9 Months ago on 18 Sept 2018, the first step was made for this bucket-list adventure...
Flights booked: 18 Sept 2018
Eurail ticket booked: 22 Nov 2018
Accommodation booked: Feb 2019
UK Visas : March 2019
Train Reservation booked: April 2019
Schengen Visas (with drama): April 2019
Tours & Priority Passes booked: May 2019
And numerous other activities - Luggage, clothing, shoes, data roaming and housesitters, to name a few...
2 Months of getting up at 05:00 to walk our 100km to be ready... (only Mom and Dad)
And here we are... leaving for the airport in an hour
(What a team! Total combined luggage weight less than 36kg for 4 people + a daypack person... you guys rock βπΌ)
Looks like we are arriving in the UK with some hefty rain... time to test out rain coats π€£
Question is will there be cricket at Edgebaston on wednesday π€
So excited for the trip!!
So excited for this trip!!
All packed and ready to go!
So excited for the tripβοΈπ
Looking good Loobies!! Enjoy a well planned trip!
Much nicer to have your family in the lounge than typing away on your laptop!!
Chilling in the Baobab Lounge. Trying out the all-important selfie stick.
Hoped for the new business class layout, but hey.... still an awesome way to fly
The view from the other side of passport control. Having an EU passport speeds up the process, but then itβs hurry up and wait for the poor ZAR passport holders!
We had a shower and met Mary, the most wonderful Ghanaian lady with whom Chris exchanged views on Ghanaian food.
Addison enjoying the fare at the Japanese Airline lounge at Frankfurt Airport.
On the shuttle from Terminal 1 to Terminal 2 at Frankfurt International Airport.
We started the last leg to London.
Graydon and Addi and London Bridge.
London is a city of contradictions that somehow blend together cohesively. On the left, London Bridge. On the right, the Shard. The old and the new manage to coexist in perfect harmony.
The view of London Bridge from the Tower of London.
A really terrible bit of modern art designed to be a monument to the place where ten people were executed at the Tower throughout history.
Spiral staircase up to one of the towers.
Old telephone booths have been turned into WiFi spots. No city can survive without adapting to the ever-changing needs of its populace.
Some random people dressed for the occasion.
More spiral staircases and mysterious doorways.
Even the light fittings have character!
Our Yeoman tour guide at the Tower if London - Andy Merriman (I promise- thatβs his actual name!). Beefeaters are part of Her Majesty βs commemorative guard, and are actually part of the British Armed Forces. In order to qualify to apply for becoming a Yeoman, a soldier must serve for at least 22 years and must have been awarded the Silver Medal for Service. More people have been to space than have qualified to be Yeomen!
The inner wall of the Tower is 28ft High. The outer wall is 24ft thick in some places.
The queues to see the Crown Jewels were long and winding, but well worth the wait. We werenβt allowed to take photos of the Crown Jewels, but the door to the room in which they are displayed was as thick as two of Graydon!
Examples of graffiti left by prisoners in one of the Towers. Contrary to popular belief, graffiti is not a new thing! This one was inscribed in the wall in 1570!
The Waldorf Hilton. Undergoing hectic renovations to its 111 year old facade.
The junior members of our party were starting to fade, but were game to learn and see as much as they could.
Gold weather vanes on each of the four \240towers of the White Tower. We were told that the Tower is as much a palace as Buckingham Palace is - it has the same status as far as the Queen is concerned.
The first soldier falls...
Spiral staircases abound!
The Yeomen actually live on Tower Green. The blue door on the left is the doctorβs house. And if his services donβt work, the vicar lives next door!
The White Tower
Three candidates for Yeomen Warders.
We navigated the underground thanks to Chris and Citymapper. Graydon and Addi were thrilled with their first ride on the underground.
Traitors Gate. King Edward didnβt want to walk in the streets with the peasants, and so he built a direct access from the Thames to the Tower to enable his boat to pull right up to the stairs!
The only windows to the outside world in the tower where the prisoners were kept.
