Saturday May 9, 2026
No adventures today. Our company left at 10:30 this morning and the house felt lonely. Our friends and family not only packed their bags, but stripped sheets and started laundry and dishes. Dave drove the group to Strasbourg where they were catching a fast train (TGV) that will put them in Paris in only 2 hours. It sounds like there may be shenanigans, as Dale has wine and wine glasses in his backpack.
| Strasburg train station |
| Kim on the platform |
| Seats look comfortable |
We miss them already. Longtime friends, Janis and Clark have traveled with us on every one of the previous 6 trips where we rented a house and explored a region for an extended time. Dale and Kim (my brother and sister-in-law) have been camping buddies for many years and have joined us previously on the last two trips before this one.
We are working on laundry and cleaning this afternoon with apéros for dinner.
| Bread and cheese, strawberries, olives, sausage, and wine - Bon Apetit |
While at the outside table, our host René, passed by and took just a sip of wine when offered. He told me that alcohol is bad for his gout. Rene has been trying to cut our grass for a few days and at the same time not bother us. We told René that finishing mowing the grass would not disturb us, so he did, stopping at times to tell us stories.
René shared a stack of photos from Logelheim's Fête de Potiron (Pumpkin Festival) René told us there were 10,000 people at this fest and I can see why. Logelheim's population is 950. This fest has taken place every year in mid-October since 1999. Pumpkins are arranged in scenes, sculpted in original ways, and built into mythical beasts, space ships and other large characters There is a parade at dusk when all the pumpkins along the parade route are lit. All things pumpkin from soup to dessert are served under tents set up in the street. The statement "It takes a village..." must apply to Logelheim's residents. Sounds like great fun. I copied some of René's photos but haven't asked if I could publish them. But there is a website for this pumpkin fest that has lots of photos. If you need some Halloween ideas, I suggest you check out this page. You'll find it here: https://www.gite-en-alsace.net/alsace/fete-de-la-citrouille.html#:~:text=F%C3%AAte%20du%20potiron%20%C3%A0%20LOGELHEIM&text=Logelheim%20est%20principalement%20connu%20pour,d%C3%A9guster%20la%20soupe%20au%20potiron.
Sunday May 10, 2026
Weather is iffy - perhaps rain around 5 pm. It's certainly gray. We spent some of our morning time looking at maps together so I get a better sense of the roads we travel to all these wonderful places. Since I'm not driving, I can't seem to get my bearings.
We decided to have lunch at Brasserie Schwendl (Green Guide suggestion) and then visit one of Colmar's art museums. It's clearly a popular place.
| Brasserie Schwendl |
Te weather is holding, so we opted to eat outside. The place was filling up; 15 minutes after we sat down, there was a line. (Good sign that the food is good.) Europeans in general eat lunch later than we do - somewhere between 1 and 2 pm. We were lucky to have arrived around 12:30. I ordered a tarte flambée - one of those ultra thin crust French answer to pizza. Dave ordered Baeckeoffe - a bit like pot roast but with 3 meats (lamb, beef, pork) and sauteed potatoes, an Alsatian dish he's been wanting to try. Lunch finished, we're off to the museum.
| Dave waiting for his food |
| Our food - Baeckeoffe for Dave, tarte flambée for me |
The Musée Unterdenlinden (under the lime tree) is housed in a 13th century Dominican convent and displays far more art than we can see in a day. First, let me say, I was enthralled by the building. Even through the white plaster and clean lines of the museum's display rooms, you never lost sight that this had been a Convent.
| Clean lines are everywhere. Here, the staircase to the lower level. |
| Reminders of this building's original use as a convent |
| The chapel of the convent is a great place to display the Isenheim Altarpiece |
The original cloisters were accessible from multiple rooms. A second win is that the building is completely handicapped accessible via elevators and ramps. Wood carvings allowed vision-impaired to explore with their hands their major artwork.
| Lynn could access the cloister using a ramp. |
| Looking across the cloister toward the well |
I will say we wandered slightly aimlessly, finding the building plan difficult. Nevertheless, we saw lots of prehistoric archeologic finds from the area, carvings from Roman times, and medieval religious art.
| A burial carving from Roman times |
| Mosaic floor from Roman times |
| Medieval carved and painted altar piece |
The museum's pièce de résistance is the Isenheim Altarpiece. Isenheim is a village 23 miles southwest of Colmar where St Anthony's monastery was located. The monks here were known for their hospital work in treating plague and other middle ages maladies like ergotism (aka St Anthony's fire) caused by a fungus often found in rye, which poisons the system leading to convulsions, gangrene and other horrible illnesses. The Isenheim altarpiece is unlike anything I've seen before. I'm not sure I can explain it well. It's kind of like a book that opens from the center and folds out to both sides
| This mock-up gives an idea of how the panels opened. |
When closed, the altarpiece looks like this:
| The Crucifixion panel was displayed most of the church year |
The panels are split vertically down the center of the central image (in this case along a vertical line just left of Jesus' body) to expose paintings on the panel underneath as well as the back of the central panel. The second view exposes the Annunciation on the left, the birth of Christ in the large center panel, and the resurrection on the right.
Painted on back of this panel (the birth of Christ) are scenes of the life of St Anthony.
| Scenes from the life of St Anthony |
When these panels are opened, the altarpiece with sculptures of St Anthony is revealed.
| The St Anthony altarpiece |
We've taken in all that we can for one day. There's so much more to see - some modern art, something about Guernica, and floors and rooms we haven't found yet. It will have to wait for another day. We walked back to the car for the drive home. On the way home Dave took me on tours of a couple of the villages near us to help me get my bearings.
We're excited to see our friends from Belgium, Dan & Paulette Dumas. They arrive tomorrow. Can't wait.
By the way, it sprinkled for just a few minutes. No rain today. Farmer René bemoans how much water costs -an unnecessary expense if it would only rain.
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