Sharing Kindness Rocks along our many adventures!

Category: Europe 6/2015 Page 3 of 5

Vienna, Austria ~ Day 2

We started the morning with a bit of a wander around town. The weather was gloomy and we weren’t sure if it would rain or not.

We decided to hop on one of those “hop on hop off” buses that drives you around town and takes you to all of the points of interest. The commentary was nothing spectacular but it gave a bit of additional insight to this very historical city.

We got hungry and hopped off for lunch. H got Goulash with spatzle (gnocchi), I got “whatever the girl next to me was having” which ended up being breaded cauliflower (really good!) with a small salad and cat had a wiener. All the food was delicious. We ended the meal with some amazing Vienna chocolates.

I also wanted to share how awesome technology is. The Google translator app will take any foreign language and translate text automatically for you. I took a picture of the menu and then a screenshot of the translated text. AMAZING!! (I’m so easily impressed!)

After we ate we went on a walking tour of  the main plaza.

We finished the day with a long family game of bouncy ball and a walk thru a beautiful park with tons of blossoming roses.

We went home, got changed and headed out for dinner. Afterwards Cat and I went out to the Strauss and Mozart concert at the Kursalon. The Kursalon was a beautiful music hall built in 1865. (H escorted us there to ensure we actually got there and then enjoyed some peace in the coffee shop.)

This was a perfect experience to introduce a 7 year old to opera and an orchestra.  There was a storyline she could understand and some ballet for good luck! We had great seats as well! We were in the second row and Cat was lucky enough not to have anyone sit in front of her.

H was waiting for us afterwards to escort us home and to hear all about our night! (love him!)

Austria to Italy to France

We packed our things and left our Airbnb, walking past the mailman, the florist, the hardware store, bakery and grocery store to get to the Metro. Such a lovely neighborhood!

We decided to head over to the Hofburg Palace to see a few other historical sites. We walked past the Opera House and a few other buildings that were picture worthy.

 Then we went into the Imperial Treasury Museum. Some things stood out that were just amazing artifacts worth remembering.
 First the Crown of Rudolph II. It was made of more jewels then I would know what to do with in 1602.
 
 His Royal cloak was very impressive to look at. It must have been very heavy to wear and I definitely wouldn’t have wanted to wear that in the summer.

There were a large number of religious artifacts. I think it’s quite interesting that they are kept in a museum in Vienna. I’m not sure how these items were validated but there is a strong belief in their healing powers by the Viennese population.   I’m not sure Cat grasped the concept of what they were.
Below are pictures of a few of them:

The nail that pierced Jesus’ hand when he was crucified.

Wood from the cross he was crucified on and the spearhead that stabbed his side, which has the metal from one of the other nails wrapped around it.

Material from Jesus’ loincloth and from the tablecloth at the last supper.

 

As well as wood from his manger.

 
Lastly, the Order of the Golden Fleece had some amazing pieces that is worth talking about here. To get the locals to support him the King made them Knights of the Golden Fleece. They had to swear total loyalty and he wore their family badge on his collar necklace. He gave each of them a necklace with flint and the Golden Fleece as well as their own chapel.
These drapes took over 10 years to sew. Such care and effort was taken to meticulously characterize each facial expression, each ripple of clothing, each shadow with thread. They used colored silk over golden thread to produce shading.  They would space the colored silk/thread out more to let the gold shine thru.  Pictures just don’t give these justice.

We left the museum and walked past the Spanish Hofreitschule which is the Spanish Riding School stables. Although we didn’t get to see the horses perform, they were beautiful to look at. During the war, they would actually go to great lengths to train the horses to protect their riders. They removed the heavy armour from the horses that were worn during that period and instead taught them different maneuvers.  By standing on their hind legs they were able make space, kick backwards or to the side to injure the enemy. Also, the horses are born black and turn bright white as they get older.

From there we went to the Demel to try Vienna’s famous cakes. The Sacher Torte was the dark chocolate cake with apricot jam and is the traditional cake for Austria (similar to Apple pie for Americans). This is what they have for birthdays and special occasions. The lighter chocolate cake is  Demel’s famous cake called the Anna Torte which was a chocolate and nougat calorie bomb!  Both were scrumptious. You could also watch the pastry chefs as they fine tuned their edible cake decorations.

We had about 3 hours to kill before we caught our night train and decided to peak inside this church. Imagine our surprise when we walked in. As luck would have it, we were told there was an organ and choir performance starting in a few minutes. Combining the music with the baroque decor was an sensory sensation difficult to explain.

On our way back to the train station, we stopped at a few stores. First we went to a kids clothing store. Cat really wanted this dress but at $169 we just couldn’t justify it. Instead we bought 2 bouncy balls!

We also stopped in the Swarovski store. (Fyi it is an Austrian company). H bought Cat and I some bling to remember our trip! The thought around this ring is that it will be a trial to see if I want wear the real thing sometime in the future!

