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Total trash

jc/jen, dpa/otpApril 14, 2009

Easter weekend in the German capital was unseasonably warm and pleasant. City residents and revelers marked the occasion by depositing 15 tons of garbage in the city's Tiergarten park.

https://p.dw.com/p/HWw8
Boy walking through trahs in the Tiergarten
Things were almost as bad as after the Love ParadeImage: AP

A small column of men from the parks authority started cleaning up the rubbish at 6 am on morning of Tuesday, April 14, after hordes of barbeque enthusiasts turned what is sometimes called Berlin's "green lung" into something resembling a cancerous organ.

Even some trees were reported damaged.

Park officials told the B.Z. newspaper it would cost around 16,000 euros ($21,200) to restore the park to a semblance of normalcy.

People making a mess in Berlin's public spaces is nothing new, as anyone who has ever witnessed the annual May 1 demonstration-cum-street-riot in the city's Kreuzberg district can attest.

But officials thought they had the situation under control in the Tiergarten, after barbeques were restricted to special areas and grilled-meat fanatics were instructed to take their waste with them.

The weather, however, seems to have thrown a monkey wrench into the works.

Clearly yearning for release after a winter in which the sun shone for an estimated fifteen minutes per month, and having emptied convenience store shelves of anything that looked remotely edible and/or flammable, hooligans armed with aprons and tongs went on a rampage.

And no one, it seems, was in much of a mind for tidying up.

Instead, the park employees were left to clean up the remains - despite the fact that park officials say budget cuts have left them short-handed.

So what are the poor park gardeners to do? Their director Hans-Gottfried Walter has the only logical answer.

"Every weekend I'm going to pray for rain," Walter told the B.Z.