegal. If they do I still have plenty of them stashed away and they'll last until somebody comes up with a bulb that is just as good but uses less power and doesn't cost an arm and a leg.

I have in mind to return the LED bulbs to Costco, but I destroyed the packaging. Those bulbs are packaged in such a way that they cannot be removed without cutting up the cardboard and the plastic wrap. Another way to make sure you keep them. Most stores will take back merchandise only in its original and undamaged package. I barely managed to remove the bulbs without stabbing myself with the point of the knife.

Arrrrggg...We are being screwed without realizing it sometimes and it isn't much fun. And when we do realize it we may say "Ah, screw it. It isn't worth my time to take this garbage back." And that, my friends, is what the manufactures and sellers count on.

Screw it!!


Tuesday, October 27, 2015

The World is going Crazy

I don't know about the way our world is developing. Is it just me or are people actually crazy? This morning I saw something on TV (only briefly. I don't watch TV in the morning!) that bugged me. They showed people dressing up their dogs for Halloween. One dog wore a batman costume and the other one something else. To me that is pretty sick. I think it borders on animal cruelty. Dogs are not people! They don't get dressed up, for crying out loud. Now I suppose you should give them Halloween treats also if they show up in front of your door on #Halloween? What's next? A cat dressed up as Catwoman?

Come on! Give me a break. This is just nuts.


I cringe when I see guys with earrings and ponytails, especially old men. They look ridiculous half-bald and wearing a ponytail and a diamond stud in their wrinkly ears. Do they ever look in the mirror and if they do what do they think they see? And those huge plugs in people's earlobes! I saw a young man on the beach one time with his plugs removed. Wow! Those flopping donuts on his ears were surely ugly. How is this guy going to look when he gets old? What about advancement on his job? Who wants to look at a CEO with those floppy ears? What kind of respect will he get from his coworkers or customers? Things like that belong into the jungle but not into a civilized world.

And what's with all those tattoos these days? Why do people ruin their skin for the rest of their lives? I've seen some pretty ugly designs. I don't object to a butterfly or some other beautiful picture on a woman's shoulder, belly, or buttock, but why tattoo half your face with black paint? Or why have a devil's face or some other weird motif on your leg? I don't get it. Why are girls and women wearing torn jeans? I've thrown better looking jeans into the garbage. I'm sure glad that fashion with those sloppy pants with the crotch down to the knees seems to have come and gone. How could anyone walk in them, especially climb stairs?

There are other things that bug me and that I can't agree with. I do not believe gay people should get married. Oh yes, I am old-fashioned that way and not influenced by propaganda from the lobbyists. Marriage is an institution that should be reserved for a man and a woman, the way it was intended to be. I have no problem if gay people live together, but not as 'husband and wife'. Come on, a man, gay or not, is still a male and can't be called 'wife'. Wife is for a female. Same goes for lesbians. You can't call another woman 'husband'. That is ridiculous. And I can't agree with gay people adopting children. Sorry. They will grow up in an environment that is not normal and I don't care what we are made to believe by the media like movies, TV-shows, magazines and newspapers. Just because certain interest groups say everything is okay doesn't make it so.

And this whole thing about gender. Some men want to be women and some women want to be men. No cross-dressing helps here. If you have a penis you are a man and if you have a vagina you are a woman. How much simpler can it be? Of course, you can always have an operation, but biologically you are still the gender you were born with. That can never be changed.

Don't get me wrong. I am not bashing homosexuals here. They are born that way and are still people with feelings and rights, like everyone else. They are not different from so-called 'normal' people and they should be treated as such. I will never discriminate against them. We are all human beings. I don't have any gay people in my circle of friends and acquaintances, but there seem to be a lot of them around. Maybe it is because society as a whole is more tolerant that way and they are coming 'out of the closet'. I'm talking about the Western, more civilized world, not those backwards countries that want to drag people back into the dark ages that were rife with ignorance and intolerance. There exist still plenty of those countries on Earth. Perhaps it is also Nature's way to curb the birthrate and stop humanity from overpopulating this planet, which is a serious problem. Eventually, there won't be enough food to feed all those billions of hungry mouths and not enough room to deal with the garbage. As long as some women still have ten and more children poverty and hunger will stay with us.

Am I such a dinosaur? I believe I'm pretty open to new ideas and the advancement of the human race, but not everything some people come up with helps us to make this a better world. I admit, many old-fashioned ideas need to be changed and we have to learn to accept each other, no matter what we believe or think, even if some of us wear outlandish clothes ☺.

However, we should no be pushed into accepting everything some weird person dreams up without questioning it or even disagreeing with. That's what  a free democratic society is all about and that's why I have a right to voice my opinion. It may not be what the majority believes at the moment and that's okay. I just don't like some of the stuff that is happening. As I've always said and I stick with that: Just because everyone does it doesn't make it right.

My wife and I would never wear something like this, but, hey, what the heck! It works for this couple. I'm open.


It may not be politically correct what I wrote here, but I don't really give a crap. That's another thing minority interest groups are trying to push on us. I don't comply. I admit, I'm not politically correct and I make no excuses.






