Showing posts with label Austria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austria. Show all posts

Saturday, August 20, 2011

DAY 14: Innsbruck

Friday, August 20th 2010

We got up early as usual and got ready to go. The first bus to Natters left at 10:17, so we aimed for that one. It was a very nice summery day, so we decided it would be a good day to go swimming. Oh, and here are some clickable pictures of the best camping site we'd been to:


Pinky really wanted to go see the Bergisel ski-jumping tower, so we asked the bus driver to drop us off at a stop closest to that. We got out, and walked up the hill towards the tower. It was a pretty steep climb, and I was tired and a bit cranky. The entrance fee to the tower was 8.5€, and I wasn't too interested in the place because I'm not a sports fanatic, so Pinky went up there and I stayed behind and waited down below. I think I'd better leave it to her to tell about the Bergisel experience :)
View over the city. Note the Alps in the background.
After that we walked down the hill and towards the old town of Innsbruck. It wasn't very far, and just about all the historical sites were close to one another. We saw all the old buildings, statues, etc that were highlighted on our map, and it didn't take us very long. The gardens of the Imperial Palace were pretty. There was some energy stone there, that apparently was a present to the city from the organizers of the Feng Shui Congress 2000. Pinky went and touched it, but didn't feel any more energized. I climbed up some cool-looking tree and then later noticed the sign saying "Don't climb the trees". Oooops, my bad.

 A street in the old town, and a silver lady with a dog

 In the Imperial gardens

We walked along the river Inn, which was a very interesting greenish color, and also cloudy. Never seen water like that before. The river + Alps = gorgeous. 
The river Inn
Did I mention I love those mountains?
It got very hot and sunny very fast, so we started looking for a cocktail bar. Found some quiet place and I ordered a Mojito, while Pinky ordered a Caipirinha. Both had like 5 cl of booze in them, which to me seemed like a lot. I don't think we have such strong cocktails in Finland. Afterwards we went looking for an Internet cafe, because we had to check train timetables and other important stuff, such as Facebook :P We found an internet cafe right by the railway station, and paid 2€ for one hour. Most of the computers were in use, and the one next to ours was occupied by a young guy who was playing World of Warcraft and kept smoking. Almost everyone else in the place was smoking as well, and the cigarette smoke was nauseating. I realized how glad I am that it's not allowed to smoke indoors in Finland. We checked everything we needed to check, even the lyrics to "My favorite things" from Sound of Music. It was bugging us for a few days, ever since Salzburg.

We got back to the camping site, and changed into our swimwear. The weather was really nice, so we went swimming in the artificial lake. The water was quite cold and refreshing. 
The artificial lake at the camping site
Afterwards we ate at the restaurant there and later in the evening had our biggest argument of the trip. I mentioned something about the song "My favorite things" and how she sings about apple strudels, and Pinky was so sure that there was nothing about them in the song. She even texted one of our friends, who at first agreed with her, but then googled the lyrics. "Cream colored ponies and crisp apple strudels, doorbells and sleigh bells and schnitzel with noodles". Yep, I was right!
It's always nice to end with a picture of a sunset
-Brain

Friday, August 19, 2011

Day 13: Salzburg and Innsbruck, Austria

Thursday, August 19 2010

My alarm clock rang at 6.45. We got ready and went for breakfast. It was 3€ for all you can eat. I was still sick so in addition to coffee, buns, cereal and juice, I got some tea and put a Finrexin in it. 

Our room had like a corridor with doors to the toilet, bathroom and the room with all the bunk beds. When we came back from breakfast, we just went in the room quickly with the beds and the lockers. The smell was disgusting!!! Ugh the room smelled so bad!!! We quickly took our stuff out of the lockers and dropped it all in the corridor. And that looked like this. 


And the end result was this. We had to take the sheets off the beds too. We packed, returned our room key and left our luggage to the common corridor lockers. We had to ask the front desk for directions to the Untersberg.

