Wintergartens (winter gardens), conservatories, greenhouses and beer gardens

Nancy & Franz
Here Nancy and Franz Wurm, Director of the Wintergarten-Fachverband association, (I’m taking the picture) enjoy a drink at one of the many beautiful beergardens in Munich.
We’ve been in Munich for one day and have much to report.
One thing that always strikes me whenever I fly into Europe is the difference in the built landscape from what I’m used to seeing in the US. It is distinctively different from what you see flying across the American countryside.
In Europe, houses are clustered in much more distinct towns and villages, some very small yet still very distinct, whereas in the United States, they are spread out across the land. In Europe, there seems to be a much clearer line between where the houses and the town ends and where the farmland begins.
The ubiquitous American housing subdivision and the endless suburban sprawl, seems to be completely absent from the European landscape – a reality that makes me very satisfied whenever I notice it. I wonder though, what do the Europeans know about city and town planning that we don’t? How do they accomplish this and is there a danger that in the future, the American “cancer of the land” will spread there?
It might be that in Europe, land being in such short supply, over the generations people developed a sense of the importance and value of the farmland and are unwilling to desecrate the open spaces so easily.
Or perhaps, the European culture, so much older than the American, is used to the way cities and towns were laid out centuries ago when there was not the automobile to provide quick and easy transportation. Or maybe it was the need to cluster together for defensive purposes – but whatever the reason, the sense that the land is something not to be squandered is evident everywhere.
I don’t mean to say that people don’t need houses to live in and that new homes should not be built, but the European model of clustering them into villages and towns seems a much more logical and less wasteful approach.
Rather than digging up a piece of choice farmland in the middle of nowhere – which I see happen all over America, and plopping down the same model x,y,z houses at infinitum with no planning rhyme or reason other than how to get the most units onto an acre and maximize revenue from the development project, we should respect the age old principles of building places that we would really like to be in. I think we might be forced into this if we are to wake up to a more ecologically sustainable way of life, which is not a bad thing in my opinion.
Where would you rather spend a day off? In a “quaint” village or town in the Cotswolds, Tuscany or Maryland’s Eastern shore or the placeless subdivisions many call home.
Ok, enough of this.
Munich has wonderful beer gardens all over the city and the first thing we did when we arrived was to sample the local fare at one of the oldest and best known.
Beer (mixed with lemonade) is a favorite drink at mid day, and small sausages with the best sauerkraut I’ve ever had!
The people of Munich are some of the most laid-back and friendly I’ve encountered. We’ve had no trouble getting around knowing only two words of German, bitte (please) and danke (thank you).
We had dinner at a lovely little café near our hotel called Café Mozart. Our host named Armin took wonderful care of us, patiently translating the entire menu and recommending the best food, beer and schnapps! His suggestions where perfect, the beer, a dunkel (dark) Bavarian brew called Weizenbier with a yeasty overtone went down very smoothly!
Tomorrow, off to visit wintergarden factories with Franz, and then on to beautiful Wurtzburg.
Alan