Showing posts with label Austria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austria. Show all posts

Monday, June 21, 2010

Vienna - Schloss Schlonbrunn

Thanks to staying up for the opera, it was another difficult morning dragging ourselves out of bed in time for breakfast. After booking a room in Athens, we moved on to Schloss Schlonbrunn the iconic Viennese summer residence of the Hapsburgs. It was a lot like the winter residence, with certain sections of the audio guide seeming to have been copied verbatim from one to the other, reflecting very similar setups between Franz-Josef's and Sisi's apartments in each location. However, Schlonbrunn had many rooms on display from other members of the dynasty, and the rooms were more impressive, but in exchange it didn't make as nice a story or give as good an impression of the people who lived there.

After, we braved the dreary cold weather to explore the grounds. We found three lovely Romantic-era fountains.

From Vienna


From Vienna


From Vienna


From Vienna


Then climbed the hill for some lovely views of Vienna.

From Vienna


On our way to the exit, we ran across some birds that looked like finches, but with different coloring than we see in the States. They were lovely and seemed quite tame, so we just couldn't resist getting out a little oatmeal we had with us to feed to them. They were extremely bold, landing on our fingertips to eat from our palms. And to try to eat Mary's thumb nail, which they seemed to find a good bit more interesting than the oatmeal. They also hovered impressively in midair to check out the goods before landing. They were amazingly light and delicate.

From Vienna


From Vienna


From Vienna


At this point we went back to our hostel for a little bit of last minute planning before hopping our flight to Athens.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Vienna - Holsdorf Palace: Silver Collection, Sisi Museum, Royal Apartments; Opera

We started off the morning a little late after our late train into Vienna last night, just barely making it to breakfast before it closed at 9am. We are staying at the Huttledord Hostel 20 minutes from down town by metro. It's got a real institutional feel to it that reminds us of the Globetrotter Inn where we stayed at in London. Though at only 13 Euros each for dorms, it's a steal. And the breakfast was surprisingly good: three kinds of whole grain bread, yogurt, cereal, coffee, tea, and hot chocolate. Mmm. Eggs, meat, and cheese were also available for a modest fee.

Our first stop of the day was the big cathedral of Stephensdom. Mass was going on and much of the outside was covered in scaffolding, so it was a kind of disappointing.

From Vienna


We enjoyed a good bit of great romantic outdoor sculpture.

From Vienna


From Vienna


Next we walked to the Hofburg Palace, where we picnicked in one of the courtyards before going inside. The tour was in three parts, with hands-down the best audio tour of the trip. It started with the Silver Collection, where we saw service after royal/state/etc service. None of them were particularly old, however, as they were typically made of solid gold or silver, so were typically melted down and re-purposed as soon as they went out of fashion or the owner fell upon hard times. During the reign of Napoleon, most were converted to coin. Porcelain was not considered fancy enough for anything but dessert, though even this seems to have eventually changed for economic reasons. It was pretty and we joked about being in "the dish room" (as the president jokingly calls the White House China room in "The American President"), though it was really more like a dozen rooms!

From Vienna


From Vienna


From Vienna


From Vienna


Next up was the Sisi Museum, where we learned all about the apparently famous Empress Sisi, wife (and cousin) of Emperor Franz-Josef. She became exceeding popular after her assassination, though apparently the legends about her were not based in reality. It seems she was an exceedingly unhappy woman who hated being the center of attention. She did a lot of traveling (largely to escape court life/responsibilities), spent 3 hours per day having her ankle-length hair done (by servants, she read or studied foreign languages during the process), and had a state-of-the-art bathroom and exercise equipment (she was 5'8" and worked hard to maintain her weight of between 90 and 95 lbs--yikes!).

Next we saw the apartments in the palace where Sisi and Franz-Josef lived and received people. It was in many ways like other palaces we've seen, but the audio-guide really made it come alive with the descriptions of he lives of the people who lived there: Franz-Josef seems to have been a well-loved ruler who took his work and family very seriously. Sisi seems to have taken her health and beauty very seriously.

Next we had the second half of our picnic before hurrying on to the Opera House for a 3pm guided tour.

From Vienna


We were more than a little put-off by the crowds when we arrived, but they broke us into manageable (still large) groups by language for the tours. The tour was excellent. We got the history of the opera house, got to compare the art from different periods, heard about how the curtained windows of Franz-Josef's private room were visible from the entry so people could decide whether or not to buy tickets based on whether his light was on. Actually though, Franz-Josef didn't much like the opera, so he'd sit out in his box before it started so people could see him, then retire back to his private room to take tea and receive important guests after the show started. We also heard about the guy who decided to change the opera from a more social affair where the house lights stayed on and people wandered in and out through the show, to what we now are used to with the house lights off and people expected to stay in there seats. He added intermissions so there would still be the social aspects, and had large rooms for people to mill about in during intermission added to the opera house. We also saw back stage and heard about how the sets are stored in a big warehouse across town and a different set is delivered by truck each day and assembled in an average of around 3 hours. You see, they do a different opera each night. Yeah, seriously! (Repeats, sure, but not on consecutive nights.) We also heard about how the whole orchestra pit can be raises and lowered. Why? Because some operas have more instruments and you want the orchestra further away to keep from drowning out the singers. Others have smaller orchestras and the pit is raised to make them louder. No one is miced, so this is important! Finally we heard about the Opera Ball, and saw the 3 ton chandelier, which is so heavy it cannot be lowered for maintenance and cleaning (normal ones are, that's why the hero can cut a rope to drop it on enemies) and instead a section of the ceiling lowers to allow access for cleaning. I'm glad that's now my job! Anyhow, it was a great tour, best of the trip by far!

