Linz to Salzburg – Europe Day 17

Hörsching, Austria

How often have you woken up in commercial lodgings and been enchanted by the light that was illuminating your environment? From tents pitched along rivers or in forests to a cave on a cliffside in New Mexico, yurts on the rocky Oregon coast, and now this farmhouse in the Austrian countryside, they have all allowed Caroline and I to start the day with a flash of inspiration that unequivocally assures us just how lucky we are to see these things firsthand.

Hörsching, Austria

Sitting in the garden of this 400-year-old farmhouse here in Hörsching, the sky has fluffy little pillows of clouds to my right and blue skies to the left. Birds of at least a half dozen sorts are all around us. The sheep are yet to stir, but with this being a farm and all, the flies are doing their best to be slightly pesky.

Caroline made us coffee and is working on a pair of socks for me while I try my best to do some writing. Before stepping outside, I was filling in some blanks regarding day 9 of this adventure, which was the day we traveled from Verona to Gorizia via Padua, but as we moved outside, I found myself distracted by the sounds, light, smell of flowers, and slight breeze to such a degree that writing about an 800-year old church became impossible.

Hunger will propel us to leave sooner rather than later, though I’ll go ahead and repeat that a short stay here of just overnight does not do this place justice.

Over the past few days, Caroline was slowly changing our plans, and last night, on the way from Vienna, they were cemented; instead of going to the salt mine, we will deviate from our path and visit the village of Haslach an der Mühl whose claim to fame is an exceptional textile center and weaving museum. The funny thing is that this salt mine was one of the prime reasons for us coming to Austria in the first place. I’d like to say it will be easy enough for us to return someday for that or another salt mine, but we know that we also want to visit the Scottish Highlands, the Scandinavian countries, Iceland, and rural France. Even if we were to do a European-centric trip roughly every other year, this takes me to about 65 years old, where I’m guessing I might be slowing down from walking an average of about 10 miles (16 km) a day as we have on this trip and that travel will be different.

The owner of the farm, with a child that sounds to be about two years old, is tending to the sheep, which has elicited the first baa followed by a quick meh. Listening to them speak German while the birds continue their song lends the perfect soundtrack, driving home the fact that we are on vacation somewhere different than anywhere near home in Arizona.

It’s 8:30 and I run out of things to write about. Writing has been getting increasingly difficult as the trip has entered its third week. Our days have been long, averaging about 17 hours of waking activity, and by now, I’m starting to saturate with impressions. Yet, in a few days, I will start looking forward to reflecting on this amazing journey. The proverbial vacation from the vacation is in sight here during our last week in Europe.

Hörsching, Austria

The impressions of our perfect night in Hörsching will hopefully stay with us for the rest of our lives, and when need be, we can return to these blog entries and refresh the experience by bringing forward some of the memories that inevitably fade with time.

Does wheat in the field just look like another field of crops to a person living in the Great Plains? To me, it is exotic, full of history, essential, and beautiful in the way it moves with the wind. It deserves glamour shots as much as any of the churches we visit.

Road side in Austria

Over Hill and Dale, there is nearly always another village in the distance, and while this makes for amazing sights to those who don’t see this every day, by the time we are back in Arizona, I can fully appreciate the fact that we can drive for hundreds of miles and rarely encounter civilization aside from the needed gas station or little cafe for something to eat.

Eferding, Austria

Here’s one of those random villages along the road; this one is known as Eferding, Austria.

Eferding, Austria

At Cafe Konditorei Weltzer, Caroline takes time to write a couple of postcards as we share a bowl of yogurt with granola and fresh fruit accompanied by a hot pot of coffee.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

It’s not a yarn store, but it’s on the same pedestal of must-visitness by Caroline. We are well off the beaten path at the Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria. The area around Haslach, also known as the Mühlviertel, is known for its linen textile production. The Textile Center hosts an annual conference in Haslach, and there is also a biannual “Weavers’ Market.” Both of these events occur in July, but Caroline thought a visit to Haslach would be her only chance to see a weaving-centric museum in Europe and couldn’t pass the opportunity.

Once we found our way in, we wasted no time and jumped right into the main room with an incredible display of the tools used across time in the making of cloth and yarn. Above in the first part of the box is flax, which, with treatment, will become linen and one of the more sought-after fabrics available, right up there with silk and fine woolen products. Other similar boxes contained cotton, wool, man-made fibers, and yarns. These displays allowed visitors to touch the different fiber sources and the stages they passed through on the way to becoming yarn and textiles.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

Flax requires three months of growth before it can be harvested, and while we do this with machines today, those machines are not able to harvest the root with the rest of the plant. For flax to produce the longest (bast type) fibers, the root should be intact during processing. After the plant is harvested, it must go through a “rippling” or “threshing” process where the seeds are removed. This is one such device that has been used for this purpose in the past.

Following this, the flax fibers must be “retted” (the word is related to “rotted,” and the result would smell about the same), which is the process of wetting the fibers and letting them age to allow the cellular structure known as “phloem” and pectin to break down. Water retting (submerging bundles of flax in-stream) takes about five days, while dew retting (spreading the flax out on the ground and spraying water on it repeatedly) can take up to six weeks. Once this action is complete, you must dry the flax before the next step, and this, too, can take a number of weeks.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

Once dry, the stalks are ready to be broken. When breaking the woody outer shell, small pieces will fall away, leaving the inner fiber strand; this is the flax that will ultimately become yarn.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

There were many methods used over time to break away the woody core, also known as “boon.” This can also be done by hand, but it’s a long and cumbersome process.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

Before taking the fibers to the spinning wheel or spinners the various flax fibers are drawn through “hackles” to make finer filaments of flax to make more refined fabrics.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

The process of drawing fibers over hackles or combs would be done several times over finer and tighter-packed spikes in order to achieve the thinnest filaments possible. The smaller the diameter of the fiber, the greater the quality of linen cloth that will be produced by this attention to detail.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

In the spinning process, individual fibers are twisted and sometimes plied to make yarn. That is the intermediate step for the flax fibers before becoming linen fabric.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

Once the long fibers are spun and have taken on the familiar form of yarn, it is time to bring them to the loom, where they will be woven into cloth.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

These are “reeds,” which are effectively combs that keep “warp” or vertical threads separated and untangled during weaving. They are also part of the “beater bar,” which pushes the “weft” or horizontal threads into a compact structure that is the basis of the cloth we are making.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

The “shuttle” holds our “weft” yarn, and when thrown through the “shed,” it adds the next row of fiber. When that is done thousands of times, we will end up with linen fabric.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

Looms come in various sizes, and the type of fabric one is making will dictate what kind of loom should be used. How many “heddles” or eyelets can be manipulated by “shafts” connected to “treadles” that, when moved in particular ways, produce patterns as desired within the fabric.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

While the previous loom was likely used for ribbons, decorations, and belts, this loom is better suited to towels, sheets, and yardage for cloth making.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

As patterns were getting more complex the demand to automate the weaving process was becoming more important. Back in 1805, Joseph Marie Jacquard invented the Jacquard loom seen here on the left; little did he know that the design was going to inspire Charles Babbage in 1837 to propose a general-purpose mechanical analytical machine to automate mathematical computation. These developments are the basis for modern computing. One of the looms to the right of the Jacquard loom is a Broeselmaschine, which is a kind of dobby loom but over a hundred years older than Jaquard’s punch cards. It uses a belt made of wooden sticks or pegs that have bumps that trigger the lifting of shafts. There isn’t a lot of information about this type of loom online; it appears to be specific to this area of Upper Austria. Here is a link to a paper in English about digital weaving that mentions it.

