Wednesday 27 November 2013

Zurich

Zurich is a beautiful city there's no doubt about it; it's obvious to see why it features on so many of the worlds most liveable cities list. It's easy to navigate, the people are lovely and the airport is 10 minutes by train. The only thing that boggles my mind is IT'S SO GOD DAMN EXPENSIVE.

All that fresh air has had a serious effect on the cost of living. To put it in perspective, a meal for two at McDonalds (the go to cheap place to eat for poor backpackers) was 20 CHF (AU$25, £14).

People had said it was expensive and I was kinda thinking 'yeah whatever', people say London is expensive and I don't think it is, you just live within your means. But getting to Zurich was a wake up call; actually having to make sure you had enough money to eat. 

The weather was pretty bad whilst we were there (until the day we left of course when it was glorious and we had to bust out the sunglasses) but we managed to do a self guided walking tour around the city centre. 

We wanted to go on a day trip to the Alps and some of the amazing natural wonders around Zurich but because the weather was so bad we decided against it.

I don't feel like I really got to experience Zurich to the fullest but I think to do that, you have to have some decent money behind you.

Like Norway (somewhere I want to go but can't afford), my return to Switzerland will be put on hold until I've got a decent full time job that could support the kind of magical trip I would want to have there.

Excuse the pics. It was raining the whole time and my lens got wet.

B xoxox





From here you're meant to be able to see the Alps but it was too cloudy


Friday 22 November 2013

Vienna Series

Vienna is the kinda place where pictures start becoming redundant. You just can't capture the beauty of it (not with my mid range digital anyway).


Hofburg Palace




Parliament (Statue is the goddess Athena)




Burgtheater



Too many fairy lights for my camera to handle clearly (City Hall)

Hofburg Palace

Post Prague delightfulness in Vienna

Our second day in Prague was an improvement. We did a great tour,  the best we've experienced so far, and saw all of the beautiful sights.

However, no matter how hard I tried I just couldn't let myself love Prague. It's beautiful don't get me wrong(especially in the old historic town protected by UNESCO) but if it wasn't for the heritage city centre, I don't think Prague offers a great deal.

Other people on our tour also experienced some horrible crimes (well, minor offences according to Czech Policie). One man was pushed to the ground and his passport stolen. Another woman had her handbag taken whilst she tried on shoes.

I felt unsafe in Prague almost all the time. 

Walking around the train station, shady characters eyed us off and would walk so close it was a complete invasion of personal space. 

I'm sure there are a plethora (BOOM WORD OF THE DAY) of people who have been to Prague and had no problems at all but after trying hard to give it a chance to impress me… I was disappointed. 

Vienna on the other hand was an absolute breath of fresh air. Personally, I think architecturally it's equally as impressive as Prague. Vienna is calm compared to the other European cities we've visited. It's amazing at night, all lit up with fairy lights, awakening my christmas spirit with all the winter markets.

Today we wound our way through the Swiss Alps to Zurich. The journey here alone has sold me already. It took over nine hours on the train but it was worth it for the views. Tomorrow we shall investigate the city and play in the snow.

Bianca

xxxoxox

PRAGUE SERIES


St Vitus Cathedral at Prague Castle

Church of Our Lady Before Týn AND SOME LIGHTS

St Nicholas Church


We ate lunch in a dark medieval cellar

Charles Bridge and Prague Castle up on the hill



Stairs to Charles Bridge


Monday 18 November 2013

How to get scammed in Prague...

Off to an annoying start in Prague. This trip had been going suspiciously smoothly so it's only expected that something would go wrong eventually.

Today we were off to a late start after a nice long sleep in. First port of call was a cash point to get some Koruna in our wallets.

After withdrawing some money, a man approached me and asked if I could change some bills for him. So I gave him 2 X 1000 bills in exchange for 4 X 500 bills.  He was very appreciative and went on his way.

It wasn't until I was in HnM trying to buy something that the cashier told me what I thought was 500 Kourno was not accepted currency in the Czech Republic.

A quick dash to the closest currency exchange confirmed that I'd been given a bunch of worthless Belarusian Ruble. This scam artist clearly identified me as an ignorant tourist and preyed on my inexperience with Czech currency.

We spent two and a half hours at the police station making a statement and getting a police report. In the scheme of things, I know it's not a lot of money (about AU$105, £61) but it's the bloody principal! I was so nice and polite to this man… I even told the bastard to have a nice day. Well I take it back. I hope he has a horrible day.

Let's all take a moment to send some bad juju his way.

I know the next three days I'll be walking around Prague like a character in Law and Order seeing if I recognise him. I'm pretty good with faces and was able to remember a few key details (short, medium build, pale, green checked shirt, dark jeans… keep an eye out). I suggested to the police that they check the cameras at the cash point, at which point I was told to only speak when spoken to.

Tomorrow we've booked a six hour tour that covers all the key sights around Prague and surrounding areas. It will be a great way to see to city (widen my search area).

