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Blumenau

16 people want to go here. 58 people have been here.
88% of people who have been to Blumenau think it's worth visiting. The most popular places in Blumenau are Velha, Oktoberfest, and Itoupava Central.

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Untitled by HalfASmalli

I´ve been living here for 8 months. It´s great!

over 5 years ago

The most exciting thing here is the bus station...that's probably why they built it miles out of town by Tadeusz598

Avoid this place.

The buildings don’t bear any real resenblance to Alte Germany. They’re kitsch. The “wooden” half-timbering is made of metal.

The beer isn’t made in little brewaries: it’s the same flavouress fizz tou get everywhere else in Brazil (Skol, Brahma etc). They do some passsable imitations of German food: we ate in a posh place up on the hill, which cost a fortune, and it was okay, but nothing special.

Everything shuts at about noon on saturday. Including the City museum. There are no bookshops, record shops …there is a Chinese restaurant…there’s no one about…it’s just a rubbish place unless your dead drunk… which is probably why they produced that beerfestival…

over 6 years ago

Untitled by katyushams

I was to know the city during the Oktoberfest. Much livened up and decorated, my stay was perfect there.

over 6 years ago

Im currently living here by Scott25

Hey Im currently living here in Blumenau. It´s an awsome city full of culuture and history. Its very modern and i think everyone should visit it.

over 7 years ago

Prost! by acescorcio

Despite Joinville’s challenge, BLUMENAU has succeeded in promoting itself as the “capital” of German Santa Catarina. Picturesquely located on the right bank of the Rio Itajaí, Blumenau was founded in 1850 by Dr Hermann Blumenau, who served as director of the colony until his return to Germany in 1880. Blumenau always had a large Italian minority, but it was mainly settled by Germans and, as late as the 1920s, two-thirds of the population spoke German as their mother tongue. In the surrounding rural communities an even larger proportion of the population were German-speakers, many of them finding it completely unnecessary to learn Portuguese. Well into this century Blumenau was isolated, with only poor river transport connections with the Brazil beyond the Itajaí valley – something that enabled its German character to be retained for longer than was the case in Joinville.

Today, Blumenau’s municipal authority misses an opportunity to remind the world of the city’s German origins, the European links helping tourism and attracting outside investors. And, superficially at least, Blumenau certainly looks, if not feels, German. The streets are sparkling clean, parking tickets are issued by wardens dressed in a uniform that Heidi would have been comfortable in, most buildings are in German architectural styles and geranium-filled window boxes are the norm. But since German is almost never heard, and the buildings (such as the half-timbered Saxon-inspired department store and the Swiss chalet-like Prefeitura) are absurd caricatures of those found in German cities, the result is a sort of “Disneyland” interpretation of Germany.

It’s easy to sneer, but tourists from São Paulo are impressed by Blumenau’s old-world atmosphere and visit in large numbers, especially during the annual Oktoberfest . Held, since 1984, over three weeks in October, the festival is basically an advertising gimmick thought up by Hering, the Blumenau-based textile and agro-industrial giant. Besides vast quantities of beer and German food, the main festival attractions are the local and visiting German bands and German folk-dance troupes. Performances take place at PROEB, Blumenau’s exhibition centre, located on the city’s outskirts (frequent buses during the festival period), as well as in the downtown streets and the central Biergarten. So successful has the Oktoberfest been in drawing visitors to Blumenau – a million people attended the festivities during its peak year in 1992 – that the city’s authorities came to realize that the local flavour of the event had been swamped by outsiders and have now successfully halved attendance.

The rest of the year, local German bands perform every evening from 5pm in the Biergarten , the city’s main meeting point, in the tree-filled Praça Hercílio Luz. In the oldest part of Blumenau, across a small bridge on the continuation of the main street, Rua XV de Novembro, the Biergarten is only a short walk from the Museu Histórico da Família Colonial , one of the city’s few museums, at Alameda Duque de Caxias 78 (Tues-Fri 8am-noon & 1.30-5.30pm, Sat 9am-1pm & 2-4.30pm, Sun 9am-noon). The museum’s buildings, constructed in 1858 and 1864 for the families of Dr Blumenau’s nephew and secretary-librarian, are two of the oldest surviving enxaimel houses in Blumenau. Exhibits include nineteenth-century furniture and household equipment, documents relating to the foundation of the city, photographs of life in the settlement during its early years, and artefacts of the Kaingangs and Xoklengs – the indigenous population displaced by the German settlers. But it’s in the beautiful forest-like garden that you’ll find the most curious feature: a cemetery, the final resting place for the much loved cats of a former occupant of one of the houses.

A good half-hour walk from Praça Hercílio Luz, on the river at Rua Itajaí 2195, is the Museu de Ecologia Fritz Müller (daily 8am-noon & 2-5pm), built in 1867 and the former home of the eponymous German-born naturalist. Born in 1822, Müller lived in Santa Catarina between 1852 and 1897, and was a close collaborator of British naturalist Charles Darwin; the small museum is dedicated to the work of the lesser-known of the two scientists.

over 7 years ago

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HalfASmalli
Tadeusz598
katyushams
Scott25
acescorcio
arsk
kmichelone
julianalejandro
realbrunabenne
itsz

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