All posts by James Collins

Brașov in Brass Monkey Weather

The locomotive steamed west from Budapest, its steel plough slicing snow and hurling it aside in swathes. Its pistons pumped an incessant pulse, while the chimney belched a constant stream of smoke that billowed from tunnels and trailed behind to hover above the sleeping countryside. Cities fell away to become dense forests topped with silvery-blue moonlight that bathed the land from the hedgerows to the star-showered horizon. The Danube glinted beneath the cloudless sky until the train left the river to its meandering and sped away on its own path. The warm throw of yellow light from the dining car brushed banks and fields, the silhouettes of the wealthy rising and falling over cuttings in distorted shapes and vanishing as the carriages pounded across bridges. Firemen shovelled, stewards served, and passengers dreamt of elegance in gently rocking bunks, unaware of the urgent night cry of the whistle. The Orient Express kept its times…

Thank you for thinking that was an extract from ‘Murder on the Orient Express.’ It was actually a transition scene from my ‘The Clearwater Inheritance,’ and the full section takes us from Budapest to Cornwall in one tracking shot of prose. Meanwhile, I’m taking a slower tracking shot from my bunk on the overnight train from Prague. Lying there and looking out of the window, I find us motionless by a snow-dusted platform, and we stay there for some time. I’m aware that people are outside. I can’t see them, but work is taking place somewhere, and there comes the occasional clunk of a carriage door. Eventually, the train moves away, silently at first, and then returning to the speed and rhythm that lulled me to sleep several hours ago. Then, we were in Hungary; now, we are in Romania, in the heart of the Transylvania region, and heading towards our next two-night stop.

Brașov

There was snow. Not as much as at this time in previous years, we were told, but still, there was some. Certainly more than has ever been seen on Symi. It became more apparent as the sun rose, and we passed rolling, tree-covered hills, houses dusted with icing sugar snow, wide fields and frozen rivers. The city of Brașov was the same, with the outskirts of town a collection of chillingly Communist-built housing projects, and the centre of town being a collection of all kinds of architecture, but the oldest part being a mix of medieval Saxon and Baroque. The railway station was a testament to the post war regimes throughout Eastern parts of Europe, functional but not fun, and we were approached by a secretive taxi driver before we’d left the building. This kind of touting still happens in places, and it used to happen on Symi as people disembarked from the boats. Maybe it still does. As it happened, our guy was a genuine taxi driver in a city cab, and all he was doing was jumping ahead of his colleagues (by touting inside) and offering his services for the whole day. Not those kinds of services, Mrs! Did we want a driver and a guide? He could take us to… Yeah. No. We’ve already got one booked for tomorrow.

Also booked in advance was our accommodation. Described as a hotel, I’d say it was more like the soundstage set for a remake of La Boheme. Under the eaves, it offered sloping roofs, large communal areas to share with other guests, a kitchen, comfort and warmth with a touch of luxury, and came complete with baffling coffee machine, a slightly OCD hostess, and an out-of-tune piano. It was fab. Apart from the bathroom in our room, where someone had had a thing for levels. The WC stood on a raised dais, so taking the throne really was like taking a throne, and the shower was also raised about nine inches from the ground. Climbing up and in was easy, but it was also easy to forget you were on high, making stepping out of the thing something of a gamble.

Again, it was a case of dropping bags and heading straight out for a gander. On my last visit here, I’d wanted to see inside the famous Black Church, but it had been closed. In the summer, they give organ concerts there at lunchtimes, but we weren’t so lucky in the winter, though we were able to go inside. This church has the largest mechanical working pipe organ in Romania, the notes tell me, and we admired it from a distance, as we also admired the medieval tapestries and other treasures. Originally dedicated to St Mary, the church is now named the Black Church because of a fire that destroyed most of the city in 1689. The church was blackened, and the name stuck. Interestingly, that was only 23 years after the Great Fire of London. I don’t know why that’s interesting, though. It just is.

As was the rest of the old part of town, which isn’t that big, so it’s easy to walk around. Except when it’s the Christmas period, and everyone has come in to see the market, to chill, perhaps to stay and visit relatives, or go skiing nearby. Whatever the reason for it, the place was heaving with people, and finding an eatery was often a case of either being lucky to get a table or having to wait. We were on the lucky side of things because we never had a problem finding somewhere to eat, the food was plentiful, and the local wines were spot on.