Thursday, October 22, 2015

#Schwerin, Germany



The town of Schwerin is located in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, East Germany, the former DDR. In fact, it is the capital city of that province. Many people in that part of Germany speak Russian.
Schwerin is a city of nearly 100,000 inhabitants, a city with beautiful, old buildings, a castle, and old churches. Unfortunately, when the Communists owned that part of Germany, they neglected the land and the buildings and many of them are in a sad state. Communism does not inspire people to work and does not promote entrepreneurship. Things deteriorate and don’t get fixed and that is evident in all the places we visited. Of course, after Germany was reunited again, people with vision moved in and began repairing and building, but it takes years to get things back to normal.

There are many lakes in the area. Most of them are somehow connected and the water flows eventually into the Baltic Sea. We booked a tour with a ship around one of the larger lakes. The shore of the lake is dotted with small cottages, many on stilts.

The public transport in Schwerin is the Electric Street car system. Very efficient and fast. It was interesting to see the cars maneuvering the narrow streets with all those Street cars.

We left Hamburg by train. According to our train ticket it was going to take one hour and forty minutes to get to Schwerin. My friend said he would wait for us by the Hauptbahnhof and I was looking forward to seeing him again after 55 years. We were supposed to be in Schwerin at 11:51 AM, but it didn’t happen that way.

They announce every stop over the speakers and they also have monitors everywhere. If you pay attention it is easy to know when you arrive at your destination. We had comfortable seats on the train, but we were anxious and a bit nervous. We are not used to traveling in a train. They finally announced we’d be arriving in Schwerin in 6 minutes. A couple of stops later I heard the announcer say ‘Schwerin’ and we left the train and stepped onto the boardwalk.

Somehow it didn’t look right. It was supposed to be the Hauptbahnhof, but we saw no buildings, just a small shelter with a bench. All around us were trees and grass. Then we looked at the sign and it read: Süd Schwerin (South Schwerin). I said to my wife, “This doesn’t look like the Hauptbahnhof.” By the time we realized we had left the train too soon it pulled away, leaving us in ‘No-man’s-land’ and in a panic.

There were a couple of young men who had also gotten off one of the wagons. We approached them and told them of our plight. One of them checked his cellphone and told us there would be another train coming at 12:37. Fifty minutes of waiting. Fifty minutes of sweating and great anxiety. We wondered what my friend was thinking when we didn’t get off the train in Schwerin.

The train finally arrived and we boarded it. It still took ten minutes to get to the Hauptbahnhof, because this train stopped at every small station. Schwerin Hauptbahnhof is not large, but it is in the center of the city. Our hotel was just across the street and we were happy to have arrived. Of course, my friend had left, but he told the front desk he would be back later.

Fifty-five years is a lifetime and long enough for people to grow apart. Sometimes so much that the connection you had when you were young has been severed. My friend and I had been in contact again by emails and by phone for about a year. We found each other again through the internet. When I told him that I was planning to visit Germany, he said, “But you must visit me.” Because of him, we changed our travel plans and we were glad we did. Otherwise we would never have seen Schwerin and all the other places we visited.

Obviously, be both had changed. Time does that to people. We were old now, but it seemed the years had done nothing to make us feel like strangers. In fact, we found we still had the same crazy ideas we had so long ago. We spent time with him and he showed us the sights in Schwerin. On our last full day in Schwerin we drove to the city of Wismar by the Baltic Sea. Another wonderful city to visit. They have a harbour and we ate in one of the harbour restaurants. Of course, we had a fish-dish and it tasted great.

There was one day we spent alone, doing some shopping and just walking around the little city. When we sat on one of the benches by the ‘Pfaffensee’, an old lady asked it was okay to join us on the bench. We had a great conversation with her for nearly an hour. We found out directly from one of the locals how Germans feel about all those refugees and other foreigners flocking to Germany. The Germans are not happy about it. They don’t like that their government pays so much money to the foreigners. People who have never worked in Germany, never paid taxes and didn’t contribute to the pension funds get more money than the Germans. Most of these refugees have many children and they get child support. No wonder they think Germany is a paradise.

Sounds pretty much the way it is in Canada. It will get worse when our new government brings in all the aging relatives of the refugees coming into Canada.

I strayed again. Back to our holiday. We stayed at the InterCity hotel in Schwerin and we were quite satisfied with our choice. Accommodations were good, breakfast was excellent and the selection was great. Many different kinds of bread and buns, cold cuts, cheeses, including Camembert, scrambled eggs, and more. Couldn’t ask for better. Loved those buns and the solid bread. None of that sponge bread so common in America.

We bought our train tickets from Schwerin to our next destination Binz on the island Rügen three days before we left Schwerin. We also bought our tickets from Binz to Berlin at the same time. I don’t quite understand how the transportation system works in Germany. Apparently, it is a good idea to buy tickets way ahead of time, because then you get better offers, whatever that means. The closer you leave buying tickets to your day of departure the more they cost. We paid 128 Euros (192,00 Canadian Dollars) for both of us for both sets of tickets. The tickets from Binz to Berlin we could have bought for 30 Euros less, but then we would have had to change trains in Strahlsund with only 8 minutes between arrival and departure of the next train. So we decided to pay the extra money and have peace of mind. No changing of trains.

