Bavarian Beer Wench
The Bavarian beer wench is a familiar sight today in the beer halls of Austria and Germany and also in the thousands of replica Bavarian beer halls throughout Europe, Australia and the United States.
You’ll find her very sexily dressed in a short skirt, bodice top showing plenty of cleavage and long socks with shoes. Or she’ll be attired in lederhosen and frilly top, still showing plenty of cleavage.
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The Bavarian beer wench is always a simple, buxom, girl-next-door type. She is always happy and eager to please and she can carry an enormous number of full beer steins at one time.
The atmosphere in a Bavarian beer hall with it’s oom-pa-pa band and boisterous, happy crowd is very very entertaining and popular with the local residents and tourists alike.
One of the most famous events in Germany is the Munich Oktoberfest which runs from late September to early October each year. It is the world’s largest fair with more than 6,000,000 people attending each year.
The Munich Oktoberfest, traditionally, takes place during the sixteen days up to and including the first Sunday in October. Visitors eat huge amounts of traditional hearty fare such as chicken, roast pork, veal knuckle, grilled fish on a stick, sausages, potato dumplings and sauerkraut.
The first Oktoberfest was held in Munich on the 18th October 1810. A great horse race was organized to celebrate the marriage of Crown Prince Ludwick and Princess Therese of Saxe-Hildburghausen. The Oktoberfest was cancelled in 1811 because Bavaria was involved in the war with Napoleon, but in 1816 the first carnival booths appeared at the fair.
In 1819, the burgers of Munich took over the management of the festival. They decided that the Oktoberfest would be celebrated in September and October each and every year from then onwards, without exception. Later the festival was made longer and the start date moved forward so that the festival could take advantage of the warm weather usually experienced in Bavaria at the end of September, it was lengthened and the date pushed forward, the reason being that the end of September in Bavaria often has very good weather. The warm temperatures of around 65F in the first week of Oktoberfest increases the thirst of the visitors, so more beer is sold.. However, today the last week of Oktoberfest is still in October.



