• On the Trail of Shakespeare

    2015年8月23日, イングランド ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

    At 7:30 am we had breakfast and our suitcases were retrieved. By 8:00 am we will be rolling toward the Cotswolds.

    At about 9:00 am we arrived at the little town of Bladon, which is adjacent to Blenheim Castle. There were viewed the lovely little churchyard where Sir Winston Churchill is buried. The little parish of St. Martin was just about to begin Sunday services, so without disrupting them, I popped inside to take a quick photo just as the procession was about to begin.
    At 11:30 am we arrived at Stratford-upon-Avon, took a quick photo stop at the home of Anne Hathaway. Just before the rain started we had a wonderful visit to the birthplace of Shakespeare and a walk through the lovely town. There was a craft fair on the riverside, and lovely half-timbered houses scattered throughout the town.

    At 5:30 pm we arrived at the Marriott Hotel in York. Rain all day. David pointed out the ruins of the castle built by Bess of Hardwick, the second wealthiest woman in Elizabethan England, and other points of interest along our route. I was surprised at our rest stop around 3:45 pm to find a Krispy Kreme Doughnut shop. Supper is at the hotel tonight at 7:00 pm, and tomorrow we will enjoy a walking tour of the old, central part of the city and a guided tour of Yorkminster.

    At 9:00 pm we returned to the room from supper. Guests in the dining room next to ours had to scurry quickly when a sudden downpour sent streams of water cascading through a skylight and onto their table. Glenda and I ate with Dana and his wife Carol.
    もっと詳しく

  • London in Depth

    2015年8月22日, イングランド ⋅ ⛅ 79 °F

    Much of the morning was spent visiting the Tower of London with new friends we met on the trip. In the afternoon we took a boat ride from the Tower to Westminster. On the Westminster Close we grabbed a hotdog from a street vendor, then started the walk to Buckingham Palace for our appointment there. We had planned to take the Hop-On-Hop-Off Bus back to our hotel on Kensington High Street, but found that they stopped running at 5:30 pm. We tried to catch the No. 9 city bus, but found that the buses do not accept cash, only Oyster Cards. A kind bus driver saw our plight and let us have a ride back to the hotel.もっと詳しく

  • A Day on the Town

    2015年8月21日, イングランド ⋅ ⛅ 73 °F

    We mastered the bus system in London to arrive at St. Paul's Cathedral and took an excellent tour of that wonderful building given by a guide who obviously loved the place. The tombs of Wellington, Nelson, John Donne, and Wrenn are there. I feel as though I am in the place that actually formed the world in which my parents and I lived our lives. We saw Churchill's underground bunker, the home of Baden-Powell, the site of Blackfriars. On the way back to the hotel, I took a seat in the front of the top level of the double-decker bus, and got some acceptable shots of London street scenes. Note that the shot taken at 1:05 pm is a picture of the Admiralty Arch just west of Trafalgar Square. The bus brought us back to the hotel precisely in time to start the C. I. E. Panoramic bus tour of London. We stopped on the South end of the Tower bridge for photos. Since we had already visited the Globe Theater and St. Paul's, we were starting to feel as though we know our way around. At 6:00 pm we will go downstairs for a complimentary drink before dinner. I think the main purpose of this gathering is to let our guide David learn our names and to give us some common information for the rest of the tour. At 8:25 pm we just returned to the room from a supper of shepherd's pie, cod, and chicken. We met some of our fellow travelers and received further information from David. It will be good to get to bed early tonight.もっと詳しく