We spent 5 days in Schwerin before we boarded our train to Binz. We had a large compartment to ourselves and plenty of room for our luggage, something we had worried about at home. Traveling with two large suitcases and hand luggage can become difficult when taking public transportation and we had no idea what to expect. Our fears were unfounded.

Once we sat in our seats we relaxed and enjoyed the sights. Traveling by train is more relaxing than driving a car.

Next: Sellin on the island Rügen by the Baltic Sea.

Sunday, October 18, 2015

The Killing of an #Elephant

Yesterday in the news they reported another senseless killing of an animal in Africa. This time a beautiful Bull Elephant, apparently shot by a German Trophy Hunter. Why would anyone kill an Elephant? The sale or even importing of ivory is illegal. You don't eat the meat. Besides, where is the sport in hunting Elephants?

I am a hunter, but I don't go on Trophy hunts. I hunt animals like deer, and when I'm fortunate to get one I take home the meat to eat. No different from buying meat in a store. Beef, pigs, chickens, and other animals that are raised for consumption also have to be killed to harvest the meat. That's how the world was designed. We all need to eat to stay alive, and I am not a vegetarian. Humans are not vegetarians. There are predators and there is prey. Predators have their eyes in the front so they can judge the distance from them to their prey. Prey, like deer, rabbits, other rodents, and most birds, have their eyes on the side of their head so they can spot their hunters more easily to give them a chance to escape. That's life. Sometimes it isn't pretty. Anyone ever watching the nature channels must have at one time or other watched a lion or other large cat chase and catch an antelope. It is brutal but reality.

Anyway, even as a hunter I cannot condone the senseless killing of an elephant, a lion, a tiger or any other exotic, usually on the verge of extinction, animal. There is no pride in that but only shame. It is not an accomplishment or great feat. How can you even miss a large target like an elephant?

I took this picture in the Berlin Zoo

More about #Hamburg



I still like to talk a little about Hamburg. There is a lot to see there. The one sight that impressed us the most was Miniature Wunderland. It is a must-see when in Hamburg. It is only six minutes with the U-Bahn from the Hauptbahnhof. You take the U3 to Baumwall and then it is a ten-minute walk to Miniature Wunderland.

We spent the whole day there. What a wonderful experience that was. 14,000 km of model railroad tracks running through miniature landscapes—valleys and mountains of places that actually exist. There are literally thousands of trains running continually. And the number of miniature people is unbelievable. They even have an airport with planes landing and taking off, rescue wagons and fire engines racing through a miniature town toward burning building. It is incredible and mindboggling. I took hundreds of pictures.

The whole thing is inside a multi-storey building and there was a huge crowd of people. We were there on Friday, August 28 and there were still a lot of children among the visitors. On one of the floors they have a restaurant where you can get food for a reasonable price. Even beer.

On Saturday we went to the Hagenbeck Zoo, also a recommended sight to see. You get there by using the U2 and it takes 15 minutes to get there. We paid 28 Euro (Can. $42.00) per person, which includes visiting the aquarium. It was a lot of money but worth it. We arrived at 9:45 AM and left at 5:00 PM. They give you a map to follow and it is quite easy to find all the displays and see all the animals. We didn’t see the lions; they were hiding. There is a restaurant inside the park and many small vendors where you can buy food.  

The next day, Sunday, we took the City Tour and it was interesting to see all the old buildings and other sights. You can get off and on whenever and wherever you like. The first time we didn’t get off anywhere, just enjoyed the sights. The second time we got off at a couple of places. One of the stops was the ‘Museum für Völkerkunde’ that displayed pictures and artifacts from ancient Egyptians, also some history about the Indians in America and their plight and pictures and artifacts from people in Africa and their suffering. It wasn’t worth the 8 Euros we paid per person to see that. We’ve seen stuff like that before. You don't need to go to a museum to find out about the misery in this world; you see that every day on TV.

In the afternoon we went on the harbor tour. That was quite interesting to see the big ships and how the load those containers onto the ships. Unfortunately, it rained during the tour, but they have a roof over the seats, so that wasn’t a big deal.

We used our Hamburg Card to buy the tickets for the city and harbor tour and got a discount, but we ran into a bit of a snag. We bought the tickets on Friday in Baumwall after visiting Miniature Wunderland, but when we got off the bus by the ‘Landungsbrücke’ they told us we have to board the ship in Baumwall where we bought the tickets, so we had to walk all the way to Baumwall, which fortunately was only a ten-minute walk. No big deal. Except we had to walk in the rain on the way back to the bus stop. The red Double-decker bus doesn’t stop in Baumwall. By the way, we paid 55.00 Euro for both of us with our discount, that’s about $83.00 Canadian. Seeing the sights is expensive, especially now with our low Dollar, but the whole trip cost a lot of money and there is no point in saving money in the wrong place. We may never go there again.

We enjoyed Hamburg, the sights and the good food, and we left there satisfied with what we had seen and done.

