Sunday, December 27, 2009

2009.12.16-25. Central Mexico in 9 days


(US$1 ~= M$12.75, 2 hours ahead of Pacific Time)

12/16-18. Puerto Vallarta, a resort town on the Pacific coast. 20~30°C. Hot under the sun. Green.

2009.12.16. Wednesday. we arrived at PVR ~9:20pm. (My dad's medicine attracted some attention at the customs, because they are in Chinese only.) All the way from the airport to downtown (10km) is glittering hotels and America chain stores. Only downtown retains some local flavor.
The very night, tried tiny tacos of chicken, beef, tongue, with cilantro and purple onion + green salsa. Beer: Indio.

Thursday. Bus to Boca de Tomatlan (M$6), hop on a water taxi to Quimixto (should be ~M$30, but I was double charged), a small town at the mouth of a river. Hiked to a waterfall along a horse trail, 30 min. A restaurant occupies the access to the falls. Half of the American tour group took a dip in the cool water. Upon return, had lunch at Martin's Dos Cocos restaurant north of the river, who apologized for not having any real food, because of the slow business. Since the boat launch is at the south end of the coast, we had the beach entirely to ourselves except for a white egret, looking very lost. Spent quite some time watching a guy fishing at the pier (yes, lots of fish, but most are small, and quite a lot of crabs on the rocks) while waiting for a returning taxi. Ended up hitching a ride with a private boat, together with this fisherman and a couple of other locals. The boat always makes a stop at Las Animas beach (entirely occupied by restaurants and quite a lot of people).
On the bus trip back, stopped at Mismaloya (the site of the 1964 movie the Night of the Iguana who made Vallarta famous - an outstanding movie, in my opinion). A major disappointment now: a giant hotel, a small beach packed with people and umbrellas.
Diner at Esquina de Los Caprichos, a little Barcelona style restaurant recommended by Lonely Planet. The gaspachio is not bad, my dad's fish is also good, but my fava bean stew has no fava beans and is terribly salty (did the Lonely Planet author try the dishes he/she recommending?).

Friday. Jardins Botanicos (a Lonely Planet must). The building design is wonderful, especially the reading room with a lovely breeze, and comfy chairs. As far as botanical garden goes, it's almost a joke. Only a few items are labeled. It's like a foreigner pet project to show off to the other foreigners. A M$20 one way bus ride (every half an hour) + M$50 entrance fee, few Mexicans would bother.
Back to downtown, strolled along the pleasant boardwalk, admiring the sculptures despite of the blazing sun. Had ice cream at Roberto's, exceptionally good (expensive though). Visited the little island in Rio Cuale. Nothing going on except for the restaurants and shops. A Huston's bust looks quite lonely.

Practicality: exchange rate at Puerto Vallarta's airport is even worse (10.8) than SeaTac (11.2). Banks (if offer currency exchange) have the best rate (12.6), passport is required. Bus from the airport is just outside of the arrival. M$5.5 per trip anywhere in the city. Most buses start or end along Insurgent Ave. south of Rio Cuale. All buses seem have no suspension: very bouncy. Long distance bus depot is 12 Km north (close to the airport, most people on that bus get off at Walmart.)



12/20-21. Guanajuato
Saturday. 10 hour bus ride to Guanajuato, connection at Guadalajara (8am - 13:15 M$315, 13:45 - 18:00 M$269). Mexican 1st class bus is super comfortable. Better than any bus I've ever ridden. Clean. Plenty leg room (about 30 assigned seats in Primera Plus, 24 in an ETN bus!). More reclined back. Soft foot support, 2 bathrooms in the back, pillows, air conditioning, TV screens showing American TV shows and movies dubbed in Mexican (but you are obliged to listen to it, even though they provide you with headset). They even provide lunch! (A small sack containing a semi edible sandwich, a sweet snack and a drink of your choice.) Lush green winding road gives away to dry yellow highland before reaching Guadalajara. Almost no villages all the way.

A UNESCO heritage site, this little hilly town has a surprising number of underground tunnels (for cars and buses, pretty safe), narrow alleys, silver mines. A beautiful little colonial town, the birthplace of Diego Rivera, and the Latin American center of Cervantes. Sunny, dry during the day, and chilly at night.

