Europe · Travel

Berlin Germany Part 2 – Bikes, Barricades and Beers

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After our disastrous first day trying to get into Berlin (including losing my passport, a nightmare which you can read about here) we had to see as much of the city as we could in 3/4 of a day.

Being our first time in Berlin, there were so many fun Berlin activities to choose from! We wanted to try and see as much of the city as possible so we opted for a bike tour. We jumped on the U-Bahn from our hostel to the TV Tower and the Fat Tire Tours shop that resides beneath it. With our flight in the evening, we wanted to see as much of Berlin as possible without getting on a tour bus.

Berliner Fernsehturm Berlin Television Tower against a blue evening sky

Fat Tire Tours

The tour was fantastic! It definitely deserves its rating as the best outdoor activity on Tripadvisor. We took their standard bike tour but they now offer several different routes, as well as e-bike and segway tours.

The official tour bikes were a little too big for my 28 inch legs and they had already given the kids the smaller bikes (the cheek!). They had to get a special bike out of the window for me. It had Californian brakes which are activated by pedalling backwards. It makes you feel very smooth, but my habit (developed over 20 years) of kicking my pedals backwards while waiting for traffic lights to change, made moving away from every set of traffic lights a challenge.

The last seventy years of Germany’s history have been turbulent and bloody, and can be quite bleak. However, our guide was incredibly funny, very knowledgeable and looked out for everyone on their bikes expertly.

Fat Tire Bike Tours logo and website

I’m a bit of a dark tourist, but if you don’t know what that is, check out this post; Are You a Dark Tourist? The Best Dark Tourism Places Around the World. Fat Tire Tours had a few of these sights, here are my highlights of the tour:

Library

If you look down at the pavement in Bebelplatz you will see a glass area that allows people to see the room beneath. Huge, empty, brightly lit shelves descend below the viewer. This piece of art called ‘Library’ commemorates the huge book burning that took place by the Nazis in 1933. They burnt books by intellects such as journalists and philosophers that threatened their ideologies, the books numbering about 20,000.

Checkpoint Charlie

The Berlin Wall is almost the world’s most famous, after the Great Wall of China. For almost 30 years after WWII, it acted as the barrier between capitalist Western sections of the city, and the communist section in the East. Berlin existed as an island of capitalism in a sea of the Soviet occupied East Germany. It was (until the Wall was erected) an easy place to defect to the West. Sections of it remain standing throughout the city, some emerging as places to share amazing street art, some maintained for posterity.

Checkpoint Charlie or checkpoint C, was one of a handful of crossing points along the wall, but the only one that foreigners could use and so it became the most well known. It became infamous in 1961 when tanks from each side faced off against each other for almost a week over a diplomatic argument.

These days the checkpoint area is a bit of a tourist hot spot and does feel a little like a theme park. You can get your passport stamped with all the old border crossing stamps for a few euros. I didn’t on this trip, but on a subsequent visit, I gave in to my addiction and paid up. (I have said if I were ever to get a tattoo, it would be a passport stamp).

The tour guide whipped out a piece of chalk and drew some diagrams on the pavement. She showed us how Berlin was carved up into sections; American, British, French and Soviet, and explained how the city worked.

The area does have some excellently informative boards and the nearby Mauermuseum (Wall Museum) that I haven’t been to personally but I hear great things about. One of the boards showed the varied means of escape of people who managed to cross the border. It was quite poignant and I found it tricky to tear myself away. Maybe I am just a history geek but I find it truly fascinating and think it’s well worth reading about.

white wooden sign with black writing in English, Russian, French and German at Checkpoint Charlie, Berlin, Germany

Watchtower

We stopped quickly to look at one of the original watch towers. Around 500 towers dotted the Wall to observe the area and anyone who they thought was acting strangely. Set at regular intervals of about 300 metres, these contained two GDR guards at all times. Not, as you might think, to look both ways, or to nudge the other awake, but to shoot the other guard if they made a break for it. What a horrible thought. We learnt about how the area was constructed. Two great walls with a no mans land, called the death strip, in between. Mines, barbed wire, ploughed earth, sometimes kilometres wide, and dogs all added to escapees struggles.

Inspired by this trip I got hold of Stasiland: Stories from Behind the Berlin Wall. It was a really great read, written by someone who was trapped living in East Berlin. She shares first hand experiences of the walls appearance, escape attempts successful and otherwise, and the paranoia felt by the residents of the German Democratic Republic.

The Brandenburg Gate

Built in the late 1700s, this is one of Berlin’s most iconic images. Atop a large columned structure rides the Goddess of Victory in a chariot, pulled by four galloping horses. The Berlin Wall ran just in front of the monument, but citizens of the East were still drawn to it. A viewing platform allowed them a glimpse of their counterparts in the West. It was from here that US President Ronald Reagan’s famous words

“Mr Gorbachov, tear down this wall”

resonated across Berlin and the world. Since the wall’s destruction, it has been seen as a symbol of unity.

The Reichstag

Germany’s government building is most definitely imposing. Its grand stone facade spreads across the top of a great lawn, and is topped by a huge glass dome. It was built in 1894 and housed the German government until a fire tore through it in 1933. During Germany’s split it lay unused and half halfheartedly refurbished. When Germany reunified in 1990, real work began on bringing it back into use and constructing a new dome. Finally finished in 1999, the government moved back in.

