Blog

  • Taxis in Munich

    I have been taking taxis everywhere in Munich. I have found them to be comfortable and clean. The drivers are generally immigrants. I had one yesterday morning from Ukraine and another from Turkey. Surprisingly in addition to speaking German, they all seem to speak some English as well. They all use Google Maps to get to their destinations. Decent driving skills as well. Yesterday there was road blocks in the city center because it was Christopher Street Day. My driver knew how to navigate all the side streets to get me back to the hotel.

    Also most of the taxis are huge and are the bigger Mercedes Benz cars or BMWs.

    My taxi driver to the Munich Main Station was driving a large comfortable Merc and was originally from Bangladesh.

  • Hofbrauhaus Am Platzl

    Whilst I was at BMW Museum in the morning, I received a text from a good friend, U Zyn, who suggested visiting this place.

    I did go and I am glad I did. Didn’t realize the historical significance of this place.

    The German Communist Party was founded here in 1919 and used this place as its headquarters.

    The National Socialist Party, aka the Nazi Party, was born here in 1920 and Hitler was here at the inauguration of the Party. He delivered his 25 point plan for the Nazi Party here.

    Lenin spent quite a bit of time here when he was living in exile in Munich before World War 1.

    Mozart is said to have spent time here and cited this place as an inspiration for his opera Idomeneo.

    This place was completely destroyed by the Allied bombing during World War 2 and it was then rebuilt in 1958.

    I found the food just so so but the place was packed and bustling! I don’t think people come here for the food.

    The beautiful roof murals
    The band playing
  • BMW World and Museum

    A wonderful way to spend a Saturday morning. I visited this place today. A fascinating showcase of their history and their past together with an amazing collection of their vintage cars, motor cycles and their engines over the years all displayed in their Museum.

    The World features all the latest models of their cars.

    There is a constant stream of people coming here. It’s a good showcase of their engineering prowess. BMW was making aircraft engines before progressing to making cars a hundred years ago. They were innovating with new and more powerful engines when the Chinese were nowhere. Of course now they are having difficulty competing in the EV marketplace with the Chinese.

    Lets hope they keep progressing and continue making top end cars.

  • Breakfast at Bicicletta

    Had my morning coffee here this morning. It is a cafe connected to the hotel. Had my coffee with a chia seed pudding and a croissant.

    Reasonably priced and good service. The croissant and the chia pudding was good. They have no service charge so tips are optional.

    There are many cafes here. They are all well patronised and decently priced. I saw about 5 within 50 meters of the hotel. All with yummy looking bakes

    I also visited the nearly Lidl supermarket. The things are so well priced, in particular the fruits. Stocked up on snacks for my next train ride.

    I have to say the people in Germany are courteous and helpful. And you feel safe here. Not like Paris or London where you are worried about snatch thieves or pickpockets. Also such beautiful weather at this time of the year. Sunny and cool.

    Munich is certainly a good place to visit although I have to say there are so many museums and historical sites I have skipped. Sigh.

  • The Lonely Broccoli

    My dinner last night was at this restaurant at my hotel in Munich. I had read the reviews about this place and they were good. But what clinched my eating here last evening was that I was tired and hungry after my train ride and when I checked in, it suddenly started pouring.

    They focus on steaks and meats. And so they named the restaurant the lonely broccoli cos with all the many meat options, the veggies such as broccoli would be lonely!

    Excellent food and service and at very good prices. Lovely setting too. I had a wagyu burger, eggplant and sauteed spinach with garlic. All yummy!

    The chocolate dessert was glorious!

    I didn’t know there was going to be such good food in Germany. And at such good prices. I thought it would be such lots of sausages.

    Singapore is such a sad place when it comes to dining and finding reasonably priced good food. Sad. Everywhere else I go, I end up with wonderful food and coffee options which make you look forward to dining the next meal. And you have so many options too.

    Super yummy chocolate dessert
  • ICE 623 Frankfurt to Munich

    Took this train to Munich from Frankfurt airport. Was told it’s a high speed train but it’s not. Most of the time it was about 120km/h and it slowed down many times. The trip was delayed too.