Caroline Wise at the Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

Caroline is getting her first up-close examination of an earlier mechanical loom.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

The pattern made by the warp set up in a Jacquard loom is intriguing and complex. Setting this up for the first time must be seriously time-consuming.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

Stacks of punch cards ready to be fed through the Jacquard loom, creating complex patterns that would otherwise be incredibly time-consuming, are seen here.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

All of the information I shared above and far more is on display right here on the main floor of the Haslach an der Mühl Textile Center and Weaving Museum.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

This motif says, “Crest of the old weaver’s market Haslach im Muehlviertel.” One room in the museum is called the Schatzkammer, or treasure chamber. It contains many samples of woven items made in the area.

The Weaver as King
Come ye, who so poorly regard the weavers
that so far, you have barely looked at their work and beings.
Here, you can see how every weaver
can be considered a king.
He sits at his loom as on a king’s throne;
although he does not live in a palace like a prince,
he is the only ruler in his realm.
There, great and small, defer to him.
Down from his throne, he looks at his estates,
rules, and governs his citizens and soldiers.
Because without his hands and treadlings,
nothing at all will move in his kingdom. See, that is royal!
However, when the power, the scepter, rises,
then everything alive in the realm awakens.
As in a parade with rifles
his military marches to and fro.
In beautiful order, his business dealings are done
and set his armies in motion,
which are at his beck and call by the thousand,
whom he can oversee at any time.
He always lives in peace, although his shooters have to
be always on their post and courageous.
And what is even more marvelous about this is
that the king does all the work himself.

Motto: By Weaver’s hands, you are provided with diaper and shroud.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

An early mechanized weaving machine from 1880 is still in operation. The gentleman who showed us this loom at work (it is LOUD!) demonstrated a few other looms for us, too. This entire experience has been well worth our deviation from our plans and in any case, the salt mine will always be there, as where who knows if funding will keep such a treasure as this open in the years to come?

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

Just as we were finishing up in the museum, one of the ladies who works at the museum asked if we’d like a tour of the upstairs workshop area; of course, we wholeheartedly said yes. More than a dozen looms of all sorts and sizes are available. Adjacent to the looms are half a dozen or more computers for working out patterns prior to setting up the looms when workshops are underway. Other than during special events I can’t say I know of such a well-endowed permanent space in all of the United States that is working to keep alive such an important craft as weaving.

Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

This is why Haslach an der Mühl is known as such, as it is on the Mühl river. Flowing water is what often drove the machinery of mills and was needed for retting flax, so Haslach proved to be a perfect location for establishing a weaving center.

Caroline Wise holding a beetle at the Textile Center and Weaving Museum in Haslach an der Mühl, Austria

You never really know how many beetle species live in your environment until you try to identify a particular species. After scanning images of more than 300 varieties native to Germany and Austria, I’m no closer to knowing just which beetle family this girl belongs to. I’m guessing girl, as it doesn’t have horns. I’ll bet a dollar that Caroline, upon editing this, will have the answer, and there will be a note right here telling you what it is. – Indeed! This is a may bug, also known as a cockchafer (Melolontha melolontha). I had never seen one, even though they are memorialized in a popular German children’s rhyme. The beetles emerge from the ground in spring, lay lots of eggs in the ground, and die. Their offspring live underground for four years until they metamorphose into the final beetle stage, crawl up to mate, and start another generation of bugs.

Caroline Wise at McDonalds in Austria

We’ve been vigilant up to now, demanding and getting Old Country meals, often the more old-fashioned traditional cooking of days gone by at that. This afternoon though, we are making an exception and visiting a McDonalds. With our trip to the Golden Arches, we were also hoping there were some regional specialties, but alas, it was the standard fare. Although I should point out that their McCafe was extraordinary with choices we’d never see in America. Five years after my last visit to Europe we are yet to see this type of ordering in the States.

Caroline Wise at McDonalds in Austria

Proof that we didn’t just visit for the photo op and another chance for me to bitch about some of the backward practices and services still found in my country of birth. Look at the table behind Caroline, and you’ll see a real coffee cup and water glass.

John Wise and Caroline Wise in Rottenegg, Austria

We had to turn around for this one but who wouldn’t want to capture a couple of rotten eggs in Rottenegg?

Strawberries roadside in Austria

Picked fresh roadside strawberries are certainly the taste of summer and a welcome treat.

Caroline Wise in Salzburg, Austria

We are in the realm of heaven or maybe the kingdom of heaven; it depends on how you want to translate the German word “Reich?” While I looked up places to stay in Salzburg, I came up with a nice farmhouse in the suburb of Himmelreich just next to Salzburg airport.

Salzburg, Austria

While the view is spectacular and the vacation just as much so, when I was getting our bags out of the car, I used my right knee as a deflection device for a suitcase that hit it in just such a way that the pain I started suffering was worse than when I fell on it. As I limped away from our lodging for the night to walk over to Hotel Laschenskyhof for dinner, which was just a mile away (1.7 km), I started having second thoughts about walking. The problem was that I had parked about 2 inches away from a wall because I was asked to leave as much room as possible so that a contractor showing up early in the morning would be able to pull a truck in, and our rental was a manual transmission that Caroline hasn’t driven in over 20 years. Slowly, we made it over and enjoyed our dinner, and by the time we were ready to walk back, the pain had started to subside.

Caroline Wise in Salzburg, Austria

The horses on the property we were staying at were friendly and curious, as were the donkeys.

Salzburg, Austria

Sunset over the Alps as seen from the Kingdom of Heaven. We called it an early night and skipped out on driving into Salzburg proper. We are either getting old, growing tired, or suffering from wounds that are slowing us down, but whatever this is, it better be temporary.

Vienna to Linz – Europe Day 16

John Wise and Caroline Wise in Vienna, Austria

It’s about time for another selfie of both of us, which has been few and far between on this trip, and there is a reason for that. The auto-focus on my lens was broken even before we left the United States, so there was that. Then, there was the image stabilization on that lens that was broken, too. Those issues weren’t the reason, though, that I’ve been held back from taking selfies; something new broke while we were here in Europe. Of course, I have my phone, and that’s what captured this image while my Samsung S9+ shoots raw images, it’s a fully manual process that is not conducive to taking selfies, so I have to shoot them as JPGs and run into problems with lighting, color temperature, and lost data in the images which are inherent to the format.

Back to my lens. I am still shooting the majority of my photos with an 8-year-old Canon T2i 18MP DSLR. My favorite lens is my “walking around lens,” an equally old Canon EF-S 17-55 f/2.8, and the other day, it appeared a metal piece that locks the zoom ring to the lens mechanism broke. Actually, it is more than simply broken because that metal piece has been rattling around inside the lens assembly as it shifts about. To zoom the lens, I have to pull the lens forward manually by grasping the outer ring, and to get it back to full wide-angle, I have to push it back in. The problem here is that the metal floater occasionally gets in the way, and the lens stops going in at around the 28mm mark, stopping me from returning to 17mm without some vigorous shaking of the camera.

Next up, while we’ve been here, the body, too is producing some errors by not registering changes in the f-stop readout. If I shot automatic mode, I wouldn’t care, but you can’t shoot a photo in a church using automatic settings (unless you are using a flash or like blurry photos), so I set the aperture by pointing the lens in full zoom towards a bright light source, locking it in, and then try to pull the lens back to its widest position while maintaining my desired f-stop and exposure time until I get a properly lit and focused image in the poorly lit confines of an altar in the front of the church. The f-stop readout and attempts to change it when stuck require me not to just turn off the camera; I have to remove the battery.

In bright daylight, I used to be able to set the camera to f/11, focus to infinity, and usually get a decent shot of Caroline and me, but there’s too much going wrong with my camera right now. Initially, panic with the misbehaving lens had me consider trying to find a camera shop (not a chance) or having a replacement lens sent overnight to where we were staying, but then, with European tax and shipping, that would have been just over $1000: nope. So I hoped and prayed that I could hobble through this without adding such a large expense in the middle of our trip for a lens that hopefully could be repaired once I returned to the United States.