Our next destination was Schwerin, a city of about 100,000 people. Why Schwerin? An old friend of mine lives there. We haven’t seen each other since 1960. I was anxious to meet him again.

Friday, October 16, 2015

A Gruelling Day



 I’m still sticking to the conspiracy theory about the Universe. It doesn’t only want me to have any extra money it also wants me to have no time. Last week I cleaned up the yard, picking up most of the dead branches and burned them. Well, that wasn’t good enough. A few days ago we had a storm with winds up to 100 km/h. High winds cause branches to break off trees.

We have willows growing on the perimeter of our property. I planted them twenty years ago and I curse the day when we made the decision to plant willows. I got the cuttings from a friend of mine. They were sticks about one foot long. In the Spring I stuck them into soil and kept watering them. They developed roots and sprouted little branches, and then in the Fall I planted them around our property.

Willows grow fast and within three years we had a nice high hedge. The problem with willows is that the branches are very brittle. That saying about ‘bending like a willow’ is not quite accurate. Those brittle branches break, especially when it gets windy. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: DON’T PLANT WILLOWS!! Unless you are asking to be punished for it. There is no end to the work with them. Those lovely catkins on the pussywillows are not worth it.

Repeat after me: “I WILL NEVER PLANT WILLOWS!” Again: “I WILL NEVER PLANT WILLOWS!”

Our nice clean yard was covered with a thick carpet of willow branches. We’ve never had it this bad. Not only our yard but also part of our neighbor’s yard in the back on one side. I try to be a good neighbor and I always clean up those branches even from their yards.

My wife and I went out this morning and raked the branches together and moved them into a pile in my garden. That pile is huge. I’m hoping for no wind tomorrow morning so I can burn them. There will be high flames and it will be scary. We burn twice a year: once in the Spring and once in the Fall. I could take the branches to the dump but that would involve several trips with my truck. Faster and easier just to burn them at home.

Either way it is gruelling work raking and loading up the piles of branches into a trailer, and then dumping them again in the garden. On top of that it was windy and chilly. I have a bit of a cold and too much exertion causes one to perspire and tire more quickly. I did not need this extra work. What makes matters worse I wanted to go fishing this morning. That didn’t happen.

The Universe doesn’t want me to go fishing, either.

Now I have a dilemma. If there is no wind tomorrow morning I will have to burn those darn branches, but if it is windy I can go fishing. What should I pray for? Wind or no wind?

I’m really torn…

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

A Conspiracy Theory




I believe there is a conspiracy going on against me. To be more specific—it’s the Universe. It doesn’t want me to save any money.

Let me explain. Three of my fishing reels broke in a short time, two in one day. Today something else broke. My wife woke me in the middle of the night and said, “The fridge is dying.”
I said, “Who is dying?”
“The fridge.”
“Oh!” Actually that was not a real surprise. The fridge had been making strange noises for a long time, mostly when it shut down. It sounded like something was going to explode any moment. Sometimes it was so loud it woke us up during the night. The warning signs were there. I tried to ignore them.
“There is nothing I can do about that now. I’ll check it out in the morning,” I said and turned around to get back to sleep.
“I can’t sleep.”
“What’s the problem?”
“That noise is driving me crazy.”
“What noise?”
“Can’t you hear that noise? That bubbling sound?”
 “Oh, that noise.” I said. “I find it soothing.” I actually did. That must be the sound a baby hears when it is still in its mother’s womb. Gurgle. Gurgle.
“Go check it out.”
By now I was wide awake and I knew I wasn’t going to get any sleep, not for a while, anyway, so I got up. We both got up, actually.
When I walked into the kitchen and listened to the fridge stuttering away I was reminded of an idling car with a bad muffler. “That doesn’t sound too good,” I admitted. We stood there listening for a while, but it wouldn’t shut off. We finally turned it off manually. When it stopped it made a loud noise like a motor that backfired. After waiting for a few minutes we turned it back on to a lower level. It was silent but not for long.
We were barely getting comfortable in bed when the gurgling started again.
“We’ll have to get used to it,” I said. “At least for tonight.”
“Well, okay. Tomorrow we’ll go and buy a new fridge like we should have when the noises started months ago. I knew this was going to happen.”
I closed my eyes. There was no use discussing it now. I needed to get my sleep because I had planned to get up early and go fishing for an hour or so.
I got up early but not to go fishing. I checked the Internet for a deal on fridges. The problem is when you are forced to buy something there are no sales. My philosophy has always been never to buy anything when I need it. Always buy when it’s on sale.
We were limited to the choice of fridges. We wanted a black one. Black is not in style anymore; now everything is stainless steel. We did find sales; we found sales, but no black ones. They were available—a month from now.
We needed a fridge now, preferable today or tomorrow.
We finally managed to find what we were after in Selkirk, but we’d have to wait till the end of the month. We were left with no choice.
The fridge still works, gurgling away happily, but now we don’t trust it anymore. We moved the frozen stuff into our big freezer and keep very little food in the fridge.
Our fridge isn’t even that old. The salesman at the store told us that fridges nowadays don’t last longer than ten years. That’s how they build them.
That is almost criminal. I remember when we used to buy old fridges as a second fridge for the basement, the garage, or for the cottage. Those fridges lasted forever.
What happened?
I tell you what happened. The consumer is being screwed by the manufacturers on all levels. Nothing lasts anymore. Things are built to break down as soon as you bring them home. And nobody fixes anything anymore, because repairmen charge you a fortune just to come and look at an appliance to tell you that it isn’t worth fixing. They suggest it is more economical to buy a new one.
No wonder the dumps are overflowing with garbage and old junk!