We did do one crazy thing that day. The city is surrounded by the Carpathian Mountains, and overlooking the city is Tâmpa Mountain. On the side of it, they’ve erected a massive sign showing the town’s name, a little like we have in Symi right now. (Up on the road overlooking the harbour, we have a large (ish) sign saying ‘Symi’, except smaller and lower down. Much lower down. I should try for a photo one day.) To reach the visitable summit of Tâmpa Mountain requires either a very long walk or a cable car. We took the latter, and looked down on poor souls hiking to the top in the afternoon flurries, no doubt freezing their fingers off and either getting a rush from their sport, or wishing they had never bothered.

The reward for this upward journey was the view. On the day we were there, the clouds were hanging low over the Carpathians to the east, and hiding most of the valley ahead of us, so the view was mainly of the snow-dusted town from a couple of thousand feet up. It was freezing. The wind was blowing in, lowering the already below-zero temperatures, and we didn’t stay admiring the place for long. We were soon inside the summit hotel, sipping various varieties of coffee to warm us up.

The rest of the day was about sightseeing and shopping at the local supermarket, which was reminiscent of Sotiris’ super market in Horio, but without the cats. On the way to dinner, we caught one of the local and ancient rituals being played out in the street. In the Jocul Ursului, the ‘Bear Dance’, people in heavy bear costumes dance to drums and flutes, symbolizing the death and rebirth of nature, warding off evil spirits, and bringing good luck/health for the new year. And there they were, drumming and dancing through the glittery streets on a cold December evening, making a lot of noise and causing a lot of cheer, and giving us an unusual sight to remember. We encountered another troupe at the railway station a couple of days later, but that wasn’t as magical.

Here’s a minute of noisy video.

Afterwards: Dinner in a cavern, some excellent Transylvanian wine, a chilly walk back to the Attic of Antiquities to rest, relax, and finally stop travelling. It felt like we’d been on the go since yesterday morning when we left… Where were we yesterday morning? Prague! That was it. Trams, trains, two countries, taxi, cable car, it was definitely time to put the feet up.

Tomorrow, Dracula Land. Now, today’s gallery:

Prague to Vienna to Brasov via Budapest

3 May. Bistritz.Left Munich at 8:35 P. M., on 1st May, arriving at Vienna early next morning; should have arrived at 6:46, but train was an hour late. Buda-Pesth seems a wonderful place, from the glimpse which I got of it from the train and the little I could walk through the streets. I feared to go very far from the station, as we had arrived late and would start as near the correct time as possible. The impression I had was that we were leaving the West and entering the East; the most western of splendid bridges over the Danube, which is here of noble width and depth, took us among the traditions of Turkish rule.

That’s the opening paragraph of Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula’, and, like Jonathan Harker, we are heading to Transylvania.

Saturday, December 27th. Day nine of the trip. Roughly 1,521 miles travelled so far since leaving home, and 541 miles to travel today before we reach our next destination tomorrow. First train, 10.36, arriving at Vienna 4 hours and 13 minutes later (14.49). Second train, the Datcia 347 overnight from Vienna to Brasov, with two two-man sleeping compartments, leaving at 19.08, and arriving in Brasov at 11.03 the next morning.

Let’s see how this day is going to go then…

It begins with packing and preparation. Somehow, we all work around each other in the kitchen. The masters of the coffee machine masterfully make sludge, while the tea drinkers of the group do the decent thing with Colette’s donation. Bags packed, rooms tidied, washing up done, anything edible of use goes into a bag for life, final check of all rooms, passports, tickets, money, another final check of all rooms, leave the Christmas tree, check again that we’ve not forgotten anything, and leave the penthouse to enter the chilly morning.

The thing is, we’re not leaving by the same station as we came in to, so Jenine has checked and double-checked the appropriate tram route. This is a good idea.

I once flew with Olympic from Rhodes to Athens to Berlin, there were no delays, my luggage came out first, and I was in a taxi to my hotel before you could say Freundschaftsbeziehungen. The weekend trip went well. I met up with some friends, and as they were leaving before me, they told me their easy route to the airport. This, I took the following morning, and arrived feeling very pleased with myself because I’d done it all by public transport. I wasn’t so pleased with myself when I discovered I was at the wrong airport, and had to spend the €50 I’d saved on a quick cab around the city. Hoppla! As they say in German.