We braved a rainy London to enjoy the Tower.
Taking a break with the Tower of London behind us and the Thames in front of us.
Another example of old and new: the Gherkin framed by the battlements of the Tower.
Sir Walter Raleighβs herb and vegetable garden, which he used to mix medicines and tonics.
Addi was amazed by an ornate canon next to the White Tower
London was wet!
The most beautiful lavender at the base of the Tower of London. The two white turrets are the entrance to the inner part of the Tower, and were used to great effect when condemned men and women were walked through them and up to the public execution site.
The tunnel from Traitors Gate to the inside courtyard of the Tower.
The only remaining timber frame Tudor-style house in London. All other houses in this style were burnt to the ground in the great London Fire. The Queenβs representative lives here.
Two members of the Queenβs Guard guard the Crown Jewels. \240Andy, the Yeoman guide, was quite vociferous in telling us to treat these soldiers with the respect they deserve.
The mechanism for lifting the portcullis
Fish and Chips outside the Tower of London. It cost each of us 50p to go to the loo!
We ubered in style from London City Centre Airport to the Waldorf Hilton, which will be our home for the next 3 nights.
Chris and Addi enjoying the breakfast on British Airways to London City Centre Airport
Tower of London - first stop after dropping bags at Hotel
Graydon thinks the underground is the best thing since slice bread...
Addison is like a sponge... detail photos of everything...
London is wet
Whiting of \240wic
We ended a very full first day with dinner at the Giraffe in Victoria. Although we were probably the only people who have probably actually seen a giraffe.
And then on to see Wicked at the Apollo Victoria Theatre in Victoria. Itβs the story of the Wizard of Oz from the point of view of the Wicked Witch of the West. It was spectacular! Itβs been running since 2006 \240and is still packing the house. And getting standing ovations!
So will we have to support New Zealand...
Or South Africa!!!
On our way to Birmingham... How bloody expensive Β£260 for return train tickets!!! What!!! Some airplane tickets are cheaper
Below: The closes a South African has been to holding the World Cup Trophy...
After all the forecasts for rain today... I just had to go and buy sunscreen π³
At least we saw Amla teaching 8000 runs - Respect
21:30 - Daylight, but the the long day that started at 06:00 has caught up...
Birmingham looks like a interesting city - again the mix of old and new... What a funky Train Station
The girls started with the breakfast spread at the hotel this morning. We had a bit of a sleep-in after the boys left for Birmingham to watch the cricket.
And then onto our tour bus to take us to Warner Bros Studios to see the making of Harry Potter.
And the tour at Warner Bros Studios begins...
Addi used the two hour drive to the studio wisely.
First destination for the day: Harrods. Addi told me she was completely overwhelmed by the store. She saw a dress she liked for Β£499!
A breather at the Harrods CafΓ©.
Early morning stroll through Coventry Gardens on our way to the tube station. The shops only open at 10:00!
The entrance to Gringotts Bank. Wait for it...
Graydon touched the Cricket World Cup. Addi touched the Triwizard Cup.
The magical trophies had lids that kept opening and closing.
The Potions classroom even had a self-stirring cauldron!
The attention to detail was especially obvious in Dumbledoreβs office.
The special effects were incredible.
The Ukrainian Underbelly that lives in Gringotts.
Every set was first built to scale out of wood. This is one of Hogwarts.
Every single wand in the movie is depicted on this wheel. Every wand is different and symbolic of who it belongs to. Hermioneβs wand, for instance, is inscribed with Knowledge Ivy - the more she learns, the higher up the wand the Ivy goes. But it will never reach the tip because she will never stop learning.
He who shall not be named...
And the piece de resistance - a complete model of Hogwarts. It took 42 days to build. Every brick, crack and crevice has been included.
The Hogwarts Express. There was a compartment for each of the 7 movies. Addi observed that they got messier as they got older!
Throughout our tour, the most noteworthy thing was the attention to the absolute miniscule detail. Nothing was accidental.
