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Living overseas

So who has Carnival?

35 replies

finknottle · 14/02/2007 10:11

Here in Germany they're in full swing having parties in silly costumes, cutting off ties and "storming" the council offices. True to form, the Germans take being silly very seriously
All we ever do is stand and watch the parade on Sunday as the people on the floats throw sweets to the children. Luckily we know a couple who have a restaurant so they invite us to drink Gluehwein with them while the parade's on.
The dss are taking part this year and are torn between excitement and annoyance that dd will get loads of sweets.

What happens where you are?

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Rosa5 · 20/02/2007 17:02

Well here in Venice Carnival is drawing to an end. Due to good weather its been a busy one and apparently fantastic costumes and masks. My dd did not make it out in costume (11mths) as constant runny nose and temp. But there have been childrens parties , adult costume balls and the streets have been packed with merrymakers.
Fink hope you feel better I had the flu before Xmas and it knocked me out.

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finknottle · 20/02/2007 12:18

Well our weekend of merrymaking was scuppered by the flu which has wiped me out since Valentine's Day when I started this thread. Then I infected the dss who missed their parade. We watched from the windows tho' and dd and dh caught their fill of sweets for all. Now dd's down with it.

Have to say had forgotten about those awful telly programmes; I assumed at first I just didn't understand the German

I do mock but the costumes (wow those primary-coloured jackets make your eyes pop) and music and general festive air cheered me up even from behind glass. Or maybe I was laid extra low by flu and susceptible to anything

Am determined to hobble to the kitchen to make pancakes tonight

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admylin · 20/02/2007 09:55

Another time of year when it is not possible to lose weight!

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SSShakeTheChi · 20/02/2007 09:47

ah yes pancakes and Pfannkuchen... It's so confusing, isn't it?

We had our Pfannkuchen after school yesterday. Never tried chocolate ones. We get the ones with red jam inside and icing on top. Yum yum.

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admylin · 20/02/2007 09:43

Yes, we really miss the bakeries in Stuttgart area, have yet to find a decent Brezel in Berlin and the Berliner are called Pfannkuchen here! Wonder what they say to pancakes up here, maybe crepes?

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smintysue · 20/02/2007 09:41

Ah yes, Carneval - hideous thing! I'm also in Germany (near Stuttgart) and I must say I've never been able to get into it, I find it loud and embarrassing.

BUT - there is a plus side, namely the "Berliner" (doughnuts) which you can buy at this time of year - and the bakery near me does chocolate ones too which are just FAB :O

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SSShakeTheChi · 20/02/2007 09:33

That'll be in the countryside somewhere surely. Doubt the grandfather is in Berlin using a rifle.

Hope not anyway!

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admylin · 20/02/2007 09:31

I know, was a bit worried when ds told me one of the new boys in class boasts about using his grandpa's Luftgewehr - just hope he doesn't think of bringing it to school one day. All boys ovviously very impressed by this lad so hope they don't get carried away.

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SSShakeTheChi · 20/02/2007 09:21

Oh Admylin, a Schwerverbrecher! The ideas that dc get. They just crack you up, don't they?

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SSShakeTheChi · 20/02/2007 09:19

Oh Cali, I would have made it, I really would have, I promise you but I couldn't find any g*damm gold material. Someone told me at school yesterday I should have tried a Turkish market.

It's so sweet of you to think of us with the headdress! That's America for you, I suppose, you can buy ANYTHING you need anytime. Here you can't even buy gold material at carnival time! I was a bit disappointed when we went to the Egyptian museum last week that they didn't sell pharaoh headdresses (or even let's be honest, complete outfits!). Surely they'd do a good business with them?

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admylin · 20/02/2007 09:18

ds would go mad if he had carneval in the 5th too! Much to his dismay, all his class begged the teacher and today in the last 2 lessons he has carneval - he has put tatoos right up both arms and has gone as a Schwerverbrecher so he says!
On Sunday at the Hauptbahnhof the train to Cologne was packed, we just saw them all waiting on the platform. Then a Kung Fu group took over the whole station with 2 chinese dragons and a lion and did a new year dragon dance - coincided nicely with carneval atmosphere and was much better!

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SSShakeTheChi · 20/02/2007 09:10

but were you being tortured?! Gawd that's horrendous.

I thought Bavaria looked good on the news. Lots of grown ups in fancy dress drinking those huge glasses of beer and dancing to "Skandal um Rosie!" I would have quite happily joined in there but I don't get those sit-down show events. In Berlin, carnival is pretty much a non-event, you just see small dc dressed up but they enjoy it.

