The Austro-Hungarian Empire was a thing until they lost WW1.
But Austria and Hungary still have a convenient train route that connects a
city that offered affordable tickets to both myself and the Family Seymour, and
that is how I plan my vacations these days. Also, I plan it around my birthday,
which is one of the greatest things about working for Neverthirst. They respect
the birthday travel plans.
And truthfully,
I didn’t plan it at all.
Emily planned
it because being a mother has turned her into a J even though she is still
trying to be in denial about that—Emily, you finally grew up! Scott is still
working on it though.
But once again, I do blame my parents for poor planning
because no one should have to celebrate birthdays during the winter. I know
that I should have been a summer baby. Still, this way I got to see the Family
S in the last week that pregnant Emily was allowed to travel (but just in case,
she followed TV actress protocol, traveling in loose flowing clothing with
oversized hand-bags blocking her belly, casually standing behind a couch
whenever possible). Also, traveling with 2 kids, aged 4 and 2 is not the
easiest thing, and I think adding a small baby would have increased the
complications a bit. Jack isn’t too worried about what or where he eats at this
point and he stayed warm and cozy inside Mommy while the rest of us waded
through snow and ice rain. Of course, he missed all the views, and I don’t
think that you can count countries you visited in the womb on your List. (I
have a List of places I’ve been. It’s a thing for travelers. We have to keep
count so that we don’t accidentally visit the same country twice. Airport
countries do NOT count.)
As usual I planned my travels with haphazard abandon, making
the weeks before I left filled with unnecessary stress and frantic last minute
phone calls. But also as usual—it all worked out in the end.
I won’t go into all the details of the trip, but I’ll post a
few photos that turned out to be discernable objects with minimal thumb-lens
exposure.
Here is a brief trip summary (Note-the formatting was beautiful in Word, but it didn't carry over, and I don't care enough to try to fix it. OCD people: try to look only at the numbers/numerals/letters and not spacing. Of course, you're OCD people, so it probably won't be possible for you to take my excellent advice):
I.
Travel to Europe
i.
Bus trip
ii.
Only broke down 3 times
B.
Juba to Khartoum
i.
Juba Airport is getting worse
ii.
Kids traveling reserve the right to be bratty
whenever they want to. This is a fact that crosses borders and culture and
language and race.
C.
Expedited exit visa process
i.
Because we love Leif, but we don’t fully believe
him that it is possible to transit through Khartoum.
ii.
Made it out anyway with valid exit visa.
D.
Khartoum to Doha
i.
Why is it SO COLD in Doha Airport?
ii.
Had to buy an over-priced pashmina scarf in a
duty free shop to protect myself from Air Conditioner Frost Bite.
E.
Doha to Budapest
II.
Hungary (basically just Budapest)
A.
Stayed with wonderful people
i.
Thanks, Borders for being awesome and great
cooks and wonderful hosts
ii.
Thanks also for giving me your Russian books. I
have learned how to read and now I’m building up my vocabulary. Starting to plan my Russia trip now. Who will
host me? Somebody reading this blog in Russia come clean now and help me out
because Русский очень хорошо.
B.
Visit Budapest on February 19, the greatest day
in the History of Awesome People’s Birthdays, aka My Birthday
i.
Saw many things including the Danube River (yes,
had the annoying song going through my head for the rest of the day until we
heard that dude playing the digeridoo in the market and that sound will cleanse your brain), the parliament building
(beautiful), the market (presents for sisters bought on my birthday—Check), ate
lots of sausages
ii.
Scott and Emily bought me grown up birthday
presents: gummy turtles and sour gummy ropes. Because I’m a grown up and that’s
what I really wanted. Ate them all in one day because why save candy when you
don’t know if an asteroid will hit earth tomorrow before Elijah Woods and Ben
Affleck can think of a plan to stop it. And then all that candy would have been
wasted.
iii.
Cile made me a wonderful birthday cake and lots
of excellent food. AND THEY GAVE ME THEIR OLD RUSSIAN BOOKS!!! Are there better
people than Glenn and Cile anywhere in the world? Probably not.
III.
Austria
A.
Traveled to Salzburg and stayed 2 nights
i.
Salzburg is full of snow, Mozart balls, and
places touched by the cast of the Sound of Music
ii.
Emily and I went on the Sound of Music tour,
while Scott pretended to want to watch the kids because he was afraid we would
humiliate him by singing songs or dancing in public (we didn’t—we behaved
decorously at all times).
iii.
Scott and I went to hear a local quartet play
Mozart and Dvorak in Mirabel Schloss. It was beautiful. Only we got there way
early and wandered around a creepy palace alone at night. We were up on the top
floor looking for the ticket place, surrounded by nefarious-looking cherub
statues and dead silence, when suddenly we heard ear-splitting screams from
down below. They stopped abruptly, and then--- we heard the disembodied voice
of a man singing quietly. I don’t watch horror movies, but I was pretty sure we
hit all of the warning signs and we rushed down from the top floor, keeping an
eye on all the evil cherubs, until we finally found the ticket booth. Then we
forgot about all the mass murder by the serial killing cherubs and just enjoyed a night of beautiful music.
iv.
Also, we saw Mozart’s house. It was fun, and I
bought some Mozart balls. They are chocolate balls with Mozart’s face on them.
Though there is some debate about whose likeness actually adorns the balls.
Austin is sure that it’s George Washington, but he doesn’t care that much as
long as he gets to eat chocolate because he knows what is really important.
B.
Halstatt
i.