The treasure vault.
Even Medusa put in an appearance!
The behind-the-scenes artistic and technical creativity is staggering.
Continuation Journals. Each character has a special book dedicated to how he/she looks, what he/she wore, hairstyles, jewellery. Nothing is left to memory.
The Owlry even had miniature owl models!
The Invisibility Cloak.
Hagridβs motorcycle
The door to vault 713 - where the Philosophers Stone was kept.
The Goblin Gallery.
The entrance to the Forbidden Forest. The trees were handmade - no green screen tech here either!
Addi on her way to the Hogwarts Express on Platform 9 3/4.
Again, the attention to detail. Even down to Gringotts Bank deposit slips!
A model of the ceiling of the Great Hall.
... and what lies beneath.
The door under the stairs
Some examples of buildings used in the movies
Diagon Alley.
And the locks actually worked!
Addi poses in front of the model of Hogwarts just to illustrate how huge it is!
We had some fun with green screen technology. Addi even flew a broom!
The taps in the prefects bathroom
The meeting at Malfoy Mansion
Gryffindor Boys Dormitory
Every single potion bottle was labelled.
Every oil painting was actually painted in oils. No computer generated pictures. This is the marble staircase - the one that kept moving. They made one life sized one and then used a green screen to capture its movement.
The Great Hall ready for a feast
The entrance to the vault...
What was left of Gringotts after the break-in by Bellatrix.
Welcome to Hogwarts!
The drinks table at the Crystal Ball.
An epic day in London started at Trafalgar Square. Unfortunately the Square was cordoned off to prepare for a concert that will take place on Sunday. All of the 34 theatres in London will be putting on extracts from the plays, musicals, ballet currently showing. And itβs free to the public.
In true London style, it got cold and wet while we were waiting for our turn on the London Eye.
With the race for the leadership of the Tory Party heating up, the security around 10 Downing Street was heavy. So this is the closest we got to the famous black door.
The original keys to every door in the bunker.
I promise that Big Ben is in there!!! The Elizabeth Tower is undergoing extensive construction which will be finished by 2021. Until then, the bell does not toll and only 1 face of the clock is visible.
Still waiting...
Spot the Queenβs Guard...
At the foot of the statue of Eros, Piccadilly Circus.
We could clearly see the pin pricks on the maps as tacks were moved as troops moved.
Itβs no surprise that the island in the middle is called Duck Island!
The Bobbies on horseback were really friendly, and the horses didnβt seem freaked out by the crowds and the noise.
The famous balcony at Buckingham Palace
Crossing the Thames, with the iconic Houses of Parliament in the background.
A walk away from the Palace towards the government buildings on the other side of the Park took us through St Jamesβ Park. Buckingham Palace on the one side...
The commentary was very interesting throughout the tour.
An appropriate quote, considering we would be spending some of the day at the Churchill War Rooms.
This was the telephone operatorβs Room. Note the special gas mask in the desk. It was designed in such a way that the operator could still answer the phone while wearing it!
This is the βRomperβ that Churchill made famous. Addi pointed out that Churchill made the Onesie fashionable!
Churchillβs kitchen. The pots and pans are the original ones used. Apparently his favourite dish was Beef Wellington.
The Plant Room. This is the room that regukatedcthe air and temperature inside the bunker.
Spot the South African flag...
The prelude to the changing of the Guard
So we turned our attention to a former PM, and spent about 3 hours in the Churchill War Rooms. Every moment was incredible. The museum is truly one of the best ones I have even been through. Any fan of WW II history should come through here. And one of the ushers was a former South African - he spoke Afrikaans with great sentiment! He hasnβt been back since 1987. His first question: is it safe?
And the Eye of London on the other side.
And as an added bonus, we saw Buckingham Palace by night, minus the thousands of tourists!
And at Addiβs request, drive a circular route past Harrods back to our hotel so she could see the famous Harrods lights. Our cabbie thought we were nuts!