  • First Views of London

    2015年8月20日, イングランド ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

    We arrived in London some three hours late, not landing until about 10:30 am. Then we had to go through customs and passport control. We were obviously not going to meet our appointment to tour Kensington Palace. We initially did not see the representative from British Cars, but after just a few minutes he showed up and took us from Heathrow Airport to the Kensington Olympia Hilton Hotel. Although our room was not ready, we were allowed to check in and to store our luggage with the concierge. He advised that the fastest way to the Globe Theater was by taxi. We caught one in front of the hotel, but the traffic, according to his own admission was worse than usual. He attributes the problems to the current mayor's efforts to turn every major highway into a bicycle path. We passed Buckingham Palace, as well as the site of the Blackfriars abbey on our way, arriving at the Globe shortly after 1 pm. We bought a sandwich, which we split, and a small salad. Shakespeare’s “As You Like It” was hilariously funny. We decided because of Glenda's arthritic hip, not to walk up to Trafalgar Square, but to take a cab back to the Hotel. Besides, it had started to rain lightly, and all of our rain gear was still packed up and locked in the offices of the concierge. When we got back to the hotel our room was ready, and we again enlisted the services of the concierge to reserve tickets for a tour of Buckingham Palace on Saturday. Instead of dining in the expensive restaurant at the hotel, we walked back down toward Hyde Park and found a wonderful, inexpensive Thai restaurant called the Blue Lagoon. After our meal we just went strolling back down toward the memorial for Prince Albert, and we decided to stop into a little shop owned by a young Egyptian from Alexandria to buy bottled water. I had a short conversation with him, then we continued our walk. Almost back to our hotel, even though she was holding my arm, Glenda's hip seized up on he and she dropped like a rock onto the sidewalk. Bystanders stopped to assist. They were very kind and concerned. She was all right except for skinned knees and elbows. We came back tot the hotel and settled in for the night. At this point we have been awake for over thirty-six hours. Sleep will come easily tonight.もっと詳しく

  • Starting in Charlotte

    2015年8月19日, アメリカ ⋅ ⛅ 84 °F

    Our flight out of Charlotte has been delayed for more than one hour so far. A severe thunderstorm has closed the ramp numerous times, and now we just were connected to the fuel truck. So in maybe half an hour or so we will be moving.

    It is now 8:40 pm. There was miscommunication with the fuelers. We have sat in the airplane for two hours and forty minutes. It looks as though we are ready for push back now.

    We sat on the airplane for four hours, and finally took off at 10:00 pm.
    もっと詳しく

  • Flying Home

    2015年5月26日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 57 °F

    We woke early and went to check out. We were given a box breakfast, which we ate in the hotel restaurant that was still officially closed. While our names had been included on the board in passes and luggage manifest, the driver had not been notified that he would have two extra passengers. He had to call for a larger car, and that delayed us somewhat. We had a furiously exciting drive to the airport, where a Viking representative took us to the proper gate and made sure that we got on the right airplane. Glenda wants to make sure that Shane, our travel agent knows that not even Uniworld gave us such attention. I had no metal on my person, but still I was frisked, and was required to remove my shoes.

    It is 11:30 am and we have landed at Düsseldorf. Glenda is unhappy because the agent in Prague would not agree to check her luggage through to our final destination at Raleigh. We had a sandwich and started on the chocolate we brought.

    Upon boarding the flight at Düsseldorf I was called aside for another, very thorough security search. I had to empty my pockets, turn on my camera and iPad, get frisked again, and have both bags searched thoroughly. We are in the air now over Belgium.
    もっと詳しく

  • Boat Tour of Prague

    2015年5月25日, チェコ共和国 ⋅ ⛅ 64 °F

    We worked our way to the dock where a riverboat took us on an hour long cruise. Before the cruise we had lunch at the Manes Restaurant, an outdoor eatery on the riverside. I got a bull mozzarella sandwich and a Czech beer. We took some more good pictures on the boat then took a bus back to the hotel. We rested in the afternoon. The cleaning lady came, so we went to the cafe and had coffee and a wonderful raspberry chocolate cake for about an hour. John and Dawn Mach joined us and the Swims for dinner at the Italian restaurant in La Corte. We had a wonderful time together and promised to keep in touch. We returned to the hotel, finished packing, and went to bed.もっと詳しく

