Showing posts with label vienna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vienna. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Danube River Valley Adventures - Vienna Trip (Part 2)

What do you think about cycling 40 kilometers in 3 hours, not in your country but in Austria, along the Danube River, through Vineyards, Apple Orchards, Pear Orchards and mountains all around you! 

You read it right! That is exactly what we did and that is exactly what this blog post is all about!

After our self-guided walking tour of Vienna the previous day, we decided to do something else. We had one full day to spend. Our options was either going to Bratislava, Slovakia or check out the country side near Vienna, a place called Melk. Rick Steves' "Vienna, Salzburg and Tirol" had information about both these places. It was either adding a tick to another country or a trip to another country side.

P.S: We were deciding all this in the morning after waking up at 9:00 am. We had the luxury to do this because of our East European Rail Pass which did not require us to make any reservation. All we had to do was find the appropriate train (either to Bratislava or to Melk) and get onto it.

So we decided to check out more about these 2 options over breakfast and a lot of the credit would go to my husband for making this happen. By the time I went to get ready, he had the complete train information checked out and duly noted on his blackberry. Every single detail, closest metro that would take us to the Central train station, time of the trains, platform details as well as the return train information, was noted. All we had to do over breakfast was to decide which way to go "EAST" (towards Bratislava) or "WEST" (towards Melk). We read more about Melk and reading Rick Steves description about the place was more than enough to convince us to go west! With breakfast done and our plan in place, our main target now was to get the metro to the central train station and get on the train to Melk. Getting the metro wasn't that difficult, but then pushing our way through the crowd and getting to the main station and finding the way to the platform was the crazy part. By the time we reached near the escalator to the platform, we had about 3 minutes to spare. With as much as 2 minutes to spare, we started running towards the train and the train wasn't in the position it was supposed to be. Online information said C-F on the platform was where the train would be but our train was in C alright but it ended in D itself and we weren't sure if it was the right one! Atleast I wasn't! After a panic exchange, (mostly me, asking more than once if it was the right train we were running towards), we decided to get in and go where ever it takes us. So with 1 minute to spare, we get into the train and ask our co-passengers if this was the train to Melk (just when the train started moving). Phew! It was!

After 50 minutes, we were in Melk. Melk as such, is a very beautiful place. Pretty much a quite and laid back place, people strolling or having a drink at the cafes. Its famous for its Abbey on rocky outcrop over looking the Danube River on one side and the town on the other. But we really didn't have much time to spend at Melk. Rick Steves had mentioned about Melk having places to rent bicycles and cycling along Danube River. We could either cycle all the way till Krems or cycle half way till Spitz and then take the ferry to Krems; and then take the train back to Vienna.

Our plan was a little more crunched since we decided about such a day at 11:00 am,  reached Melk at 12:30 pm and had an Opera to attend to at 7:00 pm back in Vienna. Which means we need to get back to Vienna atleast by 6:00 pm so that we can freshen up and change from our more informal wear (shorts and t-shirt) and into a little less informal wear (jeans and t-shirt). Anyways, coming back to our plan, it meant we need to take the 5:00 pm train back to Vienna. So that meant getting to Krems by 5:00 pm. If anything in this plan goes wrong, our EUR 70 goes down the drain.

We did walk around Melk though, finding the Tourist Information Center to get information about the cycle rental and other information about the ferry etc. Walked through the lazy streets of Melk and took photographs of the Abbey from the outside due to time constraints.
We then headed towards the cycle rental shop. I suggested that we stock up with some water/juice and food en route and some sun screen since it was a very clear bright and sunny day! Once we got some food, we got our cycles. With a small photocopy map of the route, well pretty much that was our GPS, we set out to cycle through the beautiful Danube River Valley region.


This is how the magic started. There are no words that will do justice to the feeling we had as we cycled on a nice, clear, blue-sky, sunny day along the river.



That day being a religious holiday, we had the chance to get a glimpse of what life was at the Danube River Valley. There were a lot more people outside, cycle, walking,  playing with kids on the river bed, fishing, or kayaking.