The same mistake was not made on this day, as we took our tram across town, over the river, and into the more industrial and less picturesque part of the city, where, for some reason, every other building is another home for Allianz. A quick investigation of the station reveals, among its brutalist design, cracked tiles and failing concrete, a small café in which we can wait and where we can feed the teen, while the scout checks out which platform we will need, and the Master Controller checks the punctuality of the train. Here, we fuel ourselves for the hours ahead.

(Jenine has bought a replacement bobble hat in Prague.)

Soon enough, we’re on the icy platform, doing that thing where you look up and down the tracks every five seconds in case something has miraculously appeared like the Flying Dutchman from the mist, or the Flying Czech from the blue and icy air in this case, and, eventually, it does. We are at the right spot on the right platform for our carriage doors to open right in front of us (the European customer care ethos is still prevailing, for now), and on we board to find our reserved table.

This bag up there. I’ll put yours here. Will that go under your feet? Mind the hat! Whose is this? Where’s the bag for life? It died. No, here it is. Is there a loo? There will be, sit down. I can’t, there’s a bag in the way. What, no hatstand? Sorry madam. I hope this isn’t a quiet carriage. Where’s my pills?

Alan Whicker used to say, ‘Any fool can be uncomfortable, so when you are travelling, always make yourself as comfortable as possible.’

And we do. Settling into our new space, we look forward to the next four hours and thirteen minutes, and off we set.

From city to countryside, over plains, through stations busy and not, past engines, the snow fades away, the ground is brown and ochre as if this were autumn, the time passes quickly, as do Brno and other names I vaguely recognise, and, in the midafternoon, we glide into Vienna.

Vienna railway station is not unlike a small town. They have maps and online guides showing you what’s available in what supermarket, shop, department, café, restaurant, and probably hospital, and being Austrian, it is all very well organised and signposted. This means we’re able to stow our bags in a large locker before heading out to see at least one Viennese sight/site before boarding our next train in just under four hours’ time.

Out of the station, do up your buttons, turn right into the wind, look back at the sinking sun beyond stark, modern buildings, and keep going, up to the lights, cross, turn right, and there’s the long view of the Belvedere. The Belvedere is a historic building complex in Vienna, Austria, consisting of two Baroque palaces (the Upper and Lower Belvedere), the Orangery, and the Palace Stables. The buildings are set in a Baroque park landscape in the third district of the city, on the south-eastern edge of its centre.

I am sure you knew that. You might also know that the Belvedere currently houses museums and art galleries, none of which we have time to see.

It’s a case of snap this, look at that, appreciate this and look over there, but all from the outside as we walk the gardens, and then a circuit of the complex where we visit a war memorial, and ignore a Christmas market, while trying to find a café, and deciding to have something to eat back in the station. We also need to do some shopping ready for the evening and night on the train. Someone has the foresight to buy noodles and beer, so I’m happily restored to full health, and the game can continue. So happy am I that I venture into a clothes shop and pick up three scarf/snood/things for us boys, and on the way back, check out where the Spar is, so we can buy supplies. This, as it turns out, is not as easy as it sounds.

Perhaps Saturday afternoon is the time for the Viennese to come out and do their shopping in a small, railway station branch of Spar, as that is what is taking place here. We enter in pairs, but it soon becomes apparent that we are not alone. I mean there are about 500 people crammed into long queues, and the time for departure is heading our way. We decide to divide and conquer, so H and I leave the other two to their side quest and go to pick up the luggage. This we do with ease – well, entering the code and retrieving the bags is achieved with ease; carrying the 15 bags back to the Spar upstairs is another matter. But we manage, and message our success to the B team, and wait. And wait. And bob up and down trying to see in, catching a glimpse of a bobble hat and a bald head, both belonging to the wrong people, and wait, and watch the clock, and… Finally. The B team break free from the clutches of the great Spar and appears with more bags for life (or at least, bags for the next couple of hours), and with those added to our caravan, we set off for the platform.