    It left Frankfurt airport at 1135 promptly. It was supposed to arrive in Munich at 1512 but it only got in about 1550. Rather annoying.

    The German trains cannot compare to the Chinese HSRs. Those are spot on in terms of punctuality and are much faster. Also the Chinese are much more security conscious when it comes to trains. They check and screen all bags brought into the station. They also check your identify before you are allowed to board. Germans didn’t check luggages before entering the station and neither did they check identity before boarding. Hmmm..mixed views on this.

    Comfort wise it was alright. A bit bumpy at times but otherwise ok.

  • Flight to Frankfurt

    Today I took a flight to Frankfurt. It was on a A380.

    I have not taken a long flight since Covid. Before that I used to fly regularly and in fact used to look forward to flying.

    Perhaps it is because I am out of practice? I found it tiring. I was bored. Didn’t sleep much, which is probably because it was a day flight. Didn’t feel like watching a movie as well.

    The entire flight was full on every single class. Flying has really picked up!

    The upper deck was just suites and business class and I pity the crew. Non stop service.

    I have to say the plane looks dated. These planes have been in service for some time now. I used to love flying on this plane. I remember going on this to New York via Frankfurt and I will specially choose this plane when going to London. I thought they were retiring the A380s but apparently not.

  • Dinner with Michael Lo

    Last night I had dinner with Michael. He is the owner of Dejade in Mandarin Gallery. He was here for a brief visit and he suggested dinner.

    I first met him years ago when I visited the famous Canton Street in HK looking for jade. I visited a shop owned by his parents and met him and his brother there.

    Over the years I have met him and his family at various jewelry fairs in Singapore.

    Some 2 years back, he decided to open a shop in Singapore to diversity from HK, which was experiencing a huge exodus of people then. I remember visiting his shop on the opening day. I bought a green Jade bangle that day to support him. I have been wearing this bangle ever since. I paid a very decent price for it and it is a purchase I have been very happy with since!

    At the Empire Chinese Restaurant
  • Departing UK Millionaires

    This morning I saw a report that stated that this year alone some 11,000 millionaires have or are expected to leave the UK.

    This for a variety of reasons. The primary ones being higher taxes targeted at the wealthy, a general clouding of the economic prospects for the UK and a lack of incentives to generate wealth there.

    I was surprised seeing these kind of numbers. These wealthy people are generally the ones who purchase higher end properties, thereby contributing to stamp duty revenue. They spend money and consume more and therefore contribute to the tax coffers, pay income tax and employ people in businesses they operate. If they leave, wouldn’t that have a huge impact on tax collection. By imposing a higher tax burden on the wealthy to collect more revenue it would have the exact opposite effect of driving them away and thereby leading to lower tax collection.

    Countries everywhere are trying to attract the wealthy and here you have a country shooting itself in the foot by driving them away! I always regarded the UK as a wealthy nation. Beautiful stately homes, gardens and tops in art and culture. Who will support any of these if the wealthy abandon the country?

    But the UK has been making a series of disastrous decisions recently, starting with Brexit, so perhaps it is not at all surprising.

  • NDP Participant

    Yesterday morning, a participant at this year’s NDP parade collapsed and died during the rehearsal.

    He was 47. That is sad in of itself.

    But what surprised me was how it was reported.

    There was no mention of his name, no details about him or his family, no interviews with anyone around him to note whether he felt unwell before he collapsed or said anything, why he wanted to participate in NDP, his health condition or the weather conditions at that time.

    Of course the rehearsal continued, notwithstanding his untimely and unfortunate death, and everyone must have enjoyed the show later that evening.

    But is this what we are about? The individual is irrelevant in the context of the bigger picture, a must have grand parade to showcase our “talents” before our VIPs and audience? Downplay the death and instead focus on how everyone had done their best to revive him after he collapsed?

    In today’s weather conditions is it fair to ask people, including children, to spend hours out in the sun for months to rehearse for a perfect parade lasting 90 minutes? Is a parade still important in today’s world? Fostering patriotism is good but are there better ways than this? With increasing temperatures and humidity are outdoor parades and rehearsals still healthy? Most people are there to see only the fireworks anyway. Would watching fireworks instil patriotism?