Most of these photographs were taken while I was cycling! I had to, initially, I stopped to click a photograph but then there were too many people behind me who got obstructed because of it and weren't too happy. Yeah I know I was dumb to have stopped in the first place, but I was never going to get a chance like this in my life again, for all that I know. So decided to take it on the go and hoped they would come okay :D.

We cycled for 3 hours, took small breaks in between for a sip of water or a bite of the chocolate/cake and in some places stopped to take photographs. Most of the time we were along the River, the best part of this cycle tour was we didn't have to worry about traffic, cars, highways (we did have to cross the highway a few times but it was all clearly marked and the vehicles always I mean ALWAYS waits for the cyclists to cross. Of course, we should be sensible too. I can't just dash across the highway, but the minute the cars sees cyclists waiting they slow down for us. Many people reading the blog might think what is the big deal about it, but I am not used to seeing this, EVER! *Disbelief* - One time, even a truck stopped for us!!!) but there is proper cycle lane (whether along the river or along the highway). It is always there. So its completely safe, we saw a number of families, starting from the grand-mom/grand-dad (who might be around 70+), dad, mom, kids (sometimes as young as 4-5 years) to infants (haha.. no they were riding :P but generally, cycles come with infant strollers or seats which is attached to the father's/mother's cycle).
After about 2 hours of cycling, our terrain started changing once we crossed Spitz. We started moving away from the river (but it still gets good... wait for it :D), we start cycling through vineyards, apple orchards, pear orchards and small towns. Cafes nestled deep within the farms and the only way to get to them was either walking or cycle. Families getting together for a picnic, couples sitting on benches in the apple orchards, some men working in the vineyards. It was brilliant!
People waiting for the ferry to get to Spitz



Finally, around 4:30 pm we crossed the bridge to get to Krems. Our final destination! The below photograph was taken on the bridge as I was cycling. I wasn't going to stop this time again!
We didn't have a local map of Krems and we had half an hour to find the local TI, find the railway station, find the place where we can give the cycles back and get on to the 5:04 pm train to Vienna. Now the frame rate of our story starts going up, we peddle twice as fast, trying to find the local Tourist Information center just to find it closed. We decide to call them up, there was a poster with a telephone number. Thankfully, someone picked up and luck was on our side. They mentioned we could lock our cycles at the railway station itself. So now it came down to 19 minutes, to get to the railway station, lock the cycles and catch the train. By the time we locked up the cycles, it was 4:55pm and then the running beings... after cycling 40 kilometers... my only thought at that point was once we catch the train I can sit without moving for 1 hour... please let me catch the train! Found the platform (5:01 pm)...  saw the train... increased pace and got in at 5:02pm... 2 minutes to spare we are in the train. PHEW!!!!

Taken from the train... back to Vienna

Running wasn't finished for the day. The train journey was just a stop gap, to catch our breath. We still had to get back to the hotel, freshen up, take the metro, walk to Schonbrunn, get into the Opera.
The beauty of this day was... NOTHING WENT WRONG. Other than we 2 being the last ones to enter the opera and few people giving us the why-can't-you-young-folks-keep-time stares. But we didn't read too much into it since it was really dark!  

Monday, September 9, 2013

Vienna in 10 hours

Stop 3 in East European Trip - Vienna, Austria

If you have read a couple of my posts, then you would know that the first thing we did was find a tourist information center and get the local city maps. If this is the first time you are reading it, then a good travel tip, at least the one that has always helped us, is to get local transportation and city information from the TI. Once we found where we were on the map, we started walking towards our Hotel.

The first thing you will notice about Vienna is, how crowded it is! We reached Vienna in the middle of the week and in the middle of the day and still the roads were all pretty crowded. Thankfully, the place we were staying was located in a small street away from the traffic noise but at the same time very accessible to all the city attractions of Vienna. We could cover all the major sights of Vienna in 10 hours. After checking in, freshening up, blah... blah... blah... we packed our back packs with my camera, city maps and Rick Steve's Vienna Guide and stepped out. Our hotel was located very close to the Naschmarket, should say just across the Naschmarket. It was the best thing that happened to us, one side was the market, while on the other, it had about 20-30 restaurants and cafes (yaaayyy!!!).