  • Walking Tour of Prague

    2015年5月24日, チェコ共和国 ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    We met our group at 8:20 am on the lower lobby and a Viking representative told us that the trip would be delayed for a few minutes. When the Viking representative reappeared one Chinese-American man was furious that Viking did not do what they had promised. He had raised a stink a couple of days ago on the ship because we were told that it would be a good idea to buy water when we arrived in Prague. The rest of us thought the Chinese man was being a bit extreme. We were surprised to learn that the bus would be taking us to the historical sights. Our guide's name was Anna. We were led to believe that we would be walking for about five and a half hours. We went to the old fortress and palace, then to St. Vitus Church. We could've go inside because Sunday worship was about to begin, but the outside was beautiful. The bus brought us down to the old historic center of the city. We crossed the Charles Bridge and saw another beautiful old gothic church adjacent to the old town square. It was badly damaged by the Germans in World War II. I was pleased to find in the center of the square a big monument to John Huss, a pre-reformation reformer. One large Catholic Church on the square had been converted to a Hussite church until the Hussites were declared illegal after the Thirty Years War. After that all Protestants had to leave the city. The large emblem on the church was exchanged for a large ornamental chalice, a symbol of the Hussites, while the Protestant group controlled the building. Large storks nested inside the cup of the chalice, and would often deposit upon people standing below. Our guide thought this was especially horrible because storks eat frogs. She also mentioned that the Czech word for frog is "Jabba" and the word for snake is "hut." It is from these two Czech words that a villain the the Star Wars trilogy is named "Jabba the Hut." While we were there a jazz ensemble was playing such favorites as "Dinah," and "When the Saints Go Marching In," and "It's a Long Way to Tipperary." When they played Louie Armstrong's " What a Wonderful World," Glenda teared up. It is a wonderful world, and this has been a wonder trip through it, both for the last thirty days and for the last sixty-five years. Next we walked through the Jewish quarter, with a thorough explanation of the history of Jews in Prague. Anna, our guide, was cheerful and had a wonderful dry sense of humor. However, her English was so heavily accented that she was difficult, and sometimes impossible to understand. Our guide on the bus from Budapest, Judith, was even more difficult to understand. She admitted that she had learned English during the Soviet regime, and that the learned English from books and in a classroom without ever hearing any movies or broadcasts from the west by actual native English speakers. I admire her tenacity. We got back on the bus, and returned to the hotel, where we ate lunch with the Swim couple. I enjoyed a bowl of onion soup and a Reuben sandwich with fries. Glenda and I came back to the room to rest before going to the Italian restaurant for supper. As it turned out, at supper time neither we nor the Swim couple were hungry, so they went shopping and we went out people watching. I got a few shots as the sun set. As we passed Smetana Hall we were given brochures about a concert. I didn't pay much attention until we got back to the room, but by then it was too late. At 8:00 pm there was a concert of Dvorak, Mozart, Rubinstein and others, but by the time I read the brochure it was already 9:00 pm. We went to the little grocery near the hotel and got some chips, bread, cheese and a Coke, and called that supper.もっと詳しく

  • Lunch at Austerlitz

    2015年5月23日, チェコ共和国 ⋅ ⛅ 63 °F

    We woke early, finished packing, ate breakfast and prepared to leave the ship for the bus ride to Prague in the Czech Republic. On the bus we passed through Slovakia and glimpsed the fortress we visited a couple of days ago in Bratislava. Now it is 2 pm and we are finishing lunch at the Rohlenka Truck Stop at Tvarožná, in Moravia, from where the Moravians came to North Carolina.

    This is also very close to the site of the Battle of Austerlitz. This was the place where a young Napoleon performed superhuman feats of knowing exactly where to be at the right time. He defeated a coalition of European armies and cemented his claim to be Emperor of Europe. One of the most enigmatic figures in European history, Napoleon improved the lives of the people in every nation he conquered. He brought in good education, healthcare, and efficient government. Yet every nation outside of France resisted his intrusion because they did want to lose their “freedom.” Freedom for what? To be mediocre? Tough questions.