The tiny triangle Jardín de la Unión at the center is lovely, lined with thickly trimmed Indian Laurel and restaurants.
Teatro Juárez (M$35, 1873-1903) at its sound end, is one eclectic extravaganza. Lavish Moorish deco, Greek column, Roman statues. Its next door neighbor, Templo San Diego, and a few steps away Temple de San Francisco are boring inside : white wall, empty ceiling. Even their center of worship: Basilica Nuestra Señora de Guanajuato on the main square, plaza de la paz, is only slightly better. (Where I sampled a cup of insipid atole and a sweet raisin tamale wrapped in corn leaves.) The best church is a short bus ride north (5Km, built in 1765-88) Valenciana: gold alters, Churrigueresque door, elaborate carvings. Walk further for 10 minutes is almost a tourist trap: Boca Mina San Ramón. There's one shaft that you can walk down, but you see nothing. M$30 entrance includes a short guided tour in Spanish in the very small compound, a few tools were laid out. The real operation is somewhere else. There's a creative picture of Mona Lisa hanging on the 2nd floor wall: her portrait is made of rabbits and birds.

2.5Km southwest of down town is Ex-hacienda San Gabriel de Barrera, (M$22), which I enjoyed much more. Almost no visitors, even though a big hotel was just next door. Built at the end of 17th century, Barrera family was descended from the first Conde de Rul of the La Valenciana mine. Large shady ground, vine draping walkways and overview platforms, a pavilion and a pool. You feel like in Kent England at one point, and Italian garden the next. The house itself is lovely: a court yard in the middle, lots of lush plants, spacious.

The most crowded tourist attraction here is the mummy museum (M$50). Small rooms with glass cabinets filled with ~100 disinterred corpses between 1865 till fairly recently. The high level of lime and clay in the soil inhibits decomposition.

Diego Rivera's house is now a nice little museum. His family moved to Mexico City when he was 6. Ground floor: the home, 2nd floor, Rivera's drawings and small paintings. 3rd floor, a temporary exhibit of an American.

On Sunday early evenings, in Plaza de Alhondiga in front of the fortress like museum, the former granery, a group of 10 performers present some folk dances and music. Across the plaza is the public market, where I found this strange fruit (slimy and sweet inside). Anyone know the name?

Guanajuato University is a massive building built in the 50s. Pretty good looking for the 50s. Another giant building is Half way up to Mina San Ramón, the former citadel, now a luxury hotel Cristina. Various terraces and patios offer commanding views of the colorful city and surrounding mountains.

Dinners at Cafe Santo on the little bridge of Campanero, have been adequate and convenient (few steps away from our hotel). Lunch at Truco 7 has been good value, but not as well prepared (busier and larger). Both are Lonely Planet recommendation.

Lowest price during my trip. City bus is M$4 (M$5 in San Miguel de Allende). 1 hour & M$90 east of Guanajuato. More frequent 2nd class buses like Flecha Amarillo ($M68), which picks up passengers along the road. So slower.



12/22. San Miguel de Allende
For a small town, San Miguel de Allende houses a surprising # of churches. Just across Café San Augustín (where we had lunch and hot chocolate with churrios. Was ok. Not a must as advertised in Lonely Planet), are Capilla de la Tercera Orden and Templo de San Francisco (Churrigueresque facade). North of it, facing the tiny Plaza Civica (filled with poinsettia) are baroque Oratorio de San Felipe Neri (nice courtyard) and Churrigueresque Templo de la Salud. The best is Parroquia de San Miguel Arcángel. Lovely wedding cake like appearance (late 19th century). People sit in the shade of El Jardín, facing Parroquia's pink pinnacles, buying trinkets and snacks from the street vendors. A street musician played a giant cooking pan with various dins. We chatted with American retirees, one of them walks around the square routinely everyday, while waiting for a group of kids staging a show. Many stately buildings line around the plaza: Ignacio Allende was born at the southwest corner, Banamex building (former Casa del Mayorazgo de Canal) at the northwest corner.

Escuela de Bellas Artes in a former monastery is a small oasis from the street action. Many fun modern sculptures exhibited in the hallway and garden. The larger Instituto Allende is about 15 min walk south of El Jardin. Nice murals. Equally peaceful. Just half a day, concludes our visit to this little neat artsy town, with a foreign air.



