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7 events across Germany you won’t want to miss this February

From fancy festivals to street samba, we've found the best events to lighten up your February.

7 events across Germany you won't want to miss this February
Photo: DPA

1. The Night of the Jumps, Berlin, February 4th – 5th

Photo: DPA

“The excitement that every driver feels before a jump exchanges unfiltered into the audience,” say the organizers of The Night of the Jumps. While the rest of Germany can offer high culture and traditional festivals, this event provides something completely different: adrenaline.

It's billed as an evening of spectacular jumps and aerial acrobatics on motorbikes, and takes place in the Mercedes-Benz Arena in Berlin on the 4th and 5th.

The drivers fly through the air, taking part in different events such “highest air”, and “Whipcontest”, and of course an event like this wouldn't be complete without a huge firework display.

2. The Elbphilharmonie, Hamburg

Photo: DPA

After the colourful and vibrant opening of the Elbphilharmonie, Hamburg's new concert house has a lot to live up to in its first full month. With one of the best cellists in the world, Yo-Yo Ma, already having hit the stage at the end of January, it certainly hasn't disappointed so far. 

With pianists Anna Vinnitskaya (Feb 8th) and Mitsuko Uchida (Feb 23rd) on the line up this month, there is still much to come.

3. Carnival in Cologne, Düsseldorf and other western cities

Photo: DPA

Having started at 11:11am on November 11th, the festive period of Karneval has been going for a while in Germany. However the four-month festival draws to a close in February on Ash Wednesday. For all who don't know this season, it's traditions are quite bizarre!

The week of celebrations start with Weiberfastnacht, or Fat Thursday, this year falling on February 23rd. Originating in Bonn, it is tradition that the women “take back” the town – women symbolically storm the town hall and cut off the ties of the men, leaving them with a small kiss as compensation. The whole event is even shown live on television!

Photo: DPA

For the rest of the week there are many processions and marches where different groups can create a float or a performance and take part in the festival. Much of the town dresses up, painting their faces and taking to the streets in celebration. 

The biggest city for carnival is undoubtedly Cologne, where they spend over €2 million on the week of celebrations, and give away 700,000 bars of chocolate and 300,000 bunches of flowers to spectators.

In some areas of the Rhineland they take the religious aspect of the week much more seriously, burning a straw man in order to take away all of the sins committed over the course of carnival season. 

4. Berlin International Film Festival, February 9th – 17th

Meryl Streep led the jury in 2016. Photo: DPA

Tired of the same old, same old from Hollywood? Looking for some original, interesting films? Look no further than the Berlinale, one of the world’s most notable film festivals.

This year, the 67th festival is running from the 9th to the 17th of February. It will, as always, offer a wide range of movies, from independent and art house productions to some international premieres (T2 Trainspotting is a particular highlight), and everything in between.

With 20,000 professionals arriving from 122 countries, half a million attendees expected and a reputation to die for, you can bet your horses the Berlinale will be an experience to remember.

5. Magritte Exhibition at Frankfurt Schirn Kunsthalle,  February 10th – June 17th

Photo: DPA

Does 2017 feel surreal to you? Embrace it with an exhibition of the famous 20th century Belgian surrealist artist René Magritte arriving in Frankfurt.

Frankfurt's Schirn Kunsthalle is hosting an exhibition under the patronage of German Federal President Joachim Gauck and the Belgian King. In fact, the same exhibition has just been showing in Paris at the Pompidou Centre, where it proved very popular. One for the culture vultures.

6. Bremen Samba Festival, February 17th– 18th

Photo: DPA

Weather got you down? Lacking colour in these wintry days? What better antidote than Bremen’s Samba festival, a two-day bonanza of dancing and exuberance.

Every year since 1986 Bremen’s city centre has been filled with dozens of samba groups from around Germany and beyond, and up to 40,000 spectators. As well as the massive parade on Saturday lunchtime there’s also a kids’ carnival, dancing long into the night and a masquerade ball to round it all off.

The theme this year is ‘wonders of the world’ – expect to be dazzled. If you’re looking for something a bit different, here’s your ticket. After all, as the organisers themselves say, the masks are supposed to signify how extraordinary and individual each of us is, breaking with the everyday.

7. Bonn Video Arts Festival, February 17th – April 2nd

The Museum of Art, Bonn. Photo: DPA

February also sees the opening of one of Germany’s less well-known events: the biennial Bonn Videonale festival of video arts.

Held since 2005 in Bonn’s Museum of Art, the festival has among its highlights a competition between old hands and young up-and-comers in a fierce battle for the €5,000 top prize.

But it’s not all about the money. With plenty of discussion of modern video art trends, alongside lectures, performances, presentations and more, this is a fusion of artistic talent not to be missed.

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EVENTS

How Cologne is preparing for the start of Carnival on Friday

Dressing up, singing, and drinking: On Friday, countless Jecken (revelers) in Cologne will once again celebrate the start of the Carnival session.

How Cologne is preparing for the start of Carnival on Friday

Dubbed Germany’s “fifth season” by locals, the event starts every year on November 11th at 11:11 am, and typically stretches into February or March, when colourful parades spill into the streets.

Carnival stronghold Cologne in particular is preparing for the onslaught of tens of thousands of people who will flock to its Altstadt (old town), and especially to the student quarter, starting early Friday morning. 

READ ALSO: 10 unmissable events in Germany this November

“Far too many people want to celebrate in far too small a space,” city director Andrea Blome told DPA. “We can’t stop anyone from coming to Cologne now.” 

More security this year

In the popular Kwartier Latäng student quarter, there have been regular bouts of drinking by young partygoers in the past, who crowded into a confined space, leaving litter everywhere and publicly peeing on the corners of buildings. 

Google Maps shows the location of the so-called Kwartier Latäng part of Cologne.

But with a new security plan, the city and police hope to keep the situation under control.

Several checkpoints and road closures have been set up to secure the safety of the revelers and relieve the burden on worried residents, according to Blome. Visitors will only be able to enter the closed-off area around Zülpicher Straße via a single access point. 

On Friday, Cologne is also set to send a total of 150 employees from the Ordnungsamt (public order office) onto the streets, who will be supported by 520 private security guards. 

A glass ban will again apply in the celebration zones, and several hundred toilets will be set up at the hotspots, “which nevertheless will probably not be used by all visitors,” Blome predicted.

READ ALSO: 10 words you need to know at Cologne’s Carnival

Up to 1,100 police officers are expected to be on duty on the day – about 200 fewer than last year, said head of operations Rüdiger Fink. But he expected to keep the situation “under control with a new security plan.”

What to expect

On Cologne’s Heumarkt, there will be a stage program all day with bands such as the Bläck Fööss, the Paveiern and Brings. 

Google Maps shows Cologne’s Heumarkt along the Rhine River.

According to the Willi Ostermann Society, about 10,000 tickets were sold in advance for the event, which will be aired by German WDR for several hours.

Meanwhile, in Düsseldorf, the day will start at 11:11 a.m. with the “Hoppeditz Awakening” in front of City Hall. 

According to a spokesman, the police will be adequately prepared for the start of the season, with a particular focus on the Altstadt, where there will certainly be celebrations.

“But 11.11. is a very different event here in Düsseldorf than in Cologne,” he said, referring to a more orderly start and fewer guests.

READ ALSO: What you need to know about celebrating Carnival in Germany

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