Prague, Budapest and Salzburg
We flew into sparkling clean Prague airport this afternoon and had an awesome taxi driver guide show us sites on the way to the hotel. We met up with dad (aka "Pete"), Kateri, Will and Joan at the centrally located Charles hotel (right by the Charles bridge) and set out walking historic Prague center. WOW!! This is such a beautiful city.
Will, Kateri, Jane, Dad
(Joan is in the background checking out the Astronomical clock, Kristi is taking the picture)
(Joan is in the background checking out the Astronomical clock, Kristi is taking the picture)
Heading towards the Charles Bridge
Dad practicing the Segway for tomorrow...Yes, you read that right
Old Town Square
Check out this street musician - at least 7 different instrument at once...
Perfect walking weather
Group Segway shot at the Old Town Square :)))
Kristi's birthday dinner
A group "selfie" near the Astronomical Clock
Perfect walking weather
...and looking up weather
Will, ordering 400 beers
Day 2 in Prague (June 24) -- Kristi's Birthday!!
The metro was 24 crowns for 30 minutes - which stretched into about 3 hours. These are good for the trams as well which we took uphill to the castle.
Stopping and looking at the sewing machines in this street shop, the guy kicked out "Pete" on paper in about 5 seconds.
The start of Rick Steve's walking tour - under the horse's tail by the National Museum
The metro was 24 crowns for 30 minutes - which stretched into about 3 hours. These are good for the trams as well which we took uphill to the castle.
...which included the tram up to the Palace at the top of the hill
At
the castle, we went to St. Vitus cathedral. The stained glass was
incredible. Kateri bought tickets inside so we could see St. George's
basilica and a front view of the gigantic castle. On the way back,
Jane and Kristi ran into some Broadneck High School students on a group
trip (small world!). (The class of 2015....they hadn't even been born in
when Jane graduated (1987)...they found that amusing. Jane found it
disconcerting).
The Cathedral
The tiny basilica near the palace
View from the palace
After
a very short break at the hotel to rest our feet and have a beer and
snack, we headed off to the Segway tour. Dominique was our tour guide - a
cutie patootie Czech lad with perfect English and great stories.
We
started by going through the Old Town Square where Dom told the story
about the astronomical clock maker (and how they blinded him after he
created it so he'd never create another like this one).
Group Segway shot at the Old Town Square :)))
Another story:
One building had a row of statues of famous composers, and when the
Nazis turned that building into SS headquarters, a couple soldiers were
told to destroy the statue of the Jewish composer (can't remember his
name). But when they got up to the row of statues, they couldn't figure
out which one was the "Jewish one." So, they destroyed the one that
was, according to their propaganda, the most "Jewish looking" one: It
was Wagner. Hitler's favorite composer. (Dominique summarized it
perfectly, as he turned to ride on: Something like, "that's a little bit
of humor about our town's occupation by the Nazis)
A
third story: recently, when an unpopular president was elected - a
famous and controversial Prague artist created a sculpture of a hand
flipping the bird and sent it on a boat into on the river in protest of
the election. It stayed on the river in front of the President's residence for about a week.
The
segway tour continued through old Jewish quarter. We saw the oldest
standing synagogue in Europe. Also, a building of the Knights of Malta -
part of the Crusades - but on humaniarian missions, helping, feeding,
protecting).
We
stopped at the John Lennon wall. People used to illegally smuggle his
music in - they loved the Beatles. And, in 1980, when Lennon was
murdered, someone painted a picture of him on the wall. A rebellious
act, which was immediately painted over and investigated. But a couple
days later, someone painted him again and then someone else and else..
People had started gathering at the wall and listening to music. The
police beat them and tried to get them to stop, but they kept coming
back. Dominque, this early-20's man, who wasn't even alive when that
happened, spoke of it as this monumental event, that Czechs believe was
one of the main sparks of the Velvet Revolution, which finally achieved
Czech independence in 1989. (our city tour (where the horse's ass was)
took us down the avenue where 500,000 Czechs came for weeks in 1989,
jangling keys in defiant message "go home oppressors.") There were so
many of these kinds of stories: defiant, courageous, inspiring. This
is just a few.