    While I was in the restroom I heard Dolly Parton's recording of “Nine to Five." I had a crusty roll, a bowl of Czech cabbage soup, and a big glass of Czech beer, all for about three dollars. I am listening to "The Moldau" in honor of Bedrich Smetana. When I get home I must download the Prague Symphony by Dvorak. The roads here are remarkably rough. At 2:50pm the bus was stopped by a policeman. We arrived in Prague about 4:30 pm and were quickly assigned a room at the Hilton hotel, then given a brief walking tour of the area around the hotel. It is an ultra modern facility with terraced balconies inside. James and Marcia Swim from Arkansas joined us on a walk to Republic Square. We reconnoitered the area, got some Czech koruns in exchange for dollars, and had a traditional Czech meal at a restaurant fairly close to the hotel. We actually saw some others down near Republic Square, but they were too expensive. A very personable young waiter took our pictures and brought us an excellent meal of schnitzel, potato salad, steamed dumplings and a huge tankard of Czech beer. We came back to the room and crashed.
    もっと詳しく

  • The Beauties of Budapest

    2015年5月22日, ハンガリー ⋅ 🌧 55 °F

    In the morning we took a bus tour of Budapest, ending in a walking tour around St. Stephen's Cathedral. The city is beautiful. We drove by the old palace and the ornate Parliament Building. I was especially impressed by the fact that the left side of the nave (the worshipper's left) was formerly an Islamic mosque that was incorporated into the fabric of the cathedral when it was enlarged at the beginning of the nineteenth century. After lunch Glenda went to see some performing horses. The presentation evoked the horse culture of the Magyars, who settled Hungary in the ninth century. I walked downtown with Heather and Don from California. Once we got our money exchanged, we visited the House of Terror, a museum showing the horrors of both the Nazi and the Soviet occupation of Hungary in the twentieth century. Next we went to the 4:00 pm tour of the Budapest Opera House. Picture-taking cost an extra five forits, and a mini concert consisting of an opera singer performing one five-minute aria to recorded music cost an extra ten. I opted out of both offers. After supper Heather and I went up to St. Matthias Church with our tripods and cameras to photograph Budapest by night. We had a great time using all our toys to capture some truly wonderful images.もっと詳しく

  • Evening Arrival in Budapest

    2015年5月21日, ハンガリー ⋅ 🌧 55 °F

    We arrived in Budapest at 10:05 pm. All the buildings were lit up like Christmas trees. We stood in intermittent rain up on the sun deck snapping photos furiously for two hour. The Captain was so thoughtful. He cruised through the city, then turned around and cruised back through to reach our anchorage. The result was that we got two good opportunities to photograph every one of the beautiful illuminated buildings we saw. I had heard once from an airline attendant that Budapest was one of the most beautiful cities in the world. She was right.もっと詳しく

  • Beautiful Bratislava

    2015年5月21日, スロバキア ⋅ ⛅ 52 °F

    We did a quick bus tour of Bratislava this morning, and finished it with a walk through the old fortress and the downtown area. The Czech Republic is really trying hard to make self government work. Katerina our guide had a wonderful wit, and was frank, humorous yet cynical about the ability of government (any government) to fulfill its promises. From noon until 1:30 pm I had a long talk with John and Dawn from Canada. He enjoys photography, and is finding great satisfaction in his church. It has a Mennonite heritage, but a contemporary format.もっと詳しく