The great dome has views across Berlin and can be visited by registering on the website. It isn’t just to give a great view of the city though, it represents the transparency of the government. The dome has a great mirror in the middle so the public can see the entire debating chamber below. It’s elevated position shows that the public are more important than the government.

The Holocaust Memorial/The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe

A huge number of grey concrete stelae blocks lies across what appears to be a flat area. But, wandering between them, you soon find yourself descending towards the centre. The blocks become five, six, ten foot tall and tower above you. It can feel a little disorientating. Whilst not the most graphic monument I have seen to the holocaust, it does allow you to stop and think in your own way.

The memorial was at the centre of a controversy, this YouTube video explains the “Yolocaust” art project.

I can attest to people jumping over the blocks and generally forgetting its significance, seeing it as a piece of architecture to interact with. We may well have done it too when we returned with a larger group of friends, carried away with its interesting structural design.

the concrete stelae of the Holocaust Memorial or Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Berlin, Germany

The Car Park (no, really)

We cylced up to a section of gritty concrete. Puzzled we observed the guides wry smile, “Welcome to Hitler’s bunker”. It turns out we were stood above the remains of Hitler’s infamous bunker, where he and Eva Braun ended their days, as the Soviets approached Berlin.

Lunch

Halfway through the day we stopped in a biergarten in the Tiergarten. Karl and I both dislike beer but we loved the meatloaf that they were selling. We even forced down bright red kinderbier as the peer pressure from our fellow tour-goers reached a fever pitch.

Back at the TV Tower, we boarded a pleasantly punctual train from Alexanderplatz Bahnhof back to Schönefeld Airport and our one EasyJet flight on our speed tour of four countries in ten days). We were off to Italy, you can read all about our next adventure in Rome, Italy Part 1 – Popes, Paintings and Parents

orange easyJet boarding card from Berlin Schoenefeld to Rome Ciampino

(Disclaimer: Our camera was pickpocketed later on in this trip, in Barcelona. So there are very few photos, and those I do have, I’ve had to steal from another trip to Berlin and Abi’s most excellent collection).

Rosie xx


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44 thoughts on “Berlin Germany Part 2 – Bikes, Barricades and Beers

  1. Oh no sorry to hear about your camera 🙁 I’d be so bummed. I did the free walking tour in Berlin as well and found it to be a great way to see a lot of the key sights. Berlin’s one of my favorite cities now, and I’m super jealous my sister is going to be living there for the summer!

  2. I did the free walking tour (there was A LOT of walking) and we went to the same places as you did. There’s so much history in Berlin and it’s all quite eye opening!
    Sorry to hear your camera was pickpocketed! :/

  3. Glad you saw so much of this amazing city. I lived 5 years in Berlin, exactly there in Mitte and it was a fantastic time. The bike tour is really a cool way to discover Berlin, true 🙂 Pity to hear about your pickpocketed cam 🙁

  4. Sorry to hear about your camera! =/
    I had only one day in Berlin last year, and I can’t wait to go back and explore more, there are so many things to do and see, mainly outside the touristy spots!

  5. Good call on doing the bike tour! You guys covered so much ground in a day! Let me know if you go back to Berlin and need tips on what to see – I’m based there for now 🙂

  6. Berlin is definitely one of those places that you either love or hate. To me, it has weird mix between Soviet Union and Western Europe:) Which sight did you like the best though? I saw almost all of them as well.

  7. Great post! So sorry to hear your camera got stolen 🙁 Being from Amsterdam, I love cycling during my trips. I try to use these city biking systems often. What was your favourite neighbourhood in Berlin?

    1. That’s a very hard question and not one I’m sure I can answer. The thing I love about Berlin is its variety . I guess I like a pick and mix of everywhere (how dull is that answer!)

  8. Berlin seems like such a contrast of young hip youth and decades of history. I haven’t been but just reading about the holocaust museum there haunts me

  9. I really love Berlin and this article just make me want to go there again soon! It is somehow very different from most pretty and romantic capitals – its more raw, sometimes pretty, sometimes ugly. I like that mix. Thanks for sharing an inspiring article 🙂 Hugs, Nana

  10. You are so good detailing about your experience in Berlin. It was really helpful! Though I felt a bit worried about what happened to you. We were also pickpocketed in Rome and I don’t want it to happen again.. Berlin may not be on next anytime soon. 🙂

  11. I never thought about taking a bike tour in Berlin before) last time I did all the “touristy” things there, so maybe next time bike tour could be a great idea))

  12. Sorry to hear about your bad experience but this tour does sound excellent! I’ve only spent a brief day in Berlin (for the football world cup) so would love to go back and see the city properly.

  13. I visited Berlin in Sept 2016 and fell madly in love, vow that I will do a revisit and pwrhaps cover the whole country. I think it is very underrated and the people are superbly friendly. You’ve made me miss Berlin.

    Too bad that your lost your camera…

  14. I have been to Berlin too, very hip, young and vibrant city. Did you go to the “KDW”? The department store with Europes finest grocery section?? I have never seen anything like it. Put that on your list in case you go back.

    1. We had a bit more time the second time we visited so we had the chance to do a lot more. I think Berlin is super and I’d happily visit again.
      I had a Molotov cocktail in one bar, it was served in a glass bottle with a burning sugar cube in the neck. If that isn’t hipster Berlin, I don’t know what is 🙂

      1. Yep, leave it to Berlin. 😉
        By the way, it is called “Brandenburg” gate, (with a “u”), you misspelled it in your blog, you might want to correct that. Hope you don’t mind me pointing this out. 🌸

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