More Christmas Markets...
Our quest to find all the Weihnachtmarkts (Christmas Markets) in Vienna continues, although I'm not sure we have enough time to find them all! Unfortunately, Samantha has had classes much of the past 3 days in Vienna, so I was on my own some of the time and with her some of the time.
So, on Monday, I walked down Mariahilferstrasse to the Museum Quarter to visit the Leopold Museum. It's a long walk - took about 45 minutes - but it gave me a chance to see more of Vienna. So many of the shops along Mariahilferstrasse were the sames ones we shopped at in Frankfurt, it brought a smile to my face. However, there were so many shoe stores that it made me wonder if the Viennese are obsessed with shoes. :) And, of course, along the way, I found another little Christmas market at a small church, which I think might be St. Josef's.
I enjoyed some of the art at the Leopold, which boasts about their collections of Schiele and Klimt paintings - both famous Viennese artists. For all the paintings in the museum, though, I definitely liked the landscapes more than anything involving people, especially Schiele's landscapes. I had lunch at the Leopold mostly because, after the walk and with the time zone change, I became hungry very suddenly, After the museum, I headed out to Maria-Theresten
Platz again, where the Weihnachtmarkt is not yet finished being set up. A few of the booths are open, but mostly it’s
still under construction. I walked
around the area and then took the U-Bahn back to Westbanhof, where I bought
some toiletries, water bottles, and a laungenstange (pretzel bread roll) before
going back to my hotel. I tried to nap
but couldn’t really sleep, so I read a bit and then took the U-Bahn to Krieau,
the area near Samantha’s school to meet her.
We went to Praterstern, where there was
another Winter Market open in an amusement area, where there is a ferris wheel
called the Wiener Riesenrad (Viennese giant wheel), various other rides, and
Madame Tussauds’s Wax Museum. We bought
a kartoffelpuffer – a potato pancake – because we were hoping to find some as
good as those we got in Germany. We
learned that, in Austria, they are not served with applesauce or sour cream and
are more like hash browns. Tasty but
disappointing. There were a couple of big Coca-Cola displays, so as a good Emory girl, Samantha posed with them.
We wandered the market,
shopped in the souvenir shops and then headed back to Mariahilferstrasse to the
small Weihnachtmarkt I had seen earlier in the day. Here we ordered a hot apple cider which
smelled delicious but tasted like straight rum.
Samantha discreetly poured it into a trash can, but at least she got the
pretty mug like the ones in which we’d been served our hot chocolates in the
Ratskeller. We also saw an incredible
gingerbread house and some pretty Christmas ornaments.
Samantha had a morning
class on Tuesday, so I was supposed to meet her at the Stephansplatz stop on
the U-Bahn at 11:15 so we could meet up, do lunch at one of the two cafes
recommended by teachers at York, and then go to see Time Travel Vienna, a “5D”
exhibit of the history of Vienna. I left
early so I could go to see St. Stephan’s Church in Stephansplatz, as it is one
of the most famous in Vienna.
Again, the morning was
foggy and cold, but I came up from the U-Bahn in Stephansplatz and saw the
beautiful cathedral and the little Weihnachtsmarkt next to it in the
square. I went in the church and looked
around, but they weren’t offering an English tour until Saturday. I bought some postcards and then walked
around the outside of the church and nosed about the little shops. From there, I decided to find out where the
cafes and Time Travel Vienna were before meeting Samantha.
After checking a map, I
turned and walked down The Graben, a major pedestrian area and central shopping
area of Vienna’s first district. This is
a beautiful area of town – large holiday decorations, the Plague statue, ornate
buildings and St. Peter’s Church, which apparently forms a triangle of sorts
with St. Stephans and the Plague Statue.
It was a lovely area and quite festive – I saw two punch shacks set up
for the holidays next to each other – one by the Lions Club International and
one by the Kiwanas.
I found the two little
cafes right across the street from each other on a little street off of the
Graben. Also, Time Travel Vienna is off
another little street a couple blocks up, so I bought us our tickets. The English tour is only offered at 40
minutes past the hour. I went back and
met Samantha and we checked out the two cafes, but realized neither was really
right for us. One was truly just a café,
not a lunch place, and the other, while famous for open “spread” sandwiches,
did not appeal to the allergic people that we are. So, we went to a little Italian place next
door and had a delicious lunch. We
headed out along the Graben and did some window shopping before our tour.
Time Travel Vienna is
interesting and a nice, brief introduction to the history of Vienna. It covered some ancient history, the music
history of Vienna, the Hapsburg Dynasty, and Vienna through the two world wars
– all in a fairly short time by use of interactive films (in Disney-style
shaking seats), animatronics, and moving stages. It’s a little corny, but I found it amusing.
