29. Last full day in Germany
We
enjoyed our day, having a fabulous breakfast at the hotel.
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More Cheese |
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Sooooo Good |
We
had a Zimbabwean peanut soup for lunch, which included vegetables and couscous.
Served with some French bread it was delicious.
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Zimbabwean Peanut Soup |
We
tried to enter the Russian Orthodox Chapel but it was closed for the day.
Carol
craved an ice-cream and when she went to the ice-cream parlor the girls there
all gawked at her Tilley Hat, with all the pins on it.
The
personnel of the ice-cream shop wanted to look at each pin, hear about each
country Carol had visited. It was fun for Carol; she later returned to the
store and gave each of the employees a Canadian Flag Pin, so now they can start
their own collection.
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Schreinerei Pfeiffer Restaurant |
Dinner
was at an old Carpentry Shop, converted into a Restaurant. The Schreinerei Pfeiffer served good basic
food and beer and we ended a wonderful day.
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Sign Over the Door Indicates a Carpentry Shop |
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Inside the Restaurant is Decorated With Carpenter's Tools |
Ah,
let me explain what ‘Bad’ means; as in Bad Homburg, or Bad Ems or many other
German towns with the name Bad in front of the town’s name.
It’s
a therapeutically oriented bath I am talking about. It’s part of the German
health system. Your Doctor can ‘prescribe’ a ‘Kur’ for you. You take this
‘bath’ to be cured of whatever ails you. You are prescribed a spa treatment,
not where you get pampered but where you have to exercise in a certain way.
Kneipp was a Doctor (Priest) who lived a ‘healthy’
life and advocated his methods to the Germans. He might have been a forefather
of Holistic Medicine by using herbs and water therapies. Not all Bad-towns use
the Kneipp system.
A
town like Bad Homburg is certified to give people some health benefits using a
Sanatorium, which gives certain other Spa treatments; mud, massages, etc. Bad
Homburg is famous for the natural minerals found in the water that comes out of
the local spring. You drink this water and get well; using just natural ways,
no pharmaceutical pills, needles, etc. you get well.
Not
all cure places (Bad) use his methods, there are many different treatments
available and each “Bad”-town seems to have their specialty. It is up to your
Doctor to prescribe the right treatment for you. He will send you to a Kur that
he feels will benefit you.
For
German’s those cures are paid for by their health system.
Some
towns, like Bad Homburg have also private treatment centers… where you pay for
everything out of pocket.
Believe
me there is a huge difference between being treated privately and Government paid
treatments. Bad Homburg is a top of the line Private Spa town.