Monday, October 12, 2015

#Happy Thanksgiving

We are celebrating Thanksgiving in Canada today. Over the years some Thanksgivings were nice with good weather, but this year it isn't. Yesterday we had such a beautiful day but that changed over night. It rained and we  had high winds, apparently up to 100 km/hr. I believe that, because our yard, which I had already cleaned, was covered with branches from the Willows. Thank you, Mother Nature, for creating all this work for me. I already have a huge pile of branches to burn on my garden. We covered that pile last night with a tarp to keep the wood dry, but the strong winds blew off part of the tarp and half of the former dry woodpile is wet now. On top of the bad weather it also turned cold. About an hour ago I checked and it was 5C.

However, that won't deter us from celebrating Thanksgiving. The kids are coming over this afternoon and we'll have our traditional turkey dinner with red cabbage and other good stuff.

We have good reason to be thankful. My garden produced well this year. Tomatoes where, well, so-so, but we had plenty of peppers, beans, red beets, and even some potatoes. No carrots and not many cucumbers.

I've also been successful with my fishing. We've eaten our share of Walleyes and Sauger. I even managed to catch a few Goldeyes, which are in the freezer for the meat to become firm. As soon as it gets colder I'll start smoking them.

Our trip to Germany was also a success. We saw many nice places, ate good German food and drank lots of German beer. As enjoyable as the trip was we are happy to be home again and we appreciate all the good things we have in this country.

So I'd like to wish everyone who reads my blog

                                                  Happy Thanksgiving

Be grateful for what you have. Enjoy the freedom and abundance we have in this country, but don't take it for granted. Who knows how long it will last. 

Friday, October 9, 2015

A Good Day of Fishing

I went fishing early this morning and I can't complain. It was cold, minus 1C, and a thick layer of fog covered the river. Fog was all around and you could only see the outlines of trees on the other side of the river. I was at my spot at 7:30 AM and didn't catch anything for a while, but then I caught a small  Sauger, which I kept. I didn't want to stay too long because it was shopping day and I had in mind to leave at 8:00 AM. My second fish was a little larger, but then I hooked into something big. I knew it was not a small fish by the way my line was pulled under the water. When I brought my catch closer to shore, I began to worry. Would my line hold? Would I be able to flip the fish on shore? The line held and I managed to pull the fish out of the water and swing it onto the rocks. The fish was hooked well. It was a Walleye, one of the ones everyone going to that particular stretch of the river wants to catch. Most of the fish we catch there are Sauger. Smaller than Walleye but just as good an eating fish. There were a couple of other fishermen beside me and they were as ecstatic as I was. One guy said, "I fished that spot since 6 o'clock and I didn't catch that one."

Well, my friend, that's how the cards fall, in this case that's how the fish bite. It happened to me many times. I fish for an hour and a new guy or woman comes along and catches a big one within the first five minutes. It is the case of being in the right spot at the right time. Fishing takes some skill but also a lot of luck. This time I was the lucky one. My Walleye measured 52cm and weight at around 3 1/2 pounds. It provided me with 500 g of fillets. A nice meal for my wife and me.

This made up for the bad luck I had a couple of weeks ago when I broke 2 of my good reels.

It doesn't qualify for a Master Angler Award, but it is still a nice trophy for me. I feel lucky.  

Thursday, October 8, 2015

More about #Hamburg



I still like to talk a little about Hamburg. There is a lot to see there. The one sight that impressed us the most was Miniature Wunderland. It is a must-see when in Hamburg. It is only six minutes with the U-Bahn from the Hauptbahnhof. You take the U3 to Baumwall and then it is a ten-minute walk to Miniature Wunderland.

We spent the whole day there. What a wonderful experience that was. 14,000 km of model railroad tracks running through miniature landscapes—valleys and mountains of places that actually exist. There are literally hundreds of trains running continuously. And the number of miniature people is unbelievable. They even have an airport with planes landing and taking off, rescue wagons and fire engines racing through a miniature town toward burning building. It is incredible and mind-boggling. I took hundreds of pictures.

The whole thing is inside a multi-storey building and there was a huge crowd of people. We were there on Friday, August 28 and there were still a lot of children among the visitors. On one of the floors they have a restaurant where you can get food for a reasonable price. Even beer.

Miniature Wunderland--mind-blowing details


On Saturday we went to the #Hagenbeck Zoo, also a recommended sight to see. You get there by using the U2 and it takes 15 minutes to get there. We paid 28 Euro ($42.00) per person, which includes visiting the aquarium. It was a lot of money but worth it. We arrived at 9:45 AM and left at 5:00 PM. They give you a map to follow and it is quite easy to find all the displays and see all the animals. We didn’t see the lions; they were hiding. There is a restaurant inside the park and many small vendors where you can buy food.  



