Laternenfest in Bad Homburg

Each year at the end of August Bad Homburg celebrates Laternenfest, or lantern festival.

The stalls stretch all the way from the end of the Louisenstraße up to the junction with Saalburgstraße, and then cover the Festplatz, a large open space for such fairs. On the two weekend days there are long processions and on Monday a lot of businesses close early to allow their employees to go to the festival together.

We went yesterday afternoon and stayed into the evening. I was pleasently surprised that a number of stalls had reduced their prices so that with a few exceptions everything was reasonably priced – the exceptions being turkey bites in a cone (Knabberfleisch) for 4,50EUR and Tarte Flambee (Flammkuchen) for an astounding 7EUR!

The childrens’ rides were normally 1,00-1,50EUR per go which was OK. One of Sarah’s particular favourites are the ponies – at 3EUR per ride, but the ponies are well looked after and the rides are quite long.

If you are planning on visiting the Laternenfest at any time it’s best to park your car outside of the town centre and take a bus in, otherwise be prepared for a long walk. If you’re not planning on staying very late, make sure you’re back in the bus by 9pm on Saturday night, as most of them stop running to make way for the procession and it can be almost midnight before they get through again.

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Das Schönes-Wochenende-Ticket

The Schönes-Wochenende-Ticket is an offer from Deutsche Bahn that allows you to travel anywhere within Germany for a whole day on certain types of trains. Currently these are the RegionalExpress, Regionalbahn, InterRegioExpress and S-Bahn.

The ticket is valid for up to 5 adults or for parents with all their own children, or for grand-parents with all their own grand-children.

For the exact details and current pricing and conditions please refer to the Deutsche Bahn homepage.

To hear a simple explanation in German, listen to the podcast:

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Greener driving with Bio-Ethanol

Today I took a step towards using greener fuels – I ordered a car that runs on Bio-Ethanol.

This may sound all very green, but does this mean that I will have to go to special petrol stations – or will I even find somewhere to fill up?

Well, at home this should not be a problem, as the first Bio-Ethanol petrol station in Germany happens to be in Bad Homburg, so no problems there. For further afield there are a further 90 in Germany at present, according to the site e85.biz.

But what if there isn’t one near when I need to fill up? Well, the thing I like most about this is that the car is a so-called “flexifuel vehicle”. This means, that I can run on normal petrol if I need to or any mixture of the two, they even use the same tank so unlike other types of environmentally-friendly fuels I don’t have to switch over when one of them runs out.

It also costs less than normal petrol – currently the pumps show 130.9 cents per litre for “Super” in Oberursel – the Bio-Ethanol pump in Bad Homburg was showing 89 cents per litre. The main difference is down to tax, and cannot be completely considered as running on pure bio-ethanol can use 30% more fuel than running on normal petrol. But at the moment, that would still be cheaper.

So why is it considered greener? Well, according to the literature that I’ve been given, it’s all down to the CO2 cycle – the plants that grow to make the bio-ethanol fuel have absorbed the CO2 whilst they were growing, and when you run your car on it you just set it free again. The brochure claims that this saves up to 80% of CO2-emissions compared to normal fuel.

Anyway, that was the first step. Next I have to wait for the car to be delivered in a few weeks. I will report back then with my first bio-ethanol experiences.

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