We took a bus to a train to a boat to the
lakeside town of Halstatt, especially picturesque in the snow, but not friendly
to tourists hoping to get just one room for one night to get out of the icy
rain. Fortunately, we found a place, and managed to enjoy the beauty and quiet
ii.
Left the kids with Scott and climbed up to the
beautiful church on the hill.
iii.
The kids loved the boat the most.
C.
Vienna
i.
Emily in extra misery. Scott, Austin, Adelaina
and I brave the rain for the Rick Steve walking tour. Scott and I enjoyed it.
Adelaina tolerated it. Austin hated the Unfairness of Life that forced him to
have parents who make their kids experience Culture. Austin: I feel you, pal.
It will be years before you realize that they are actually awesome. Years of
more pain and unfairness and walking in the rain. But at least there will be
hilarious half-naked statues because that amused him enough to smile. And also,
chocolate cake and candy because if you travel with me there will be lots of
chocolate cake and candy.
ii.
Austria is for culture. I convinced Emily to
come out at night to the opera with me. Not hard to do because she really
wanted to see some of Vienna and had rested all day. We scalped some tickets
for Andrea Chernier. We enjoyed watching an Italian opera set in France during
the revolution, trying to guess what was happening, while I took illegal photos
of the stage in spite of being told not to by the show announcer. Of course the
Operahaus expects its cultured guests to follow the rules, but I had waited at
cross-walks for lights for a whole week of wasted law-abiding minutes, and I am
good at taking sneaky horrible photos. Also, I do enjoy opera, but I love
laughing at things more than that and I was very thankful to see the tiny
leading man paired with a tall plump leading lady. Their passionate embrace as
they were led off to the guillotine left me with a pleasing sense that operatic
capital punishment scenes CAN be comedic. And that proves that the world that
we live in is not such a bad place after all. Thank you, Mom and Dad, for
making me lead a cultured lifestyle so that I can appreciate the opera while
still making fun of it.
|
The expressions sum up this day.
Scott + Amanda = Happy for Vienna Walking Tour/Famous Building Scavenger Hunt
Adelaina = yeah, whatevs. I'll chill in the stroller.
Austin = I HATE you all for making me do this and I refuse all photographs.
Emily = Coughing fit in the hotel under a pile of tissues (not pictured) |
|
We hoped seeing this skeleton of a famous Austrian guy
in a church would cheer Austin up, but nope. |
|
He was briefly amused by some naked statue butts, sorry 'booties.' |
|
Adelaina was happy because Lunch + Daddy |
|
OK, the Sacher Torte IS overrated, but it cheered everyone up.
Except for Scott who is afflicted by a strong dislike for chocolate.
Please pray for him. We're starting a support group. |
|
Pano shot of the square in front of the Hapsburg Palace because I'm so good at panos now. |
|
Pano shot of the square with the Operahaus and some other famous buildings.
Yes, that weird roof thing is really like that.
Yes, I forgot what most of those buildings are.
Yes, I took this photo really fast because it was raining
and this was the best way to get one fast photo. |
|
Opera Star Walk of Fame. Too bad they didn't get Strauss's hand prints. |
|
India friends: They have Cafe Coffee Day in Austria!
Are they franchising internationally? |
|
Scalped opera tickets and a nice dinner make Emily happy!
And me too. |
|
An quick "Yes, those tickets ARE real!" selfie |
|
Operahaus |
|
Illegal and terrible photo of the opera |
|
Curtain call |
IV.
Travel Back Home (Note: in Point F, Home =
Khartoum, Sudan)
A.
Train to Budapest, bus to airport, last meal
with Family S in airport, boarding planes and heading to separate countries and
continents and doctor’s appointments for pregnant women with bronchitis
B.
Doha airport is STILL miserably cold, but this
time I came prepared.
C.
Was able to move my ticket up 6 hours for only
$30, reducing my time in the airport by 50%.
D.
Translated for a nice Algerian man to the Pakistani
ticket agent because most of the Arabic-speaking inhabitants of the Arab nation
of Qatar don’t work menial jobs in airports, leaving the many Arabs traveling
through this international hub at a loss for translators while still in their
own regional-language area. Lucky for some of those guys, one or two Americans
have made the effort to learn Arabic and can make some translations.
V.
Travel from Airport in Khartoum to IAS Office
A.
This shouldn’t be a big deal, but no one could
come to pick me up because they were visiting a staff member in the hospital
B.
So I took a taxi
C.
The taxi driver told me I was very good and kind
after I agreed to up the amount I was going to pay him AFTER I got him to agree
to the price that I wanted initially because I would rather be generous by
choice and not because I feel someone is cheating me. It’s semantics, but it’s
how I play the game of Bargaining. He then asked for my hand in marriage, after
which we had an odd conversation, where I first thought he was complimenting my
figure (“You aren’t ‘full’ like most people like you. You don’t have a ‘body’.
I like that.”) until he said, “I will pray that God will ‘fill you out’ so that
you can get a ‘body’ and become ‘full’ like other women.” And I felt encouraged
to know that the bags and bags of Haribo gummies, Mozart chocolate balls,
Austrian pastries, ropes of sausages, plates of wiener schnitzel, wonderful
homemade food in Budapest did not add anything to my gaunt waif-like figure.
But of course, I can’t go against God, so for dinner I made sure to eat an
entire can of Honey Mustard Pringles, several pieces of chocolate from
Grandmom’s birthday chocolate (the only present I got to open on my
birthday—thanks, Grandmom and Grandpop!), and half a bag of Haribo gummy
cherries (got to have the fruit for health).