One more wrinkle in this fabric I should share. Last night, when I fell, my camera was in my right hand, and took a hard jolt as my knuckles were sacrificed to offer a small amount of protection to the all-important camera. Funny enough, no further damage was done to the aging camera that has now shot well more than 100,000 images faithfully for me on water, in snow, in searing heat, and on two continents more than once.

Vienna, Austria

On our way to the Austrian National Library, we spotted the Minoritenkirche and, of course, had to pay a visit. The church was started in 1276 and was completed by 1350.

Vienna, Austria

There was more to this church than a five-minute visit was going to allow being seen, but not only do we have a couple of intentional stops to make today, but we are also driving to Krems an der Donau before spending the night near Linz, Austria.

Vienna, Austria

Two other things of note about this church, though. First, it was the subject of a watercolor painting by Adolf Hitler back in 1910, and second, that painting was referenced by Kurt Vonnegut in “Deadeye Dick” several times. I’d never seen the watercolor before learning about it after our vacation had ended, and found it strange that Hitler and I had chosen nearly identical perspectives to capture the image.

From the Minoritenkirche, we walked over to Café Central for a snack and a coffee just as Freud, Tito, Stalin, Trotsky, and Hitler did back in January 1913 (though not all at the same time and probably not just after visiting the Minoritenkirche).

Vienna, Austria

I should have thrown my broken camera to the ground and finished the job as no photograph I can take will ever do justice to this incredible interior of the Austrian National Library. While nowhere near the scale of the U.S. Library of Congress, it is one of the most beautiful libraries I’ve ever been in. Hmmm, I’m starting to think of a vacation during which we’d focus on libraries instead of so many churches.

Vienna, Austria

It’s near impossible to take landscape formatted photos in here and I’m stuck with portrait framing to try and capture a feel of the interior. There are also books behind books as a “secret” panel that is propped open shows visitors who peer within.

Vienna, Austria

Tycho Brahe was a Dutch astronomer whose theory back in the 16th century was still quite popular. Contrary to Copernicus, Tycho believed that the sun revolved around the heavier and slowly spinning Earth. This book from 1661 attempts to diagram his theory. Notice that the Earth is not flat!

Vienna, Austria

This is a facsimile copy of the very rare book and founding codex of the Austrian National Library known as Gospels of John of Opava. The book is also known by the name “Evangeliar des Johann von Troppau.” The original was written in pure gold ink back in 1368 in the Czech Republic. It has a metal book cover, and the only known surviving copy is stored out of public view.

Vienna, Austria

The Augustinerkirche, or Augustinian Church, was another surprise on our way this morning. Started back in 1327, it has played host to the marriages of Emperor Franz Joseph, Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, and Empress Maria Theresia. On Sunday High Mass, the church often features a full orchestra and choir, should you be so lucky to be there on one of those weekends.

Vienna, Austria

The Jewish Museum of Vienna is our last scheduled visit of the day before heading west. According to Wikipedia, “The first Jewish Museum in Vienna and the world was founded in 1896. It was supported and run by the Society for the Collection and Preservation of Artistic and Historical Memorials of Jewry. The museum focused on the culture and history of the Jews in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, especially in Vienna and Galicia.”

During World War II, about 6,400 objects of art were confiscated from the existing Jewish museum, and the old facility was shuttered. Starting in the 1950s, those objects were instituted, and then in the early 1990s, the current location of the museum was established.

Vienna, Austria

Max Berger, who was born in 1924 and was the only survivor of the death camps from his family, is the person largely responsible for the collection on display today. He amassed more than 10,000 pieces of Judaica, and upon his death, his widow donated another 3,200 pieces to the museum.

Vienna, Austria

Without the museum and the efforts of those who have supported the creation and protection of this rich history, a large part of the story and cultural contribution to central Europe would be lost. One of the current exhibits explains the importance of salons (cultural gatherings in people’s homes), which were often hosted by Jewish women in Vienna from the late 18th century on.

Vienna, Austria

The Pestsäule or Plague Column stands in recognition of the approximate 76,000 residents of Vienna that died in the plague of 1679 killing nearly a third of the population. On the other days, when we were passing this monument, it was wrapped around its base with hordes of tourists, so seeing it this way and not in shadow was a lucky break.

Vienna, Austria

This is the other part of the Jewish Museum known as Museum Judenplatz, which, in addition to an exhibit, features some unearthed foundations of a medieval synagogue nearly 5 feet below the current street level. With this, it was time to leave Vienna.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

The first church we came upon after arriving in Krems an der Donau was the Parish Church of St. Vitus. The original church that sat here was built back in 1014, or 1004 years ago. It and others made way for the current church over the centuries.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

In 1975 the organ that was about 300 years old received a renovation, while the church would have to wait until 2009 for its major renovation. That work was finally done in 2016.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

As part of a traveler’s experience, I vote for churches featuring organ music, choirs, and bell-ringing seven days a week and multiple times a day to fit everyone else’s schedule. If only there was enough demand for experiential travel that could make my request financially viable.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

Around every corner is another church, and the one up the hill is our next stop: the Piaristenkirche. Krems is not built on flat land and these stairways up and down the hills are instantly attracting my curiosity. Caroline took the path on the left through the tunnel, and I took the right with open stairs.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

The Piaristenkirche is the oldest church in Krems and dates from 1475, though an older church has stood here since 1284.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

In these towns that escaped devastation from the countless wars that have wracked Europe, there is still that sense of what the medieval village might have looked like with winding streets prior to consideration being made for automobiles.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

This is part of the perfect layout for a city I want to live in. A city where we wouldn’t need cars in the town center but with enough population density to support a vibrant shopping main street. Museums, music venues, and salons for learning and art exhibitions would also play a key role. My social network of synthesists, gourmet chefs, writers, filmmakers, and photographers would be part of this community. To me, the virtual world we should be building is the face of the next social space, but our obsession with sports and violence and lack of clear direction for the intellectual progress of humanity has us staring at our own belly buttons instead of honestly trying to make a better world. Sometimes, I hate being an idealist.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

Feeling sorrowful? Drown that negativity at Café-Konditorei Hagmann with a Marilleneisknoedel mit Marillensauce und Schlagobers! It’s apricot season in Europe, and these crumb-covered ice cream balls stuffed with fresh apricot and sides of apricot compote and whipped cream are the perfect antidote to the heat, foot pain, or the blues should you be suffering from that or any other ailment. Add a cappuccino and some sparkling water and you’ll have entered travelers paradise.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

This is our last view of the Danube while on this particular journey across Europe. I hope to see it again someday.

Krems an der Donau, Austria

As in all river valleys across Europe, you will find grapes growing on the hillsides because other than great desserts, baked goods, exquisite art, and other luxuries for the soul, wine is as essential as water and air.

Horsching, Austria

Our apartment for the night is not just an apartment; it is an old farmhouse. We are in Hörsching, Austria, outside of Linz, and while the intention was to visit Linz while we were in this corner of the world, we will not make it. Being out in the countryside spoke to us in an instant and warmly greeted us with recommendations to go slow tonight and stop rushing around.

Horsching, Austria

The first thing we learned here was that one night was not going to be enough, but due to our schedule, we would not be able to extend our visit.