After our tour, we headed back out to the Graben and
walked over to the Weihnachtsmarkt outside of St. Stephans. Very pretty area. We took the U-Bahn back to the Rathaus to go
to that Market, though, because Samantha was freezing and wanted to buy a hat
at one of the booths like where I had bought one at the Rathaus. So, we went back to the market, bought her a
nice, warm hat, had some chocolate-covered bananas and strawberries, and
wandered around. I had bought one at the Rathaus. So, we went back to the market, bought her a
nice, warm hat, had some chocolate-covered bananas and strawberries, and
wandered around.
Eventually, we had to
head over to the area where the Volksopera House is, where we will be attending
The Merry Widow on Thursday night. Samantha
was meeting there with a man who apparently works at the U.S. Consulate, even
though he is Austrian, at the Café Weimar.
She had to interview this man about the charity he works with that
provides relief to Uganda. Café Weimar
was a traditional Viennese Coffee House, where people meet and talk and
sip a coffee, or in our case, a hot chocolate, (which always is served with a
glass of tap water) and stay for hours.
Her interview was very successful and interesting. She is meeting with her group on Wednesday to
finalize their presentation and report on this project.After our tour, we headed
back out to the Graben and walked over to the Weihnachtsmarkt outside of St.
Stephans. Very pretty area. We took the U-Bahn back to the Rathaus to go
to that Market, though, because Samantha was freezing and wanted to buy a hat
at one of the booths like wher
After the interview, we
took the U-Bahn back to Westbahnhof and picked up some dinner in the food court
and grocery store there. We took it back
to my hotel room and watched some more American TV before I started to nod
off. I was expecting to stay awake
longer, as I have been sleeping longer, but I was walking around Vienna all day
and must have gotten tired out.
Hopefully I’ll be able to stay awake long enough to enjoy the Merry Widow
on Thursday.
On Wednesday, Samantha had class and meetings from 1-8 p.m., so we only had the morning together. First thing, we went back to Heldenplatz to see the Morning Exercise of the Lipizzsaners at the
Spanish Riding School of Vienna. We had
a nice hot chocolate in the café there and then watched the Morning Exercise
for about an hour and a half. We got to
see three groups of riders put the horses through their paces and it was
fascinating to see the footwork of these horses. They don’t allow pictures – I’m sure it could
frighten the horses – so, unfortunately, I have no pictures, but it was
fascinating to watch.
After we left the
Riding School, we had lunch in a nice little café right on Michaelerplatz, which was good
because she wouldn't have any other breaks, so that was her meal for the day. We parted in the U-Bahn, as she went off to
meet her group to finish their presentation before class and I went to
Belvedere Palace. The weather was
a little warmer in the morning, so we were too warm with our hats, gloves and
scarves, but rainy in the afternoon, so cooler again. Unfortunately, it is supposed to rain most of
the rest of the week, so it doesn’t look like the pictures will be very good.
I took the U-Bahn and then
walked a few blocks through a very run-down area on the way to Belvedere
Palace. The grounds of the Belvedere are
beautiful and must be stunning when the gardens are in bloom. Of course, there is another Weihnachmart
being set up in front of Upper Belvedere, part of the same market that is being
set up in Maria-Theresten Platz and other places around
the city. I don’t think these markets
are opening until this weekend, but there was a lot of activity as the booths
were being set up.
The Upper Belvedere houses an art museum with
the most famous painting in Vienna, the Kiss by Stimt. It’s interesting and the iridescence of the
gold in the painting is fascinating, but Stimt doesn’t really do it for me. There were some impressionist pieces, including
some by Monet, Renoir, Manet, and Degas, so, of course, that was my favorite
part of the museum, beyond the grounds and the architecture of the buildings
themselves. I met 5 girls from a small
university in Arkansas who are doing a semester abroad in Florence and were
touring the area this weekend. They had
been to Berlin and Munich and were in Vienna for only about a day before moving
on to Prague, I think. A lot of study abroad
students are sightseeing in Europe every weekend, from the sounds of it. I never did a semester abroad, but it sounds
like it would have been fun.
On my way back to the U-Bahn after Belvedere,
I stopped at St. Elizabeth’s Church, just a pretty little church in the
neighborhood. Then I hopped back on the
train and headed to Westbahnhof, where I picked up some bread, water, cheddar
cheese, and train schedules for Salzburg and Budapest. I can’t believe we only have tomorrow left
before Elizabeth arrives and we fly to Bologna.
It’s going to be so much fun!
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