More fool me anyway. That will teach me to be nice. I'll never give anyone change again.

You live, you learn, what can I say.

Prague 1, Bianca 0

xxoxox


NOT KORUNA.  next stop Belarus??

Friday 15 November 2013

Berlin Series

East Side Gallery






Deutscher Bundestag

BIG BUBBLES

Bradenburg Gate

Germany- The cool kid of Europe

Apologies. Bad wifi kept me from you.

We had a great five days in Hamburg. It is such a beautiful city and not what I expected at all (starting to realise no where is really what I expect). For all the travelling I've done, I never  had much interest in going to Germany. I don't know why but it was never on the top of my list. This time, I scheduled Hamburg into the itinerary to visit a friend of mine who lives there. Then I thought we should check out Berlin too.

We arrived in Hamburg to find that our hostel was located right smack bang in the middle of the red light district (Reeperbahn). Not good for a weekend away... I actually had enough of all that in Amsterdam. Luckily, not too far from our hostel was St Pauli, the hipster/punk area. Super cool boutiques, second hand shops, record stores (Vinyl is big in GER) and everything in between. 

It's just a cool place. I'd describe it as gritty. It's great because there are nearly NO tourists, it's cheap, it's shameless in it's ugliness and vibrant in its beauty. It feels a bit like Brooklyn, NYC. Just the vibe and some of the architecture. It has this  'IDGAF' attitude but where it's pretty it's stunning. The city centre is positioned off of a great lake and at night the city lights reflect of the water. Spectacular.

The weather has started to turn. It's the kind of 'eyes watering, nose tap dripping' kind of cold.

And its only getting worse.

One day I will be able to afford to travel in summer… one day.

Berlin is like Hamburg but on steroids. If you didn't know any better, you'd think Berlin was hosting the world graffiti championships or something. The street art is BEYOND anything I have ever seen anywhere in the world. I think the whole 'cool, industrial vs urban vs alternative' must be a Germany wide thing. Germany definitely has the most street cred out of any european country I have visited so far.

Props to Germany, the cool kid of Europe.

B xoxox






Winterdom Fair in Hamburg

Hamburg is the 2nd largest port in Europe


Schmalzkuchen. Life ruiner.

Friday 8 November 2013

Amster damned if you do, damned if you don't…

I came to Amsterdam and completely fell of the grid. I'm sorry, I don't know what happened. It's been such a whirlwind week. I think my biggest mistake was going to a sex show the first night we arrived. I've spent the last four days mentally recovering.

It was my boyfriends birthday and we were in Amsterdam so we did what any self respecting couple would do…. got hammered, went to a sex show, a bar, a club then got really pissed off when it was 4am and we couldn't find anywhere to eat (surprising in A'dam, no?).

Day two was recovery. Then because I was so hungover during the day of BF's actual birthday, day three was 'do what BF wants to do' day. Which was skateboard. So day three was find BF somewhere to skate day.

DAY FOUR
Finally saw some stuff I wanted to see. Went to VONDELPARK for some R&R and then went to Anne Frank house. Moving stuff. 

Yesterday we went on a canal cruise which was boring as all hell and really over priced. But then we discovered the Albert Cuyp markets and had a great arvo shopping and eating waffles. We went to this great place called Bazar for dinner. It's an old church that has been transformed into a restaurant. Massive serves of delish Moroccon/Turkish food and cheap. That's want we want people.

Our train (or coach or hovercraft, I never really know until I get there cause the tickets are so bloody confusing) to Hamburg doesn't leave until 3pm so this morning we are gonna go for a little cycle around the city before we leave.

I'm still not sure about A'dam. I don't feel I have seen enough to really make a judgement. However, I was discussing with a fellow hostel dweller about ways to assess a new place and it's all about liveability really. For example, I love Vegas but it's not liveable. Amsterdam on the other hand seems like it would be a cool place to live. Although I'm not 100% on how much would actually get done.

Until Hamburg…

B xoxox




Indoor skatepark in Utrecht

Vondelpark

Crazy that this tree is still alive

Albert Cuyp Market



Brugge

During our stay in Brussels, we made a day trip to Brugge.

About 18 months ago, I was on a plane on my way to Thailand and I was flicking through those little travel mags they have in the seat pocket. I read this article about Brugge being the hidden gem of Belgium and I wrote it down in this note I have on my iPhone with all the places I want to visit.

I was really excited to be able to mark something off that list.

Brugge is a beautiful little town about an hour and a half out of Brussels on the train. It’s full of quaint colourful houses and cobbled streets. There is loads of old churches and there is a series of canals that run through the city.

Whilst Brugge is beautiful, unfortunately I didn’t do my research well enough because they day we went was a bank holiday in Belgium so not only was it heaving with day trippers from all over Belgium, a lot of the shops were shut.

Still we had a little walk around, ate some chips and went home.


B  xoxox