
Parliament in Budapest
We left Budapest after 5 nights and headed to Prague. There are a couple of ways to get to Prague from Budapest. One is to go through Vienna. The other, more direct way, is to go through Slovakia. When we got on the train we weren’t exactly sure which route we were going but knew it was listed in our trusty Eurail book that has all the train schedules so everything should be fine. Turns out we were on the route that went through Slovakia. It was explained to us while we were on the train by our little old toothless conductor that even though it was in the book because Slovakia is not part of the network of countries that participate in the whole Eurail thing the pass was not valid from when we entered until we left Slovakia. Keep in mind, his English was only slightly better than my Hungarian or whatever it is that he spoke so most of this conversation took place through hand gestures and him punching in numbers on a key pad. Eventually it became clear to me that he was saying that we needed to pay about 70 Euro to go through Slovakia. This is a little more than $100. Not great but not the end of the world. Then he just disappeared. He came back about 10 minutes latter and told me to follow him. So we left that car and went into a more private area where he proceeded to make absolutely no sense for about 5 minutes until he finally said pay 10 Euro each and then said ‘Shhhhh‘. I said ok and then he told me to sit back down. He came back later and we went away again I gave him 20 Euro. Then he gave a big toothless grin and that was it. My first bribe.

Flat Stanley at the Prague Castle
In Prague on the Charles Bridge

We headed to Rothenburg ob der Tauber the next day. It was raining and we were only planning on staying one night so we ventured out to explore anyway. Luckily, it is a tiny, little town in the middle of nowhere so it was easy to see in one afternoon. Rothenburg is the stereotypical traditional German town. If you think about old school Germany what you probably envision is a place like this. Very quaint and nice but it’s strange to me that anyone actually lives there. And without tourism, most likely, no one would. Living there would be kind of like living at the German village at the Epcot Center in Disney World. It took us a little more than 4 hours to get there even though it was right down the street from Heidelberg because the bus that used to go there didn’t go there anymore. So we took the train back up through Frankfurt. I’m glad we went, just to see it, even though it was cold and raining. We had seen what we needed to see so we took off this morning.
Streets in Rothenburg
Right now we are on the train to Amsterdam. Brooke just got some wet naps from the train attendant. She can bareley contain herself. By the time I post this we’ll be there. After Amsterdam we’ll be going to Paris to meet up with my family. We are traveling together with them from Paris to Nice and then to Italy for the following week or so. I learned a couple of hours ago that getting on the train from Paris to Nice with them could be a problem. I was told that we need to wait until we are in Paris to book the tickets but I was told by someone else that all of the trains were booked. Hopefully by the time she reads this we will have figured all of this out but otherwise I think my Mom might have a heart attack. Chill mom!! We’ll get there.
- 1st floor means 2nd floor, 2nd floor means 3rd, etc, etc.
- Grocery shopping is more difficult when you can’t read what you’re buying
- Beef and pork are not in short supply in Germany and Eastern Europe
- The bars in Budapest are some of the coolest around
- Bribery can save you a couple of bucks and get you where you need to go- Don’t trust the stupid Eurail train schedule book. It’s been wrong a couple of times. We’ve done some running with 30 pound packs on our backs.
- If you don’t do laundry for a couple of weeks, everything you own starts to smell real funky. I feel kind of sorry for the people sitting next to us on the trains.
- If there are beautiful Hungarians, they don’t go to the bathhouses in Budapest.
- As we go forward we should mix up the trip more so that we are doing different things in different places.
- There isn’t a big difference between 1st and 2nd class on the trains.
This is what Brooke looks like with her backpack = not easy running
Yea a new post! Sounds like you guys are having fun! When are you making it back to the states? we will be in memphis Dec 11th-14th. Have fun!
ReplyDeleteI know, it's taken us a while to post on here. I'm already working on the next one so we don't go so long in between. We plan to be back in the states sometime mid-Novemberish before Thanksgiving. We will be going to Boston to get my car and drive south. We've been talking about stopping in Pittsburgh on the way...only if you'll have us!! :)
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