Cruising the Beautiful Danube
Time goes, the river flows
Vienna seems long ago. While still eye-catching church spires, old forts, and quaint towns along the river ignite 2 (photo) shots instead of 10 of similar genre earlier on the trip. Forests and rolling hills give texture to the flat lands of a few days ago. Smart engineering of concrete slabs screwed into rock walls with iron spouts spaced in the slabs, drain pent up water in rainy times. The low end of gullies have fixed concrete or stone drains to ensure natural water flows get to the river without spreading out and causing uncontrolled erosion. How come we don’t do that?
The river is cleaner the further upstream we travel. Less fishermen compared to Romania-Bulgaria-Serbia. Nicer homes, landscapes, and buildings on the Austrian shore. The cruise has slowed some due to many locks and the time it takes to get through them.
I forgot to mention the Iron Gate region before Budapest. All the literature point to the Iron Gate (natural canyon/rock wall) as one of the most beautiful on the Danube . . . and it is. Look it up on the Internet or wait for pics from our camera.
Soon enough, we glimpse the famous abbey in Melk, Austria through the riverbank trees. A slough just before landing is when the abbey fully fills our eyeballs. Ohhhh, my! OK, go to Melk Abbey on the Internet for a look. This was one of our favorite stops. The abbey is strategically situated above the town and is fortress-like with its steep walls on the cliff. Everything about the place is centuries old. The sanctuary is stunningly captivating. Kink, Kim, n me count this as one of our most favored visits. Go find it for a look.
While Kim joined our tour group, Kink n I were told that a path (as opposed to steps) was just to the right of the parking area. We went to find it to join up with our group. Ahem, . . . the path was like 40 degrees, 50 yds down and cobblestoned; of course!! Kink’s eyes got big and he said, “I’ll stay on the bus.” I said, “Hang on.” I wheeled him around backwards and proceeded down the decline with my boots smoking (like brakes smoking . . . get it?). Ha! Hot dang, we made it and enjoyed the abbey. Kink had been here several years ago with Bobby Masuda and never thought he’d see the abbey again. The tour itself was spectacular.
But wait, there’s more! Getting support staff to the elevator . . . yonder . . . secret key and stuff takes time. Lots of time. So instead of continuing down into the village at the end of the walk-talk tour as we’d plan, Kink n I have only one way to get on the bus. UP that same (now) incline. Sheeeesh! This time Kink is adamant there is no way to get up and he’s reading me the riot act. A guy from the cruise ship appears. Only two words are spoken, “Let’s go!”
. . . baby, it was olympian.
Passau is where the Danube, Inn, and Ilz Rivers meet. Charming small city. Lots of people did shopping here. All the qualities of people mix, buildings, history etc are here.
Then we find ourselves in the most surprising small city on the cruise. Unexpectedly, Regensburg, Germany has the bones, the European feel, the elements of some of the best stuff we’d seen all in this one place. Lots of free time here. The three of us had lunch at a street side cafĂ© and watched the world go by.
Nuremberg ends the cruise part of our trip. Tour guide said people don’t really like to talk about their history, so the walk-talk wasn’t much. Much about Hitler . . . so who cares.
Goodbye to our new friends Hugh & Virginia, Sandy & JB, Barbara & David, the Danube River, and to the Viking Neptune.
Next: Prague, Czech Republic.
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