12/23-25. Mexico City
M$248 10:00 - 14:00 to Mexico Norte. M$2 metro ticket. Stayed at Hotel Isabel in the historical downtown. Very big room, balcony, courtyard from 2nd floor up. My favorite store is the pastry shop Ideal.
Historical Center is surprisingly stately and beautiful. Many handsome UNESCOlisted colonial buildings: medieval Casa de los Condes de San Mateo de Valparaiso, Baroque Museo del Estanquillo (interesting posters hanging in the windows), Palacio de Iturbide (a free temporary exhibition of recent 200 years of design in Mexico), Moorish Casa de los Azulejos, Italianate post office ... just to name a few, within 10 minutes of walk. The pedestrian only avenue Madero is bustling with shoppers and performers.
West of the main thorough fare Lazaro Cardenas is the baroque Palacio de Bellas, and the central park Alameda, full of street stalls selling snacks and trinkets. We tried fried banana, cactus palm (a bit sour) with meat. North of the park is plaza de Santa Veracruz. South side, in front of the circular monument Hemiciclo a Juárez, two people took turns trying their best to hammer some human justice issues into the indifferent brains of passers by. Across the street is Archivo Notarias (former templo de Corpus Christi). Behind it, is one ugly reddish tall building of Ministry of Foreign Affairs. But it has an interesting sculpture pond, full of little reddish pyramids. An installation titled "Exodus" consists of ~100 cloth made people - true size, all mourning. Whenever a breeze passes through, they all move in an eerie way.

East end of the historical center is Zócalo. Christmas decoration was on every building. Snow activity booths were setup, (melting fast), attracting lots of families. Surrounding the square (especially close to Templo Mayor) are endless street vendors. A few shamans-to-be administrates some rituals to anyone who can pay a few pesos, with some green leaves and smoke. Templo Mayor, ruin (demolished by Spaniards) of a major Aztec (Tenochtitlán) worship site. (M$51. Bottled liquid is not permitted). A low fence surrounds the site. Not much to see.
Note the one wall with skeleton carvings! The museum houses a good size model of the site and artifacts found here. East of the square is the National Palace (former Cortés' fortress). Anyone with a passport can visit and admire Rivera's murals. North of the square is the iconic Catedral Metropolitana where we attended the Christmas eve mass (I felt ill after ~15 minutes). Its interior cannot match the outside. Police bars beggars and vendors. Many handsome buildings round the plaza. Secretaría de Educación Pública is closed (notable for 120 fresco panel by Rivera), beautiful National Monte de Piedad, and many museums.

Outside of the center, checked out the neighborhood of Coyoacán for blue Frida Kahlo's home (too bad, was closed due to the holiday short opening hours), Casa de Cortés (absolutely uninteresting) - where Cuauhtémoc was tortured. Also, went to Xochimilco (Tren Ligero M$2 from Metro station Tasquena) and took the most cheesy trajinera ride in the dirty canal (M$360 + M$50 tip. 1 hour. Better hire a boat with a number of friends to split the cost). Went by a couple of nursery, the island of broken dolls. Small boats float next to yours trying to sell food, or a mariachi band sings a minute for you. Not scenic.

Teotihuacán (M$51, M$33 one way 1 hr bus from Terminal Norte or Indios Verdes) is a must. Main sites: la Ciudadela (Templo de Quetzalcoatl, with an older pyramid ~AD300); Pyramid of the Sun (70m high 248 steps ~ AD100), site museum next to it, Pyramid of the Moon (~AD300, flanked by 12 small pyramids - elegant design), palace of Quetzalpapalotl to its SW, museum of mural and palace of Tetitla outside of the gates ( lots of murals under restoration). 5 gates. ~2km x 1km inside the wall. To explore Luckily it's cloudy, otherwise without any shade, this place can really be a via de mortes.

On the way back, we stopped by Basilica Our Lady of Guadalupe, a pilgrimage site around December 12. The new basilica (1974-6) is very well designed. The old one is sinking and leaning.