Caroline Wise in Horsching, Austria

Peter and Greti were our hosts for this Airbnb (which you can find by clicking right here), and it was Peter who gave us a couple of recommendations for dinner just down the road. We pulled into the Gasthof Mandorfer, and maybe because it was still relatively early, the restaurant was mostly empty, except for a side room where about a dozen people were sitting with maybe six accordions on top of the tables or in people’s laps. Everyone else was out on the patio enjoying the great weather. With five days to go before the World Wide Knit in Public Day, there were four women on one of the other tables practicing for the global event, so Caroline went back to the car to grab her yarn because nothing is quite as good as a beer, knitting, dinner, and sunset all at the same time.

Horsching, Austria

Closing thoughts for the day:

Between churches, food, and photos, we enjoy simply walking through the city and, in part, doing some window shopping, people watching and talking about what we’ve seen interspersed with fragments of history Caroline is pulling off the internet or taking from her memory.

In the early morning, before breakfast, while on vacation, I try to prep some photos should I get the opportunity during the day to sit in a coffee shop and write, although this hasn’t been possible since we were in Italy. Caroline, on the other hand, tends to read about places we’ll be going, where we’ve been, or the people and history we learned of when visiting a place.

Once we get underway, it’s time to find some breakfast, which we hope will be some bread, butter, jam, a boiled egg, and coffee. An outdoor breakfast while people-watching remains my all-time favorite way of starting the day.

Where we go next sometimes depends on where we ate and what is relatively nearby, or we might have to take into consideration what opens where and when. In any case, there is some amount of travel, and as much as possible, we will try to walk a street we’ve not yet traveled. An app that draws highlights over the streets we’ve already walked would be ideal for this so we could easily see the streets we’d still like to explore; you never know what you might find down some random way.

As we walk along, we are looking at chipped and aged wood doors and window frames, curtains, cobblestones, roofs, signage, facades, people, dog poop, trees, moss, graffiti, old gates, keyholes, how cars park, bicycles including rusted hulks of bikes missing parts, occasionally I’ll ring a bike bell (maybe too often), glance at musty books in windows, names on door buzzers, and birds scurrying about.

Stickers on poles and electricity boxes get extra scrutiny. Antennas on roofs, while rarer these days, spark my imagination into thinking of the old guy in some apartment upstairs who’s lived there for 60 years and never felt the need to get cable and now is one of the last people to get poor reception on his TV as he tunes in the World Cup. Occasionally, an item left next to the trash will invite me to have a closer look and wonder why the person was getting rid of this particular thing.

Menus on the outside of restaurants is an absolute luxury, though with the internet I suppose I could look up a menu online. Passing by a place and checking out their menu without someone asking if I want a table allows me to find inspiration or lack of interest, and should I find the menu inviting, I put a virtual bookmark in my spatial memory to remember that this eatery might offer me a meal someday.

Soon, the day is coming to an end, and I can’t believe all the impressions that were made; this is the luxury of wandering around.

Walking stats: 17,650 steps for 8.25 miles or 13.4 km and 28 floors climbed.

Budapest – Europe Day 11

Budapest, Hungary

We have a list of sights we intend to visit while in Budapest, and initially, we are foregoing looking at it and are just venturing out to see what we stumble upon. Wouldn’t you know that a church would show up so quickly? Churches are easy targets, to be honest, as they are visual focal points easily seen from various vantage points across a city. Knowing that a large Gothic or Baroque building is just over there lets you assume that there are probably some other interesting things to see in its immediate vicinity. Believe it or not, we are not going into that church just yet.

Budapest, Hungary

Breakfast was calling from “A Table” over on Arany János Utca, and we answered by grabbing a couple of americanos and a hot breakfast Hungarian style. The tip for this place proved worthwhile, though most of the visitors were speaking English. Next time we visit, we need to discover where the locals go. It seems that it’s mostly Americans who use TripAdvisor.

Budapest, Hungary

Back to that church, we held off on visiting. St. Stephen’s Basilica is named after King Stephen (Istvan in Hungarian), who lived between 975 and 1038 and was the first king of Hungary. It’s a relatively new building, having replaced a theater that stood on the site back in the 18th century. The consecration of St. Stephen’s was in 1905. After another photo, I’ll take you into the church, but pay special attention to that center dome, as there is a narrow circular stairway that is well worth your investment to crawl up. But first, I give you the following.

Budapest, Hungary

The stonework directly in front of the church could easily be overlooked as you gawk at the imposing building in front of you and race to the door to start learning of the history and opulence contained within, but you should stop to admire this beautiful piece of art. Anywhere else, this would be a centerpiece within a lobby or otherwise drab city hall; here in Budapest, it is but one tiny part of a 360-degree view that is embedded with details out of a mandala.

Budapest, Hungary

These next 14 images are going to go into some of the details that caught my eye. I shot a lot more than this, but most are of poor quality, and while there are more than a few more that I consider worthy, this is already going to be too many images for some readers. Then again, I’m not writing this blog for visitors; it is here for the sole purpose of serving my wife and me. For those of you who might endure my blathering on and on endlessly about my interpretation of things or are simply happy to see what a person can accomplish on a single day in Budapest (though we have roughly three days here in the city), I invite you to indulge with me, and maybe you too can delight in the extraordinary lines, arches, decorations, columns, and rich, warm light this church bathes in.

Budapest, Hungary

I present the altar. Just one of the columns on the left or right of the altar would turn one of those local fairly plain churches into a destination that those of the Catholic faith would make a pilgrimage to. So I’m projecting here, and maybe they wouldn’t, but obviously, it would draw Caroline and me in. I’d like to note that Caroline has a preference for Gothic churches and finds some of the gaudier Baroque churches to be too flamboyant and ostentatious. As for me, I love them all and would love nothing more than to visit all the major cathedrals and basilicas of Europe, South and North America, and anywhere else people have invested hundreds of years to build such monuments.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the main dome over the nave and not your only view of it.

Budapest, Hungary

The dark warmth and glow here are magnified by the contrast of dark woods and marble embellished with gold and lines that pull light and distribute shadows in the most seductive ways. If I had to guess, I might venture to think that the clergy doesn’t want visitors to associate seductiveness with the church but rather solemn reverence for God while visiting. Maybe they could also be happy knowing that visitors find such pleasure in these houses of worship.

Budapest, Hungary

A closer look at the altar and the world within the larger world within the universal one we all inhabit can be seen represented here. The metaphor of one looking out over another who looks over the many is a poetic notion that, in a romantic view under the best of circumstances, seems too oft corrupted by our base human nature wanting self-aggrandizement. This embracing of power seizes the alpha animal, allowing his position as an apex predator to initially, with benevolence, guide a people. The flocking or pack mentality of his followers is easily abused when the senses of the leader are drawn into the luxury that accompanies the opulence of privilege. When the wealth of knowledge and wisdom begins to replace the narrow-mindedness of the adolescent ego, we start to ascend to greater things and higher potential. Sadly, this cannot be fully understood by the young, and even among those who are becoming older, many will fail to find the truth of conviction and purpose while they can still enjoy its magnificence.

Budapest, Hungary

This idea of looking up and to the heavens for our source of life and guiding light, while relatively simple, is a complex interpretation of looking to the sky for the sun that grows our food and the clouds that deliver freshwater to grow our crops. We as a species (except for us atheists) look to God to grow us spiritually and imbue us with life while nourishing our souls on our journey of transformation from nothing to life, to death, to rebirth. The genius of early humanity to translate the cycle of life into one of the spiritual, intellectual processes is brilliant in its own right, though hypocrisy has tainted the potential of its message to engage me at an appreciable level beyond my recognition of its mechanical functionality as a primitive control engine to breed complacency and blind faith.

Budapest, Hungary

Still, we must look up and within. Not just into the heavens and a godlike figure, we must also look within and find the greatness of what we postulate in the essence of god within ourselves. Our philosophers for the past couple of hundred years have been trying to show us the way to self-fulfillment, but in times of uncertainty, we look to the strong man instead of the strength we can find within; this is the work of fear or through the eyes of the church maybe this is the root of evil.

