In Munich, we visit our friends C and S. Unfortunately...or fortunately?...C also had a cold, so we decided to be booger-best-friends and spend the day together blowing our noses, eating noodles, and watching TV. J and S met near the main train station and made their way to Theresienweise, the location of Oktoberfest in Munich.
(before I go on, please youtube 'Killertitten Das Supertalent' and you'll get a glimpse of what C and I saw on TV at one point during the day)
From what J told me (or rather, slurred to me) 11 hours later, this place is full of these huge open air tents. There's one per brand of beer, and unless you get there super-early, you have a bit to wait until you can get into one. In the tent, you have the lovely ladies dressed up in Dirndl carrying 3 litres of beer in each hand.
Girls that attend Oktoberfest usually wear dirndls, and boys wear lederhosen. As J didn't have access to any lederhosen, he wore the typical shirt that most men wear with their lederhosen. It's a small checked shirt in either blue, purple, red or green. He chose blue and C and S bought it for him ahead of time. Also, girls have a way of tying something on their dresses that says whether they are single or not, so it's almost like a huge single's mixer. Fun!
J told me (slurred to me) that there were people from all over the world there. However, being so focussed on the consumption of beer, he only met one guy from Switzerland. Otherwise, he spent the day with S and his cousins. 6 litres of beer, one half chicken, a pretzel, singing and dancing later, J and S (and his cousins) were stumbling home at 11pm. You see, Oktoberfest ends relatively early so that they can set up for the next day of festivites.