Rojo
TS Member
Firstly thank you to everyone who provided advice in the Koln Trip thread, as your input was greatly appreciated and the driving tips probably kept me alive.
Note: I'm quite busy catching up with work so I will try and update when I can spare 5 minutes so please see this as a WIP. I just wanted to get the ball rolling.
Prelude
So after my 2nd Tough Mudder in as many weeks (I need lazier friends!). Myself and my better half headed from Crawley for a day in London. We managed to cram in soo much including National History Museum, London Eye, walk along the South bank, Tower Bridge, Towers, Clink Prison and the many buildings us northerners only get to see on TV that make up the skyline. From there we headed to Stansted, got the smallest amount of sleep and we were on our way to Germany.
We arrived at Koln/Bonn Airport and picked up the mighty 1.4 chariot known as an Opel Astra. In a baptism of fire I headed straight out of the airport onto the Autobahn for my first driving experience abroad. The next 2 and a bit hours to Hamelin was a stressed filled blur but we made it
My knowledge of Hamelin starts and ends with my school performance of the Pied Piper of Hamelin. I was naturally a little disappointed that the reviews of my stellar rendition of town folk #4 had not made it back to the town. So instead of signing autographs we signed the guestbook and headed for a look around the town. It's a beautiful town with lots of references to the tale of the Pied Piper as you would expect. The river Wasser is very close by and the town has an abundance of shops and pubs for the tourists. We arrived on a Monday which meant that the Pied Piper museum was sadly closed. You can do the whole town in half a day max, so if you arrive early maybe fitting something closer to Hanover such as the Herrenhausen Gardens.
So we decided to pad the time with a small snack in the oldest Inn in Hamelin, the Im Rattenkrug. The Inn was a great choice as it served my favourite German beer Paulaner and a great assortment of food for very reasonable prices.
We then decided to head to the pub next door called "Ellis Island". You're probably thinking that sounds about as German as a Frankfurter and you would be right. It's some kind of weird German/American mash up. After explaining the gutbusting amount of food I had next door to the owner, we agreed on just a pint of beer that I had never tried before and no food. It was at this point we had a breakdown in communication. The breakdown being that he thought the "no food" comment meant bring me sausage from Munich and a load of bread. So being typically British and somewhat an idiot I politely nibbled at it.
After all that food and beer I was too tired to do absolutely anything else, so it was time to hit the hay and wake up fresh and ready for Heide Park....
Note: I'm quite busy catching up with work so I will try and update when I can spare 5 minutes so please see this as a WIP. I just wanted to get the ball rolling.
Prelude
So after my 2nd Tough Mudder in as many weeks (I need lazier friends!). Myself and my better half headed from Crawley for a day in London. We managed to cram in soo much including National History Museum, London Eye, walk along the South bank, Tower Bridge, Towers, Clink Prison and the many buildings us northerners only get to see on TV that make up the skyline. From there we headed to Stansted, got the smallest amount of sleep and we were on our way to Germany.
We arrived at Koln/Bonn Airport and picked up the mighty 1.4 chariot known as an Opel Astra. In a baptism of fire I headed straight out of the airport onto the Autobahn for my first driving experience abroad. The next 2 and a bit hours to Hamelin was a stressed filled blur but we made it

My knowledge of Hamelin starts and ends with my school performance of the Pied Piper of Hamelin. I was naturally a little disappointed that the reviews of my stellar rendition of town folk #4 had not made it back to the town. So instead of signing autographs we signed the guestbook and headed for a look around the town. It's a beautiful town with lots of references to the tale of the Pied Piper as you would expect. The river Wasser is very close by and the town has an abundance of shops and pubs for the tourists. We arrived on a Monday which meant that the Pied Piper museum was sadly closed. You can do the whole town in half a day max, so if you arrive early maybe fitting something closer to Hanover such as the Herrenhausen Gardens.
So we decided to pad the time with a small snack in the oldest Inn in Hamelin, the Im Rattenkrug. The Inn was a great choice as it served my favourite German beer Paulaner and a great assortment of food for very reasonable prices.

We then decided to head to the pub next door called "Ellis Island". You're probably thinking that sounds about as German as a Frankfurter and you would be right. It's some kind of weird German/American mash up. After explaining the gutbusting amount of food I had next door to the owner, we agreed on just a pint of beer that I had never tried before and no food. It was at this point we had a breakdown in communication. The breakdown being that he thought the "no food" comment meant bring me sausage from Munich and a load of bread. So being typically British and somewhat an idiot I politely nibbled at it.
After all that food and beer I was too tired to do absolutely anything else, so it was time to hit the hay and wake up fresh and ready for Heide Park....
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