Metro to the airport is very convenient. Stop: Terminal Aerea.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

2009.12.11. References to Salvador Dali Make Me Hot

UW school of drama, written by José Rivera, directed by Alyson Roux. Incoherent. The sex reference between the coyote and the cat has little to do with the home coming soldier and his wife.

Sunday, December 06, 2009

2009.12.5. Lake Twenty-two

Finally a sunny weekend day. COLD. Hiked to Lake 22 on Mount Loop Highway. The surface was frozen almost completely. Managed to walk towards the center of the lake (for a little bit) on snowshoes. The trail is very slippery at a couple of places (I fell once). The last stretch was frozen snow. Otherwise passable for running shoes. Quite a few people. Forgot to bring a camera.

Friday, December 04, 2009

2009.12.3. Seattle Symphony's Festive Holiday concert

Conducted by Christopher Seaman
Glinka: Ruslan and Ludmilla Overture  
Vivaldi: Viola Concerto in G minor, RV 417 (Susan Gulkis Assadi, viola)
Tchaikovsky: Three Dances from The Nutcracker  
Dukas: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice  
Rimsky-Korsakov: Polonaise from Christmas Eve  
Humperdinck: Prelude to Hansel and Gretel  
Tchaikovsky: Suite from Swan Lake 
Came only because I got sick of wasting 4+ hours over the Internet problem on a Windows Server 2008 running as a Virtual Machine. Cheerful and festival. The Viola Concerto doesn't really fit in the program (too Baroque, and they had to move the stage before and after). Nonetheless, all was fine. The conductor was wearing some eyecatch red vest with golden thread. He seems to love big sounds. The concert hall was maybe only 60% full. A pity.

Thursday, December 03, 2009

2009.12.1. Twelfth Night

Seattle Shakespeare Company presents >Twelfth Night or What You Will. Silly plot, a farce really. Very well acted. Good costumes. Simple stage (almost none).

Friday, November 27, 2009

2009.11.26. Thanksgiving in Victoria

Took Victoria Clipper to Victoria. Left in the rain and back in the rain. Silly waiting at the dock. (The ticket asks passengers to check in 1 hour ahead.)
Luckily the weather was better in Victoria, even sunny in the morning. Visited St. Ann, just a block east of downtown traffic. A Catholic girls school and convent from 1858, predating the establishment of the city of Victoria, to 1973. It currently houses a museum and government offices. Small and pleasant ground. A relatively untamed park, Beacon Hill to the south, makes a good place for a picnic (I saw some broken glasses). I chatted with a French lady at Anglican Christ Church Cathedral. She's very proud of the highest church tower in Canada. Nice stainless glass windows. St. Andrew (1892) also has very elaborate stainless glass.
After a tasty lunch (recommended by a stranger) at Pagliacci, headed over to the Governor's residence. It's about a mile east in a fine neighborhood with fancy private houses. Meticulously planted and cared-for ground, open to public (with a restroom). Up on a hill, it offers fine view of the harbor and the ocean. Maybe on a clear day, you can see Olympic mountains.

Black Friday 11.27. Macy's parade on 4th ave. 9am - 11am. Not bad, a lot of people. Instead of catching up with his peer, a dog decided to poop right in front of the parade judge. At 5pm, Seattle Men's Chorus and Women's Chorus performed on the 3rd floor balcony of Westlake Center, followed by light of the star and a small fireworks on top of Macy's roof. Again, a large crowd, and the police was happy to shuffle people around.

Sunday. Marathon (I didn't do it). Both full and half. Even there is a Marathon Walk. Seems well organized. The recovery room has medical support and chiropractical sessions.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

2009.11.20. Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6

Seattle Symphony under guest conductor Arild Remmereit.
Ludvig Irgens-Jensen: Partita Sinfonica, “The Drover”
Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K. 467. Gabriela Montero at piano.
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74, “Pathétique” 
Irgens-Jensen's 1939 composition is romantic, especially the pretty 2nd movement.
Mozart's, as always, pretty and melodic. Montero's encore improvisation was fun and elaborate. She's too much of a soloist to play with an orchestra.
Pathétique's 1st movement is tear wrenching (I love the opening). 2nd movement is joyful and waltzy. 3rd movement is so grand and powerful that it brought untimely applause. Last movement is gloomy.
2009.11.19. Equivocation at Seattle Repertory Theatre, a new play by Bill Cain from Ashland's Oregon Shakespeare Festival.

