Sunday, 22 December 2024

Bears Abroad - A Cruise Down the Rhine (in 2023)

 

It was a great honour for this Small Bear to put together a presentation for our IWA branch in October this year, all about our journeys so far on the waterways of Europe. 

I have already written about our journey on the Rhône, but I thought it might be nice to share some of our other adventures, so here is a post about our journey on the Rhine.


We bears - Hanley, Endon and I - and our human guardians Polar and Grizzly, travelled out to Basel in Switzerland by train to meet our cruise boat.  We went through a huge lock before bedtime and probably some more during the night on our way to our first stop at Strasbourg the following morning, which was our first proper look at a very big inland port, where the Rhône-Rhine Canal and Marne-Rhine canals reach the Rhine.  

  

We realised that the Rhine was a much busier commercial waterway than the Rhône had been, although this part turned out to be quiet compared to further downstream.  As on the Rhône, the Rhine locks are part of massive civil engineering works including diversion canals and huge hydro-electric power stations. 

Endon Bear was chosen to enjoy the first adventure ashore, a trip to the Black Forest – with gateau, of course! 

 

He visited an area around a lovely but very deep lake called the Mummelsee, where legends say mermaids used to live.  Endon saw a statue of a mermaid and lots of super carvings, but his favourite part of the journey was seeing the forest itself and the pretty houses the local people live in.

 

Hanley Bear got to visit Speyer the following day, which is an ancient city with a fine cathedral and old city walls.  He found the best way to see the city was from Grizzly's backpack, as Polar needed to take her big camera in her bag.

 

I had a trip to Heidelburg in the afternoon, visiting a big ruined castle up on the top of the hill that overlooks the city, before looking around the centre and exploring the riverside area.  It was a very beautiful old city and I was lucky to see it on a gloriously sunny day too. 

All three of us also had adventures aboard the ship, including a game of deck quoits with human guardian Grizzly, where we sat on the quoits, and eating cakes at afternoon tea.

 

After Strasbourg, we didn’t see any more locks or canalised sections of waterway, as we were cruising on the great river itself.  The most spectacular part of the journey was through the Rhine Gorge.

 

There were castles everywhere and, according to the captain of our ship, in the olden days lots of them were owned by bad people who robbed travellers on the roads and on the river, so it was a very dangerous journey.

 

Because there is a strong current in the river through the gorge, it is still quite a risky journey and special boating rules apply to allow boats coming up stream to choose which side of the river they want to use.  If they are going to be passing on the wrong (starboard) side, they put up a special blue board by the ship’s bridge to let other craft know and the oncoming boats do the same to show that they have seen and understood the signal.  The captain told us that they also send automatic radio signals to each other. 

We bears thought this was a very clever idea and started looking out for blue boards on our boat and the others.  We saw a very special boat, the steamer Goethe, which has been restored after spending many years sunk in the river after being bombed during World War 2.

 

We all visited Koblenz after that and had an exciting cable car ride across the Rhine to the fortress overlooking the city, where you get a marvellous view of where the river Moselle joins it.   

There were absolutely huge freight boats on the river now, often big tugs pushing three or four big container barges, and the railway lines on both sides of the river were very busy too.  Around 400 boats use this stretch of waterway every day!

Hanley Bear had the first of two unusual railway journeys the following day, as we stopped at Königswinter, where a little rack railway took him up to a great viewpoint above the river, with mountains to the east and the cities of Bonn and Cologne to the west and north.   

We spent the following morning in Cologne and I went ashore with our human guardians to see the Cathedral and famous Hohenzollern railway bridge, although we found Hanley Bear had stowed away with us when he heard that we were also visiting a brewery!

          

Heading north from Cologne, the development along the river banks got much more industrial and less picturesque, although it was still interesting to see all the different types of boats on the move.   We had a very long journey overnight and, when we woke up, we found we were in Amsterdam!

I enjoyed looking around this very pretty city with human guardian Polar, quite early before it got too busy.  I loved the canals, which are kept clean by flushing fresh water through every morning, and all the elegant houses and interesting houseboats – but it was the wrong time of year for tulips!

Hanley Bear had a different adventure, as he went north out of the city for a trip on the Medemblik Steam Railway.  This ran across very flat countryside, where they grow tulips in the spring, to the coastal town of Hoorn.  Hanley’s favourite part of the journey was crossing a motorway by level-crossing, with six lanes of road traffic stopped to let the little train pass!

We all had a marvellous time, but our holiday was almost at an end – and so is my little article.  But I will tell you about our second visit to The Netherlands in another post and this time there will be plenty of tulips!

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Friday, 20 December 2024

Two Bears in Dorset - Fossil Hunting!

 This summer, Hanley Bear and I went on a super holiday with Polar, Grizzly, Grizzly's daughter and son-in-law and Grizzly's grandcubs, plus Florence, their doggie.


