Wednesday, June 5th,
2019 – Thursday, June 6th, 2019
It is summer, and we are on the road again. After
twenty-four hours of travel, we have hopscotched two continents, and find
ourselves starting our summer vacation in Basel, Switzerland, basking in the hot,
bright, dry sunshine of western Europe.
We are visiting Sam and Sarah, who are getting married in
the presence of all their family and friends from Europe, next weekend, and
taking the chance to stay with them in their lovely new home in Basel. This is
a lovely a garden we’re in. From where I sit on a small terrace, I can see a
riotous herb corner with parsley, basil, rosemary, mint, and a lot that I can’t
recognize. Beyond that, we have the neighbors’ flower patches, with lavender,
bright orange poppies, and magenta-colored blossoms. To my left is a long,
grassy backyard lined with large pink roses in bloom, and a shady backyard with
chairs and a table. Now that I’ve freshly showered and had a chance to drink
some water and tea, It feels like forever since we were traveling, but it’s the
travel that has lasted forever, and we only arrived in Switzerland this
morning.
The past few days have been some crazy, busy rush to get
ready for the summer. Steve and I made stops at work, the bank, brunching with
friends, dropping off keys, and said goodbye to Stella on Monday. Yesterday, we
cleaned up our house as best as we could because later this summer, other folks
will be staying there, and threw out the last of our trash. We unexpectedly
brought an umbrella along so that we could brave the rain during first ten
minutes of our trip between our front door and the MRT station, and were
finally off. The first leg of our trip was a short 3 hour hop to Hong Kong,
where we enjoyed some final Asian noodles, crowd-watched, and finally boarded
an Etihad Airlines flight for Abu Dhabi. The next eight-hour flight was a bit
more of a pain, but I succeeded in watching Captain
Marvel and catching a little bit of sleep before we alighted in the U.A.E.
Even at 1:30 am, the Abu Dhabi airport is a fascinating
place, with advertisements of more dates and chocolates and desert-like goods
than you can shake a wooden spoon at. Men wearing long robes with slippers and
hats or other head coverings walked about everywhere with each other. We saw
planes with destinations we’d never heard of before, like Dammam (a city in
Saudi Arabia) and Calicut (third-largest city in Kerala, India), and debated
with each other how many AEDs or dhirams to the US dollar (about 5).
When it was time to board our final flight to Zurich, I fell
asleep before the plane even got off the ground. When I woke up two hours
before we landed, it was clear it was morning. Steve pointed out mountains
below us and to our left as we made our slow descent, and these long ranges of mountains
were lit up with the beautiful colors of dawn, all lemon-yellow and pale pink.
When you’re traveling, I think it makes a big difference whether you do so by
bright daylight or the dark of night. After we disembarked and left the
airport, we took an hour-long train that leisurely wound from Zurich to Basel
in the presence of many commuters on their way to work in the city, and the
bright sunlight went some distance to making us feel like we’d arrived.
At Basel, we stopped to get a coffee and some breakfast, and
as soon as we had taken a sip of our drinks, I noticed Sarah’s parents Norm and
Theresa walk in! I knew they were in town, but even this was a little too
coincidental. We had coffee together, shared stories about their trip to Taiwan
to see us last year, and also enjoyed seeing a few photos from their first
wedding in the US last month. That was a funny coincidence.
When we finally ended up at Sarah’s door, it was a glorious
reunion. Sam, Sarah, Steve, and I (why don’t I have a name that starts with S?)
have enjoyed each other’s company in no less than four countries before, so we
were delighted to spend more time together in the country that they now live
in. Their house which they moved into this spring is a delightful narrow house
with a long lot of a backyard which seems to be par for the course out here. It’s
beautiful to be in the land of single-family homes again, and to have this
patch of land to call your own.
For the first afternoon, Steve and I walked to the nearby
Tiergarten, which is a small petting zoo-garden. We saw domesticated animals
like wooly pigs, horses, donkeys, goats, and chickens, as well as some more
exotic animals such as storks (which are native to the area), giant owls, and a
lynx, which simply resembled a very large cat. It was a lovely time to simply
walk around and enjoy how gloriously warm and dry it was in Switzerland. We
finished the evening when Sam came back from work at home, grilling sausages
and vegetables on the back porch and drinking beers. The sun sets so late here,
and even though we only started getting dinner together around 8 pm, it was
finally full dark by the time we finished near 11 pm.
All memory of the warm day had fled when we woke up
yesterday. It was down to fifty-degrees, drizzling and breezy outside. Steve
and I were at odds about what to do and where to go, but we finally figured
things out and ended up walking downtown for lunch (at a Chinese restaurant
called Happy Wok – of course) and then to the Basler Munster (Basel Minster).
It’s a lovely old Romanesque church that is celebrating its 1000-year
anniversary, as parts of the foundations date from 1019. Sometimes, it’s such a
great reminder that we come from such young parts of the world, that the oldest
thing we can claim in the US only boasts about 400 years of history. We
wandered about looking at the crypts below the floor where there were
fascinating medieval style paintings that date back to the 1400s, as well as the
stained glass windows (one had Jesus in the middle of a six-pointed star
wearing a red cloak, which is not something I’ve ever seen before). I even
loved the wooden chairs that made up the rows – they all had a different design
on the back. I counted at least twenty-something different designs which were
all simple and lovely. It reminded me of heraldry in their style and shape.
We finished off the afternoon with coffee and törtchen (little cakes or cupcakes) at a
café downtown called Fumare Non Fumare, which was originally a bank of sorts. The
first floor was just one big room with a very sunny, lovely atrium in the
middle, lit by a large skylight, and there were at least 50-60 people in the
room all reading, in conversation, enjoying time with their children or friends
at different couches or islands of tables and chairs. It felt warm and lively
but not overwhelming. Steve worked on his app while I finished reading Bringing Up Bébé, which is a book about
French parenting. It was fascinating to read this while eying the toddlers who
were walking around or people breastfeeding their children in the middle of the
atrium.
This is kind of an abrupt end, but honestly, I have too much to write about Basel to squeeze it all into one essay. So tomorrow, more about Basel the city and our explorations therein!