  • The Splendor of Vienna

    2015年5月20日, オーストリア ⋅ ⛅ 63 °F

    In the morning we took a bus tour of Vienna, driving by the concert hall of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, the opera house, the city hall, the coffee shop frequented by Sigmund Freud, and many other places. As we walked to St. Stephen's Church, we toured the Hofburg Palace, and went by the house of Franz Josef Haydn, the court musician to the Hapsburgs. Although the cathedral was magnificent, but it had been decorated with ultraviolet light, and garish blue modern art. We took a few photos just to prove that we had been there. We happened to find Sacha in front of the church and asked him if there were a good coffee shop nearby. He mentioned one a couple of blocks away. We went there and enjoyed a good apple streusel and a cup of coffee. The streusel was not much different from good pastries I have eaten at home. The coffee, though, was magnificent. It was not as strong as espresso, but much stronger than any other "American" coffee I have ever tasted. When we had been there just a few minutes Sacha joined us. He and I got into another discussion on Mithraism, a subject in which he seems passionately interested. After lunch on the ship, I went to tour the Schoenbrunn Palace, the summer palace of Maria Theresa, (or "Theresia," as she is known here). Again, the magnificence of the palace was overwhelming. Another tourist and I kept wondering where she actually lived, this is to say, where did she spend her private time. There were two relatively small rooms near the corner off from her bedroom. Our best guess was that these smaller rooms may actually have been her "nest." Afterwards we had an hour free to ourselves. Since we could not take photographs above stairs, I got some shots out in the garden. Glenda cared more for the excursion with Chef Denes into Vienna to shop in the food markets. She brought back several goodies for me for the market, including a kind of Austrian cheese called "bergkase," or "mountain cheese." It was stinky, strong and delicious. After supper we went back to the palace, this time to the redoubt room for a concert of Viennese music by yet Vienna Residents Orchestra. Most of the pieces were by Mozart and Strauss, with a flute duet accompanied by orchestra by Doppler, and a movement for the unfinished symphony by Brahms. I had to pinch myself to believe that I was in Vienna, in the Hapsburg Palace, listening to the music of Mozart and Haydn. The room was recently restored after a fire destroyed it. It is the same hall in which John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khruschev met for the Vienna Summit in June 1961. The man seated next to Glenda insisted on stomping his feet in time with the music, shaking the floor and disturbing all of us around him. On this, trip wonder follows,wonder. My "wow meter" pegged out a long time ago back in Cologne. After the concert it was raining as we headed for the bus. When we returned to the ship about 11 pm, Chef Denes had prepared for us a nighttime snack of Hungarian goulash, and champagne.もっと詳しく

  • Ice Cream in Krems

    2015年5月19日, オーストリア ⋅ ⛅ 64 °F

    Scenic Cruising: at about 2:20pm we pass the Aggstein Castle in the Wachau Valley. 2:34 pm. One Lord of this castle would kidnap people, and offer them a choice. Either they could pay the ransom or agree to jump off the cliff to their death. Maypole in small village. Vineyards over church steeple. Ruins of the castle Spitz. 2:37 pm.

    2:55 Weissenkirche was Protestant church attacked in thirty years war, has defensive wall,

    3:00 pm Durnstein Castle. Richard the Lionhearted was imprisoned here after he went on a crusade. His mother ransomed him by paying 26 metric tons of silver.

    In the afternoon we walked into Krems with John and Dawn; Heather and Don; Mel and his wife, and a few others. We got separated fairly quickly. We hung with Heather and Don and went to get gelato. John told us about two churches he had found, the Dom and one other church, the Piaristenkirche. We took photos in both. In the evening we had a Viennese buffet with accordion and guitar players strolling among the tables. I tasted schnapps, but didn't care for it. I ate a small cheese plate, and that is all I really wanted. However, when we went back into the kitchen, there was a serving line with Wiener schnitzel, bratwurst and all sorts of Viennese food that I could not resist.
    もっと詳しく

  • Melk Abbey

    2015年5月19日, オーストリア ⋅ ⛅ 52 °F

    At 5:30 am the light woke me as we passed the lovely Austrian town of Persenbeug. I went up to the newly re-opened sun deck to grab a few photos. For the last two days the sun deck was closed so that the ship could pass under bridges on the Main-Danube Canal. In the morning we toured the Palace of the Archbishop in Melk.もっと詳しく