We all rented a pretty cottage together in Dorset.  On the way, we met two Small Bears from Shaftsbury in Dorset who said that there was a lot to enjoy in their home county.  Of course Hanley told them it could not possibly be as good as Staffordshire.

"But we have a coastline - with fossils!" said one of the Dorset Bears.  "And apple cake."
Hanley and I agreed that the apple cake was delicious, although Shaftsbury is better known to humans of a certain age for a certain type of loaf, that isn't actually made there!
The first day we were in Dorset was the elder grandcub's birthday.  He had presents to open, but his main present was joining a fossil-hunting walk along the beach at Charmouth.
We searched very carefully and found some tiny ammonites, but there were huge ones to see in the museum, which were bigger than us.  We found it hard to believe these had been sea creatures alive hundreds of millions of years ago. 
After Charmouth, we visited Lyme Regis for lunch, which I had to explain to Hanley was nothing to do with Newcastle-under-Lyme, the town next to Stoke-on-Trent.  He said the beer was very good, even if it wasn't brewed in Staffordshire.
Then we went for a walk and saw the statue of Mary Anning, who discovered lots of ancient creatures while excavating fossils in the 19th century, with the help of her dog, Tray.

Back at the cottage, we made a proper "Finds Table" of the coffee table, putting down lots of newspaper so we didn't scratch it and sorting our fossils into different types and sizes. 
It was tiring work for Small Bears!

Another day, we went to the Etches Museum, founded by Mr Steve Etches who still excavates fossils around Kimmeridge Bay and has a huge Pliosaur skull and hundreds of other amazing finds.

We bought a tiny envelope of small fossils each with our pocket money to add to our collection from Charmouth, and Polar collected some leaflets about the different types of rock to share with the local school.

Then we went fossil-hunting on the beach again.  Kimmeridge Bay was quite different to Charmouth, and you could see the outlines of several big ammonites in the flat rocks along the shore.

As well as looking for fossils, we were able to search for interesting living creatures in the rock pools, while Florence ran about on the flat rocks. 
"I hope she doesn't run too far," said Hanley.  "There might be bombs and bullets further up the beach!"
But both the human cubs and Florence were very sensible and didn't go past the warning sign, even though we couldn't see any red flags.
On the way home, we stopped at The Blue Pool, a lovely country park around a lake.  Hanley Bear was very excited when he found out that the lake is there because lots a clay was dug out of the ground here and sent to Wedgwood's factory in Stoke-on-Trent for making fine china.
Hanley and I climbed some of the pine trees and tried to find any small wild bears living in the woods but, if they were there, they were obviously very shy.
Back at the cottage, we opened our little packets of fossils to see what we had.  They were very small indeed, but ideal for a Small Bear collection, so we will look after them carefully.
We had other adventures in Dorset too, so I will try to write about those soon, as I have lots to tell you about our adventures this year that I haven't put on my blog yet!


Space Aliens in "Me" Park?

 Ay up, everyone!  It's Hanley Bear here, with a guest post for Sonning's blog about something strange that happened in Me Park during the summer.

"Me Park" being Hanley Park, of course, which is also the best park in the world, so I suppose that's why visitors from outer space came to have a look at it and landed their spacecraft there!

I was with the group of humans who have a regular Wednesday walk around Me Park when we spotted something very strange up in the top field.  I could see at once that it was definitely not from Earth and was probably an alien base of some sort, although the humans guarding it were doing a good job of persuading other passers-by that it was something to do with art.

A few days later, Polar and Grizzly took me back with them for a closer look.  By this time, a large crowd had gathered, and some of them were being allowed into the alien base!  One of the people pretending it was art gave us a map; it looked very easy to get lost inside, but I did my best to memorise it.

Polar and Grizzly had to take their shoes off to go inside but my small bear claws were small enough not to damage the strange fabric, so I was allowed in too.  I could see straight away that it was definitely not a human thing!


The people guarding it said all the light inside was natural but, although it was a dull day outside, the colours inside were glowing.  Definitely alien technology!  I told Grizzly I thought the aliens were probably friendly but not to get too close to any funny egg-shaped things we found on the floor, just in case.

I thought I spotted a small alien figure crawling along one of the passageways, but it turned out to be a human cub.  

 

I followed it anyway and found the most amazing chamber with a beautiful ceiling covered in patterns, which are probably alien writing.  I wondered if it explained the way to get to their home planet, or how to make homes like this for humans too.

We had plenty of time to carry on exploring but I couldn't find anywhere that looked like an engine room or control panel, just more colourful corridors and bouncy-walled small rooms.

I had hoped to meet the aliens and thank them for coming to visit Me Park, but we only saw their human helpers...

... unless the human helpers were the aliens, disguised as humans!