Budapest:
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The bus ride from Krakow to Budapest could have
passed for Route 29 in Virginia for part of the way – trees changing colors,
fog in the rolling hills, billboards now and then, clusters of homes in town
and farmhouses outside. We passed
through Slovakia and I could be fooling myself but I think I could spot a
difference in the writing on signs between Polish and Slovakian, without
understanding 99% of either. The road
there was narrower and more mountainous but never felt sketchy.
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First, a nod to Tibor Sarkaday, my soccer coach,
Steve’s dad, and a onetime Freedom Fighter in 1956, the attempt to overthrow
the communist regime. To recognize the
anniversary the Parliament was flying the Hungarian flag with a hole the middle
in it for where they cut out the hammer and sickle, which is what the
revolutionaries flew for a few weeks until Soviet tanks, ext. crushed the
movement. The new flag has no need for a
hole because it’s simply red, white, and green.
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I get the feeling some of the political tension in
Hungary is based on the simmering desire to restore the lands taken from
Hungary after WWI. This is partly based
on the light propaganda mixed into the Museum of Terror, ostensibly about Nazi
and Soviet occupation but was focused 99% on “communists were bad” with slight
mention of Hungary’s authoritarian regime in the 30’s and 40’s that partnered
with the Nazis. The EU has said Prime
Minister Orban has crossed the line between democracy and hybrid democracy-authoritarian. One of his first steps was to control the
media.
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A shout out to Sean and especially Evelin for
insider tips. Budapest is clearly foodie
heaven.
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We took a walking tour with Petra and 30 others,
whom she called her “students.” Karen
chatted with her 1:1 a lot during the walking bits. Not as focused on history, more an overall intro
to the city. Worth it and she was
interesting and entertaining, but we still wish we’d gotten a history lesson.
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We walked a lot both days, covering the Buda
side (we stayed on the Pest side of the Danube) including a climb to the
Citadel overlooking the city.
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Karen and I toured Margaret Island, which is
about a kilometer long and has play areas, lots of walking paths, and great
views east and west. The next day we walked
Varosliget Park, another huge space with museums, playgrounds, and exercise
equipment, all being well-used on a Friday around noon. Hungary is second in the world for Olympic
medals per capita - could be unrelated but having ping pong tables and small
soccer spaces, etc., couldn’t hurt their chances.
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We also did a one-hour cruise on the Duna
(Danube) river.
·
Heard lots of English around us, seemingly
mostly as the universal second language.
·
We left Hungary saying it’s one more place we
would love to spend more time in.
Timisoara:
·
Brian from Sitecore recommended trying
Romania. We’re glad he did. I was cautious after knowing that’s where
Bobbie had her camera stolen years ago and after reading about how sketchy the
trains are. We didn’t make it to Brian’s
hometown of Sibiu but went to Timisoara, based mostly on train and bus options. The population is almost 500,000 but the old
center, dating from 18th century.
The city started as a fort in the 13th century, controlling
the trade route between Vienna and Constantinople.
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The highlight was a walking tour by Vlad. Karen and I were the only ones who signed up
for the Sunday morning slot, so it ended up being a private tour. Although it was listed as 2 ½ hours we took 4
hours. I’m not sure if it was our 100
questions. Vlad was 3 during the Romania
Revolution in December 1989, which started there in Timisoara as a small
protest about the government ordered a Hungarian (based on ethnicity, not
nationality) priest to leave town and it grew from there. Vlad remembers hearing machine guns firing
(government) and crawling on the floor with his mother and siblings to avoid
being hit by stray bullets. His father
was at the protests. Afterwards I read
more about how it spread to Bucharest after Ceausescu fumbled a public speech
at a government rally designed to bolster support, but the TV broadcast caught
enough boos to show he misread the crowd and the state TV suddenly witched to another
program. A few more things then, he and
his wife were executed by on Christmas Day less than 2 weeks later.
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Vlad also talked about there were 3 channels on
TV in the 80’s: State news, government propaganda/movies,
and Dallas, to show how decadent Western life was.
·
We took a boat “tour” along the Bega Canal,
which is actually just the city’s tram on the water and road bikes slowly along
another section of the canal. We lucked
out with still more weather in the 60’s so we walked a lot.
·
The city is designated as the 2023 EU cultural
city so there are a lot of buildings under renovation. Our sense is of everywhere we’ve been this is
the place that will see the biggest growth in property values over the next decade. Vlad said a lot of the workers fixing the
concrete are Vietnamese. And he said
very few Ukrainian refugees want to be in Romania.
·
Romanian is much closer to Spanish and much
easier for me than Polish or Hungarian.
But I’m sure with my accent I said the equivalent of “thunk few” a lot
of times.
·
The Romanian countryside reminds me of Mexico’s.
Misc:
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The US is exporting our fashion brands, at
least. It’s common to see a group of
school kids on a field trip where one in four is wearing a name of a US
location or team or brand. In Scotland I
talked to a couple in their 30’s where one had a Yankees hat and the other a
Red Sox one. They had no idea what I was
talking about when I mentioned the rivalry.
Makes me think the girl in the New Jersey sweatshirt might not know that
is a state. Most Americans don’t know
Jersey (the original, not the New) is an island but they don’t wear shirts with
that name on it. BTW, I know it myself
only because a project I once worked sent a document there for signature.
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The lack of liability laws means there are a lot
of poles sticking up in random spots on the sidewalks and
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Hungary and Romania have a clear hierarchy, with
traffic-light and crosswalk following pedestrians at the top, followed by
patient bikers.
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I think I could write Communist designer handbook: Use a lot of concrete, flat right angles, and
not a lot of windows. Plus find a way to
use less or cheaper concrete so that in 50 years every wall and balcony looks
suspect. Don’t worry if it’s next to a
beautiful 19th century building.
·
About half the music I’m hearing is modern American
pop.
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Halloween isn’t a big deal, even in Dracula’s
home country.
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On our next European tour we hope to hit more
smaller, less-touristy cities and to move hotels less frequently but said this
is a good intro to a lot of places.
Great photos John! Keep them coming! So much fun following you and Karen! Ed
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