From Vienna


From Vienna


From Vienna


From Vienna


From Vienna


After, we got in line for standing tickets to the night's opera, Tannhausen by Wagner. Once we had staked out our spot with Josh's jacket, we went back behind the opera house for some traditional cheap-eats at the hot dog stand. The opera was in 3 segments of approximately 1 hour each with 2 half-hour intermissions. Josh liked it, Mary not so much. Sure wish you could buy standing tickets to the theater in the USA for 4 Euros though!

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Salzburg - Hellbrun Trick Fountains, Castle, Maria's Abbey

In the morning we took a bus out of town to see the "trick fountains" at Hellbrun. They were a bit cheesy, especially in presentation by the tour guide, but it was a good time too. Also, it was really impressive to see what they did entirely with water power, without electricity or any other power source.

From Salzburg


From Salzburg


From Salzburg


There was also a nice little palace on the grounds that we enjoyed exploring. It had some fantastic wood inlay, and the dinning room had some great murals.

From Salzburg


From Salzburg


From Salzburg


Next we were thinking of taking a cable car to the top of an almost 2000 m peak nearby (which we could do for "free" with our 24 hour Salzburg sightseeing card), but it was overcast (mountains all had their heads in the clouds) and threatening to rain, so we decided it would probably be pretty disappointing and not really worth the time. Instead we made our way back to town and took the cable car up to the castle.

From Salzburg


We took the castle tour, we started in a room with models of the castle. They did a nice job of showing how the castle evolved over time. Next up was a room with a variety of torture instruments. They didn't actually do the torturing here, but prisoners were chained up in it. Then we went to the top of the tower for some awesome views of Salzburg. They also showed us a mechanical clock/organ thing, which by the time we are blogging, both Mary and I don't recall much about.

From Salzburg


From Salzburg


From Salzburg


From Salzburg


From Salzburg


After that, we headed down the hill to see the Abbey that we missed before, the one from the Sound of Music. It only looked like we had access to the church, which was small and quite dark. Then we walked back down the hill and explored the little "catacombs" near the cemetery we saw on our way down.

From Salzburg


From Salzburg


Afterward, we walked home along the river, passing a market. One of the stalls had some stuff that we saw in India. Small world. We picked up our luggage and headed off to Munich.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Travel to Salzburg

Since we didn't get back from walking around the lake until pretty late last night, we had kind of a slow morning. We reheated last night's pasta and veggies for breakfast, then made up the remaining pasta with oil, cheese, and garlic (everything we had left) to have later for lunch. Times like this make me feel like I am becoming my mother. I hated it when she expected me to eat leftover cold pasta for lunch when we were traveling. However, this was really good cold leftover pasta, and it was my idea, so it was all good.

We went online to reserve our rental car and discovered that the base rate that Avis was quoting us was about half the price of the real rate once they added on the taxes and fees. Ugh. Why do they think I care what is the money they get and what is extra taxes? Oh, right, they don't. They just wanted me to make plans to use a rental car based on a lower price. We considered the car anyway for a while but eventually decided against.

By this time, it was almost time to catch our train out of Lake Bled. We'd hoped to go up to the castle for views out over the lake, but there really wasn't time. Instead we just went down to the water for a couple minutes before hurrying off to catch our train to Villach, right over the border in Austria, then switched for a train to Salzburg. On the way down to the water, we saw a nice church. The train ride was really scenic too. In our compartment on the way to Salzburg was a German student on his way home from a semester studying it Italy. We enjoyed talking with him and he urged us to visit Regansburg when we go to Germany.

From Lake Bled


From Salzburg


From Salzburg


We arrived in Salzburg around 5pm, having emailed and heard back from 2 out of 3 hostels in Salzburg that they were booked for the night, and the third one turned out to be crazy expensive. Instead we went to tourist information where they booked us a cheap room for a small fee. We got there just as it started raining heavily, but after a while it cleared up and we went out. Most things were closed, but we went on a long walk around the old town exploring the things that were still open, including:

Gardens
From Salzburg


From Salzburg


Window shopping
From Salzburg


The Dom (the big cathedral)
From Salzburg


St. Peters
From Salzburg


Maria's Abbey from the Sound of Music (it was closed, but this looked kind of familiar)
From Salzburg

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Austrian Alps and Ptuj

Saturday was a beautiful day as promised and we drove around to the other side of the lake where we took a gondola up Dachstein mountain from the town of Obertraun (which sounds like some villain from that movie... the Mudders will understand).

From Halstatt


Josh and Mary thought it was going to be lame, but they were wrong. The views were incredible. It seemed like we were at the top of the world with snowy mountain peaks in all directions. You couldn't ask for a more beautiful clear day, or a more beautiful place to spend it. As Dad said, "If you aren't going to take the gondola up into the Alps on a day like today, when are you going to do it?" It was much like we expected the Himalayas to look, had we done our hike on a clear day.

From Halstatt


We had fun watching the paragliders launching from the top of the mountain.

From Halstatt


Josh even did a little high-altitude sun-bathing.

From Halstatt


Then we walked on to the 5-fingers lookout where we stood out over the edge of the mountain and looked back at Hallstatt.

From Halstatt


When we got back down, we drove on for the town of Ptuj in Slovenia, which we chose to go to largely because of the name. In Slovenia, "J" is pronounced as a "Y", and name of the town really is pronounced just like somebody splitting. We even drove through the town Spittal to get there. I'm not making this up. Along the way we saw a whole flock of paragliders.

From Halstatt


We had just a little bit of time after we arrived and before it got dark to check into a hotel, walk through town to a restaurant on the waterfront where we had quite a feast (the meat platter for two and the fish platter for two). The river was lovely.