Category Archives: Travel

Winter Wonderland

It’s been snowing quite a bit here during the last week or two, and by now we have about half a metre (19 inches) of snow, I think. I took some photos on Saturday morning, when there was much less snow than now.

Winter landscape around my village on December 18, 2010

This was taken during a walk around our village on Saturday morning, before it started snowing non-stop for the rest of the weekend.

I think this is the most snow we’ve had where I live since the winter of 1979, when the snow was higher than I was tall. Of course, I was a bit younger then…

Snake!

This afternoon our neighbour rang the doorbell and asked me to help him catch a snake in his garden. Yes, you read that right. He’d seen his cat outside of his window obviously prowling something and then taking a sudden leap because something lunged at him. He managed to put a bucket on top of the snake upside down and now wanted me to help to put it into an upright bucket with a lid. The snake was very aggressive and hissed like mad, but we managed to put it into the second bucket. Here it is:

It didn’t look like a native snake and googling for snake images didn’t help at all. We didn’t want to take it into the forest and release it in case it was non-native, but it was hard to identify. Finally I called a friend who teaches biology and knows a lot about snakes; he even keeps one as a pet. I showed him the photos I took, and he said it was a grass snake (called Ringelnatter in German). They usually have two distinctive yellow spots behind their head, which this snake was missing, but my expert explained that these spots faded with age.

Compare the head with this photo.

He said our specimen was an older one and quite a big one to boot. He recommended releasing it at the edge of the forst, preferably somewhere where it can catch some sun tomorrow. Of course we obliged. The snake pretended to be dead for a little bit, but quickly recovered and slid away into the darkness…

Frohe Ostern!

We had some visitors over the long weekend and visited the butterfly garden in Sayn and then went to see the birds of prey at Burg Maus yesterday.

Links are only available in German, sorry:

André took some awesome photos, the best of which you can see on his Flickr page. Here’s a little preview:

Forty years ago…

… men first landed on the moon.

Hal has some postings with links up.

I wasn’t born yet back then, but I’m sure I would have been glued to the TV. Today, you can recreate the experience by going to Kottke’s Apollo 11 page.

Wer noch mehr über das Mondprogramm der NASA erfahren möchte, dem empfehle ich das Buch, welches ich gerade lese: Der Mond (weitere Rezension) von Ralf Jaumann (Herausgeber).