Now, here’s a short tale. Once, when Neil and I were travelling around, we travelled from Prague to Vienna on a smart train with buffet service and a dining car, but as we had a longer, eight-hour journey coming up, we decided to leave the new-to-us experience of a dining car until then. That day came, Budapest to Belgrade (roughly eight hours, in theory), and we set off in an equally smart, first-class carriage that had locked toilets and no buffet car, so I investigated second class to find no dining car, no buffet anything, and only the very basic of toilets. I mean, practically the hole in the floor to the tracks kind of job, and one was so bad, someone was keeping chickens in it. Things became stranger when we arrived at the Hungary/Serbia border, and three sets of officials boarded, one lot with sniffer dogs, and someone ran across the roof, another man was taken off, never to be seen again. Nor, when we set off, and I turned behind to see about using the loo, was there any sign of second class. Those carriages had vanished, but at least someone opened the 1st class WC. But I digress… Kind of, because…

Our Romanian train doesn’t let us down. We have a compartment for each pair with two narrow bunks, and a third if needed (as long as the sandwich filling is very thin and no-one is claustrophobic), and we have… not much else, actually. A window, and just enough room to shove bags in corners as long as we sit on them. We try a seating compartment a way down the train, and find a six-seater with only one sceptical looking woman using it, and we try sitting there for a while, but the lighting is so dim, and we don’t feel able to relax because we know we’ll be disturbing our fellow traveller, so we bundle back to our cabin to become students on an interrail adventure. Three on the bottom bunk facing the wall, one on a bag in the corner, drinking beer, having a laugh, chatting the evening away and enjoying the blackouts. These happen at the start of the journey. We’re moving, but there’s no light in the cabin. Then there is. Then there isn’t. Then there is. A passenger comes to ask if our heating is working. Yes, it bloomin’ is. I’m sweating like a glassblower’s armpit, and even with the AC off and the window open, we’re at a toasty 98°. He is clearly unhappy and mutters his way towards the steward (who we rarely see after our initial grunt of welcome).

The evening draws to a natural end, and we prepare for bed. If you are of the type who likes to shower before bed, and you find yourself on a Romanian night train, then abandon all hope. I mean, you could try, but you’d have to squeeze into something smaller than a telephone box with one tap, one hosepipe, and I’m not sure I remember drainage, while standing not three feet away from the leaking WC and holding up a queue of others wanting to be somewhere else but needing the facilities.

We don’t bother. Instead, we climb into the bunks with me worrying that Neil will roll out (he doesn’t), and wondering where I will wake up, and before I know it…

Oblivion for a short while. A speeding train passes. The window is slammed shut by the suction. Things calm. Rattling, rhythm, swaying… Screaming whistles from the engine. I think they are doing it for fun. Then, I suspect, we are crossing the border. I don’t know the time, but I am grateful I am not woken to show papers and passports, and then… Definitely time to get up. My T-shirt is soaked as usual, and I need the facilities, but it’s not yet dawn, so it’s quiet out there, and we’re stationary in a station. Which turns out to be Sighisoara in the heart of Transylvania. And it is tomorrow, so we must now wait until, strangely, tomorrow to talk about Brașov.

On the Feast of Stephen

Boxing Day was almost a day off. We finally did that thing we always say we’re going to do at Christmas, and that’s to go for a long walk. We used to haul ourselves away from excess on one day over the festive season and waddle and burp our way up a hillside, but we’ve not done it for years. Not until the Feast of Stephen, when all we had planned was the concert in the late afternoon, and, according to the spreadsheet we had “Tour guide Harry…” for the day, and a list of places to see, most of which we had seen yesterday.

Tour Guide Harry was quite happy to lounge in bed and drink coffee, but we finally got our various acts together and headed out into the cold for a decent walk. We’d been averaging eight to ten miles a day simply walking from one place to another, from one hotel to another, or the length of a train looking for the WC, and we were to add a fair few more miles that day.

From Wenceslas Square down to the river and across in the startlingly clear and icy morning. Calm river, water birds, a demonstration on the riverbank, incredible architecture, along one side of the river, over again and into the Jewish Quarter via the Rudolfinum concert hall and the commemorative statue to liberty. Then, back towards the centre of the Old Town to take another sideways glance at the Christmas market, which was about 90% food, so not much good if you were looking for local arts and crafts. Of course, we were visiting these places at the busiest time of the winter season, so you can’t complain about crowds, and I’ve already said, it was slightly quieter than when we’d been at Easter. Even so, it was good to get off the main roads now and then and take a look at what lay behind. For example, we saw the famous hanging-out man, which is David Černý’s Statue of Sigmund Freud. Beyond giving you that info, I can be of no help.

We also went to see a statue that wasn’t there. This had happened before, when H and I went to find Mládí, the famous statue of Youth at Prague Castle. It used to be there beside the Toy Museum, and it was famous because the bronze had weathered to a natural, almost-black colour, apart from the young man’s tackle, which was dazzlingly shiny thanks to the hands of hundreds of people who’d grabbed his nuts for luck. (Thiers and his, I imagine.) When Neil and I were there in 2015, I remember a queue of giggling Asian girls and a couple of burly lorry driver types waiting their turn. When H and I went to see him last time, he had gone. Same this time. He had been removed in 2016 as part of renovation work and never returned. He’s in the city art depository now, no doubt recounting his tales of grappling girls and dubious lorry drivers to Don Giovanni.