Plot summary: William Shakespeare was commissioned by Robert Cecil to write a play of the failed Gunpowder Plot, while father Henry Garnet was being trialed for his involvement. As how to answer under oath a question whose answer lies between a lie or death, equivocation comes to play. How to stage a play without angering the king and Cecil, Shakespeare and his actors had to make adjustments.

Good acting, simple stage (with fire), effective storm simulation (by light and sound). Long (3 hours). A bit too ambitious for the playwright to touch on these other themes: father daughter relationship, faith, artist's block and rivalry, ruthless politician, Macbeth & King Lear, current political comments. A little messy, but overall enjoyable.

Sunday, November 08, 2009

2009.11.7. Shostakovich's Symphony No. 15

Seattle Symphony.
Borodin: Symphony No. 3 in A minor
Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto in D major (Leonidas Kavakos, violin)
Shostakovich: Symphony No. 15 in B major
Tchaikovsky's 2nd movement is most moving. Kavakos's handling of speed and pause is delicious. I fell asleep during Shostakovich's, regardless of 4 percussionists' effort.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

2009.10.24. Melakwa Lakes

Melakwa Lake.
9 miles RT, 2300 ft gain. I-90 exit 47. Denny Creek waterslide @1.3 mile, Keekwulee Falls @1.4 mile, Snowshoe Falls at 2 mile. Hemlock Pass @3.5 mile @4600 ft. Trees were shrouded in frozen mist, some ice fell. Lakes are blue green, very clear, yellow grass and some fall color. Many mushrooms in the lower part of the trail.

2009.10.23. Pilchuck Glass School annual auction

Pilchuck Glass School annual auction, with silent and live auctions, a 5 course very slow but expertly crafted dinner. All pieces were donated by artists. The night raised $900k for the school. Very colorful pieces, some elegant, some ugly, some playful, but all interesting to see. Also fun to see attendees' dresses & jewelries. Online catalog, some photos don't do justice to the art work. My favorite piece is a frosty leaf by Mielle Riggie. Another piece I liked is a blue thermometer by Alyssa Oxley, especially the "water drops".

Thursday, October 22, 2009

2009.10.21. La Traviata

Verdi's La Traviata at Seattle Opera. Very melodic. Sumptuous costume and stage set from San Francisco Opera. Lighting is exceptional, especially when an introspect is sung in a crowd (the crowd will be dimmed and frozen). Great acting. The baritone father is excellent.
Violetta Valéry:    Nuccia Focile
Alfredo Germont:    Dimitri Pittas
Giorgio Germont:    Charles Taylor
Conductor:          Brian Garman
Set Designer:       John Conklin
Costume Designer:   David Walker
Lighting Designer:  Connie Yun

Saturday, October 17, 2009

2009.10.17. Mushroom Show

Annual wild mushroom show at UW's horticulture center. People bring mushroom from their yard to be identified. The guided tour of the 4 long tables by Daniel Winkle is educational, personal and fun. Check here for online mushroom identification.

Friday, October 16, 2009

2009.10.15. Joseph and Dreacoat

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at the 5th Ave Theatre. Stupid and childish plot, exaggerating act, card board stage set, tacky colors. Costume design is not bad. Catchy tunes by Andrew Lloyd Webber, easily singalong-able. They had to repeat all the songs at the end in order to stretch to 2 hours.

2009.10.13. Seattle Art Museum preview

SAM: 2 new exhibitions. Members' preview & talk.
Alexander Calder: A Balancing Act. A dozen or so large installations hanging on the ceiling, and some small pieces, plus 2 movie clips. Most of these came from Jon & Mary Shirley's collection. Fun to see, doesn't take much time.
Michelangelo Public and Private. Less than 10 very small drawings, plus woodcut prints of the Sistine Chapel ceiling before it was "modified".

