Our trip to Braunau has come to an end, and
I must say that it has been beautiful and memorable to the last minute. I don’t
have Trish’ talent to make a lovely recount of a
trip – as that has been made quite obvious in my last two posts... and
any other posts I’ve ever written thought a travel – so I’ll refrain the most
dignified way from even attempting again to do so. We’ve got a lot of private
jokes and the sour realization from my side that I can’t play jokes on Phil:
he’s immune to my sense of kidding. I guess he compensates for Trish’
outstanding reactions to kidding.
Today we checked out of our lovely hotel,
where to my disheartening amazement I found out once again that generic,
hotel shampoo/shower bath is much better for my hair than the overly expensive
shampoos I hunt down often at exclusive stores. My question now
is, how can I get some of that stuff for myself? In the worse of cases these
supplies can only be bought at stores that cater only to hotels. This gets me
thinking: “maybe
I should get in contact with the owners of my favorite hotel in Vienna and
explain my situation and ask them to help me get my hands on some of the stuff.
I’m a frequent customer with them; sure they would like to help me, right?”
Still on hair, today we saw only one of the
brunet kids of Austria, which according to the local source, is the 80% of the
population. The rest of the kids were blond, but that still doesn’t explain the
over exposition in the media and advertisement, of ginger kids. Ginger kids
seem to be the local Children of the Corn… and there are plenty of cornfields
around Braunau! It’s so weird… I still think of corn as an American product,
that’s absolutely native. and it’s quite weird to see huge tables of land
packed with corn around little, typically countryside Austrian houses, and
knowing that this people don’t do tortillas, pozole, tamales or even chicha
from it. Really, what do they do with so much corn? Biofuel?
Me - being the economist I am - suddenly think that there might be a weird "international trade" crap going on, like it takes less units of wool to produce a unit of corn in Austria than in Mexico, or something like that... but still, really, if corn isn't a main staple - or at least a visibly main staple of Austria, why would they bother growing it? (Hazards of reading economical magazines)
We walked around in a town that was dead
because it was Sunday and nothing was open. Nothing. The whole idea that you’ll
have to drive to a gas station in the middle of the day to get a carton of milk
was bewildering. I guess it gives you sense of peace and allows your body to
really rest – since you can’t run errands or do any of the things that you’d
normally do on the weekend – but come on! What if I’d like to spend my weekend
getting a haircut or having a professional facial, or just at the mall window
shopping? Nope, the quiet, and truly lovely town becomes a veritable ghost city
on Sunday. I still wouldn’t mind living there, truth to be told, provided that
I get impeccable access to the internet or a car that can take me to the next
living civilization.
Braunau is a quite beautiful location,
peaceful, artistic, historically rich, and aesthetically breathe taking, but
please don’t go there! J Well, you my very few readers can go there as long as you swear
eternal secrecy: I’d hate to have it crowded with tourists. (Though that might inspire the population of the
town to translate some of their stuff to English, so I can understand them
too.)
Our last touristic location was Salzburg
itself, where we went to a museum village, which was really exciting with the
traditional clothes and old fashioned houses and equipments, traditional crafts
and a beer garden where we learned about the rejected, and most delicious
sausage ever. We’ve got so comfortable around each other that we were eating
from each other’s plates, like a group of laid back college students. It was so
awesome!
We are on our way home now, with a heart
filled with warmth, good memories and brand new friends, and stronger
penpallship. If it will come to happen, we will Trish and Phil will be our
guests in Budapest. I’ll prepare, so I’ll try to match their superb hosting
skills, but if that doesn’t work, at least they’ll leave Budapest knowing as
many pubs as it would otherwise be not possible. It is needless to say, that
they are – of course – warmly welcomed to visit Costa Rica whenever they want
to. :-D There are plenty more of pubs to visit, and certainly many more
beaches.
Gathering up my thoughts about this trip, I've come to experiment again, that meeting your penpals shouldn't be something you should be afraid of. If anything, a meeting can pepper up an already smoothly working penpalling relationship. I can imagine my letters to Trish now, full of comments and common references to these days and the shared experiences. It will be different now to talk about food, since we have shared meals together, and her praising of Phil's cooking skills will bear with an extra weight, since now we know that he's an Iron Chef living incognito in Sleepy Town, Dreamy Austria.
Indeed you may not be able to arrange a meeting with all of your penpals, with time and money getting in the way, but if you can, pack up your camping gear and meet them! Penpallig IS, after all, about reaching out for friends and getting together to share bits and snipets of our lives, so, if you want their letters in your life, why wouldn't you want THEM also in it?
2 comments:
Bah, don’t make yourself worse than you are. Your travelogues are really interesting to read, even for a person who was with you, I enjoyed it and loved to learn about your opinions about everything :D
Phil’s humor is … if not not-existant … pretty… let’s say it’s a matter of language probably. Hmm, I guess he was with his future new car all the time rather than with us. I want to apologize for that. Oh I just hope he’ll finally make a decision by Friday.
I do collect those tiny shampoo and shower gel bottles for decoration matters. I hardly ever use them, except for short day trips to a campsite or something so I don’t have to pack so much. However, I didn’t know you were so into them. I’ll probably do some housecleaning and get rid of stuff I don’t need, so who knows. In case I suddenly decide that the shelf in which I keep them can be used otherwise, I’ll take them to Budapest with me. (btw, your hair is weird, if it prefers that kind of product)
Hmm I don’t know what we do with all the corn, maybe produce starch? Food for animals? I don’t think we really grow plants for fuel in Austria, there is too much population… we need the fields we have for other stuff I guess. (remember, like 50% of the country is mountains where you can’t grow a lot)
Ahh, you know from that double page in my Book of Ideas that I would love to visit Costa Rica one day. Our travel plans for 2013 are already made though since our friends in the states are getting married and we’ll extend that stay by renting a house at the beach somewhere in Florida with Alex and Veronica (our friends with whom we went to Italy)…
You know, my fear of meeting friends from abroad almost vanished now. Well, if it was someone else, and you know who I am talking about, I’d rather say I am busy and have no time, but all the others (and also those I’ve already seen) are most welcome anytime. :D It’s a unique and all the same sort of weird experience one shouldn’t miss!
Thank you for your nice words! Oh, and worry not about Phil! He's nice and we liked him very much. I mean, what's not to like about someone who gets bonkers about bagels? He's plain AWESOME!
I guess, like my pictures, my "travelogues" are more about the PEOPLE in them, than the geography. The geography is important, but the people in them... that gets me going! (and the stores!!!)
Post a Comment