Why Don Giovanni? Because he’s missing too. We walked to the Estate’s theatre, where H and I had seen ‘The Magic Flute’ back in 2023, and where there had been a sculpture depicting Don Giovanni (which was first performed at that theatre on the 29th of October 1787). Now, that too has gone. I mean, what next? No Irish pubs?

Before.
After.

What is it with Irish pubs and European cities? We found a few in other places too. Not complaining, because Czech beer is Czech beer no matter where you have it, and the menus were great. I was just wondering.

We ended up in one or two that Boxing Day as we went a-wandering looking for missing works of art. Jenine and Harry went to a beer museum while we had lunch and did some more wandering as the sun started to set, met up with the others to look at the place H and I stayed last time, to see the Cat Café from outside (yes, it caters for stray cats and cat lovers), and to make our way to the concert.

A bit blurred – phone cam and a dimly lit room = blur.

Guess who was in the ensemble? Dagmar, again on the viola. The day before, we’d heard her solo Paganini’s Caprice number 24 in A minor (that’s The South Bank Show tune) which, in parts, looks like this:

Now, she was helping the others along with O Come All Ye Faithful, but once the carols were done, they launched into many other classical pieces, we had a mezzo sing for us, and we had the titular organist play for us. The net says about him: The titular organist of the St. Salvator Church in Prague’s Klementinum complex is Robert Hugo, a noted specialist in historical organs and Baroque music who has held this role since the 1990s, frequently performing at concerts held in the Klementinum’s famous Mirror Chapel. So, there you go.

I think, that night, he was in rather a hurry to be somewhere else, for after helping out with a couple of early numbers, he dashed of Bach’s Toccata and Fuge in D minor, and had practically shut up the organ and collected his papers while still holding the final pedal D. That done, he was off – but it was a wonderful concert, and wonderful to see H’s face when the organ began – and it was only a chapel instrument, I reminded him. Imagine what the cathedral ones sound like. Hopefully, one day, he’ll hear one in full throat, feel the air vibrate throughout a cathedral, and appreciate the power of mechanics and music in harmony.

Before that, though, food. We headed to the Wet Beaver for dinner. That was the restaurant where we’d drawn looks three years ago by discussing the river rats, aka, wet beavers, and H wanted to return there. It was just around from where we stayed before, and the food was good. Mind you, by then, I was reduced to pea soup and some slices of cheese as I’d already had Irish bangers and mash. Still, it was another memorable dinner followed by a slow walk back to the mansion apartment ahead of packing for the next day’s journey. This one promised to be a right old adventure, and it was certainly that, as you will find out tomorrow.

Meanwhile, as Tony Heart used to say, here’s the gallery.

Christmas Day in Prague

Christmas morning comes, and the house creaks gradually into life. It never fails to impress me how teenagers can sleep for 12 hours and still be silent until after their first feeding. I’m sure when I was 18, I was up at six every day, even if I hadn’t gone to bed until after midnight. I only once remember waking up at ten one morning, as fresh as a model in a senna pod advert, and thinking I’d missed half the day. However, as much as the teen wants to lie in, today is Christmas Day, and we have two appointments booked.

There are to be no presents this Christmas because the whole trip is our present to each other and ourselves. Having said that, Neil paid for the Venice gondola as a gift, and I’ve done the same with our first appointment today. But that’s not going to happen unless we get on the road, so after breakfast of eggs on toast, coffee for the caffeine junkies and tea for me and H (I brought a zip-lock bag of proper tea donated to the expedition by Colette), we set off into zero degrees to find the nearest stop for tram #22.

I should mention that H and I had been to Prague in 2023, and for the next few days, H was mainly in charge of routes and ascents because he had been there before. This is how we knew to search out the ticket machine on the tram, so as to avoid fines. Not that there was any sign of anyone checking. The trams were already busy at nine in the morning, mainly with eager tourists like us and people heading to work. One of the reasons for choosing Prague for Christmas Day was that everything is open. Shops, sights, restaurants, concert halls; nothing, it seems, sleeps, so there is always something to do.