Sunday, October 11, 2009

2009.10.10. Lake Ann

Lake Ann at the foot of Mt Shuksan's south face. Road is closed at the ski area, so extra ~1.5 mile to the trail head. The lake itself isn't the prettiest. Small, quite a few camping spots. Walked up the climbing route (left of the fork) for a steep 40 minutes to the glacier. Splendid view from there: Baker Lake shimmering under the sun, Mt Baker completely white, and the glowing red leaves of the huckleberry in the valley. A better part of this trail is in the valley, but pretty enough at this time of the year due to the huckleberry leaves and yellow grass. Plenty of overripen (almost dried yet extremely flavorful) berries and mushrooms. Came back with our hands full, freezing (1°C at the parking lot). Still managed to snap a sunset photo off Highwood Lake. ~5:30 hr drive, ~6 hr hiking.
Direction: Mt Baker Hwy (542) to Austin Pass (1.8 miles beyond the ski area). Trail head on the left side of the road. 4.1 miles one way to the lake.

Friday, October 09, 2009

2009.10.8. Richard Dawkins

Richard Dawkins speaks at UW's basketball arena, promoting his recent book: The Greatest Show on Earth: The Evidence for Evolution. He read about half an hour. It's just like his book, verbose, not captivating. His answers during Q&A session were a lot more interesting. Half of the arena, a good turnout. Some students were here because of extra credit given in their classes.

2009.10.7. Abe Lincoln in Illinois

Abe Lincoln in Illinois by Robert E. Sherwood, at Intiman theatre. The play picks a few episodes of Lincoln's life, depicting his humble beginning as a determined young man studying, his passionate marriage and his reluctant embrace of politics. Simple stage, well acted, very enjoyable.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

2009.9.2-21 Hike in South Tyrol and Dolomites

Hiking in South Tyrol and east Dolomites + brief sightseeing in Poland (Warsaw, Krakow), Austria (Melk, Grossglockner Rd., Vienna), Slovakia (Bratislava, Trnava), Hungary (Esztergom, Visegrad, Budapest). Saw too many places, completely saturated :(

This is a lo...ong post. Please click the show more link at each section.

General comments:
  • Vienna & Budapest are extremely handsome. Lots of things to see and do (more so in Vienna). Tons of tourists, but there are enough locals to retain a genuine air. However, I found smaller towns more endearing, because of our gracious host in Eppan, a jolly waiter in St. Gilgen who doesn't speak English, two strangers in Bratislava whose faces I've already forgotten.
  • Alps is NOT wild. Full of people and grazing animals, beautiful, but too noisy (at least in summer, or when there is a bus load of school kids). Flowers bloom longer, no mosquitoes, grass cut evenly. Lots of larch trees. I wonder what would it be like when they all turn yellow. No camping other than in camp grounds near a town, filled with trailers and tents larger than my apartment.
  • Saw many retired people hiking, and they are in perfect shape: a testament to western Europe's excellent social / pension benefit.
  • Trails are well maintained and marked (white / red paint with trail number). Every step has a lovely refuge that offers expensive food and inexpensive shared lodging. It'll be interesting to follow part of Via Alpina for multiple days.
  • Litter on trail. A lot of tissue paper, and some plastic food wrappers.
  • Prices (this blog is based on €1 ~ $1.47): expensive museum entrance fees (~€10, even a small one that you can walk through in 5 minutes.), audio guide (sometimes a floor map, or photo permission) means extra cost. As a simple measure: a bus ticket costs €0.5 (0.7 for transfer within 60 min) in Bratislava, 2.4zl (~€0.8) in Warsaw, 300ft (€1.1, not transferable) in Budapest, €1.7 in Vienna.
  • Food: strong flavors and generous use of spices (less so in Italy). Fresh ingredient and simple taste is not in fashion. Lots of pickled vegetables, all sorts of paprika and sausages. The eastern block has good milk products like kefir, semtana and many kinds of soft fresh or smoked cheese. Coffee is excellent in Italy and Austria. Alcohol is much cheaper than in US (domestic beer is €0.5~1 for 0.5l). Pastry and cakes are often short of my expectation. Fruit drinks diluted with water, yet powered by chemicals seem to be popular. (I've tried two, both have unpleasant metallic taste). Drinking fountain is rare. Lousy fast food joints are everywhere: McDonald's are full of people (all tourists?). Home cooking is always the best (my Polish friend's mom cooks the best bigos).
  • Being completely illiterate has some benefit: got to try some unknown food (unfortunately, they remain unknown). Traveling alone has some benefit too: 1) I was able to find hosts in 4 cities, so had a glimpse of the local life (except one American ex-patriot, thanks to their hospitality.). 2) I received 2 ride offers to Budapest, and one to the sculpture park outside of Budapest. Too bad, schedule conflict.
  • Truly understood what luggage means. Lugging them from city to city is tiring.

