Spent the day at Magic Kingdom prepping for the main event tomorrow. #parkeologychallenge. Supply run then Epcot.
Notes
Kind:short content: a post or status update with just plain content and typically without a title
I do not like certain types of rides, first time on Splash Mountain, tomorrow last perhaps?
Onboard JetBlue 583 to Orlando.
And the journey begins…
Trying something different over the next few days. The Parkeology Disneyworld Challenge, to ride all open rides at 4 Disney World parks in one day. The challenge requires tweeting to @Parkeology with the tag #parkeologychallenge. Another team member will be keeping that record for official certification. I’ll be doing my Indieweb version when it won’t interfere. Only 1 rule for that. It must be posted to my website.
Enjoying a nice day off with no Black Friday drama. Wonder if anyone I know is braving the stores.
I have streamlined my process for posting from the Indigenous for Android client to my site and syndicating to Twitter. More tweets coming.
Commemorates the division of Berlin by the Berlin Wall and the deaths that occurred there. The monument was created in 1998 by the Federal Republic of Germany and the Federal State of Berlin. It is located on Bernauer Straße at the corner of Ackerstraße and includes a Chapel of Reconciliation, the Berlin Wall Documentation Centre, a 60-metre (200 ft) section of the former border, a window of remembrance and a visitor centre.
Only a short distance from the parking lot where Hitler’s bunker is the memorial to the murdered Jews of Europe, which is a series of concrete blocks. It is very large and abstract.
A surprisingly number of people are here for the Hebrew language tour. Wish my Hebrew was better.
The sixteen ton world clock was opened to the public in 1969, shortly before the twentieth anniversary of the German Democratic Republic, along with the Berlin TV Tower(seen in the background). The erection of the clock was part of a larger plan to expand and reorganize Alexanderplatz as a whole. At the end of the renovations, the public square was four times larger than it was at the end of the World War II.
It was intended to be both a symbol of Communist power and of Berlin. It remains the latter today, as it is easily visible throughout the central and some suburban districts of Berlin. With its height of 368 metres (including antenna) it is the tallest structure in Germany, and the second-tallest structure in the European Union.
Journey ends for today in Berlin.
First stop on my trip. Welcome to Dublin.