The bus stop was in front of the Mirabell castle. We took bus 25, and it cost 2.10€ to go to the Untersbergbahn, where the cable car went to the top, the Geiereck peak. The mountain's elevation is 1972 meters (6 470 feet, Google converter), but the Geiereck peak is at 1300 meters (4 265 ft, Google converter).

It takes about 10 minutes to go up with the cable car. It costs 20€ to go up and down. It would've been 11€ or so one way, but the climb down would've taken 3 hours, and we simply didn't have the energy or time to do that. And I'm sure we would have gotten lost!!! 

I'm going to let the pictures speak for themselves. This was my favorite thing about this trip and I would go back a hundred times.  You can click on all the pictures and see them in full size.

The numbers here are not the same as listed in Wikipedia, oh well... 



Going up
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We wandered around the mountain for a long while. It was really cold and windy. In the beginning it was really foggy up there too. The weather was clearing up when we were returning to the cable car station. There was a restaurant there and we ate and had beers.

We went down with the cable car eventually, took a bus back to town, I fell asleep, and we had to find a grocery store before our train to Innsbruck. Of course, we couldn't find the closest one to the hostel, we went really far and had to hurry back to pick up our luggage and find our way to the train station. 


Our train to Innsbruck left 16.02. This time it was very easy to find a compartment (for 6 people). I'm sure we went directly to the right end of the train where these places weren't reserved. We shared it with an English couple. We nearly missed our stop since we didn't really hear the announcements. There was something wrong with the speaker in the compartment.

In Innsbruck we found a tourist information and got a map from there and asked for directions to our camping site, Natterersee Camping. BEST CAMPING PLACE ON EARTH!!! Pictures will be in another post. The map would've been 1 euro, but the old man selling the maps was kind and gave it to us, and gave us bus schedules too. We could take the first bus 4143 to Natters, and then change to a 4168 to the Camping place. One way ticket was 2.30€. The bus goes from town to Natters more often, but from Natters to the camping site every two hours.

Brain's side-note: we also asked the old man at the tourist info if it would be possible for us to buy some sort of a travel card to save money on bus tickets. He didn't know, and sent us to the nearby kiosk. We went there and they didn't know either, and sent us to the post office. The young boy working at the post office said that he's not from Innsbruck and so doesn't know anything about tourist cards (I thought that was a very strange excuse). He sent us somewhere else, but at that point we just gave up and went to the bus stop.

We arrived at the camping place and were in awe of the place! It's so fancy looking! It cost 62€ for the two of us and a tent for two nights. The bathrooms and showers were brand new. They had sinks to wash clothes in, and dish washing sinks. The kids playground was amazing and the artificial lake too! So awesome! 


Brain's side-note: after we checked in, one of the employees took us to our spot on a small car thingy (kinda like a golf cart). He was very weird, maybe Italian, kept talking funny, and I didn't really understand half of what he was saying. He seemed to be friends with everybody at the camping site and was very very talkative. Oh, and we ate our first real Austrian apple strudels at the restaurant there :)

The campsite quieted down around 11 pm and that's when we went to sleep as well. It wasn't cold this time really. 


-Pinky

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Day 12: Vienna and Salzburg

Wednesday, August 18 2010

Our morning routine had to be changed. Our alarms rang 6:45, and we had planned on leaving with the 9.12 bus, but we didn't make it. We went with the 9.22 bus. Packing the tent wasn't complicated, it was just annoying. The inner tent was difficult to fold neatly. Also that had been directly on the ground, and the ground was wet, you get the picture. And we had to get rid of all the spiders, crickets and ants off of it too. 

Our train to Salzburg left 10.20 from Wien Westbahnhof. We there early enough and I went to get some tea and since I was still feeling like I was going to get sick, I added a bag of Finrexin, a cold medicine to my tea. Brain thought that the combination is disgusting.
The train was really packed this time too, and luckily we were there early enough to get good seats. The trainride wasn't very eventful. 

Salzburg Hauptbahnhof was under construction and it didn't look like it was going to be done anytime soon. It took a while for us to find an info place where we could get a map of the city.