Next,
we segway'd through a lovely park - a really nice green and calm space.
Also, an art exhibit of 100 Jewish kids saved from Nazi's. The displays
- pictures of the kids and their life stories through adulthood was
powerful. We finished by zooming around a relatively empty square
before we headed back in. It was great...everyone's favorite part of
the Prague stay. We saw part of old town we never knew existed; for
example there's way more under the Charles bridge than you can see being
ON the bridge. That was really cool.
And Hello. Dad and Joan rode Segways. (and rode them well!)
After
covering nearly every inch of Prague in a single day, we sat down (at
about 9:30) for a wonderful birthday dinner at a traditional Czech
restaurant. The waiter helped us select wines from the area to go along
with our goulash in a bread bowl, salads, and potato soups. And the
waiter brought Kristi a birthday sundae, and it had a sparkler on it.
Kristi's birthday dinner
A group "selfie" near the Astronomical Clock
Then we mozied (limped) back
through the Old Town square and over the Charles bridge, trying to
capture in photos the incredible views of the lights on the town. The
castle lit up, the Teem Church, the Clock, and rows of soft-lit
townhouses....so pretty.
After
an early breakfast, we checked out of the Charles (a great hotel in
Prague center). We got to the train station , picked up the sweet van -
a Peugot which Kateri expertly drove through the Czech country side on a
rainy day. We decided to change plans for the train - we would keep
the van for the whole trip and cancel our train reservations to save us
the rush and allow more freedom to explore the country sides.
Dad
wanted to "take pictures of various and sundry buildings, the lay of
the land, etc to sort of ground truth what he and Mark had been seeing
on Google Earth. Dad and Joan wanted to see where their grandparents
were raised - "where our mother's parents were raised - the Weigels and
Groeligs.
Trebarov and Rychanov (June 25)
Trebarov is the primary reason Dad and Aunt Joan wanted to come to this region of the world. It's where their grandparents (on their mother's side) grew up. (Their mom's mom grew up in Trebarov, their mom's dad grew up in nearby Rychanov na Morave).
Uncle Mark had helped us out by writing up a detailed description of what he had been able to figure out about that part of the family history and Joan read it to us as we drove through the beautiful countryside during a light and gorgeous rain. (The smells of the rain on the forest trees and fields of crops was so great, we couldn't take deep enough breaths).
Joan reading from Mark's family research write up
The Trebarov countryside: a very rural area, but simply beautiful!
Driving via Brno, we arrived in Budapest!
This is a panoramic view from our hotel, The Bellevue B&B. It is on the Buda side with a stunning view of the Parliament building right from the balcony of Joan's room (so we spent a fair amount of time bothering Joan). This building, several others, and the bridges were lit up amazingly each night.
Mathias Castle on top of Castle Hill....we walked around a corner....and this is what we saw!
Our
first evening in Budapest, we checked into the Bellevue and received
*very detailed* instructions on how the B&B works (how to lock the
doors, open the balcony doors, turn on the lights, heat the water, etc.)
from the owners of the establishment: Judit and Lajosh, a very
Hungarian couple. (The husband smiled and made jokes all the time. The
wife was very nice...and also very, er, Hungarian: "eat this now. You will like.
Spread butter on the bread now. Don't turn on this fan." etc.) Awesome.
A lovely breakfast, accommodating hosts - watching us eat making sure we had everything we needed!
Lajosh and Judit
After
checking in, we ate dinner at an amazing Hungarian restaurant a few
hundred feet from our B&B, The Hunyadi. And after a long drive,
were happy to eat great food, drink lots of wine, tell stories and
laugh. Then an amble back to the B&B and a good sleep.