In our case, it was a tram across the river pointing out places we’d been to on our previous visit (Petrin Tower, Observatory, Museum of Music, an Irish pub…), and getting off just below the climb to the castle. There’s a walk up a few hundred steps to reach the top, but hey, we know about steps, especially those of us without transport, so that was no problem. All the same, by the time I reached the top, I was dripping with sweat despite the freezing weather.

There was much ‘Remember this?’ and ‘When I came here in 1783…’ and so on, as all of us had been to the city before, and having been more recently than the others, H and I knew the modern score. A quick glance at the changing of the guard at the Presidential Palace (only the quick change, not the full-drag version), and on to the security barriers now in place at the entrance to the castle grounds.

This is another sad reflection of first-world affluence. Security guards at heritage sites, human traffic restrictions, queues, extra payments to enter cities because we’re gradually eating away at our own world from its resources to things we’ve built from them, and everyone’s an Instagram influencer. I’m sure a large percentage of tourists only visit places to be seen to have been there and to show off the fact on their ‘socials.’

‘What did you think of Prague?’
‘It got me 2k more views.’
‘Yes, but the culture?’
‘Hmm? The what now?’

[Inserts a range of emojis from ‘meh’ to ‘vomit’ and moves on.]

We took a look at St Vitus Cathedral from the outside, and the others went up the tower.

I wasn’t part of the summit party. I tried, but the irrational fear of falling from a great height, plus a little claustrophobia on the two-way, narrow tower stairs, sent me back to the courtyard. There, I sat like Bernie Sanders, wrapped in my overcoat, hat and gloves, minding my own while they scaled the heights.

After that, onwards through the grounds to the Lobkowicz Palace just as it opened, for an hour admiring the private collection of art, china, music memorabilia, including some original scores by the greats, and other interesting cultural things… Such as?

Well, there was a fascinating display of Botulinum toxin housed in an alarming number of lips and trout pouts. Overcome Asian girls photographing every single exhibit to death, people posing by the piano (oops), and a few appreciatives cooing over the Canalettos.

One Canaletto. Lord Mayor’s Day, 1747
A modern-day Caneletto, Christmas Day, 2025

And onwards to take our front row seats in the music room for a lunchtime concert. These happen all the time in Prague, it seems. You can’t help but stumble across members of the Czech National Symphony Orchestra or the Dvořák Symphony Orchestra popping into a baroque concert hall to dash off a few numbers before heading off to their next venue. In this case, we had a wonderful hour of flute, piano and the viola, which was played by a lady called Dagmar Mašková, a member and Deputy Section Leader of the Prague Philharmonia, who would turn up again in our near future. They usually play the old faves, the ones everyone knows such as, ‘That thing by Mozart, and the lovely bit from Orpheus in His Underwear. Oh, and that one… you know, it goes like…. We used to call it Old Father Thames, but not the music hall song version…’ (‘Moldau’ by Smetana.’ The bit you’ll recognise starts at 1.08 on this YouTube version.)

I’ve found that always included in their programmes is something slightly more obscure. In this case, it was a Pavane by Ravel I’d never before heard arranged for a trio. Gorgeous. The last time, with H, when we attended a similar concert in the same place, it was a piece by Jan Jiří Benda (not a made-up name) that struck me. Look up his violin sonata and, particularly, the Grave. Here’s a YouTube link. Goosebumps.

Image from: https://www.travelersuniverse.com/lobkowicz-palace-concert-in-prague-ticket-review/

(Hint: It’s not us in the front row.)

Side note: Back in 1995 or ’96, Kiwi Bernie and I had visited Prague on our drive around Europe. We pulled up at an accommodation agency on the outskirts, secured a room for two nights at a cost of £6.00, and found it at the end of a tram line. We also found it used to be a borstal or similar, because the bedroom (cell) door was nine inches of iron and steel with a grille protecting a 14 x 5 room containing nothing but two single beds, and the showers were a shared and heavily tiled chamber reminiscent of an army barracks or British boarding school. On the plus side, our £6.00 included breakfast in a room heavy with doilies, fancy china, and psychedelic wallpaper. The lady of the house, aka, the warden, would not let us leave until we had finished six courses of traditional Czech fare. Waddling off, we took the tram into town, visited one traditional market not made for tourists because that was all there was, and later, believe it or not, had a three-course very late lunch (with wine), before stumbling upon a concert performance of Mozart’s Requiem in the Church of Our Lady in front of Týn. Accommodation aside, we spent the equivalent of £10.00 between us that day. How times have changed since the years immediately following the Velvet Revolution.

