September 19, 2011

Germany-Munich-Oktoberfest; How to get reservations for Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany

How to get reservations for Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany


You can visit the Oktoberfest beer tents without a reservation. If you do this, plan to arrive as early as possible, especially with a large group. During the week, arrive no later than 2:30 p.m.; on weekends, go in the morning. Otherwise, you run the risk tents will be full, and if you don’t have a seat, you won’t be served any beer. If you do decide to reserve, this must be done directly with individual tents.

Oktoberfest gate in Munich, Germany
Oktoberfest gate in Munich, Germany
 

Probably the best thing for out-of-towners to do is to purchase an Oktoberfest package. Viator offers one that includes a tour of the grounds, a ride on the creaky Ferris wheel (on a clear day you can see the Alps), and a reserved seat in a tent with beer and food. Seating on my tour in 2010 was reserved from noon until around 5 p.m. and included two litres of beer and half of a roasted chicken per person (drink and food is a mandatory purchase with tickets to the tents). Iain, our English guide, whose Mick Jagger-blue eyes almost exactly matched his blue-and-white shirt, said he had been attending Oktoberfest for 10 years and informed us that “we’ve got serious beer drinking to do.” We were cautioned to be sensible and not to become bierleichen, or "beer corpses”—a term that refers to passed out drinkers, NOT dead drinkers. As our group got ready to board the Ferris wheel, he told us that the weather that day was “fur”--or was it “farn”?—when a warm wind comes over the Alps and everyone gets headaches and aggressive and drunk. He said that on this kind of day you “can see for crazy miles.”

We learned that 70% of people attending are from Bavaria (50% from Munich, 20% from the rest of Germany, and 10% from the rest of the world--with Italians and Australians making up the largest portion). In 2010, 6.2 million-plus people attended. Iain refers to this--the biggest festival on Earth—as “the beast.” While we caught our breath, he filled us in on the history. Oktoberfest started long ago, when people figured out that the best way to get rid of an excess of beer was to have a festival. Tents began appearing in 1881. Albert Einstein installed light bulbs in the 1800s in the Schot tent. “Now people pour in through the gates like beer into a stein. It’s mad, absolutely mad. Good times,” he declared, and then pointed out that Germany was created as a country only in 1871, that it is a baby compared to the U.S.—the same age as Lucky Strike cigarettes! Before we enter our tent, he tells us that amazingly everything is removed from the fairgrounds after the last day. The area becomes an empty field with roads. One of my tour mates summed it all up as “like a state fair on steroids.”


More Oktoberfest in Munich.

More things to do in Munich.


image c2011 Carole Terwilliger Meyers

11 comments:

  1. Hi Carole,
    I know this is a fairly old post but wanted to say thanks for the info on Viator. We are going to Oktoberfest 2012 and I think this tour is just what we need. Do you have any other blog posts on tours and such in Bavaria that we can get to by train or bus?
    Thanks again!
    Julie

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  2. Hi Julie.
    You are going to have a blast! More info on:
    Oktoberfest, http://travelswithcarole.blogspot.com/search/label/Oktoberfest;
    Munich, http://travelswithcarole.blogspot.com/search/label/Munich
    Regensburg, http://travelswithcarole.blogspot.com/search/label/Regensburg
    Germany in general, http://travelswithcarole.blogspot.com/search/label/Germany.
    I also recommend this website, which is operated by a friend of mine, http://europeforvisitors.com/germany.
    regards, Carole

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  3. Can't wait to visit Munich again, really loved it and Oktoberfest would be a lot of fun.

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  4. I don't drink beer (I don't like it!) so I think if I happened to be in Munich during Oktoberfest I'd take the opportunity to visit historic sites, museums, and shops while all the visitors were busy drinking!

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  5. Two litres of beer, a roast chicken and a guide with Mick Jagger-blue eyes, sign me up for Oktoberfest, Munich!

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  6. Ah the real Oktoberfest. We have been to many, one just last night, but I'm sure they don't hold a candle to Munich.

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  7. Ha! Oktoberfest isn't the only time you'll encounter a bierleich! Bless his heart, we were seated close to a young man who had clearly drowned his sorrows at the pagoda in the Englischergarten this past summer. The party went on around him.

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  8. Loved our visit to Munich and Oktoberfest. I didn't know that the majority of people come from Bavaria, interesting fun fact! I have to admit that I also loved the roasted chicken after a liter of bier.

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  9. Oktoberfest in Munich, sounds like a good time but I think it's too crowded for me to be comfortable.

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