Sept. 2-4, Poland. Wednesday.
No toilet paper in Warsaw's international airport! I only spent ~4 hours in Warszawa. Lazienki Park is lovely: large, baroque, outfitted with a "roman" stage and silly boats, many locals (on this Wednesday afternoon). The leafy blvd. Aleje Ujazdowskie bordering the park is lined with embassies & ministries. Its north end leads to the charming old town (Stare Miasto, meticulously rebuilt after WWII), the royal castle, Red brick Barbican tower. Many restaurants along the way, full of tourists. Warsaw University is also here. A guy was blowing giant soap bubbles in the middle of the old town square (faithful to its 1701 version). Benches available for anyone to sit and enjoy. St John cathedral merits a short stop: nice door and stain glass windows. Castle square is bigger, centered around a column of Sigismund 3. Monument of Warsaw uprising is nearby. show more

Sept 5th. Saturday. Drove with my Polish friend and her 3 year old schnauzer Seti from Katowice, Poland to Bolzano, Italy. Visited Stift Melk (€7.7) about half way. The 18th century abbey complex sits on a hill overlooking the Danube. Looks like it was painted yesterday. The abbey dates from 1089. The interior is baroque gone mad. Its church is gilded to the teeth. I cannot imagine how the monks-in-training contemplate the earthly splendor. My favorite is the library, with hundred manuscripts before 1500, some from 12th century. The ground is large and well maintained, with a garden pavilion. English guided tour is offered twice a day. Bus loads of tourists. show more

Sept. 6-11. Hiking.
These are stunningly beautiful areas: little villages full of flower-bedecked windows. Rolling hills with flowering meadows. View of mountains all around. Südtirol is one of the largest apple producing regions in Europe. Many vineyards and other fruit orchards. German speaking. Cortina area is much more touristy. Dramatic dolomite formations, large larch forest. Italian speaking.

Sept. 6. Sunday. Armed with topo maps and direction, apples and plums (all provided by our host), blessed with blue sky, we hiked Schlern, 40 minutes NE towards Blumau -> Fiè allo Sciliar / Völs. Parked at Volser Weiher Lake at 1096 m (€3 parking). Water seems cloudy. There're a couple of hotels and restaurants. A few guests were fishing when we came back from the hike. Followed trail #1, easy walk to Tuffalm, a beautiful restaurant, at 1274 m, with a meadow full of purple crocus. Then trail #3, until Schaufelesteig at 2143 m. By the time I reached the plateau where I could see Rifuge Bolzano / Schlernhaus (2450 m, spotless restrooms!), I was out of breath. There, lying in front of me, was one fat cow! Many more after her. I took a nap too, in between piles of cow dung! This is one giant pasture, with 360 degree view of the distant mountains. Seiseralm/Alpe di Siusi boasts "the largest alpine meadow in Europe". Absolutely beautiful. Many people here from different trails or lifts. I continued to the peak Petz / Pez close by at 2563 m. A cross on top. Loose rocks.
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Sept. 9. Drove to Cortina d'Ampezzo. Took SS241 -> SS48: Val d'Ega -> Val di Fassa -> ... Stopped briefly at the emerald Lago di Carezza / Karersee, 1520 m. Passed the ski town of Canazei, 30+ turns of Passo Podoi (2239 m). Very scenic all the way. show more

Sept. 12-13, to Vienna. Very scenic all the way except on Hwy 1 close to Vienna. Grossglockner Alpine Road (€28 toll) was a product of the depression era of 1930s, following a Roman route for trade and slaves. 3000 men worked for 5 years to build this spectacular road (which I can only imagine). Franz Joseph had a nice house (now a restaurant) here overlooking the LONG and dirty glacier. Cold and high. Grass was yellow (probably should come here in late June?). Lots of marmots. Too cloudy to see the peaks. When we reached the highest point on the road, Hochtor at 2504 m, we could only see fellow tourists. Displays of nature and history were installed at almost each stop, to tell us what we were supposed to marvel at. show more

