The food is absolutely more authentic! Local cuisine is simply better than foreign facsimiles and this 100% true with Christmas market fare.
Collectable mugs. Every year, each city has commemorative mugs that they sell hot drinks (mostly Glühwein) in. The price of your drink includes a deposit for the mug so that if you want to keep it after downing your drink, you're already covered, but if you want the 2-3 CHF / Euro back just take your empty mug back to the nearest vendor and they'll exchange it for the local currency.
(Hot chocolate also comes in the mugs!) |
The weather is always cold! This seems to be true even when the temperatures are unseasonably mild. Last year, we went to the Zurich markets on a day that was said to be 50 degrees but it was honestly one of the coldest Christmas market experiences of my life! This year the temperatures were legitamately frigid everywhere we went. And while it can make walking around outside all day a little uncomfortable it does provide a different feel compared to visiting an equivalent market in North Texas where the temperatures can reach the mid to upper 60's.
The cities have a traditional old world feel! Of course much of this is due to the fact that most of the cities worth visiting at Christmas are legitimately several hundred years old at least so the locals have quite a bit of practice in putting their collective best foot forward during the holidays!
Everything is decorated! And while this can also be true of certain areas in the states, over here it's frequently hard to find a building, sign or street corner that doesn't have something festive for the holidays draped over it.
This is a train station. It apparently needed to feel festive too. |
It's festive but not Kitschy. Maybe it's the fact that places like Walmart and Target don't really exist over here so when you go to buy something from a vendor it doesn't feel like your paying a middleman for something. Also, the term kitschy originates from the German word "kitsch" meaning "gaudy" or "trashy" and despite how over-the-top some of the decorations can be you also know that it generally wasn't done on the cheap so it tends to avoid the dreaded kitschy feel.
This year selection of markets were Colmar, Basel and Feldkirch with the family and Amanda got a bonus trip to Prague for work and visited their market. Here's hoping we can continue the tradition in the future!
Merry Christmas everyone!
Merry Christmas everyone!
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