After a relaxed meal of Gnocchi with egg and fresh green salad for me and a Traditional Viennese Goulash soup for my husband - all washed down with a couple of glasses of wine, we started walking towards the Opera. On our way to the Opera House, we covered the Albertina and the monument against war and fascism.

View from Albertina

Monument against War and Fascism
Monument of War and Fascism by Rick Steves
While waltzing from the Schönbrunn to Sachertorte, don't miss a powerful memorial standing behind Vienna's Opera House (on Albertinaplatz). The Monument Against War and Fascism consists of four thought-provoking statues.
The split white monument, The Gates of Violence, remembers victims of all wars and violence, including the 1938–1945 Nazi rule of Austria. Standing directly in front of it, you're at the gates of a concentration camp. Step into a montage of wartime images: clubs and WWI gas masks, a dying woman birthing a future soldier, and chained slave laborers sitting on a pedestal of granite cut from the infamous quarry at Mauthausen Concentration Camp.
The hunched-over figure on the ground behind is a Jew forced to wash anti-Nazi graffiti off a street with a toothbrush. The statue with its head buried in the stone (Orpheus entering the underworld) reminds Austrians of the consequences of not keeping their government on track. Behind that, the 1945 declaration of Austria's second republic — with human rights built into it — is cut into the stone. The experience gains emotional impact when you realize this monument stands on the spot where several hundred people were buried alive when the cellar they were hiding in was demolished in a WWII bombing attack.
When reading the above excerpt from Rick Steve's book and standing where we were standing, was quite emotional. Travel might be fun and exciting but personally, for me travel has been an eye opener in a lot of ways. The deeper meaning of life, looking out the box that you have been brought up in and seeing life through other people's eyes. It can put a lot of things into perspective and erase out a lot of things which you had thought had some perspective!

I know I changed the tone of my post from being light to something very serious but I really wanted  to try and convey what I felt at that moment.

Anyways, moving on... from here, we continued our self-guided walking tour and went towards the Opera House.
Vienna's Opera House
Going back to the lighter side of life, something really funny happened here. Near the Opera House you see many many ladies and gentlemen dressed as Mozart (yes, the stereotypical projection of Mozart, red coats and white wigs); they sell Opera tickets and their targets are... we tourists! The minute we reached the Opera House, we were approached by one and we shot him down so quickly he didn't even realize that we were done talking. We moved on and then there was this other guy who laid the perfect trap to engage us in a conversation, he saw us and called out "Hey do you guys know what all goes into making a VEGETARIAN BRIYANI?" Come on... I had to answer that, being a vegetarian (OK! Eggetarian but still...) we got talking and he swooped his way in to sell tickets! We had already been to a concert in Salzburg and previously, one in Venice (yeah! I know this post is still pending...) so we budged and asked him if he had any tickets to an Opera. Fortunately for him and unfortunately (money-wise) for us, he had just the one we were asking for, called Die Fledermaus at the Schönbrunn Palace for the next day 7:00 pm show (70 EUR just vanished into thin air at that point! That went straight to our expense with label "lets-do-it-anyways-since-its-once-in-a-lifetime-chance"). Though I was the reason for starting that conversation with the ticket guy in the first place, I was the perfect wife and nagged about spending so much money in a giffy, throughout the remaining of our walking tour. Did I tell you my husband has a LOT of patience? :D 

The next stop in our walking tour, St. Stephen's Cathedral.
St Stephens Cathedral, Vienna




The walk towards St. Stephens was as mesmerizing as the Cathedral itself. The entire street is filled with shops and its a shoppers paradise but the best part is the buildings are a mix of the old and the new architecture. The photograph below depicts just that, the building on the right used to be offices of lawyers and accountants.