Sept. 13-16. Vienna.
My Polish friend dropped me off in Vienna around 3pm on Sunday. Had a snack (just to cool off after walking with 2 bags), dropped my luggage at my American host's home in Margareten Plaza. Rushed to Vienna State Opera (about 20 minutes' walk). Gounod's Faust was to play from 19:00 till 22:15 (one intermission). Sold out. Many young sales men in 18th costumes peddling classical concert tickets right in front of the opera house. Standing tickets are available 80 minutes before curtain: €4 for orchestra level, and €3 for gallery level. Conductor: de Billy. Singers: Isokoski, Selinger, Kushpler; Beczala, Youn, Eröd, Kammerer. Musikverein wasn't playing anything, because the season of Vienna Philharmonic doesn't start until October. Two days later, I watched the premier of Neue Welt des Balletts here, conducted by Eberle, choreographed by Myriam Naisy, András Lukács, Jorma Elo, William Forsythe, Jirí Kylián. The last two pieces, by Kylián, were pretty funny. The moves are more stable, and the girls are prettier and more shapely (compared to regional ballet companies like PNB). Nonetheless, I fell asleep for awhile. The strange thing is that a couple of the dances were accompanied by recorded music, while musicians sitting in the pit. show more

Sept 16 - 17. Bratislava, Slovakia, is an easy (every 30 min) slow (1 hr for 64km) train ride east of Vienna (€14, same price for round trip ticket if return on the same day). It was the capital of Hungary from 1536 after its defeat by the Turks. Even after the capital moved to Budapest, Hungarian kings and queens were still crowned here at St. Martin's Cathedral until 1830. The train station is north of the old town, ~20 - 30 min walk. A lovely town, small enough to get my bearings quickly. Many ornate Baroque buildings, red roofs, medieval Michael's Gate, a cute Art Deco blue church, a Soviet style WWII memorial, Slavín, up on a hill half way between the train station and old town. Lively streets. Friendly people. Wifi hot spot in the middle of every square in the old town. Bratislava castle was being renovated, but you can walk up the castle hill and look around. Good view over the old town and the flying sauce bridge. Quite some other buildings are being cleaned up. One of these had posters boarding up window slots, as a colorful temporary solution. On this Thursday, a wind band called SPOKAR played on Hviezdoslavovo nam 5pm - 6pm. About 16 musicians standing on the small platform. An attractive street to its own right: wide and clean, public benches under trees, fountains and drinking fountains at every block, multicolor pavement, leading to the opera house. show

Sept 18, Friday. To Hungary.
bridge to Esztergom Train to Sturovo. Walked over Danube to Esztergom, capital of Hungary from 1000 to 1256, seat of the primate of Hungarian Roman Catholic Church. Its neoclassic basilica is one of the largest in the world, and its green dome can been seen from miles away. (From the sturovo train station, it's ~1 hour to the bridge. Lugging my junk under the sun was no fun. Should have taken some local bus, as the town center is close to the bridge. But I didn't know.). Dedicated in 1856, it's grand, but a bit empty inside. No stainless glass windows. The view from the castle hill is very nice. Széchenyi square is clean and pretty, but no people. The streets and the market are bustling. Lots of school kids. Behind the market is the local long distance bus depot. show more

Sept 19-21. Budapest, capital of Hungary since 1361. In the 1st century, it was the Roman capital of Lower Pannonnia. The large Roman ruin Aquincum can be easily visited by HEV (the only suburban rail line) from Buda at Batthyány Square. Now, this is a hustling bustling place, for the locals. This weekend, a green fair on Andrássy út (with display like a giant ball made of plastic bottles) blocked all moto vehicles. It also happened to be some patrimony day. Not only some museums were free (albeit some sections were closed because of that), the president's office at Sándor Palace was open to public. Just a long line (~1 hr under the sun). Parquet floor, white gilded ceiling, French style furniture. English description only in the hallway about the site. Many guards. show more

== END ==

Disclaimer: many images used here are not mine.