Budapest, Hungary

And he said unto them, “Let there be music,” and the organ pumped out the jams. The language of music is not the tyranny of thought and words; it is the elixir that stirs the body into movement and the mind into the trance of ecstasy. Johann Sebastian Bach was lucky enough and alive at a time that allowed him to celebrate bringing Europeans further into the Enlightenment by unifying their souls in songs of celebration, loss, mourning, and creation. To hear the organ resonate with the choir, bringing the angelic voice of innocence to the bellowing of the Earth being tamed by humanity, is maybe a kind of early mind control that allowed the people of this earlier age to stand before their own naked potential.

Budapest, Hungary

Are your eyes able to see all the details at once? Is your mind able to catalog the myriad of meanings engraved, etched, and presented to your senses in a moment? Can you learn the lessons of life in a year, twenty, or even fifty years? All of our lives, we search for meaning in the little and big things our minds and bodies are able to encounter, and still, we are left with more questions than answers as to what it all might mean. There is a part of me that feels that the building of the church itself is a large question looming all around us that asks us to see the outside as the monolithic object that draws us in to start looking within. And when we understand this larger purpose of finding beauty and meaning in the tiniest of details, maybe we can start to understand that is in part the tiny details of who we are, what we eat, the words we make from letters that only represent tiny sound fragments that find meaning when strung together much like a life brought to fruition in the stringing together of millions of tiny events and circumstances that create the individual within the larger system. Just as the church is a building for finding spirituality, maybe the container of the human is the building where we are supposed to find culture and, ultimately, enlightenment.

Budapest, Hungary

Look into the shadows, for though you cannot see, there is no reason to believe there is nothing there. Light in the darkness illuminates a reality you didn’t know existed prior to you seeing it. This is part of the basis of both religion and enlightenment: look within your mind and look within your heart to find the power of the intellect of us people or your obedience to a God because your mind cannot fathom the breadth that knowledge can bestow upon you.

Budapest, Hungary

The window allowing you to look out also lets light in, and the candle that burns, destroying itself in the process, illuminates our environment, allowing us to see where the light of the window cannot reach. Deep within the closed spaces of ourselves, we find the greatest darkness and the place that religion and philosophy have been begging us to explore with the help of their light, showing us a path. Maybe I’m lost in metaphors as I write this from almost 11,000 meters in the sky (36,000 feet) on our flight back home, but this idea of the candle destroying itself strikes me in the way that we humans also burn through our own energy source ultimately destroying ourselves on our journey to bring light to others. If we are complacent, allowing others to light the way, how will we find within ourselves the things we do not realize are integral to becoming a greater self?

Budapest, Hungary

Within this church is a side chapel, and within it is a box, and within it is another box, a reliquary that holds something else. Something the church finds precious and valuable is there for all to see, though none of us can touch it or see it in its entirety; it is the right hand of King Stephen. We are only allowed to catch a glimpse of his hand, and even then, we are denied to view or examine it on a cellular or molecular level. The onion skin’s layers are many, but never do we get to the ultimate possession of knowledge that allows us to know it all; we are forever in ignorance of universal knowledge. We are only people visiting the artifacts of our ancestors, and rarely, if ever, do we truly understand where we have been or where we are going.

Budapest, Hungary

We look deeper as time goes by. We do not enter the center, the top, or in the depths of our world. We must move through the door and choose our path, and while we might see what we think is the big picture, we soon realize we haven’t seen much at all until we gather nearer to the source of what created the larger image. From the door, we could not read the text or interpret the panels, nor could we move from the door into the inner domain of the sacristy, which is usually beyond our reach anyway. The lesson for humanity is writ large within the physical constructs of the church in a symbolic representation that is beyond the clergy. The priest only exists in a fraction of the time that the church and its ideas are representing. The priest is here as a caretaker and person to welcome you for you to find your way in a universe that does not come with GPS or a road map to show you a way on your journey.

Budapest, Hungary

Again, we explore the seductive lines on the edges of what our eye first sees, but beyond that lie greater questions that beg for answers. We cannot find our lives in the confines of the television or in the instant gratification of sending our friends a photo on Instagram. Curves of the body may entice us, but they are only a small part of the story. What does the smile tell us? What does the scent allude to? Where do the connections and passages lead to? These questions are not just about the church or religion; they are about human will, relationships, intellect, and emotional well-being. Shelter is only found within, and the hearth will grow cold when we fail to fuel it. This is true about the essence of us people, too; what are you fueling yourself with? Hopefully not strictly junk.

Budapest, Hungary

Now we go up instead of within, and here we find not the top as we might have expected, but the top as it is with still another layer above us. On this side of the dome, I cannot imagine what might be on the other side had I not previously been below it. Even though I have seen the dome from below it’s difficult to not place the art and ornament in its proper place that is just on the other side of this structure. I do not know how sturdy this is, how thick it is, or how much it might weigh, but I do believe that what I think is on the other side is actually there. This is my Schroedinger’s cat as found in a church.

Budapest, Hungary

So I look up, and now I see the top, or do I? I do not, not even close. It is too dark and obscured at the top to see what is up in the scaffolding. I do understand that the stairs lead to another passage that would take me to the cupola and surrounding me would be a roof clad in copper, but I’m not allowed. Above the cupola is a base where a golden cross is mounted. It’s time to step into the sky. Before I do, I realize my assumptions are wrong because the cupola must be sitting above the bell tower. A few more steps and my investment in walking up all these stairs might deliver some answers.

Budapest, Hungary

My first step into this new world and perspective is not met with proof of a bell tower but with a view of the world as I’ve never seen it before. How many other perceptions of reality exist out there within the many buildings and people who move between them?

Budapest, Hungary

Another view and another unfathomable multitude of potentials waiting to become realities.

Budapest, Hungary

This angle produces yet more options and outcomes. Should I now aloft myself to the International Space Station how might my understanding shift yet again?

Budapest, Hungary

The bell towers turn out to be in the left and right smaller domed towers. Funny how it’s hard to perceive all angles of a potential reality before you’ve stepped into them.

John Wise and Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

How do I know I’ve been to these places and been able to consider the things that have coursed through my mind and lodged themselves in my memories? I have this image that proves that Caroline and I have been in the presence of the top of the exterior of a church in Budapest, and yet I cannot accept the images and icons of organized religion as similar proofs. Seems that my perspective is biased and possibly flawed; I’ll have to keep on trying to light the shadows within my mind in my continuing search for answers.

Budapest, Hungary

Like magic or by the elevator, we are transported to the adjacent south tower where the treasury is located. And as you’d expect, it houses a collection of treasures.

Budapest, Hungary

From clothing to trinkets, goblets, and religious artifacts that this particular church holds dear.

Budapest, Hungary

Some placards explain many of the objects, such as when they were created, by whom, when, and of what materials. I pass them by to allow some mystery to continue to exist. Who knows, maybe someday I’ll return and still have something more to learn.

Budapest, Hungary

The death mask of Cardinal Mindszenty. During World War II, he was imprisoned by the pro-Nazi Arrow Cross Party, who were responsible for horrible atrocities not only against the Cardinal but the local Jewish population too; more on that later. Opposing communism, he was tortured and given a life sentence after the war in 1949. After serving eight years during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, he was freed and lived in the United States embassy for 15 years until he was allowed to leave Hungary. He died in exile in 1975 in Vienna, Austria.

Budapest, Hungary

How many cultural references are in this image? What is the history of each line, symbol, and material? This wasn’t just made one day from ideas and forms unique to the artist; the person was drawing upon the histories of generations that preceded his own craftsmanship.

