Oktoberfest is open. Mayor Dieter Reiter officially started Oktoberfest at noon Saturday when he inserted the tap into the first beer keg, signaling the 189th start of the festival. Thousands of beer lovers celebrated in the Munich fairground as the first to clink their mugs during the world’s largest folk festival. Servers immediately began ferrying trays — each carrying up to 8 glass mugs — to tables. Revelers started clinking their mugs and taking deep gulps of beer in the stuffy heat of the tent. The celebration runs through Oct. 6 in 18 large tents covering the Theresienwiese fairground. This year’s festival includes stepped-up security in the wake of a deadly knife attack in Solingen, a city roughly 470 kilometers (292 miles) northwest of Munich. The violence on Aug....
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Authentic program is part of DAS FEST in the Günther-Klotz-Anlage Karlsruhe Music, dance, culinary delights, a bazaar, yoga, hands-on activities and information about India - all in the heart of Karlsruhe: this year's INDIA SUMMER DAYS will once again offer a wide range of activities from Friday to Sunday, 19 to 21 July 2024. Parallel to the activities around the DAS FEST stages in the Günther-Klotz-Anlage, the “Indian village" will once again be integrated in the area of the active playground with free admission. Whether classical, folk or popular music, table or string instruments, classical dance styles from many regions of India, the Bollywood moves familiar from films, cricket demonstration, puppet show, workshops or hands-on yoga: the Indian village offers numerous insights, allo
Read MoreOktoberfest is back in Germany after two years of pandemic cancellations — the same bicep-challenging beer mugs, fat-dripping pork knuckles, pretzels the size of dinner plates, men in leather shorts and women in cleavage-baring traditional dresses. But while brewers are more than glad to see the return of the Bavarian capital’s sudsy tourist centerpiece, both they and visitors are under pressure from inflation in a way that could scarcely be imagined the last time it was held in 2019. A man mounts a light advertisement on a booth on the Oktoberfest grounds in Munich, Germany, Thursday, Sept. 15, 2022. (Peter Kneffel/dpa via AP) For one thing, the 1-liter (2-pint) mug of beer will cost between 12.60 and 13.80 euros ($12.84 and $14.07) this year, which is an increase of about 15% c...
Read MoreGermany’s annual Oktoberfest festival is finally on again for this fall, following a two-year hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic, the head of the famous Bavarian beer festival said Thursday. “The Wiesn will take place,” Clemens Baumgaertner told reporters in Munich using the locals’ Bavarian colloquialism for the Oktoberfest which is referring to the big lawn, or Wiese, where the boozy celebrations are taking place. He said said the popular beer festival in the Bavarian capital will be held without any pandemic restrictions from Sept. 17 to Oct. 3 — Germany’s national day. FILE PHOTO: A waitress carries beer mugs at the Hofbraeuhausbeer tent in Munich, Germany. Oktoberfest is Germany's and the world largest beer fair. About six million people attend the sixteen-day festival d...
Read MoreA Munich brewpub has found a novel way to beat Europe's cooking oil shortages - letting customers pay for their beer with sunflower oil to ensure plentiful stocks for frying schnitzels. With Ukraine and Russia accounting for about 80% of global exports of sunflower seed oil, many European countries including Germany have seen supplies dwindle since Russia invaded its neighbour in February. Sunflower oil from Ukraine, a total of 80 liters, is loaded from the trunk of Moritz Baller's car at Munich's Giesinger Brewery in Munich, Germany, July 15, 2022. REUTERS/Lukas Barth Managers at the Giesinger Brewery, a brewhouse and pub in the southern city of Munich, think they may have the answer, offering beer lovers a litre of their favourite brew for the same quantity of sunflower oil. ...
Read MoreThe annual Oktoberfest, the world's largest beer festival, will take place this year without any coronavirus restrictions after being cancelled for the past two years due to the pandemic, Munich mayor Dieter Reiter said on Friday. "There will be an unrestricted (festival), which will hopefully give a lot of people a lot of pleasure," Reiter told a news conference, adding that he had instructed the festival's management to go ahead "without delay and without restrictions." FILE PHOTO: Visitors of the Oktoberfest toast with beer mugs during the opening day of the Oktoberfest at Theresienwiese in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Alexandra Beier/Getty Images) The Oktoberfest is due to be held from Sept. 17 to Oct. 3. Reiter, who said he did not come to his decision lightly due to the pa...
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