Salzburg
Reading: Nothing - my last book was boring
05.06.2007
A little background is needed for this entry I think. When I was in Australia I lived with a girl named Julia for a few months. Julia was a music major and absolutely adored the sound of music. She tried to make me watch it a bunch of times but I constantly wormed out of it. Soooo I find it really ironic that I'm now in those very same hillls that Maria von Trapp ran - those hills that are alive with the sound of music!
Ok that was corny, I promise I'll try to keep the sound of music quotes out of this entry. On our first day in Salzburg Jill, Kristen and I just went on a self-guided walking tour around the town. Salzburg is in a basin of some sort formed when a couple lakes from the ice-age dried up. At least thats the gist that I got - really though all that matters is that its in a valley, with green rolling hills nearby and the alps in the background. Unfortunately when we were about as far away from our hostel as we planned on going it started to pour down on us. So we busted out the ponchoes, umbrellas and hoodies and trudged back to the hostel. Early night that night as we all needed some good shuteye after Munich.
The morning of the second day marked a big occasion - my first time watching the sound of music. I actually really liked it - guess I should have listened to Julia all those times (Sorry Julez!). It was a feel-good movie, with a bunch of unintentionally hilarious parts in it to boot. After watching it Jill (an avid sound of music fan) got a glint in her eye and took off on the sound of music tour while me and Kristen explored the local fortress. The fortress was interesting as it was the seat of arch-bishops governing over Salzburg from 1400-1800 (roughly - please don't wikipedia me on this trevor!) and had never been taken by force - only willingly surrended to napoleon on his jaunt through europe. After heading back to the hostel and meeting up with Jill we went to another beergarden for the night. This one had 2L steins and a crazy friendly group of swiss-germans in it. The swiss-germans seemed to take a liking to us backpackers and brought us over for a traditional snuff snorting ritual of sorts. At the time I wasn't 100% sure what it was but there was a couple of grandmas beside me doing it so I figured it had to be ok!
On our last day we took an organized tour to the nearby icecaves. They are the largest discovered icecave in the world (I think) - it took over 1km to walk to the back of them. The formations were really impressive, as was the ride there through the alps. Plus we had a wicked funny aussie tourguide that played Akon on the ride there as his wife was into it. Sorry no photos from inside the caves though - it wasn't allowed.
At this point I'm splitting up with Jill and Kristen - they head to Croatia and the Dalmation coast while I continue up to Vienna. I had a great time travelling with these girls and will be sad to see them go.
Stealing the ladders from my hostel
Jill and I hamming it up in the Mirabell gardens
Jill with the Romanian woman who taught her to make Hungarian sweetbread
View of old-town salzburg from the fortress
Traditional Austrian hat complete with not-so-traditional tourist
Jill, me and Kristen at the biergarten
Group from hostel
Prost dass die gurten nicht verrost! (cheers so you're throat won't go rusty)
Snuff ritual with the swiss-germans
Salzburg at night
Entrance to the ice caves -that's Jill and Kristen in the foreground
Some wannabe-thug showing that the icecaves were cold (surprise)
Kristen and Jill with the castle at Wurfen in the background