Budapest, Hungary

Whose hands worked the needles of this design? Who spun the silk and other materials that the robe is made from? Did certain materials and dyes come from other corners of the Earth? It’s amazing to me to imagine the magnitude of cultural expression and history that can be embedded in a single piece of cloth and our ability to attempt to give meaning to things that bear our imprint.

Budapest, Hungary

From the animals depicted in Chauvet to the lion’s statues found in many cities around the globe, we humans use fierce beasts, demons, dragons, and gargoyles to ward off our enemies. If only our totems to our aspirations for peace were effective against bullets and explosives.

Budapest, Hungary

We are heading for the stairs that will take us up to Buda Castle. After seeing the Pest side of the city from St. Stephen’s Basilica, it is time to see the Buda side from Matthias Church.

Budapest, Hungary

Down below, we could have taken the funicular, but that would have stolen the midway views as we trudged up the mountain. That’s St. Stephen’s on the other side of the bridge that is crossing the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

There seems to be a joke here that asks, “What happens when two funiculi pass on the side of the mountain?”

Budapest, Hungary

Our second museum of the trip is the Buda Castle History Museum, which is worthy of a visit should you ever find yourself in Budapest. These are royal seals used over the history of the country. Deciding what to photograph in a museum is difficult because essentially everything is of interest, but blog entries shouldn’t have a thousand images accompanying them either. So, I try to choose things that might not always get photographed and that I might later have something to say about. My results are a mixed bag.

Budapest, Hungary

Were there once Danube River dolphins, or are those gills and rabbit ears on those two things facing each other?

Budapest, Hungary

There were dozens of red marble carvings on display; this was qualified as a favorite, so here you go.

Budapest, Hungary

The tiles of a mosaic floor piece in beautiful shape after so many centuries. How many centuries do you ask? I’m not sure, though most everything in the museum seemed to date from about 1500 through the mid-1600s.

Budapest, Hungary

The only thing missing is some antlers.

Budapest, Hungary

Buda Castle from the inside court.

Budapest, Hungary

Oh yeah, antlers.

Budapest, Hungary

Ruins of some sort. (maybe we find out something more about these)

Budapest, Hungary

Changing of the guard. I’m guessing this is the presidential palace, but it felt awkward to ask anyone official-looking here as the police and security in plain clothes didn’t look like they’d enjoy answering tourist questions.

Budapest, Hungary

Matthias Church is about to be explored from top to bottom, but not in that order.

Budapest, Hungary

Before that, we headed over to Fisherman’s Bastion, which, to be honest, I think is more a ploy to collect a few more forints because….

Budapest, Hungary

Other than a slightly nicer view of Parliament and the city on the other side of the river, there’s not much difference in the view than just 10 feet below where we stand.

Budapest, Hungary

We are inside the church and will watch the clock as the tower operates on a schedule and limits on how many people can go up per group.

Budapest, Hungary

There’s a warmth in here with all the dark tones that paint this church with a very different feeling than, say, the Dresden Frauenkirche with its white and gold aesthetic or Magdeburg’s Dom, which is cold, gray, and quite austere. The other day, we were in the ornate Basilica of St. Anthony in Padua, which was relatively bold in its presentation, whereas Matthias Church feels subdued yet just as sophisticated.

Budapest, Hungary

To think that the majority of humanity will never gaze upon or look within these living museums whose purpose is to facilitate prayer, devotion, and ultimately salvation is a strange thought to me, as our churches, mosques, and temples are such integral parts of our lives. The diversity and work that exists upon these walls and the adornments both in and outside the building are testaments to our brilliance in architecting places that inspire our imagination to heights we’ve never witnessed in another species.

Budapest, Hungary

Solemnity comes to the person who walks into a church just as it does when one enters a hospital. We somehow sense the fragile nature of our existence when in places that heal, be it with medicine or spiritual guidance. This formality of dignity might also play a role in how people go about their lives in cultures that place greater importance on the social rules that enforce these behaviors, though this is purely conjectured on my part, coming from a thought-out-loud question.

Budapest, Hungary

From reflection and inspiration, we are feeding the more benevolent side of our natures. Maybe our commercial and social gathering places need a return to such environments that demand respect, quiet, and contemplation. How would writing be affected if it were being done during extended visits to a church as opposed to the coffee shop?

Budapest, Hungary

To sit here in the pulpit and find the words that might come to mind while taking influence from my surroundings sounds like a grand working vacation in its own right. How would one go about seeking permission to be allowed such a task and privilege?

Budapest, Hungary

In an age before movies and television, I could see the church as fulfilling the role of taking a community to another place, much like modern media does today. Here in the church, the worshiper listens to scripture and the gospel while viewing the scenes reflecting passages from the bible, with the air scented in frankincense and colored light streaming in from stained glass, helping create an ancient theater experience featuring god and the apostles as the main cast.

Budapest, Hungary

This is a rare view for me as I cannot recollect many other churches I’ve been able to visit above the nave or apse for a look into the church such as this.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the altar in the sanctuary of Matthias Church. Its scale is somewhat skewed due to our view from above its main body. Some of the altar’s imposing authority, when seen below, is lost; maybe this is why the average visitor or congregation member of a church is seated before the altar in the nave.

Budapest, Hungary

Over the past decade, more work regarding the investigation of how light impacts us emotionally has been undertaken at the professional research level, but still, the field, from what I can find, is in its nascent stage. While early research has shown some effect on how the spectral quality of light affects us, I would like to better understand how this light found in vast, dense places combines with the unique acoustic qualities of the church that amplify or greatly alter the prosody of the sermon to impact our senses and emotional being.

Budapest, Hungary

On a similar note, how do architecture and our internal spaces affect our perceptions and emotions? While a search on the internet has given me a few leads to follow up on, I don’t have the time at this writing to encapsulate what they have to say, so I’m giving my reader and myself a couple of links to read. The first one is from Kashmira Gander and an article she wrote for the Independent out of the United Kingdom titled “How Architecture Uses Space, Light, and Material to Affect Your Mood.” The other article is from Shivangi Vats, published on Medium titled, “Impact of Architecture on Human Psychology….” There’s so much to know about life and so little time to learn about it all.

Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

Up the tower, we go for yet another view of things from a perspective not everyone is willing to try to reach.

Budapest, Hungary

If you’ve never been to a European city on Christmas Day to hear a dozen or more church bells ringing across the landscape, you may not be able to fully appreciate how profound the effect is on us. While the solitary bell is a beautiful sound in its own right, it is the various tones and pitches working in concert, echoing through the streets, that real bells bring that recordings broadcast from modern bell-less towers cannot deliver. Seeing these large bells, it is as though we intuitively understand we are standing before something great. When rung, they will resonate deep within us and seem to strike something primordial.

Budapest, Hungary

We have arrived at the top of Buda. Pest lies across the Danube and Parliament can easily be seen in all of its spectacular glory there on the banks of this historic river.

Budapest, Hungary

Other than the cars below and many of the houses in the distance, it’s a strange thought looking out here from the tower of Matthias Church that the view is much the way it might have looked hundreds of years ago.

Caroline Wise at the Museum of Applied Folk Art in Budapest, Hungary

Another temple of worship we needed to visit, this time it was the Museum of Applied Folk Art. Turns out that this place doubles as the meetup point for a local fiber arts group with somebody’s Baby Wolf loom set up with a length of cloth being made.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

On an adjacent loom was a sample draped over a weaving in progress. I tried to sneak a peek at it but was admonished not to touch a thing by one of the people working at the front door.

Caroline Wise at Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

The loom was a relatively simple two-shaft loom but with some beautiful woodwork that made it into a work of art.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

I must live under a rock, or Caroline doesn’t share all the available information with me regarding loom configurations, as I’ve never seen a two-shaft or a six-shaft loom before.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

Ethnic folk art is what this museum is about, and while there isn’t much on display, what is here is interesting enough to keep our attention. Many of the photos I’ll take here are for Caroline to take inspiration from once we return to America.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

Some of the pieces Caroline could make if only she had time away from knitting all these socks she makes me and that other thing that consumes so much of her time: work.

