Thursday, June 22, 2006

Vacation

I'm back from my (second) great European adventure. I started with a visit to my cousin Michael and his girlfriend Katie in London then travelled around Zealand/Øresund in Denmark and Sweden (i.e. Copenhagen). Afterward I went on the Berlin to Budapest Contiki tour (that also included intermediate stops in Prague and Vienna).

It was a lot of travelling (14 towns and cities in 8 countries, 6 airports, 6 train stations, 2 boats, well over 100 km of walking, and far too many buses, subways, and taxis to count), but I had a great time and so many unforgettable experiences - an English picnic in Hampstead Heath, sailing a Viking ship across a fjord, visiting the Tivoli amusement park, World Cup parties in Berlin, enjoying plum wine with friends in an open-air cafe on Prague's Old Town Square, cruising down the Vltava River, riding the famous Prater ferris wheel, and relaxing in the Gellért Thermal Baths.

I'm always willing to try new food and drinks, especially while travelling - salmon carpaccio (oops, I thought it was going to be cooked!) smoked eel smørrebrød (interesting...and I learned that the point and pick method of choosing food can yield some unexpected choices!), a giant pork knuckle with a 1 litre beer mug in Berlin (this meal can only be described as 'massive'), Sacher Torte chocolate cake at the Sacher Hotel in Vienna (very yummy), and a shot of absinthe ("Prost" to the 'green fairy'). And of course, I would be remiss if I did not have a 'Danish' pastry (weinerbrød) in Denmark!

I visited a lot of churches including Vor Frue Kirke with Thorvaldsen's beautiful marble statues of Jesus and the twelve Apostles, the ornate Berliner Dom, the singular Kaiser Wilhelm Gedächniskirche (the shattered bell tower is all the survived World War II), the beautifully rebuilt Dresden Frauenkirche, and St. Vitus in Prague Castle.

Of course, I also stopped at museums (e.g. HMS Belfast on the Thames, the Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde, and the famous Pergamon in Berlin), as well as palaces and castles (e.g. Kronborg Slot, Christiansborg, Prague Castle, the giant Schönbrunn (summer) and Hofburg (winter) palaces in Vienna).

The sights - Charles Bridge, the Brandenburg Gate and Reichstag, Fernsehturm TV tower, etc. - and history - a walking tour through Berlin (e.g. Checkpoint Charlie, Bebelplatz book burning commemoration, etc.) as well as the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, and the Berlin Wall, etc. - were also numerous.

With all that, somehow I also made it to three concerts! - The Red Hot Chili Peppers in Prague (awesome), a classical music concert in Vienna, Pink in Heroes' Square in Budapest.

Lastly, I should mention all the wonderful people I met - the friendly and polite Danes as well as all the great people and new friends from the tour.

I'll post pictures (with stories) once I have time to sort through all the photographs that I took.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I hope you will post some pictures.
I am thinking about going on the Berlin to Budapest tour in October 2006.

Ryan said...

I'm part way though posting photos on Flickr - see my sets , which are grouped by city, or my photostream. I'm currently in the middle of Prague and I should have then all up in a couple weeks.

Ryan said...

I've added phtoos from Budapest, the last city from my trip, to Flickr.

Anonymous said...

Did you get to go to Sachsenhausen on your tour or did you have to go on your own? How long does it take to get there from Berlin and how much time did you spend visiting it? I am going on the same tour in October. BTW...love your pictures, thanks for posting them.

Ryan said...

The second day in Berlin started with a bit of a bus tour around Berlin. As part of downtown was closed to traffic (due to the World Cup), it was mainly just a visit to the East Gallery (part of the Berlin Wall that's still up) and then you could get dropped off at a couple places in town and had the rest of the day free (until dinner).

Our bus driver and tour manager offered to take people to the Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp if they were interested. About 1/3 to 1/2 of the tour went. It was about a 30 minute drive (one-way) from the centre of Berlin and we had a little over an hour to tour it (individually - they provide an audio guide that has well over an hour of narration).

So I'm not really sure if it would be part of another tour or not. My brochure from Sachsenhausen says that you can get there on a couple different trains (40 minutes from Zoo Station), so it sounds like you can make it there on your own if you want. [Let me know if you want the specific directions - I'm not sure if there is a website that lists them or not].

Anonymous said...

Directions would be great! Would you mind if I emailed you to ask some questions about your trip?

Ryan said...

rjhadley [at] gmail [dot] com