  • Passing Through Passau

    2015年5月18日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

    Before breakfast I saw a little deer grazing on the bank of the Danube. Around 10 am we arrived in the city and started a 90 minute walking tour with our guide Martina. It ended at the cathedral, but we decided to go back to the bishop's residence to tour it quickly before the noon organ concert in the cathedral. I'm so glad we did. The first floor housed a library. The second held an art collection. The third floor led to a gallery overlooking the high altar, giving me unobstructed access to the front of the church. I photographed everything up in the sanctuary from about forty feet away, and from a third floor level. I think I made some magnificent photographs. Next we walked down by the Inn River to find the church attached to the Jesuit convent. It was simple and beautiful. We sat there in silence for several minutes before going out to find the Jesuit church. Though we found it fairly quickly, it was locked tight. Next we found a deli and I enjoyed a liver cheese sandwich. Strangely, this liverkase contains neither liver nor cheese. It is a kind of thick sliced baloney, served with hot potato salad and a good local beer. As we walked further toward St. Paul's Church, we grabbed two ice cream cones. When we got to the church, I was impressed with its beauty. Though not nearly as elaborate as the cathedral, it holds a lovely reredos made of black ebony wood. The whole effect of the altar is quite masculine. I loved it. A cherry streusel and coffee followed, and we found our meeting place well in advance of our 5:30 pm deadline. We came back to the ship and I enjoyed a dinner of osso bucco before retiring.もっと詳しく

  • Sausages and Sopranos

    2015年5月17日, ドイツ ⋅ ☀️ 64 °F

    We went with Heather and Don to get the special sausages and beer they make here. A dining companion next to us was a German man and his wife who work for Siemens and visit Myrtle Beach each year. At dinner Ellen brought her Chinese-American friends with whom I discussed the Chinese language, culture and history. In the evening we heard three singers accompanied be a pianist sing selections by Mozart and Puccini, and also a medley from the Sound of Music.もっと詳しく

  • St. Peter's Cathedral, Regensburg

    2015年5月17日, ドイツ ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F

    I awoke around 6 am and went to take photos on deck. Lecture at 10 am on the history of architectural styles. We passed by the Cathedral of Regensburg, dedicated to St. Peter, in the morning, then toured the interior in the afternoon. This building is the most important church and landmark of the city of Regensburg, Germany. It is the seat of the Catholic diocese of Regensburg. The church is the prime example of Gothic architecture in Bavaria. It was opened in 1520.もっと詳しく

  • Nuremberg Churches

    2015年5月16日, ドイツ ⋅ ☀️ 64 °F

    St. Sebaldus Church is a medieval church in Nuremberg, Germany. Along with Frauenkirche and St. Lorenz, it is one of the most important churches of the city, and also one of the oldest. It is located at the Albrecht-Dürer-Platz, in front of the old city hall. In front of the Frauenkirche is the Hauptmarkt, a farmers' market which Glenda examined thoroughly.もっと詳しく

  • Nuremberg Castle

    2015年5月16日, ドイツ ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F

    We began walking at the old city walls and fortress of Nuremberg Castle. Since this town captures what is quintessentially German, Adolf Hitler wanted to establish his presence here. It is fascinating how the dry moat, the upward climb to the portcullis, and the crooked, left-turning approach covered with murder holes were devised for strategic defense. The soft sandstone and the angled walls both served defensive purposes as well. It is interesting that this castle was never attacked because it was designed so well, no one dared attack directly. The best they could do was to lay siege to it. Our guide, whose name I understood to be Ingar, was very bright and funny. Down in the town we saw the modern pig sculpture symbolizing the world's reception of the work of Albrecht Durer, and the traditional statue of the late nineteenth century.もっと詳しく

  • Arrival in Nuremberg

    2015年5月16日, ドイツ ⋅ ☀️ 45 °F

    This morning we docked near Nuremberg at around 8 am. We ate breakfast with Mel and his wife, and their friends Jim and Sally from Houston. Going into Nuremberg we drove to Zeppelin field to see the Congress hall and the grandstand of the 1932 Nazi rally. Many of the streets nearby bear the names of Jewish leaders, such as Itzak Rabin. Passed the building housing the courtroom of the postwar trials.もっと詳しく

  • Seehof Palace

    2015年5月15日, ドイツ ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

    The ship was delayed in its transfer to a new location, so cruise director Sacha took us for a brief visit to the summer residence of the prince-bishop, the Seehof Palace. We returned to the ship in its new location in time for a late supper and the evening briefing. We dined with Richmond and Debbie, and were joined by new friends Mike and Leah. Leah expressed some very strong opinions that we should still feel guilty for the atrocities committed by previous generations.もっと詳しく

あなたの旅行のプロフィールを入手する

無料

QR code

FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android