Originally we were supposed to stay at a camping place, but we got an email from there while in Berlin, that they're fully booked and we can't go there. I had also gotten sick in Vienna, so we decided we'd stay in a hostel. We started walking to the wrong direction first, luckily not that badly, but still too much. I was tired and sick and getting cranky. I apparently was very cranky while we were walking to the hostel. I noticed it myself, but I didn't think others would, and Brain did. I thought I managed to hide it so well!

Our hostel was YoHo International Youth Hostel in Salzburg. We hadn't reserved anything and just went there. The 6-bed mixed dorm cost 22€/night/person. Including us there was an Asian girl and boy and two guys who we never saw awake. They weren't in the room when we got there, they must've been in town somewhere cause they got there around 2-3 am. And we left before they woke up the next day. Our dorm room had a bathroom and a toilet, and they were separate too!

YoHo hostel pictures (all clickable)

 We left our luggage in the room lockers, and left for town. We walked onwards on Paracelsusstrasse and turned onto Franz-Josef Strasse. There was a little cafe there, we got coffee with toasts. I got an Italian toast (mozzarella, tomatoes, olive oil and lettuce of some sort) and a caffe latte. Brain got a Greek toast and a caramel macchiato.  MasterCard wasn't accepted. Dun dun dun

Since it was already afternoon, we wanted to climb up to the Hohensalzburg fortress. We walked around Schloss Mirabell. I wasn't very impressed with it, after all, I've seen Sanssouci and Schloss Schönbrunn. This was in the very middle of the city, and it wasn't as grande as one would assume a Schloss to be. (Although there were sculptures of unicorns, which I thought were cool! -Brain)


  Schloss Mirabell (clickable)

We crossed the river and walked through the old town towards the Hohensalzburg fortress, but didn't spend too much time in the old town. We did buy a couple postcards, one for our friend's fiance who was fighting in Afghanistan at the time. The address was strange, it had no country on it. We assumed it was going to England first, so we just got stamps to England..
Hohensalzburg Fortress


Views of the fortress and around it

A funicular up to the Hohensalzburg fortress would've cost over 10 euros, so we decided to walk up the hill. It didn't take too long, and it wasn't very difficult, although it was a very steep hill. At one point we noticed we had taken the shorter way, which meant a whole lot of stairs. Once we were up high, there was a gate and entrance through that cost 7,40€ and that included the entrance to the courtyard, the museum in the castle, and some audio guide. We didn't want that, we just wanted to get to the courtyard, so we didn't pay the 7,40€. We turned around and started walking on the Mönchberg, which is the mountain/ridge the fortress is located on. 

To get back to the old town we had to climb down a whole lot of stairs, and some were quite scary too! We saw St.Peter's Abbey. It was very different from Vienna's St. Peter's. The Dom was near too and we had a look inside. It was very pretty. The center isle was probably as long as the one in Tuomiokirkko in Tampere, but this was wider and higher.

Brain's side-note: I don't think I'd ever seen a real-live nun before the visit to Salzburg, or after it, for that matter. But in Salzburg we saw several: one was riding a bike, and there was one on the bus as well. 

Mozart's birth house on Getreidegasse
We walked to Getreidegasse, which is one of the main streets in the old town. We saw the yellow Mozart's birth house. We ate at an Italian restaurant. Our waitress had the craziest hair, I tell you! Small pizza was 5-6€ and bit 8-9€. We thought we ordered the small pizzas, but I guess we weren't clear enough. The check had some funny numbers on it. Pizzas and drinks together were supposed to be less than 20€, but the total cost was 23€ or so. After dinner we bought Mozarts kugeln, they weren't that good. It had been raining a little the whole day so we walked back to our hostel and hung around there.

More pictures of Salzburg taken on the Mönchberg. You can click on all the pictures to see them in full size.




Stairs we had to climb down to get to the Old Town from the Mönchberg.


The Salzach river was a weird green color. Like all the rivers in Austria...


-Pinky