Categories
Austria Europe

Adventure in the Alps

From Salzburg, it was about two more hours on the train and we found ourselves in Innsbruck! Austria and Switzerland were amazing for transportation – the fact that Swiss trains run on time should surprise no one, but there are also apps in both Austria and Switzerland that allow you to simply take whatever train you want, turn it on as you board, turn it off as you exit, and the app will calculate your fare, applying any discounts or fare caps that you might qualify for. We had booked a few things in advance, but not everything, and it was amazing to be able to just figure it out as we went.

Innsbruck is stunning, right next to the mountains. I wanted to do some sort of day up in the mountains while we were in Central Europe, and while I’d originally expected that would be in Switzerland, there were several good options in Innsbruck. One option is visiting the ski jump, but we opted instead to take the gondola up to Nordkette!

It starts with a steep funicular up the mountain, and then two gondolas until you get to the top of the mountain. From there, you can take a short walk to get to the peak. It was a bit windy but the views were stunning, and we were happy to get out of the heat for a little while. Throughout our entire trip, we seemed to be following a heat wave across Europe – it wasn’t until the very last day when we had grey skies and rain.

From there, we had lunch at the restaurant at the top and worked our way back down the mountain, taking the two gondolas and then the funicular. It was quite crowded, and we waited in fairly long lines at each stage. Luckily, it didn’t feel too crowded up at the top once everyone had spread out, but we were glad we weren’t in a hurry to get back down to the city.

What we saw of Innsbruck was lovely, although we spent comparatively less time in the city. I think it would have been interesting to go to a museum here, in Tyrol, as I could feel the cultural shift in Austria as we moved from Vienna to the comparatively less urban regions, and I would have liked to get a sense of how they viewed their national identity as well. But there were still many museums ahead of us on this trip and the mountains were calling.

This was our last full day in Austria! I loved Austria – I would absolutely go back. It has the natural beauty of Switzerland but for much more reasonable prices, and so many towns and cities came up in my research that looked like they would have been fun to explore. Hopefully I can make it back at some point soon. Our last few hours in Innsbruck, though, were spent researching our next destination: Liechtenstein! And it turned out it was a lot more interesting than we’d expected.

Categories
Austria Europe

The Hills Are Alive

….with the sound of music! It is so funny to me that Austrians are generally unfamiliar with The Sound of Music. Coming to Salzburg and making a pilgrimage to the filming locations has been on my bucket list for longer than I even knew what a bucket list was. Somehow, the movie never caught on in Austria, though, so they regard the tourists who are recreating Do Re Mi on the steps with bemusement.

It was a two and a half hour train ride from Vienna, so we arrived in mid morning. After dropping our bags off at the hotel and grabbing a quick breakfast, we headed to Mirabell Gardens! It was a beautiful stroll through the park, although it might have been more pleasant if we weren’t in the midst of a massive heat wave. From there, we worked our way over to the Hohensalzburg Fortress on the top of the hill.

The fortress provided me with one of my all time funniest moments in a museum. We were in a section on military history, and it was going through various weaponry, regalia, and other details about Austria in various wars. We got to a whole room on WW1. I’m always fascinated to see how various parts of Europe reflect on WW2, and I leaned over to Sam.

“I wonder what the next room will say about their military history,” I said. And then we walked into the next room to find…. A brand new exhibit on the Middle Ages! Are you interested in the recipes they cooked? The lutes they played music on? We just skipped all of the Austrian military history after, say, 1918, and we never went back to it. It was Middle Ages for the rest of the tour. I’ve decided that’s my new favorite segue when I don’t want to talk about something.

The city managed to feel both quaint and lively. My favorite area to walk around was over by the university, which felt a little more laid back. We had lots of good food options and ended up taking a bus out towards the outskirts of town to an Indian restaurant, which was fun to see a different area outside of where the majority of tourists were congregated.

Salzburg officially wins for fanciest Foot Locker, by the way. I was stunned to see the corporate logo above the door.

Salzburg had been on my list for so long, and it didn’t disappoint! I liked Vienna, but I loved the rest of Austria, and I would absolutely go back and explore more of the countryside and the smaller towns and cities. The next morning, we boarded another train and it was off to Innsbruck!

Categories
Austria Europe

Vacation in Vienna

I have been to Austria before this summer, technically. When I visited family in Germany, we walked across the border and went to a café and had a pastry. I’ve counted it as my 7th country visited, right between Germany and Finland. But I’ve always known that I wanted to come back and explore, because Austria has a lot to offer!

From Paris, Sam and I flew to Vienna. We originally wanted to try the night train but it sold out too quickly. It was a bit of a strange time to be in Vienna – I hadn’t realized it when we’d booked, but it was meant to be the same dates that Taylor Swift was in town. At first I was glad we had found a reasonably priced hotel but worried everything would be crowded. Then, when the concert was cancelled due to the foiled terrorism threat, it morphed into a different worry. Huge shout out to the Austrian authorities for figuring that out and preventing the attack!

This isn’t my best picture but it does show one of the many Taylor Swift related discounts that the shopkeepers in Vienna offered!

It didn’t impact our trip, really. It meant a few areas were more crowded, and instead of tourists taking photos, it was sad would-be concert goers exchanging wristbands and singing in the streets. The stores were offering discounts to anyone who presented a concert ticket, usually at 22% as a tie-in to Taylor Swift. It was sobering to think that something tragic could have happened while we were there, and a little ironic for it to happen immediately after we left the massive international event that is the Olympics.

Anyway. On to Vienna! This was one of our more chill stops – most of what I wanted was to experience café culture and explore some of the neighborhoods. After so many busy day trips out of Luxembourg and the excitement of the Olympics, these were a few days to rest and enjoy being in a beautiful city before we went back to traversing through Central Europe by train and switching hotels every night.

The amount of pictures I’ve taken of ceiling domes is probably excessive but look at it!

Vienna is known for its museums – so much so that there’s actually a whole district devoted to them, called MuseumsQuartier. If I’ve learned anything from living in DC, it’s that it’s all too easy to get museum’d out, so we picked the one we were most interested in and started there – the Museum of Austrian Contemporary History, which covers their history starting in 1918. The museum was housed in the Hofburg in Heldenplatz, which was a gorgeous building!

In love with these haunting pictures of abandoned checkpoints rendered obsolete by Schengen and Free Movement

Austria has a bit of a complex relationship with its recent history, as, I suppose, any German-speaking country in Europe might. This was a theme throughout our trip. When we were buying our ticket, the woman actually asked us if we realized this museum wouldn’t have any history from before 1918, seemingly confused why we would want to go to this one. It was fascinating – Austria seems to want to have a dual narrative of WW2, in which they were both completely innocent of any actions taken by the Nazi regime and also that they were never conquered as a nation. The two ideas seem to be at odds, yet both are present throughout their telling of history.

I’ve heard travelers debate at length about whether Vienna is boring. I think there is a sense that everything functions as it should, that all its edges have been worn away and replaced by public parks and efficient transit and more cultural institutions than you could ever hope to see in a single visit, and that it makes Vienna somehow less interesting than places that are less organized.

I love this federal government building tbh

Was Vienna my favorite place we went to? No, but I liked it a lot. And if you told me I had to pick somewhere to live in Europe for a few years, Vienna would be among my top choices. There’s something very pleasant about being somewhere where things just sort of…. work. I also had an excellent time in the rest of Austria (more on this soon!) and would love to return at some point to see more.