The next day, Sunday, we took the City Tour and it was interesting to see all the old buildings and other sights. You can get off and on whenever and wherever you like. The first time we didn’t get off anywhere, just enjoyed the sights. The second time we got off at a couple of places. One of the stops was the ‘Museum für Völkerkunde’ that displayed pictures and artifacts from ancient Egyptians, also some history about the Indians in America and their plight and pictures and artifacts from people in Africa and their suffering. It wasn’t worth the 8 Euros we paid per person to see that. We’ve seen stuff like that before. There is plenty of suffering going on everywhere. I don't need to go to a museum to see that.

In the afternoon we went on the harbor tour. That was quite interesting to see the big ships and how they load those containers onto the ships. Unfortunately, it rained during the tour, but they have a roof over the seats, so that wasn’t a big deal.

We used our Hamburg Card to buy the tickets for the city and harbor tour and got a discount, but we ran into a bit of a snag. We bought the tickets on Friday in Baumwall after visiting Miniature Wunderland, but when we got off the bus by the ‘Landungsbrücke’ they told us we have to board the ship in Baumwall where we bought the tickets, so we had to walk all the way to Baumwall, which fortunately was only a ten-minute walk. No big deal. Except we had to walk in the rain on the way back to the bus stop. The red Double-Decker bus doesn’t stop in Baumwall. By the way, we paid 55.00 Euro for both of us with our discount, that’s about $83.00 Canadian. Seeing the sights is expensive, especially now with our low Dollar, but the whole trip to Germany cost a lot of money and there is no point in saving money in the wrong place. In fact, the whole point in going on a trip like that is seeing the sights.We may never go there again.



We enjoyed Hamburg, the sights and the good food, and we left there satisfied with what we had seen and done.

Our next destination was Schwerin, a city of about 90,000 people. Why Schwerin? An old friend of mine lives there. We haven’t seen each other since 1960. I was anxious to meet him again.

Monday, October 5, 2015

#Hamburg, Germany



 Hamburg Hauptbahnhof is fairly large, with trains coming and going day and night; and there is also the subway.

We bought a Hamburg Tourist Card for two days, which allowed us to use the Subway, the train, and the bus for free. It also saved us a lot of agony buying tickets at the automatic ticket machines. And we got a discount when we booked the city and harbor tour.

We stayed at the Novum Continental Hotel. It is just across the street from the train station and a good strategic location. There were restaurants strung along the ‘Kirchenallee’ and we didn’t have far to walk to find one with good food. All of them served good German Food and, of course, good German beer. Prices were descent.

As I mentioned in one of my earlier blogs, bottled water in Germany is expensive in the restaurants. They don’t bring water to the table for free the way we are used to in Canada and the US. We bought bottled water at a grocery store not far from our hotel for 11 cents a bottle. Curiously, the also charge 25 cents deposit for each bottle, but you get it back. They have an interesting way of doing it. There are machines where you place the bottles on a moving belt and you get a printed voucher which you redeem at the cashier. Unfortunately, when we took our bottles back the machine was out of order, so we left nine empties in our hotel when we checked out.

A not so pleasant thing to mention is that the area east of the train station is not the best area in town. It is slowly being overrun by foreigners. I won’t say what nationality, but the streets are filthy with garbage everywhere. There is no German spoken in that area. Also, there are a lot of beggars walking around, bothering you, even when you sit on the terrace of a restaurant having a drink or something to eat. They sit on the sidewalks with their cups in front of them, but they also come up to you and beg for money. Many of them are old men or women. It is a shame what is happening to the beautiful Germany.

I hope it doesn’t happen here when all those refugees we take in bring their aging parents and grandparents over. They’ll be a drain on our Healthcare and Social Assistance programs. The taxpayers will have to foot the bill for them, because those people never paid a dime on taxes, but they will reap the benefits of hard working Canadians (and Americans). This is the sad truth and fact and has nothing to do with racism.

Talking about restaurants; we had our fill of German food: Schnitzel, Pork-hocks, Rouladen, delicious Pork roasts, Headcheese, and other good stuff. Accompanied by Sauerkraut, Red Cabbage, wonderful boiled potatoes and great tasting fried potatoes.

Some restaurants offered French Fries. We only had them once and regretted it. You don’t visit Germany to eat French Fries. I get plenty of them here at the Burger places.

We ate ‘Currywurst’ and ‘Bratwurst’ with a bun or potato salad for lunch. And let’s not forget all the beer we downed. We usually ordered a half-liter mug and it was barely enough.

Being home now I miss the variety of great tasting bread and buns. I’m stuck again eating those tasteless buns from Safeway, the Superstore, or Extra Food where we shop. They are full of air and fall apart. Obviously, some ingredient is missing. Even the hot dog buns are crappy.

Oh well, I’ll get used to them again. We have other things that are better. Last night we went to Tony Roma’s and I had the ribs and a baked potato. It was great also. Except the prices, especially the beer, are not as reasonable, and you pay taxes and have to tip, which adds 30% to the price. We paid $65.00 (including taxes and tip). That was a downer.

