After visiting the Tut Anch Amun that day I was hungry and wanted to eat convieniently at the Tollwood summer festival which was at the same park as the exhibtion anyway. Guido and Anke went home, but Kathrin and Bernhard decided to join me.
This establishment boasted very different wines. Unfortunately I still had to drive later, so I only admired the design. The entrance artwork this year was a flower made by traffic signs. Not bad, and they had uglier stuff standing there. This alley had mostly food stalls. At night when the lanterns are turned on it must look very nice. Tasteful, nice and comfortable. I like the look of this establishment. Unfortunately again they sold mostly alcoholic beverages, so onwards we went. Very hard to recognize it from the picture, much easier in real when you can add depth perception. It's a rider on a horse done from metal parts. I like it. In front of the asian food stalls this generic asian looking warrior holds... something. At some open air podium they had a shakuhachi concert. I was very curious, because for all my japanese studies, I never heard one. I was a little disappointed at seeing only one japanese guy among the musicians, but I guess the others are very good at it too, or they wouldn't be performing. All in all, however the festival had too much background noise to enjoy the rather silent music completely. Shop-keepers from all over the world sell out their culture. Clocks made from melted bottles. I like their look, but I can't imagine where they would fit. And also I don't like to read analog clocks, so I also like them best in the shop. The pink shop sold clothes and would fit right in Harajuku.