Leaving Slovenia this rooster was sheltering in the phone booth at the border crossing (only one we have had to get checked at, even though it is in the EU), while we had tea, and then came out with the sun.
And now we are waltzing around Austria - the country of the dry people and the angry German tourists - well only one but he was our first encounter in the campground in Vienna that was seriously oversubscribed. We weren't driving any further and Gordie fit beautifully into the spot this guy had taken his car out of for the day. It all worked out as we got a real spot the next morning and had two days visiting Vienna.
Very interesting introduction to the Hapsburgs that we knew almost nothing about. Vienna had million people in 1900, and 1.6M now that the empire is no longer. It was the government centre for over 50million people before that little disagreement between 1914 and 1918 put an end to things and to the monarchy. All those taxes let you build really BIG homes. There is a surprising amount of old stuff still standing after going through two big wars recently, and many others not so recently. The huge Cathedral was rebuilt by the locals after a major fire at about the time the Russians"liberated" the city in 1945, which is pretty incredible. We managed to get in a choral mass there on our first day with soloists and orchestra and organ all there to support Barb through some glorious hymns. Then off to a fun dinner in a courtyard brewpub with some locals meeting to plan their vacation.
Biked the Danube next morning and off to the summer palace (photo for Gaston Spike) for some design ideas for Gaston Real to implement for us at the farm this summer – no more slumming it for us! Then more touring around town. They have incredible public transit, biking and park systems that we could be learning from. We took in a beautiful trumpet and organ concert in a small church in the evening.
Very interesting introduction to the Hapsburgs that we knew almost nothing about. Vienna had million people in 1900, and 1.6M now that the empire is no longer. It was the government centre for over 50million people before that little disagreement between 1914 and 1918 put an end to things and to the monarchy. All those taxes let you build really BIG homes. There is a surprising amount of old stuff still standing after going through two big wars recently, and many others not so recently. The huge Cathedral was rebuilt by the locals after a major fire at about the time the Russians"liberated" the city in 1945, which is pretty incredible. We managed to get in a choral mass there on our first day with soloists and orchestra and organ all there to support Barb through some glorious hymns. Then off to a fun dinner in a courtyard brewpub with some locals meeting to plan their vacation.
Biked the Danube next morning and off to the summer palace (photo for Gaston Spike) for some design ideas for Gaston Real to implement for us at the farm this summer – no more slumming it for us! Then more touring around town. They have incredible public transit, biking and park systems that we could be learning from. We took in a beautiful trumpet and organ concert in a small church in the evening.
Today we headed to the mountains, lakes and free wireless of Hallstatt in central Austria, where we are waiting out some lightning. (Much of the country is flat, which is not what you would expect but presumably you couldn't have started an empire without some homegrown food.)

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