Wining and dining on Eastern European waters
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Connie Reinglass
If it’s good wine, beer, food, desserts, history, music and scenery
that you are looking for, a trip we took to Central and Eastern
Europe might be for you.
We flew to Budapest, Hungary, spent two days and then embarked on
a beautiful new five-star river cruise ship, the Amadeus Symphony. We
traveled north on the Danube River through five different countries:
Hungary, Slovakia, Austria, Germany and the Czech Republic.
We were wined and dined every evening and during the day, after a
full buffet breakfast, were whisked off on tours to Budapest, the
Slovak capital, Bratislava, Salzburg and Vienna in Austria and
Regensburg and Nuremberg in Germany, as well as other small charming
country villages in between. We ended our trip with three extra
nights in Prague, the capital city of the Czech Republic.
In Budapest, we were able to stay directly adjacent to the
500-year-old Matthias Church and the famous Fishermen’s Bastion. From
our vantage point, we had a glass of the local Tokaji Aszu wine. The
view was so charming, overlooking the Danube from the Buda side to
the Pest side, that I immediately fell in love with the area, and I
don’t think it was because of the wine.
In Austria, we were able to see some of the areas where the “Sound
of Music” had been filmed, along with the church used in the wedding
scene and the absolutely stunning Mirabell Gardens.
Austria is a fabulous country, and Vienna is definitely the City
of Music. We were able to enjoy a concert and ballet at the Palais
Liechtenstein with music from Strauss and Mozart. We were also right
in the midst of a pension strike in Vienna, but I have never seen a
more orderly and polite strike. The cable cars and the city buses
were not in service, but our privately owned buses were able to get
us through the city to see the sites and attend the concert. The
traffic was backed up, but none of the drivers were crossing over
onto the cable car tracks to pass other cars or even honking. I can’t
even image that happening here.
This trip had a little something for everyone in our immediate
group of 25 from Southern California. I think the men had the best
time watching the mechanics of the ship maneuvering through the 16
locks of the Main-Danube Canal. Passing through the locks is a
fascinating feat and it entertained the entire ship.
The beer was great, and we got a royal tour and tasting at the
Pilsner-Urquell Brewery, in Pilsen, just outside of Prague. We took
part in a wine tasting in the Faust Wine Cellar, a former cellar of
Dominican monks, in the Budapest Hilton and in a cellar in the quaint
little town of Durnstein.
Even the abbeys were exquisite. The Melk Abbey was astonishing.
There were several of us that just sat speechless in the cathedral,
absorbing its magnificence. It is one of Europe’s largest baroque
monasteries. We were also able to view the Weltenberg Abbey after a
leisurely cruise through the Danube Gorge.
Prague is definitely a city worth visiting. We would have liked to
spend another two or three days just exploring the history and
museums. It is a very diverse city, and I would want to venture out
into the countryside next time.
We all gathered around and waited for the world famous
astronomical clock, in the city square, to chime at the hour, and I
had the feeling as if we were waiting for the ball to drop on New
Year’s Eve. It’s quite a mechanical wonder watching the apostles
parade around at the stroke of the hour. We then went to the top of
the tower housing the clock and absorbed the entire city of Prague,
which is breathtaking. While in Prague, the women of course had to go
shopping for garnets and Bohemian crystal, which is the specialty in
the Czech Republic.
If you have never been to Europe -- or even if you have -- a river
cruise is the way to go. Your hotel travels with you. It is so
relaxing, and you really get caught up in the atmosphere and are
intoxicated with the scenery, even without beer or wine. We have been
back a few weeks now, and I still have vacation head. I would go back
in a heartbeat.
During our cruise, we celebrated our anniversary. I whispered to
my husband during the fabulous sparkler-laden layer cake that paraded
out, “How are we ever going to top this?”
* CONNIE REINGLASS is a Newport Beach resident.
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