Friday, June 24, 2016

Tears for MS Treasures

We Prepare to Disembark MS Treasures

Saturday, June 25, 2016

A very sad day in our lives. We are being forced to depart from our ship.

 Disembarkation was without chaos.  Bags out at the civilized hour of 8:30 am, to be trucked directly to the Ritz-Carlton in Budapest.

We ate our last spinach/mushroom omelet in the Compass Rose dining room, said farewell to those continuing on to Amsterdam, and boarded yet another bus for a city tour of the Pest side.

It's still hot and humid, very very of both.  Thankfully the coaches have a/c!

We visited the incredible Parliament building, walking up and down many, many stairs.  



Every surface is decorated.  The main domed area honors all the kings of Hungary and displays the crown jewels in a seismic-protected case. 




  

















Back on the bus and down the Budapest version of Paris' Champs Elysses -- Andrassy Boulevard.  Here are incredible homes, upscale shopping, trees to shade everything, and views that kept us turning our heads from "on the left side" and "on the right side."

At the end of Andrassy Blvd, the Hero's Square, honoring Hungary's Hero's. Columns and statues amazingly, all in correct proportion. 



Obviously Hero's Square is a gathering place. We had the honor of getting to see an exhibit of "Stalin" Cars. Cars developed during Communist times that were not good to drive or to look at, and barely able to navigate.




Finally on to St. Stephen's Basilica/Cathedral.  Speechless!  The only Roman Catholic altar in the world that has a statue of the king/saint on the high altar. 



This case holds the hand of St Stephens.




Back on the bus to an indoor market.  This huge building (there are 3-4 of them in greater Budapest) has 3 floors of stalls.  From the vendors you can buy trashy trinkets, t-shirts, embroidered everything, food, beer, etc.  The ground floor is one large grocery story -- stalls with sausages, meats, veggies, sweets, paprika, etc.





By this time we've been on/off the (damn) bus too many times.  We've been adequately entertained and educated; we've seen and heard and walked and learned to stay out of the bike lanes that are well-marked on every major sidewalk.


It's now time for the hotel -- The Ritz Carlton.  




Nice hotels are the traveler's home/haven and we take advantage of the peace and quiet and shower and update on the US Stock Market and the Brexit stories. A quiet dinner en suite' from our Market shopping:Pate', and the famous Cream Cake.





Life is good -- even if it continues to be hot and humid. Thunderstorms predicted for tomorrow...ah for a good night's sleep.....

Thursday, June 23, 2016

Hungary in Hungary? Or Is It the Wine?

Closing in on the End of This Adventure






Here it is June 24, another 90+ degree day and we have arrived in Hungary which will be our last country on the Danube River Cruise. We were disappointed in never seeing the Blue Danube nor the Green Danube. However, what we did have was a marvelous ride up the Danube, loving every moment of the trip. AND we cannot wait for the next part of our trip, on land!!!!

We have a very busy day today and a long river ride again overnight heading toward Budapest where we will spend a few days. We have arrived in Mohacs, Hungary as our port. We will be busing up to Pecs, Hungary where we will begin our tour.

This is the first country where we have had face to face Customs and Immigration issues. Each person had to present our passports, get them stamped and then our ship had to be moved to another location for disembarking and on to our day...thus a large delay. This cut our visit to Pecs down to a quick walk through the lovely little town, watched a graduation, visited the church, walked through the town and headed off to the winery.




The Cathedral of St Peter and St Paul in Pecs




 The grill of locks making commitment by lovers for lasting romance.


At the Polgar Winery







Crumb Cakes in Croatia

Sailing all night to exit Serbia heading for Croatia...for the rest of the story!




 Vukovar, Croatia forms Croatia's eastern border with Serbia. During the Yugoslav wars in the early 1990s, heavy fighting in the surrounding region resulted in the deaths of thousands and widespread destruction. Vukovar remains an extremely devastated place. As we walked we did not see so much destruction as we expected and certainly not what we saw in Belgrade. It appears that they have been rebuilding rapidly. The economy is is poor with 19% unemployment.




We had a short walk through the town of Vukovar.








This building houses the organization responsible for warning Vukovar
when the Danube will be overflowing its banks.
Last time the river rose, this building was under water.
Irony to the max.

After the walk, a ride to a small village with our guide telling us his story of the "Homeland Way" of the 90's. We walked to a small home and were entertained with cakes, not exactly the cream cakes but delicious chocolate cake and lemon cakes. We had our first try of the famous plum brandy that seems so popular in the region.









Beth and Becky had a brief moment as Rulers of the Ship -- visiting the bridge. 
Met Captain and 1st Officer



It's good luck to have a stork nest on your home.