We got to the train station to catch our night train. The train was 14 hours from Vienna to Milan, Italy

We were in a sleeper cabin for 4. We ended up sharing our cabin with a lovely lady from Verona, Italy. She has such an interesting background and actually had restored the needlework on garments similar to the one I mentioned above.  She is currently getting her Masters in Art history and was someone I could talk to for hours.  We were all pretty tired and went to sleep around 10 and slept all the way thru until 6. It’s a very small world as her daughter is going to boarding school just a few miles from where H went to school! She got off in Verona and we had the cabin to ourselves until we got to Milan.

We had 2 hours in Milan to purchase our connecting train tickets to get to Nice.  After a bit of a runaround, we got things organized, grabbed some train station Italian pizza (yuk)  for breakfast and sandwiches for later and barely made it in time. When we got on our second train we found out we had 3 separate seats in various parts of the car. After a few moments of disorganization we figured it out and now we are on our way to Nice!

View from the train.

First 2 nights in the South of France

We got to the train station late in the afternoon in Nice, picked up our rental car and headed out of town.

 

We ended up in the greatest little town called Frejus on the coast. We found a quaint hotel and walked to the marina for a seafood dinner.

Cat wasn’t impressed that the shrimp still had its eyeballs!

We found an amazing creperie and ice cream shop and headed back to the hotel for the night!

We got up the next morning and explored the town some more. Such a chic French feel.

We had a breakfast of champions

And then headed to our next stop which was San Raphael for our second night a few miles down the coast. This hotel room had bunk beds which made the kid so happy! They let us check in early in the morning so we dropped off our stuff and headed to the beach.

The beach…

…and that was our day!

Day 3 ~ South of France

Beach and boat…that was our day. Actually it was a: breakfast in bed for H for Fathers Day, rent H a sun lounger at the beach so he didn’t have to get sandy, hang out on the beach, go on a catamaran for a 3 hour snorkeling trip kind of day. That was our day. We are all a bit more relaxed and sun kissed then we have been on this trip.  It was an amazing day and the perfect way to celebrate an awesome dad on Fathers Day!

 Some random pics from the day.

13 things that happened in our 13 hours in Nice

 

1) After navigating the one way streets with crazy drivers, we finally arrived at the parking garage to drop off the rental car. Sadly for us, the entrance was blocked by not one…but 2 buses. We had to do the 5 mile navigation thru one way streets to get back to the parking garage. This took us 20 minutes.
2) Europe is short on space so parking garages are really small. There is rarely room to spare. Once we got into the garage we had to park on the 6th floor and drive up the spiral ramp. The steering wheel was almost completely locked the entire way up. This picture doesn’t give it justice.

3) The parking spaces are also tiny! H was having such a hard time parking the car in the space provided. A worker from a different car rental company actually came up to us and offered to help park! He got it in the spot without a problem. I just hope they move our car before the person next to us returns…they won’t be able to open the door.

4)  On the way to the hotel I almost ordered 6 Subway sandwiches when I tried to order a 6 inch sandwich for Cat.  A six inch sandwich doesn’t translate well in a country that doesn’t use inches. Note to self…15 centimeters = 6 inches.

5) We walked to our hotel to find this note:

Which would have been great if we had a phone! Thank goodness for the Best Western around the corner who called for us! That’s what we get for arriving after 7pm on a Sunday evening!

6) Our room was very clean but tiny. You could barely fit a 30 centimeter Subway sandwich between the wall and the bed. I feel like it was a competition to see how much furniture you can squeeze into such a small space.

7) H and I still needed to find dinner and walked past this place…

That is a combination of foods I wasn’t prepared to try.

8) Nice near the train station at dark was not the place to wander around. We saw several ladies of the night.

9)  We ended up at a small family run pizza place and got 2 pizzas to go. Only in Nice can you order a duck pizza. H said it was really good.

10) Dogs are king! We walked past 2 homeless people on the street. One with a dog and one without. I watched multiple people give the man with the dog money where no one gave the other person any.

11) Again, dogs are king. At the train station these dogs decided they wanted to sleep in the middle of the busy walkway. No one questioned it.

12) Train station bathrooms. They charged €1 ($1) each to use a bathroom with no toilet seat. Most places allow us to get 2 for the price of one as Cat is still little. This guy insisted that either Cat go by herself (down a flight of stairs and down a long hallway) or I pay as well. I paid….

13) The bakery near our hotel had awesome chocolate croissants and fresh sticks of bread that were still warm. That coupled with an excellent cafe latte makes all the other stuff fade away.

1st night in paris

Random First Night in Paris

We arrived to Paris and were greeted by several guys in lovely green outfits with big guns!

Regardless, Cat was very excited to be here!

After checking into the hotel, we found a cute restaurant nearby.

(H was sitting on the elevator to the basement which brought the garbage up so he had to move out of the way when they decided it was time to dump the trash)

Afterwards we had a romantic first evening in Paris doing laundry.

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