Trying out 24 hour shopping

Having read about the 24 hour supermarket machine, we just had to try it out for ourselves.

The menu was easy to operate, and our purchase was delivered quickly.  But I had a feeling, that the 2000 items had been selected to give a wide variety of types of item, rather than trying to offer different brands of the same item.

Trying out the 24 hour supermarket machine
Trying out the 24 hour supermarket machine

This is obviously an attraction for those who have left something at home, a toothbrush, for example, and are happy to have any type as long as it’s available any time of the day or night.

Since there is a normal type of supermarket in Puerto del Carmen next to the machine, anyone wanting something more specific may need to go there during opening hours instead.

Open-air theatre in Oberursel

Each year one of the regular attractions in Oberursel is the open-air theatre production called “Theater im Park”.

The production, featuring local actors, started in 1994 and performs a different play if each.  Until last year, this took place at the “Villa Gans”, just off the old main road between Oberursel and Königstein.

This year, for the first time, the plays are being held in the grounds of the “Klinik Hohe Mark”, which is a short walk from the end of the U-Bahn line at the northern end of Oberursel.

The play this year is called “Datterich”, Datterich being the name of one of the leading characters.  Herr Datterich used to be an official in the tax office in Oberursel, but now spends much of his time in the town’s public houses and hiding from those he himself owes money to.

And although the play originates from Darmstadt, it has been adapted to fit in with the geography of Oberursel, and is performed in the local Hessian dialect.

So the town is referred to as “Orschel” and the folk order their drinks in “Budells” and pay with “Dahlers”.

This means that even some native German speakers require either the translation guide contained within the programme, or help from their neighbours.  Visitors from overseas may require a little more help, although with a little bit of imagination it is possible to work out the meanings of many of the words.

The “Budell”, for example, is a bottle.  The Hessian word developed out of the French “Bouteille”.

The 'Datterich' Ensemble giving a preview performance at the Epinayplatz, Oberursel

The 'Datterich' Ensemble giving a preview performance at the Epinayplatz, Oberursel

The production is rounded off by the appearance of the narrator, who musically gives the audience background information on the events as well as warning them to watch out for anyone adding an extra drink to their bill at the bar during the interval!

Datterich only has two more performances left in this year: on Friday and Saturday this week (23rd & 24th July).  But it will be reprised next year when the Hessentag is held in Oberursel, so there will be another chance to see it then.

Tickets are sold in advance at the OK Service-Center in Kumeliusstr. 8, near the Epinay-Platz, or – subject to availability – in the park.

Rules of the road and red lights

I’m not sure if it’s just the summer heat, but it seems to me that people’s attention for simple rules of the road has gone out of the window lately.

It all started with the bicycles.  We’ve noticed this year a lack of respect on the part of cyclists for red lights.

Red pedestrian traffic lightsIt doesn’t matter what kind of red light: pedestrian crossings, crossroads, or even cycle paths.  They just ride straight through them.  It’s a common occurance on the Hohemarkstraße in Oberursel, where I see at least one cyclist every week go through at red light – usually whilst pedestrians are crossing.

But at crossings it can be even worst – they veer off to the right to use the pedestrian crossing across the side road and avoid the red traffic light that way.  Of course, the pedestrian crossing may also be at red, but that doesn’t seem to worry them.

Then there are the pedestrians who just walk across the main road without looking, forcing drivers to brake hard.  And I don’t mean taking a run at it, I mean leisurely walking across.

At one point on the Hohemarkstraße there they do it about 50m from the nearest pedestrian crossing, which has usually just gone back to green for motorists before they cross.

Others do take the trouble to walk to a pedestrian crossing, only to use it when it’s set to red anyway.

At this point I don’t want to forget to mention the cyclists who ride on the right-hand side of the road, and then turn left across the traffic without looking, or those that ride on the wrong side of the road, or ride the wrong way down a one way street (which is allowed in certain parts of Frankfurt) and then shoot out at the end without stopping, regardless of the fact that drivers will not be expecting anything to come out that way.

Not that some drivers are any better.  I recently stopped at an unguarded railway crossing because I could see that a tram was coming, and trams have priority over cars (they are also bigger, heavier, take longer to stop, and can do a lot of damage if you get in their way).  The driver behind me started waving madly at me for stopping, she then got impatient and tried to drive around me and get across the crossing before the tram came.

The tram won.

But it turns out that this is even worse in other parts of Germany.  On a recent trip to Cologne I was able to observe how cyclists and pedestrians use the same path along the Rhine.  The cyclists swerve between the pedestrians at quite a speed, or just ring their bells and make them get out of the way.  Marking out separate paths might be a good idea.

Worse still, where there are dedicated cycle paths there are often pedestrian crossings.  I watched, as the lights on the cycle path and the main road turned to red, and the pedestrian lights turned to green.  The pedestrians started to cross, and the cyclists didn’t care.

They rang their bells anyway, ignored the red lights, and made the pedestrians get out of their way.

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