The walking tour continued, taking us through Graben, a pedestrians only street, famous for its Plague Column/Trinity Column as well as the Classic public toilets (yes! you read it right!) designed by the famous architect Adolf Loos. The interior decor of these loos are still maintained in the same way as they were initially designed and they are fully functional.

Plague Column/Trinity Column
The Plague column was commission by Emporer Leopold I during the terrible plague epidemic in 1679, which costed the lives of 100,000 of people. This column was erected as a prayer at the end of the epidemic.

From Graben, we walked towards the more exclusive market street, Kohlmarket which leads to the Hofburg.

From the Hofburg Palace, we walked towards the Parliament House of Vienna.
From here, we wanted to see the City Hall and there was our surprise waiting for us. The Film Festival 2013 was being screened. The best part of the surprise was, on that specific day, they were going to screen an Opera (yup, a similar one for which we had paid 70 EUR is being screened here for free and with sub-titles!!!). After nagging some more about how we are wasting money unnecessarily, we settled to watch it for sometime. It started around 9:00pm and was 3.5 hours long, so we couldn't stick around till the end since we had to get dinner before the restaurants close. Vienna, unlike the other cities, has restaurants open for a longer time. Thanks to the Naschmarket, restaurants there close around 11:00pm.

We had a quick dinner in a Chinese restaurant and went back to the Hotel, to crash for the night. 10 hours since we left the hotel room, we had seen Vienna by foot and enjoyed every moment of it. 

But we didn't know that this was just the beginning! The next day was going to be the highlight of our entire trip. One that, probably, we will never forget in our lives. What all we did you ask? 
- Ran from the metro station to the main station to catch the train to Melk, caught it with 1 min to spare
- Adventures in the Danube river valley region, 
- Ran to catch the train back to Vienna, caught it again with 2 mins to spare

Last but not the least, we were the last 2 to enter into a proper Opera, in an Opera Theater of the Schonbrunn Palace, which had already started!!! All this makes it eligible for a separate post about "Day 2 in Vienna", coming up soon! 

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

August 2013 - Celebrating the Sun

I come from a place where the Sun (is always scorching) and people are always complaining about it. The weather is scorching in Summer and hot in the Spring and warm in the Winters. Sun rises and sets at times it is expected to. At 6 am, its in the east; at 12 pm its over head; and at 5 pm its in the west ready to set.

And then I go to a place where in early August, sun rises around 4-5 am; it's overhead at around 4pm and sun decides that its ready to set sometime around 8-9pm. And to top all this, at 1 am, in the middle of the night, you can see light at the northern part of Stockholm (towards north pole)! Can you imagine seeing the sky lit in the middle of the night? I couldn't! And wouldn't move from the window, I was like a kid. And the people, they get so excited with summer. The entire city is outdoors, cycling, sun-bathing, lazing around, picnicking, sailing, sleeping in the parks, reading a book, listening to music, drinking a beer (yeah in the morning! It's like "let me have a beer and go back to sleep and allow the sun to do its thing *yawn*") and oh! did i mention just lazing around... oh yeah!!! That's summer in Europe (at least in Stockholm and in some countries of Eastern Europe).

When my husband decided to go for his "6 months internal transfer to Sweden", I wanted to be as supportive as possible, but at the back of my mind I wasn't too comfortable with the idea of he being away for so long. Though I am still not 100% okay with the idea of he being away, this movement has brought me the best days of year 2013. I had the chance to join the summer party of Europe, perceive life the way Europeans do, drink Beer (should add lots of it), travel to 4 countries in a span of 10 days and last but not the least see the bigger picture in life. Ofcourse, I do feel jealous that inherently I am not "genetically programmed" to enjoy life the way they do! But I am happy I got a glimpse of what it is, to be that way!


After coming back, I was talking to my friends and they are all looking forward to the photographs I had taken and the experiences I had there. They wanted to know when my next blog posts were coming up and frankly speaking I don't know if I can do justice expressing what I saw/felt for the past 3 weeks, if I can convey the vibes of European summer through my words or my photographs. But I am sure going to try that and hope I am able to get through at least 10% of what I felt!

Will be back with the photographs and more on my experiences!