1. Purchase appropriate attire, or you’ll look and feel like
a loser. This step should always come first, even if no Oktoberfest is in the
horizon. Ignore the cost, for, in the words of Martha, you’re purchasing an
heirloom that will be passed on for generations. (I can see it now, “Oh no.
Dad’s wearing his lederhosen again and talking about the ‘Good old days…’”)
2. Make reservations in February. Or, if you had no idea
you’d be in Germany come September/October, then wait until the absolute last
minute and buy online from a Canadian could who, after the previous weekend,
realized it was hell to wake up on the Sunday after and have to resume their
parental duties, thus selling their second weekend’s reservations.
4. Scour the internet for a last-minute place to stay and
don’t worry that you’re paying double, maybe triple the amount for a place to
lay your weary head. (AirBNB has always come through for me with this.)
5. Hop on the 7 AM train filled with fellow Oktoberfest
goers. Ignore that most are already drinking.
6. You’ve officially arrived! You can either:
A)Proceed
directly to the festivities or
B)
Explore Munich, knowing that Saturdays are insane and not worth squeezing
your way into a tent. Good food, fun, and beer to be had either way.
7. Once at Oktoberfest, first walk around and soak it all
in. You’ll see rides of monstrous proportions, ‘tents’ that are more like
permanent gymnasiums, and traditional wear of all shapes and sizes. Revere the
old men proudly donning their worn-in leiderhosen, their hats with protruding
feathers and multiple pins from God-knows what. Judge each dirdel,
compartmentalizing into your own created categories (That-One’s-Legit,
I-Want-That-for-Next-Year, Got-That-One-From-Spencers.) Take in the smells as
you saunter past each stall: fried sweet dough, chicken over an open
rotisserie, crispy pork skins ready to be consumed on a roll, brauwurst of all
kinds, baked potato bar, the fish stall (pick up the pace on that one…)
Caution—these smells may or may not be as inviting after spending some time in
a tent.
8. Once your time has come, cautiously enter into the tent
of your choice (in our case, the Hofbrau.) Marvel at the sheer enormity of the
structure with a capacity for 10,000 people, both inside and out in the biergarten.
Make your way to your reserved table where you’ll be given vouchers for two
liter-beers, a half a chicken, and 7.50 to spend on whatever else you fancy.
9. Let the festivities begin! Make friends with your
neighbors! Sing along to the German drinking songs! Love life!
10. Continue with #9
11. Safely make your way home.
12. Repeat on day 2.
1 comment:
Awww Mike has the same Germany face as you do! Yayyyyyyy
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