Moving on. After the concert, we toddled off down the hill to find Harry’s wet beaver.

Now, this takes a little explaining, but to cut a long-haired beaver short, they’re not beavers, they’re a variation thereof, a big water rat, a coypu creature also called a Nutella… No, that’s not right, a Hygena, no, that was a kitchen… Nutria, that’s it. It sounds like another treatment for constipation, but is, in fact, an animal. Three years ago, we came across them, and at dinner that night, the teen, then only 15, announced to the restaurant that he’d seen his first beaver, and it was wet.

The less said, the longer the gag runs for, and it’s still running three years later.

On Christmas Day, the Charles Bridge was less crowded than it had been on Easter Day (during our last visit), and we did the obligatory sightseeing, took the photos, and did the marvelling as we crossed, and again, were grateful for the weather. Cold, yes, but bright blue sky, no wind, rain, hail, frogs, plagues or snow. (That would come later).

We took a wander among the old buildings and streets, did some posing in various locations, and came across a man selling tickets to concerts at the Klementinum. This is “Prague’s second-largest building complex after Prague Castle and houses the most beautiful library in the world.” The concert was for the following afternoon, and if we came at 17.00, we would hear the ensemble performing with the organ. If we came at 19.00, it would be an ensemble and a piano. Well, we’d done that, and although we’d been admiring them, H had never heard a pipe organ in action, and although the tickets for the best seats were €56.00 each (gone are the days of £10.00 for the day), I thought, ‘It’s Christmas,’ and, probably thanks to a recent beer or two in an Irish pub, set about jovially haggling with the chap. Between me and a total stranger beside us who joined the routine, we got the price down to more of an ‘It’s only money’ level, and secured us gallery seats for the next afternoon. More on that tomorrow.

For today, we are still wandering the streets towards our next destination. Night has come early, the shopfronts are warmly glittering, the smell of chimney cake and sugar are in the air, and the sounds of all languages and occasional Christmas music roll between the awe-inspiring architecture. Harry, of course, is in awe of the cars, until there we are, by the river at the second appointment. This is another of those ‘must do’ attractions in Prague, not least of all because it involves food.

Here we go again, but this time, for H’s grandma, who I know is reading this and who might not have seen this video before. Back in 2023, H and I did a similar trip up and down part of the river at night, only on a larger boat than we took this time. I was enamoured of the horseradish sauce, though I found it a little hot. I suggested that the next time I took some, I only took what my grandmother used to refer to as ‘a suspicion.’ A soupçon.

The scene unfolds…

Sorry about the blurred bits. My eyes were watering.

Meanwhile, back to the present day (the day on which you give presents, get it?). Never mind. Christmas Day ended with a dinner on a boat, with sightseeing from up top for those who were brave enough, laughter, chatter, and a bracing walk home.

The Gallery

This one’s a mix of my photos and some from the others, but I can’t remember which is whose, or whose is which, but they should give you an idea.

Trains on a Travelling Day

It’s Thursday morning as I write this in readiness for tomorrow. The wind is howling somewhat, the sea is grey and troubled, the Patmos is currently still in the Saronic Gulf, but at least it is on its way, and it’s due into Symi tonight at 19.30, instead of yesterday morning – news of which will be of no use to anyone reading this. I’m just catching you up with my Symi news as I sit here in my dressing gown, sniffing and coughing, but getting on with it. This warm, wet and windy weather is forecast to stay with us off and on until after the weekend, during which time, I must finish off these travel tales. Which brings me neatly onto the next one.

Today, because this is a shorter and rather dull text compared to the others, let’s start with a bonus picture. The bear I was talking about yesterday.

2,200 euros to you, Sir.

To Prague on an unusual Christmas Eve
The itinerary of this trip had been spreadsheeted to death, and the column of ‘Main Event’ for the sixth day of the journey read, ‘Travel. Travel. Soup in a bread roll and beer. Melody Apartment, Prague.’

It was a day for being on the move, and, thanks to the preplanning, it all went smoothly. The 10.07 from Salzburg to Linz – on time. Half an hour or so to wait in Linz. Onward 11.45 to Prague, a 3.45-hour journey where it was possible to see the countryside and culture change outside the window.

From the industrial sites on the edge of Salzburg, and stops with Teutonic sounding names, to flat landscape, snow, and changing architecture.