With the Strawberry Moon shining, Some big event during the night.  Bumpy ride.  Flashing lights.  Other boats and barges near by.  Still no info about that.  Hope to update later.  Stay tuned.








Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Something other than US politics



CNN International/BBC Keep us well informed!


While river cruising we are able to watch CNN and BBC.  We're very interested in today's vote (June 23) in Britain with respect to their stay/leave the European Union.  Analysis is all engaging and broadens our understanding. Holy Cow, the Brits voted to leave the EU! We cannot believe this....

We're watching our own House of Representatives behave (mis-behave?) while "discussing" gun control.


We see sports and so the football/soccer tournament is fascinating, especially the hair-do's!



How we get opinions about each country:

Each of our staff on board our ship is from a different region:  Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria, Poland and other nearby countries. As we pass thru the Balkans the cruise folks offer us speakers who share history and politics of the area.  We've heard from the Serbian speaker who explained the Ottoman surge, the fall of Austria-Hungary, the rise of Yugoslavia, the Balkan wars, and finally today's relative peace.

Today, June 23, we will hear the Croatian side.


This was before!






















For the history buffs (who will surely find reasons to correct the following) --
Yugoslavia was born at the end of WW2 as the merging of 6 nations.  


  • Each nation/region had a president, with Tito rising as the first above equals.  We've heard the Orwell quote quite often:  "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others."
  • Then came the break-up.  Lots of claiming and reclaiming territories.  "this really belonged to us and we're taking it back."
  • Ethnic relocation is a euphemism for genocide.
  • Each of our staff on board our ship is very polite and circumspect in their comments and speak generously and forgivingly about others.  


Bottom line:  this area is about ethnic racism and territorial ownership.  These attitudes have prevailed for centuries.  These attitudes have acted out in genocides beyond the realm of even Messers Hitler and Stalin.  These attitudes continue to be present today.


My personal opinion:  it's like the weather in Washington.  If it's not raining just wait.  If it's raining you know it.  Apply this maxim to the violence and chaos. So today this is The Balkans,i.e.. former Yugoslavia


Boiling Belgrade

 You Ain't Felt Nothing if YOU Haven't Felt the Boil in Belgrade, Serbia



On June 22, 2016 we suffer the heat.  So hot.  So humid.  We are grateful -- so grateful -- for buses with a/c and a ship that is cool and welcoming.AND we were told that the heat will get worse over the summer. Get us OUT!!

Great presentation by historian this morning on the glories of Serbia and t's leadership of the Slav countries, before departing by coach to Belgrade city and attractions. He told us that they had 20% unemployment. We visited the famous Kalemegdan fortress that is now a serene park with a viewpoint unparalleled:  from this vantage point we could see the confluence of three rivers. 





 The view also showed us visually the strategic importance of Belgrade as "the crossroads of Europe." The city is still struggling and though they have great plans, they don't have a strong enough economy to pull it off. And no such thing as traffic control!




a bombed out building waiting for repairs


bullet holes all along the wall


traffic nightmare

Back on the bus to see the Church of St. Sava.  Magnificent in Byzantine style, tho church is still under construction after more than 100 years.  Funds to build the church come from Serbs all over the globe.  The church's exterior is complete -- marble facade, bell towers, a dome. 




 Inside the columns are wrapped in heavy plastic, the center of the floor is incomplete, and looking up into the dome we could see the equivalent of construction scaffolding.  "Should be finished in another 20-25 years," said the guide.

One more bus ride to Tito memorial.  This is a grand park with many pieces of sculpture, most given as gifts to Josef Tito Broz, president of 6 countries brought together as Yugoslavia at the end of WWII.  THe memorial building is well-maintained but other areas are in sore need of some love and attention.










One of many statues of Tito

And finally a bus return to the ship, that cool haven that offers a cold beer, a fresh salad, and a nap.

For dinner we went to the Royal Palace for a marvelous tour and to have a surprise greeting with Prince Alexander and Princess Katherine. They spoke with us for over 10 minutes explaining that they live in the Palace but that the Palace is owned by the Serbian Government.   




And their modest home.
For those curious about the Royals click here.

Later we learned that ours was the first tour group they had personally greeted.  One of our group, a retired physician, had treated a first cousin of the Prince (while in Greece.)  The two men had an extended chat.




The pool house.




Palace dining room.  The Royals live on
floors 2 and 3 (to which we were not invited.)



Basement -- including large theater with 6 seats
(one for each regional president, Slovenia, Croatia, etc.)
and one extra large and separate seat for Tito




The Chapel -- alternately in use as a store room

or a chapel, depending on the occupiers
and/or visitors.


We dined at another palace in the compound:  The White Palace.

Built for someone's son and family -- lost track
of the family tree at this point in the heat.

The two most gorgeous "royals" at the dinner.