Just as an example. This is a picture of a fish dish. Including ½ liter beer it cost 12.20 Euros, which at the current state of our Dollar comes to $18.30 (that includes the taxes and the tip, which is part of the quoted price). That makes $36.60 for two dinners. What a difference!

It looks great and it was delicious


To be continued

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Food, Beer, Trains, and other Stuff—interesting or not



 As I mentioned in my last blog, we were gone for three weeks. It was enjoyable most of the time. We ate plenty of good German food and drank a liter of beer every day. You can buy beer in every grocery store and from every vendor that sells sausage and other fast food.

I paid one Euro for half a liter beer in a small store at the train station. I also bought a Salami sandwich for one and a half Euros.

I wish liqueur laws were not so restrictive in Canada and beer not so expensive. Our government is just too damn greedy. They could make just as much money if the prices came down. People would buy more; I know I would. Instead I make my own beer which is time spent I could use to do other stuff. Even though beer and wine is so much cheaper in Germany and so readily available, we never saw any drunks.

I was quite happy to get away from the Tim Hortons, the A # W’s, the McDonalds, the Burger Kings, and other similar junk food places. However, our last breakfast in Berlin at the airport was at a Burger King, because I didn’t want to pay nine Euros for a Croissant and a cup of tea at those other places.

Why are these places at the airports so greedy?

I have to inject here that I don’t care much for our new Winnipeg Airport. In the old airport I used to take a sandwich and a soft drink to the airport to have for breakfast. They had tables and chairs before you had to go through Security. Not so in the new airport! You can’t take any liquids through Security to the other side, which means you are forced to pay exuberant prices for food and drinks. We paid $3.00 for a bottle of water—in Canada! That bugs me.

Speaking of water, in Germany you don’t get water in restaurants—not for free, anyway. A bottle of water costs nearly as much as a bottle of beer, which made the choice what to drink quite clear.

One peculiar thing we found in Germany is the fact that employees behind counters, be it in a store, a restaurant, a train station, or even at a government outlet, can be quite sarcastic, bored and even rude. I had my first experience with that in the Hamburg airport.

I asked a female attendant how to get to the ‘Hauptbahnhof’. She just laughed and said, “That is twenty minutes away.” I said, “I’m aware of that, but where do I board the train?”
Attendant:  “Downstairs.”
Me: “How do I get there?”
Attendant: “Down the stairs.” Gives me a strange look.
Me: “Where are the stairs?”
Attendant: “Outside.”
Me: “Where outside? Which exit do I use?”
Finally, with obvious boredom, she points me in the right direction.
Another incident happened in a store when I asked the saleswoman how much a certain item cost. She said, “If you would raise your eyes you could see the sign with the price at the top of the shelf.”

At a fast-food place I changed my mind about a fish-sandwich I bought. I saw one that looked better.  The guy behind the counter was totally annoyed about that. When I told him I was going to eat it there, he got all flustered because now he had to take the sandwich out of the paper bag he had shoved it and put it onto a paper plate. No smiles from him.

It may possibly have something to do with the fact that in Germany nobody leaves a tip; not in restaurants or anywhere else. You just round it up to the next Euro.  By the way, before we left on our trip, I checked out the internet about tipping in Germany and I got completely wrong information. This guy suggested to leave 5 to 7 Dollars a night with the maids in the hotel and 10 to 15 percent at restaurants. False information. Nobody tips. 

About traveling in Germany. In Winnipeg we don’t have streetcars, not anymore; we don’t have a subway, and nobody uses the train. I don’t remember when I used a bus for the last time. My mode of transportation is a car. So getting around in Germany presented some problems at first. Our first trial began in Hamburg. We had to buy a ticket for the train on a ticket dispenser. You have to punch in where you want to go and it tells you how much it cost and then you put in your money and it prints out your ticket. Sounds easy enough but it isn’t. They have zones with different tariffs and we found it confusing.

We speak fluent German, which is a good thing but can also be negative at times. Asking for help with certain things Germans do on a daily basis might earn you strange looks. A young man finally helped us with buying our ticket.

Actually, you can buy tickets at counter where you talk to a live person and that made future purchases easy.

In Hamburg we went on a city tour and also on a tour around the harbor. We learned how to use the ‘U-Bahn’ (Subway), and the train. Once we knew how it wasn’t all that difficult. By the way, all the trains, the street cars, and the U-Bahn run on electric power. No pollution there and they are silent.

In Schwerin, our next stop, we got a Tourist card from our hotel, which allowed us the use of any public transportation system. We used the street car a lot.

On the island Rügen we received a Tourist card from our hotel, also. There we used the local ‘Beach train’ to get around in the city and the bus to travel to nearby small communities.

In Berlin, again with a free Tourist card, we used the train to get around, but we also did a lot of walking. Walking was good exercise and kept us from gaining weight from all the Schnitzel, the Pork hocks, and the delicious fish we consumed and those gallons of beer we drank.