There was plenty of time for eating, much to the delight of at least one member of the party, so the day began with breakfast aboard. This involved shopping in Salzburg station for anything that would go with apple strudel, and enough supplies to see us through the long journey, which was to be a total of nearly six hours from station to station to station accommodation.

During the journey (I forget what train we were on, but it was before Christmas Day), we had Christmas carols playing on Jenine’s phone. We were in our own compartment, like old-fashioned corridor trains had, so we weren’t disturbing anyone, and there was no chance of being told off by a bullying Italian as it wasn’t a quiet carriage anyway. Whatever, this gave Neil and I the opportunity to present a little present. Having found Michael Bauble’s version of Silent Night on the phone, it played and we signed along in BSL. We’d only learnt the second verse the night before, so that was a bit touch and go, but we managed. Then, all four of us learnt the first verse, and from then on, every time we heard it playing throughout our journey, at least one of us would sign along.

[Here’s the link to the YouTube video we learnt from. Apart from anything else, it’s lovely to watch.]

There’s not much else to tell you about this day, which was the most un-Christmasy Christmas Eve I’ve yet encountered. It was easy to forget what day it was, not because of doing too much in a short time, but because the day didn’t matter.

Since moving to Symi in 2002, we have spent every Christmas bar two with the logical family, and over the years, a Christmas Eve routine has evolved. The day usually starts with last-minute purchases of wine, sherry, port, and other unnecessary extras, and the last-minute gathering of presents. Around midday, to save too much haulage on Christmas Day, we’d shuffle off to Jenine’s house ladened with bags of gifts, games and bottles. There, we’d sit at the table en famille, peeling potatoes, making stuffing with the boys (not a euphemism), wrapping bacon around sausages (nor is that), and keeping an eye on Neil so he doesn’t throw the sprouts in the bin. Later, in the afternoon, we’d wobble home to watch a Christmas film (either Polar Express or Die Hard), and wake the next morning to do it all again with more excess.

This Christmas Eve morning passed by in a blur of railway stations, views and later, snow. I have to admit, we were ladened with bags, and weighted down with shopping before we reached our rented apartment not far from Wenceslas Square in Prague, so that could have been construed as Christmas Eve-ish, but what a place it was.

New to the dreaded Airbnb market, the owners had given us a special price, and what we had in return was outstanding. I made a video, but the soundtrack isn’t suitable for sensitive ears, so walk with me…

A security number to enter the lobby, a key to operate the lift up five floors. Enter the apartment through a secure door to find a hat stand… A Hat stand! My Hiker had a home.

A long hallway full of cupboards, and a double bedroom with a bathroom opposite. (Heated towel rails – I’ve just ordered a small one for home.) Then, we come to a dining/sitting room with a table large enough for eight, a large TV, a fully-equipped kitchen, including baffling coffee machine and dishwasher, a sofa bed made up for our fifth member who couldn’t make the trip, and plenty of heating. Then, a second wing with a huge bedroom and en suite bathroom, and all kitted out in a modern, elegant way. We could want for nothing in this place, and we soon made ourselves at home. It became Christmasy when Jenine blew up an 18” inflatable Christmas tree from Temu and plonked it on a random table.

The only thing on the to-do list that evening was a pre-booked meal, because turning up on the doorstep in such places on Christmas Eve would only lead to disappointment. In this case, we saved the ‘Soup in a bread roll and beer’ for another day (when we would include an appropriate comma), because we hadn’t been able to advance book a restaurant close by that served it, and so, we had an Indian meal at an atmospheric and well-designed basement restaurant not far from the apartment. Apart from Jenine leaving her new and much cherished bobble hat there (or losing it on the way home), everything was wonderful and dandy.

As was the cold walk back among more twinkling lights. I think we watched a film… Or was that before going out? I know we moved the dining table, and at one point, us three blokes were camped out on the sofa bed having a laugh about something, and it was below zero outside, but it didn’t matter, and there were no potatoes to peel, and no sprouts to guard. All was well, and we were looking forward to our two Christmas Day treats – which I will talk about next week.

The Gallery

So that you have something to view over the weekend, the gallery today includes some images that Neil took with a real camera. There are more somewhere, and these are mainly Innsbruck, but among today’s gallery photos, you will see: Jenine’s bobble hat (before it went missing on Christmas Eve), the hideous but award-winning funicular railway station, Santas in gondolas in Venice, a lot of snow, and cathedral details. Enjoy your browse, and have a good weekend.