Döner Kabab in Budapest, Hungary

After we visited the Folk Art Museum, one of the ladies who was doing needlepoint, there told us of a nearby folk art store called Mester Porta just down the street. We did a bit of shopping and then desperately needed something to eat before we started on a long walk to the other side of the river. The lady working at Mester Porta told us of a decent Döner Kebab shop further down the street, and that’s where we headed. Do not attempt to think that a Döner and gyros are the same things if you are in America. Gyros is a poor excuse for something that wants to imitate the amazing Döner but is made in some factory in Chicago and is the exact same weird meat product served from coast to coast, whereas in Europe, each shop owner has their own recipe and meat combination. Sometimes conformity sucks unless it’s In-N-Out Burger.

Budapest, Hungary

We are crossing the Danube on the Margaret Bridge, which was opened in 1876 and is the second oldest bridge here in Budapest. Earlier in the day, we crossed from Pest to Buda on the Széchenyi Chain Bridge which is the oldest bridge here in Budapest and the first that was a permanent crossing of the Danube. The night before, we drove over the Liberty Bridge, coming into the city, and the night shot of Buda Castle was taken while we were crossing Elisabeth Bridge, which means we have now crossed all the major bridges of Budapest. Margaret Bridge is a three-way bridge connected to Margaret Island, and we would have loved to have visited, but we have an appointment at 6:00 p.m. we’ve got to get to, and it feels far away in this heat, humidity, and in-light of the distance we’ve already walked today.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the Néprajzi Múzeum of Ethnography that chronicles life in Hungary and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries. We didn’t visit this time; maybe on a subsequent vacation, we’ll be able to take it in.

Budapest, Hungary

Up close to Parliament, that was sold out during our visit, so better planning would have been required if this had been a must-see. It’s on the list should we ever come back.

John Wise and Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

We arrived at the dock for Dunarama early, which was fortunate for our tired feet, laden bladders, and parched palates. With a half-hour before our departure, we sat on the floating restaurant patio with a couple of bottles of sparkling water and took a well-deserved break. As 6:00 p.m. came around, one of the boatmen approached us to bring us aboard a small speedboat that was about to be our means of travel for a private tour up and down the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

The view from the middle of the Danube is truly a different perspective than all others we’d had today. Initially, we took it slow and leisurely to acquaint ourselves with the sense of being on one of Earth’s most famous rivers. Would Parliament have looked so amazing under rainy skies or perfectly blue skies? From the light clouds and the reflection of Parliament in the river, we had what must be one of the most incredible sights seen on our planet today.

Budapest, Hungary

On the other side of the river, Buda Castle was nearly in silhouette, with the sun getting lower in the west. Our tour company, Dunarama, while not inexpensive, might offer the most unique views of the city and its river banks.

Budapest, Hungary

All of the romance with a blast of outrageous fun comes with a trip on the water. While we were speeding down the Danube, the guys turned up AC/DC’s Thunderstruck and opened up the throttle with some hairpin turns thrown in for added thrills. While Caroline was initially reluctant to add so much sound pollution to the pristine environment, once we were hauling ass, she was all smiles and fist pumps of excitement. We were paying for a 50-minute tour and soon were feeling that it was all too short and that we could easily do it all over again. I don’t believe we could have chosen a more perfect day or time to have taken this extraordinary journey on the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

By 7:00 p.m. we are pulling up to the dock and catching our breaths. We walk to a nearby restaurant that promises an authentic Hungarian meal and take our time to relax and get full. From here, we wander around the city center, taking in all the open shops, people sitting around enjoying a drink, an abundance of Thai Massage joints, and the general feeling of being in a Bohemian wonderland of debauchery and vast history. Budapest is certainly at a crossroads historically, culturally, and economically as the world of Europe is still changing with the global movement of people, capital, and entertainment. We clocked 12.26 miles or just under 20 km of walking across the city today and climbed 77 floors of steps; our feet and heads need an overnight break.

Colmar to Como – Europe Day 7

Colmar, France

That old thing called weather looks cooperative, but it’s still late spring, so we are “prepared” for a turn at any moment. These views are why travelers and tourists flock to this area. Being out here early, we nearly have the place to ourselves.

Colmar, France

Just to my right, out of view, was an elderly Chinese man who, armed with his sketchbook, was drawing a pretty good rendition of this particular perspective. By now, you might start to understand why this area is also called “Little Venice.”

Colmar, France

In a couple of hours, all of these places will be teaming with people and the village will once again have sprung back to life.

Caroline Wise in Colmar, France

Just the tip.

Colmar, France

One view might be much like the last, but because we walked these streets on such a gorgeous day and the place was ours, these images will allow us to study the details to see what we might have missed while we were walking through or just gaze into the scene as it was on this day allowing the impressions to take up permanent residence in our memories.

Colmar, France

There could be considered one disadvantage to being up and out early: nothing is open yet. The bakeries are the first to open which is good because hunger walked out the door with us. What we are really waiting for is this:

Colmar, France

I took better photos of St. Martin Church, but those didn’t include the stork and its nest in quite the same way. The importance of storks in the Alsace goes beyond the baby being born story and dates back to the year 817 and involves Louis the Pious, son of Charlemagne. If you’d like to read a very short history of that story, check out this blog.

St. Martin Church in Colmar, France

Construction began back in 1234 and wasn’t completed until 1365. The idea that more than a few generations of craftsmen spread out over 131 years would work on this with those who began never seeing their work finished is a strange thought. If I were a betting person, I’d wager that it could be every day and on some of those days, multiple times a day, that we visit a church or cathedral.

Colmar, France

At least there are a few places left that haven’t gone over to red plastic and neon for their signage. Aux Deux Freres is “Two Brothers,” and Charcuterie translates to cooked or prepared meats.

Colmar, France

Last night, the streets were teeming with visitors enjoying the early summer weather. With the shadows still long but shortening quickly, it won’t be long before, once again, the din of the village will be at a low roar.

Colmar, France

With things still in this idyllic moment, we decided to was okay to leave as we have one of the two longest drives on this trip ahead of us today.

After the “long” drive from Colmar to Basel and then Lucerne, we were ready to enter the Alps in earnest.

The Alps in Switzerland

Caroline, by now, has already commented on how “Swiss” everything looks half a dozen times. We are blown away to have the weather cooperating with us, as we have been trying our best to prepare ourselves for the fact that we may not see any peaks up here due to cloud cover.

The Alps in Switzerland

While I never got a photo of it, we were impressed with how many people still harvest hay on the side of the mountains using hand tools.

Caroline Wise and a cow in the Alps of Switzerland

Every one of the cows in this roadside pasture wore a bell, and the chorus of the two dozen or more bells clanging in the mountains was a terrifically beautiful sound we will never forget, especially because I recorded the Cow Concert and will post it here after I return to the States. By the time this friendly cow was done with Caroline’s arms, she had scratch marks all over them from that tough old tongue.

The Alps in Switzerland

We couldn’t believe the outrageous intensity of the landscape either; the only thing missing was the time that would be required to meander up these anonymous roads and find the hidden trails to go hiking so that instead of only seeing the obvious sights, we could find the hidden ones too.

The Alps in Switzerland

I should point out that we are not on the main road here as there is a series of tunnels and freeways that were built that allow the heaviest traffic and trucks to make better time through this stretch of Alps; we chose the scenic path.

The Alps in Switzerland

Tunnels bored under the mountains allow for a straighter, less difficult drive, but who’d want to miss this?