Admylin at our school even the fifth graders were in fancy dress. Mind you Catholic school so I suppose they have to really get into it!

Which brings me back to Rosenmontag. I just don't understand the connection to roses, Lapsed. Why is it Rose Monday? So I followed your example and googled it.

Apparently according to Wikipedia no one knows "..wobei sich Rosen ursprünglich nicht auf die Blume, sondern auf das Verb rasen bezog. Anderen Interpretationen zufolge verdankt der Rosenmontag seinen Namen dem vierten Fastensonntag, dem Rosensonntag."

Not that it REALLY matters but I was just curious Quite like the idea of Rasenmontag

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berolina · 19/02/2007 18:49

My first encounter with carnival in Germany was when I was in hospital with acute gastroenteritis, keeping nothing down, on a drip and in a room between two old ladies who watched one of those interminable carnival programmes. Silly hats and 'jokes' followed by trumpet fanfares - 'da-da, da-DA'. Thought I was hallucinating due to dehydration. Since then I've never been able to get into it.

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PeachyClair · 19/02/2007 18:48

oops bad link

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PeachyClair · 19/02/2007 18:43

here


just to prove we can do Carnival in the Uk as well as anyone

this si the circuit we are involved with

One of the biggest carnivals in the world I'll have you know- just not so well publicised

(this one was 100ft long and won, btw- do take a look)

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Scootergirl · 19/02/2007 18:28

We went to Karneval in Germany today and DD's favourite game is now "marching band" where she marches round playing the drum and we have to shout "Halt-bol" (which they all shouted - no idea what it means!) at her. Then we have to swap and be the carnival people who throw sweets at her...

It's getting quite wearing

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lapsedrunner · 16/02/2007 18:09

SSShakeTheChi - (from Wikipedia) Rosenmontag (literally: "rose monday") peaks out German "Carnival" and coincides with the finalization of the German Lent. It is not a bank holiday, and is also not celebrated nationwide, but in the places that celebrate Carnival, most companies give employees a half day off (which most employees then extend to a whole day by taking a half day's holiday).

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Califrau · 16/02/2007 16:30

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

SSShakeTheChi · 16/02/2007 13:46

vampire sounds wild. I gave up on the pharaoh outfit in the end since I couldn't find gold material ANYWHERE! So I bought an Indian outfit. She's happy with that. Our school has carnival on Monday - Rosenmontag. Why is it called Rosenmontag BTW, do you know?

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admylin · 16/02/2007 11:42

Today dd is celebrating Carneval in school. She went as a vampire and there was a huge buffet type table set out for their breakfast - they were going to be celebrating from 8:20 till 14:10 so goodness knows what she will be like when I pick her up! Make the most of it because from year 3 they don't do it anymore! Ds is quite pleased not to have to dress up but most of the girls in his class were very sad.
I would put a photo of her dressed up on here but I can't find any info explaining how to do it.

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lucy5 · 15/02/2007 09:46

We have carnival here in Spain too. There has been hours of TV devoted to groups of men dressed in silly costumes singing comedy songs. In Cadiz carnival is much bigger and these men roam the streets on lorries singing and there is a huge procession.

Here in Estepona it's a bit quieter but dd is really looking forward to the procession.

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SSShakeTheChi · 15/02/2007 09:29

Iptwinkletoes at not knowing what it was all about. I remember the first time I saw one of those carnival programmes on tv here, the audience were shrieking with laughter so I thought, this must be something good. I totally didn't get it. There were some older men dressed like court jesters who were obviously in charge and some poeple telling jokes and I think blowing a trumpet. I didn't manage to find any of it funny at all
but I think I did understand what they were saying. Must have been missing all the innuendoes.

The fancy dress part of it is good though. Apart from Fasching, I don't find fancy dress for dc here, so I usually get an outfit for dd and a few other things for dressing up at home. This year I bought a Viking helmet with horns, a pirate hat, a feathered mask, some Indian stuff and her outfit since it's all so cheap.

Where we live in Berlin, you can manage to ignore it completely if you choose to. It really isn't a big thing like it is in South Germany. Although I did read that there is going to be a carnival parade down Ku'damm at the weekend. I might pack dh off to that with dd. Don't do outdoor things unless we have a temperature over 10 degrees.

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Californication · 14/02/2007 20:40

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

lptwinkletoes · 14/02/2007 20:35

Hiya im new here ive lived in germany for a year and half now and i never knew what all the fancy dress costumes and carnival things were about

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belgo · 14/02/2007 16:34

We have carnival in Belgium - my dd will have pancakes at her nursery school, and will dress up in fancy dress.

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