
This past weekend we visited Legoland Deutschland, about a three hour drive from Zurich. We had planned this trip even before we moved, because it was to coincide with Charlie's fifth birthday, which is this coming Saturday.
We left early Saturday morning; the boys were so excited they could hardly stand it. Tobi was excited, but for a different reason. He has a goal (which I think might be a bit lofty): for us to visit thirty countries in three years. I'll be happy with ten. Anyway, he was excited because the route Google maps (which is now our BFF, by the way) suggested took us through Austria. Now, don't get too excited. The hills were probably alive but we didn't hear much from them because we were only in Austria for about fifteen minutes. I told Tobi it didn't really count if we didn't stop and at least have something to eat (he remedied this by stopping at a gas station in Austria on the way home and buying us drinks and M&Ms. He's so sneaky).
When we got to the German border, it was like someone had waved a flag and a race had begun, but no one told us. Suddenly the speed limit icon on the GPS (our other BFF) went away and cars were zooming past us. Finally we figured out that we were in fact on the Autobahn and so Tobi tried to see just how fast a Ford S-Max would go (hint: not as fast as a BMW or Audi).
We arrived at the Legoland Hotel and checked in, and then walked through the woods from the hotel to the park. The kids had a blast. Grant was old enough to ride the bigger rollercoasters, so he went off on his own a bit and rode those. I rode some of the smaller rides with Charlie while Tobi and Caroline hung out at all the fabulous Legoland playgrounds sprinkled throughout the park.

My kids always want to sit on strangers' laps.

A lego miniature of the Allianz soccer arena in Munich. The Lego minimen in the audience periodically took flash pictures of the match. This was Charlie's favorite thing in Miniland.

We stayed in Room 122.

The boys enjoyed the Egyptian-themed room and bunk beds.
We closed down the park at five o'clock and headed back to the hotel. The kids thoroughly enjoyed the playgrounds that were everywhere - there was even one right outside our room. I had already booked the dinner at the hotel, so we had dinner and then played a little outside before heading to the room to crash. Everyone was pretty exhausted, but we were up bright and early the next morning. We had breakfast at the hotel and then headed back to the park for a few more hours of fun.

Are those hands creeping you out? Is that Lego Elvis?

Around two o'clock on Sunday afternoon, Grant said to Tobi and me, "Can we go now?" Yeah, you know they were tired if they were asking to leave. Caroline was asleep before we even made it to the highway. The boys soon followed her.
Since the kids were asleep, I asked Tobi to make a detour to a city, not far from Legoland, called Ulm, which sits on the Danube (geek moment: I had to play the Strauss piece, On the Beautiful Blue Danube, in piano lessons when I was a kid, so I was excited to see the real thing. Not blue). Ulm has a famous church, the Ulmer Münster. The church's claim to fame is that it is the tallest church in the world. We could see the spire from very far away, but I really had no idea it was the tallest in the world.
Tobi stayed in the car with the kids and I just went in alone for a few minutes. I could do an entire tour of Europe just to see churches. They were all amazing in their own way. I also always feel a twinge of sadness to think of how long it took these churches to be built. The church in Ulm was started in the fourteenth century, but was not completed until the 19th century. I try to imagine the people who worked on it and how they never saw its completion, nearly 500 years later. Simply astounding.
After the detour, we headed home. Through Austria again. Yes, Tobi, it counts. M&Ms and Sprite totally count as enjoying Austria.
So there you have it - a lot of fun, a lot of Legos, and a little bit of history thrown in for good measure.
Cheers!
Tiffany
All the pictures from the trip are on my FB page.



Let's meet up in Austria someday, okay? Doable. And we can enjoy it and do some real eating. :)
ReplyDeleteTiffany, this is too fun, I am loving Legoland Deutschland, it looks so cool. And it seems like Caroline & Charlie & Grant certainly enjoyed, Legoman would have scared me at that age!
ReplyDeleteFabulous fun to see your posts!
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