Caroline Wise in the Alps of Switzerland

You had to know that Caroline is nerdy enough to reenact a Sound of Music moment here in the Alps, right?

Caroline Wise in the Alps of Switzerland

Defacing the Alps with snow graffiti because she just doesn’t care.

The Alps in Switzerland

Approaching the summit of the road on Gotthard Pass. Below us is a 10.5-mile (17km) long tunnel, allowing the trucks and those in a hurry to move quickly while we linger and take in the sights. Well below them, close to the base of the mountain, is the world’s longest rail tunnel at 35.5 miles long (57km).

The Alps in Switzerland

Year-round, the snowpack and glaciers throughout the Alps make for some of the greatest scenic drives on Earth. This particular section of the Alps is known as the Lepontine Alps.

The Alps in Switzerland

About to start our descent toward Italy.

The Alps in Switzerland

This was the view from near the highest point on our road today and is adjacent to the spot where I took the image looking down the mountains. There is also a souvenir and cafe up here, along with a WC also known as a water closet or toilet.

The Alps in Switzerland

One last look back from where we just drove through.

Entering Italy

And then, all of a sudden, we were on narrower, crowded streets with people yelling at us that we couldn’t stop anywhere. From the idyllic to mayhem in less than 10 miles.

John Wise and Caroline Wise on the streets of Como, Italy

We look pretty good for what we just endured. We made a mistake and drove right past the sign that said in Italian that these narrow streets that were far narrower than anything else I’d ever driven on in my life, were only for locals. Our apartment for the night was down one of these passages and so we kind of felt that made us temporary local residents: wrong! If you notice that the lighting on our selfies is different on this trip, it’s because I’m using my phone to shoot these due to the lens on my DSLR having a broken auto-focus. During the course of our trip, my 10-year-old Canon would see different electronic malfunctions, and the zoom on my lens would break, forcing me to manually pull on the barrel of the lens to jam it back into a wide angle.

Como, Italy

This is indicative of the passage we drove down. Should you think it looks wide enough, our side-view mirrors were at times only inches away from buildings, tourists, and other cars.

Como, Italy

Walking to dinner because a short two-mile (3.4km) walk up the hillside might offer up some nice views.

Crotto del Sergente Osteria in Como, Italy

This is Crotto del Sergente Osteria in Como; well, actually, it’s out in the woods in a secluded corner away from traffic. It’s the perfect setting for our first-ever meal in Italy. I chose this while we were back in the States so I could avoid wasting time debating different places while we were starving on the streets of Como. This restaurant is known for its slow food.

Crotto del Sergente Osteria in Como, Italy

I won’t task you will all the photos I shot of our dinner, but I offer you these two. This was one of our warm first courses and is Raviolone all’Osibuco of Veal with Saffron of Faloppio, Soft Marrow, and Horseradish.

Crotto del Sergente Osteria in Como, Italy

My second course was this Porchetta del Crotto with Ginger Sauce and Piattoni (beans).

Como, Italy

We took a taxi back to town as not only was it dark when we finished dinner, but what I didn’t show you about our walk up a twisting, winding road was how often there was no sidewalk and how we hugged the edge of the road just half a meter away from vehicles speeding right by us. We can’t tell you what time Como goes to sleep because at 11:00 p.m., there were still thousands out on the street; matter of fact, over in front of the lake, there was a public Zumba class with hundreds of people dancing along. This photo is not indicative of the number of people out, as there’s hardly anyone here.

Como, Italy

Walking back to our apartment around midnight we have covered 9.5 miles by foot today (15 km) and climbed 40 floors.

Getting Places – Europe Day 1

First glimpse of the European continent

The first view of the European Continent coming into view.

Rural European land from 30,000 feet

Farms in the Netherlands.

Farmland in Germany

Farms in Germany. If you are looking for more details, you won’t find them here. We are exhausted and have been traveling for fifteen hours now.

German city from 30,000 feet

More of Germany from high in the sky.

Approaching Frankfurt and passing the Main River in Germany

Approaching the Frankfurt International Airport and passing over the Rhein River as we do so.

Arriving in Frankfurt and greeted by Stephanie, Katarina, and Klaus Engelhardt with Caroline Wise

Best welcome at an airport ever! Caroline and I were met by Stephanie, Katharina, and Klaus Engelhardt here in the city of Caroline’s birth, Frankfurt, Germany. We are on vacation and will be moving further down the road at a point, but for now, we are here to visit family.

John Wise, Jutta Engelhardt, Caroline Wise and Katarina Engelhardt in Frankfurt, Germany

After a small snack with the Engelhardt’s, we walked over to our dinner reservation, which, when I made it I didn’t know was around the corner from Klaus and Stephanie. Shortly after we arrived, Jutta was delivered by taxi, and we were ready to grab a table. This was my first time seeing my Schwiegermutter (mother-in-law) in five years; back then, it was an emergency visit due to her breaking her hip. Although I was incredibly jet-lagged it was still a wonderful moment with all of us sitting down for dinner.

Hand cheese (handkaesse mit musik) with onions

“Handkäse mit Musik” was my appetizer of choice as this is one of the typical Frankfurt dishes and is never found in regions beyond the state of Hessen.

Calf schnitzel with green sauce

My entree was “Schnitzel vom Kalb mit grüner Soße” or schnitzel with green sauce. This is another taste of Frankfurt, difficult if not impossible to get anywhere else. I could have eaten this for dessert, too, but vanilla ice cream with hot raspberry (Heisse Liebe or Hot Love) spoke to me.

Asparagus and boiled potato with Hollandaise

Caroline opted for asparagus and boiled potato with hollandaise. White asparagus is not available year-round, and we were lucky to get this dish as we are moving closer to the end of the season; of course, she shared it with me.

Speissekammer Restaurant in Frankfurt, Germany

Our re-acquaintance with the traditional flavors of Frankfurt happened here at Speisekammer Restaurant, where we opted for a table outside. By the end of dinner, I was falling down tired from the jet lag; as a matter of fact, for a moment, I nearly fell asleep at the table and had to excuse myself to walk around. The first day of this vacation is now firmly set in the column of perfection.

Due to being in the air the better part of our day, we only collected 3 miles of walking or 5 km and hiked up a minuscule four floors.

Going Places – Europe Day 0

John Wise and Caroline Wise

Flying somewhere to do stuff elsewhere. So where is that elsewhere?

Grand Canyon from 30,000 feet

The first clue is that we are passing over the Grand Canyon National Park, and if you look closer, you might notice the Colorado River winding its way through this Big Ditch, not that the Colorado plays a role in this adventure.

Clouds over America

You won’t glean any hints from this amorphous landscape of our direction or location, but it’s beautiful up here.

Clouds over America

Our ever-present travel companions for the past hour or so.

Caroline Wise at Mo's Seafood & Chowder at the Portland Airport, Oregon

With two-and-a-half hours between flights, we certainly had enough time for a cup of slumgullion from Mo’s Seafood & Chowder at the Portland Airport in Oregon. Slumgullion is clam chowder topped with bay shrimp, in case you weren’t already familiar with this coastal Oregon treat.

Mount St. Helens in Washington

This is the peak of Mount St. Helens in Washington, so you can glean that we are still traveling north’ish.

John Wise and Caroline Wise

There’s a serious clue in this photo about our ultimate destination, but spelling it out would spoil the fun.

Sunset over Alberta or Saskatchewan, Canada

As the sun sets, we are somewhere over either Alberta or Saskatchewan, Canada, heading in the general direction of Hudson Bay. After a bite to eat for dinner, we tried to get some fitful sleep for the next five hours; a baby that had other plans worked hard to ensure we got as little rest as possible while it screeched like a wounded hawk/seal demon hybrid.