The
next day was our big tour day. We signed up for a hop on/hop off bus
tour, which was nice because we could see a lot of the city without
wearing out our already tired legs. Although it wasn't totally our cup
of tea (too many stop-and-waits), there was an audio history lesson and
explanation of buildings playing through headphones, so we got to learn a
bit, and overall it was good. This tour also included a boat ride down
the Danube, and that WAS worth it!
Kateri and Will - in front of the "Drexler" palace (highlighted on the bus' audio tour)
Kateri over the Danube - just a tiny bit breezy on the bus
Cool tunnel view of the Chain Bridge
We had lunch on a docked ship overlooking the Danube River before our boat tour
View from the pedestrian mall approaching the basilica. Beautiful!
The Chain Bridge: the first suspension bridge in Europe
After
a nice break at the hotel - and about 500 pictures of the beautiful
sunset on the Parliament building across the Danube from us - we headed
to the Castle Hill Overlook to see Budapest illuminated...
This was an amazing day in a place that none of us ever expected to visit, let alone together.
We
marveled multiple times about how incomprehensible it was that we we
eating, walking, chatting, taking pictures, etc. on the Danube. In
Budapest. Crazy.
After
a relaxed evening and a good sleep, we had a early breakfast (because
Judit and Lajosh were heading out to go on their own vacation to
Krakow!), and then headed out towards Salzburg.
Two
Hungarian words we learned: "koszonom" (pronounced Goosenem) and
"Szivesen" (pronounced "shdeeveshayne"): "Thank you" and "you're
welcome."
Koszonom, Budapest. Until next time.
Beautiful city at night!
A lovely drive from Budapest to Salzburg, Austria through the mountains and lake region. Mondsee Lake (right off the A1 highway) - SUCH a gorgeous place!
Beautiful Mondsee Lake...
Nice photo of Joan - and her shirt matches the blue water!
Kateri and Joan pre-booked us another lovely B&B in Salzburg - the Pension/Zimmer Scheck. Very close to the bike path into old town. We walked into to check out the sites, figure out the lay of the land for the next day's castle touring and to have dinner. Salzburg was perfect - weather, people, mountain air just lovely.
Finding our way from the hotel to old town - using Jane's map and trusty Ipod map.
Old town streets/shops
Fountain near Cathedral (This is where Fraulein Maria sang "I have Confidence")
Inside the Cathedral at Salzburg
Kateri and Jane playing a nice game of chess on the Salzburg plaza (directly 'under' the castle)
Entrance to Plaza right below Castle
The castle - walking into Old town
Entrance to Plaza right below Castle
The castle - walking into Old town
Dinner out in old town. The schpritzers, bier and traditional Austrian dishes here were awesoooome
The Salzburg Stier - the thing dad wanted to see and hear the most.
(we have a distant cousin that actually fixed this organ.)
We spent the next morning checking out the Castle and fortress area of old town. This is what dad had been looking forward to the whole trip - so it was great to spend some time here checking out all the nooks in this area and taking sweeping views of the landscape. Austria is gorgeous!
View from Castle/fortress east of funicular drop off
East side of castle
West side of castle
The Salzburg Stier - the thing dad wanted to see and hear the most.
(we have a distant cousin that actually fixed this organ.)
At 11:05, we heard it from the wood box above us!
"Exit"
Lunch at the top. Check...out...the...view!
The cemetery - also recognizable from the Sound of Music
Mozart statue in Salzburg old town
Jane, Kateri, Will and Kristi spent the afternoon on electric bikes and rode through and around town to some lovely lovely sites. The ebikes gave us an extra shove as we pedaled so we were flying down these paths. We loved it!
First stop: Maribell Garden
(Where the Von Trapp kids sang "Do Re Mi")
Electric bikes - the coolest thing ever! Touring on one of many bike paths from town.
Will FINALLY gets his superbike
These guys were surfing the canal waves - wow!
Kateri and the castle
i like the structures of these old building. roads etc. if you this town one thing must came into your mind. how they do that.
ReplyDeletemeet and greet Gatwick