| Denise |
Jan 11th, 2002 07:51 AM |
I have just returned from a tour of Austria. We arrived in Vienna on the 28th of December and returned the 9th of January. (Yes we waltzed down the Inner Strat at midnight to the Blue Danube, along with hundreds of thousands more people, beautiful.) Depending if you are planning to tour the city then a pension or "family house" is the ticket. These older buildings have character and they do have long term residents and those who rent the lower levels for offices and shop fronts. Almost everywhere they serve a "continental breakfast" consisting of alot of sliced meats, cheese, breads, jams, cereal, yoghurt, etc. No bacon and eggs unless you are looking for an American breakfast at a local restaurant. A site that will forever stay with me was the site of St. Stephans Catheral lite up at night as I walked up Grabenplatz(?) to Karnetstrasse(?) and turned the corner-absolutely breathtaking. A must see in Vienna are the palaces of the Hapsburgs, oppulance of the churches, the Lippizaner horses, the boys choir (if they are not on tour), Musikverin for a concert, State Opera house for an evening to remember. Tour the gold/silver collections-two different venues. Not to miss the Upper Belvedere Palace for the amazing collection of Rubens, Rembrants, Titans, etc.- definitely a full days worth on this and the Lower Belvedere (which is like a natural museum of history, so I passed on this one). On the lower level is the collection of Egyptian antiquities-and don't forget to look at the palace itself-perhaps from the coffee shop on the second level-stunning! We missed a visit to Schloss Schrobrunn (apparently a smaller version of Versailles and a must see). We also travelled to Salzburg for 3 days(quite medival)and Graz(for 2 days very scenic). Note, the dining experience for the average consumer $75/100 US for supper is less than mediocre. Lots of beef, pork, lamb, sausage, potato salad, no greens or salads to speak of-I was very disappointed. The cafe's coffee, chocolate and pastry are excellent, but some are touristy. Very few people cue in line (anywhere), don't be surprised if someone sits with you without asking pulls out a cigarette and smokes. Smoking is desperate even if you are a smoker. If you want to take something unusual home in a viennese coffee or pumpkin oil stop at Julius Meinl looks like a Hagan Daz parlor or coffee house on the street but a beautiful food emporium past the coffee shop. Enjoy-maybe write after your trip. I will need information on Prague and Budapest as I will be travelling there next year. Oh, pick up Michelin's Green Travel Guide for Austria - quite good.
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