People in Germany walk a lot and they use their bikes. There were hundreds of bikes chained to bike stands by the ‘Hauptbahnhof’ and also at one of the outdoor markets we visited. People on bicycles where everywhere. They have special bike paths in many places. Evidence that people are physically more active was the fact that we saw no obese and very few severely overweight people. Some a little heavier maybe, but many were slim and trim-looking.

On the whole, people were dressed nice and clean and not sloppy. We only saw one guy with his crotch down to his knees and his pants on the verge of slipping down; he was probably a foreign traveler. Some old men were dressed a little too flamboyant for my taste. My wife thought it was refreshing and interesting, but she won’t get me to dress like that. Tattoos were also evident but not common and we saw the odd girl wearing torn jeans; fewer yet with blue or purple hair or crazy haircuts. I don’t remember seeing any guys wearing rings or diamond studs in their ears. I’m sure they exist; there are odd and strange people everywhere. You can’t get away from them, no matter where you go.

One thing I found annoying and that was all the dogs. Germans seem to have a love-affair with dogs, and not only small dogs; some are quite large. They take their dogs into the bus, into restaurants, and to the beach. Some people have more than one dog.

The other day on TV they showed some kind of convention where people showed off their dogs, doing tricks and stuff like that. I don’t know where this happened. It doesn’t matter, anyway, and I wasn’t that interested. Okay, I admit, dogs are pretty smart, loyal to their owners, and good company for a lonely person, but let’s remember that they are still only animals and not people. Dressing up a dog like a person or a baby is going too far. Come on, if you want a baby than have one—a human one.

I’m not a dog-person.

To be continued…

Thursday, October 1, 2015

A not so pleasant Day



Last Thursday was not a good day for me.

I had planned to go fishing early in the morning at my usual fishing spot by the Lockport Dam, five minutes from our place. I like to go at daybreak because then I have the place to myself most of the time. There are certain spots along the river which are more productive than others. Regular visiting anglers know these spots. And it seems everyone wants to fish on ‘my spot’. On some occasions at certain times of the year I fished practically shoulder to shoulder with other anglers. Some of them can get quite aggressive and will move in as soon as you vacate your spot to change lures.

Usually the first anglers arrive at around 8:15 AM and it can get crowded in a short time. I like to be gone by then.

Thursday was a cloudy, dreary looking day and I was feeling jittery when I woke up. I should have crawled back to bed
.
When I got to ‘my spot’ there was already a young man fishing there, but he left about ten minutes later. He had his limit of four Sauger. That’s what I was after also—Sauger.

It started already with my first cast. The bait on my Shimano reel didn’t work anymore and my line balled into a ‘bird’s nest’ on my reel. Fortunately, I had a second rod and reel along. So instead of wasting time with the tangled up line I decided to change to the other rod.

When I cast my bait again into the water, the bail didn’t work, either. I could see the jig dangling in front of me. I reached out to grab it but my hand seemed to go right through the line. I couldn’t grab it. I tried again with the same result. Now you have to remember it was a strange day, overcast and the light was eerie; things were difficult to see clearly.

After a few unsuccessful tries to grab the line with the jig at the end I panicked a little. I looked around if I could see a body lying among the rocks—my body. I honestly thought I had died. I had left the land of the living and was now a ghost. You know, you’ve seen movies like that.

That feeling lasted only for a short time when discovered that the line had wrapped itself around the rod and the jig was dangling not from the tip of the rod but from the middle. I also realized that I had picked up the rod with the Shimano reel again. That’s why the bail didn’t work.

I got the other rod and tried again. I caught a few fish, mostly small ones which I released back into the water. Everything was going fine except for that jittery feeling that didn’t want to leave me. When I had four keepers I cast the jig out one more time, hoping for a larger fish.

My jig got caught between rocks, which happens a lot there. I usually lose one or two jigs to that rocky bottom of the river. That is something you have to count on. I tried to dislodge it. Not looking down, I stepped onto a wet rock, slipped and fell—right on top of my reel. It could not bear my weight and the ‘foot’ that holds it to the rod broke off.
 
That was my Daiwa reel; not as expensive as my Shimano but a good, reliable and great little reel that has given me years of trouble-free service.

I went home not a happy camper.

The Daiwa reel was beyond repair, but I was hoping to fix the Shimano. When I opened it up, I saw that the bail guide had broken off. It is an old reel and parts are not readily available, if at all. I made a bail guide from a nail. The bail sort of works—sometimes. You can’t make a piece of precision-component from a nail with a coarse grinder I built using the motor of an old washing machine; it just won’t work.

I resigned to the fact that I can’t use it. It is finished, kaput. It is important to use equipment that works properly and smoothly, not something that is now a piece of junk that’ll drive me crazy.
Desperate, I bought a couple of used reels and rods from some guy who advertised them on Kijiji, but they are not my old, reliable Shimano or my Daiwa. What was I thinking? People sell stuff at Garage sales or on line because they want to get rid of it, stuff that doesn’t work properly and stuff they consider garbage. If it would still work they wouldn't sell it. I might just have to sell them again to another unsuspecting desperate angler, and then spend the money and buy something descent and new.

Why is the Universe so cruel?