Saturday I spent the day in Vienna Austria, not one of the things that I had originally planned on doing during my trip. One of the teachers at the school, Pam, invited me to go along with her and two of the student teachers to go to Vienna for the day. I was absolutely thrilled to go!!! I was so excited to see another city that I haven't ever been too, and getting a chance to use my German sounded absolutely fabulous!
Vienna is about 3 hours by train away from Budapest, so this meant to catch our 6 o'clock train we had to get on the road about 5. Pretty early, even for an education major...Thankfully Brad offered to drive us to the train station, otherwise we would have been on the road at 4!!! So, early in the darkness of the morning we ventured out for our day. After a 3 hour train ride, a few minutes of sleep and 2 new stamps in our passports, we made it to Vienna.
After we first arrived we had to purchase return tickets for the train, and then we also got tickets for public transportation. I had been reading a guide book for probably an hour on the train so I felt like I had a pretty good idea of how public worked, and what we might want to see during our day.
The first stop on our trip was the Schonnbrunn Palace which was breathtaking. I cannot even imagine living in a palace, especially this one. It has acres of gardens, a zoo, incredible flowers and just walking the grounds made you feel like royalty. We hopped back on the U-bahn (Subway) to get back into the city. We stopped at Karlskirche (Karl's church) next, and of all the churches we saw yesterday, this one was my favorite. It was equally breathtaking, and the years of work that must have gone into this church amazes me.
We went further downtown into the Fussgangerzone, or the pedestrian zone. After our morning of walking we were excited to take a stop at Starbucks. Pam really wanted to stop here, and it was a nice break after a little snowy/icy rain. We had some lunch, and some coffee while we figured out our next plan of action. We decided to split at this point, and Pam and I did some shopping while the guys went to a museum. After shopping we had the biggest bummer of the day; Pam realized she had forgotten her backpack at Starbucks, and after much looking we realized that it was not going to be found. (My German got a lot of practice during this adventure...) Thankfully she didn't have anything crucially important in it, no money, ID or her passport, but her curriculum for her classes, an ungraded test one of here classes had taken, and some books were in it, so that is a bummer.
We spent the majority of the afternoon walking the cobblestone streets, listening to street musicians, shopping and sightseeing. I think the most interesting thing we saw in the afternoon was the Judenplatz, which is in the former Jewish Ghetto of Vienna and is a solemn rememberance to what happened only 60 years ago.
Our day of walking was beginning to take a toll on our energy supply, so for dinner we went totally Austrian and had Schnitzel. We ate dinner at a restaurant called Figlmuller and the kid portions of schnitzel we ordered was falling of the edges of our dinner plates, I'm glad I didn't order the full portion!!! Stuffed and warm we ventured back to the train station and hopped on our train to return!
Overall I loved every minute of my day in Vienna, and I was so happy that I got to take this day trip. Being able to read the signs and speak to people was so fun; a great confidence booster with my German. I am so thankful for all your prayers, and as I wrap up here this week here are a few specific things you can pray for:
- Good closure at the school and with the students
- Safety in travel home and good weather for traveling
- Great re-entry into the states and school (my spring semester starts January