Our first ride in a Black Cab. The driver was incredibly knowledgeable and enthusiast about sharing his knowledge. He had a lot to say about the recent visit of a certain Head of State, mostly from a how-it-affected-the-traffic perspective than an actual political one.
No matter where we go, thereβs cricket...
The forefather of the spreadsheet. Every day the spreadsheet would be updated to show the movement of troops, casualties, H1 and H2 bombs and the loss of life after every bomb strike.
The main gates of Buckingham Palace.
Leicester Square. The famous Odeon Cinema is behind Chris and the kids. This is where the London premieres of most movies take place.
Constitution Road, which leads up to Buckingham Palace.
This sign was the only indication the people working and living in the War Rooms had of the weather outside. If bombs were raining down on the city above, the board put up read βWindyβ.
The Victoria Memorial opposite the main gates of Buckingham Palace.
Churchillβs bedroom. He only took his daily afternoon naps here, and only slept three nights in this bed. We learnt that even through the worst of the war, he took two baths a day!
Coffee at a Turkish Coffee House
Dinner in China Town. We had Peking Duck and DimSum.
The original maps showing the movement of the various troops involved in the war...
We arrived an hour before the changing of the Guard. And thank goodness that we did. The crowds were unbelievable. A cabbie told us later that the full changing of the Guard takes place every other day. We were very lucky that we were there on a day where all the pomp and ceremony were present. The regiment involved in the changing of the Guard today was the Gherkins. Every three days a new regiment takes over (there are 5 regiments).
Despite the fact that their very existence depended on electricity, the men and women who lived in the War Rooms were very electricity conscious!
Back on terra firma, we crossed back over the Thames over the Golden Jubilee Bridge.
The Enigma coding machine.
Clemmy Churchillβs bedroom. Compare this to Churchillβs bedroom a few photos on.
Old meets new on Piccadilly Circus.
The Guards at the gates of the Barracks at the end of St Jamesβ Park. Even the horse is stoic!
The closest we got to the door at 10 Downing street. This is the ACTUAL door Churchill walked through after being made PM! There is no key to the door and it can only be opened from the inside. The current door of 10 Downing Street is bomb proof - installed after the IRA bombed the door in 1991.
Green Park is ... well ... green.
The London Eye is a remarkable engineering feat! The round trip took about 30 minutes and the views were spectacular!
The PMβs dining room is quintessentially British and enabled Churchill and his wife, Clementine, to dine together even during the worst of the Blitz.
This is a close up of the cartoon of Hitler.
Lunch at the War Rooms.
The architecture along Piccadilly is incredible.
These are the crowds about 30 minutes before the changing of the Guard was due to begin.
Complete with key...
And the through a shopping center called The Arches. It was eerie!
At 8am, London is still sleeping.
We watched Darkest Hour before we came to London and that really helped put the various rooms into perspective. This is the actual War Room. The chair in the middle under the map is the actual chair Churchill sat in. In fact, nothing in the entire museum is fake (except the statues of the people) - everything is what was actually found after the War Rooms were opened up post WWII.
The crowds during the changing of the Guard. It was crazy!
The statue of William Shakespeare in the middle of the Square.
Buckingham Palace.
The Cabinet Room contained a map on one wall where someone had doodled a cartoon of Hitler.
Back on the road, we made our way to Westminster Abbey, but could unfortunately not get in.
No truer words...
The famous Map Room. The men who worked here were the elite and were called the Glamour Boys. In 1987, when a full inventory of the War Rooms was done, they discovered sugar cubes that had been stashed in a drawer. You can see them on the left side of the desk at the front of this photo.
And it begins. It takes about 45 minutes for the full ceremony.
A cross section of the ceiling. The cinder block is 6 feet thick!
East meets West
China Town by day.
Piccadilly Circus.
Trafalgar Square - blocked off for a theatre show this weekend... so no sitting on the Lions π¦
World war 2 - memorial - probably the newest monument in London
Walk through the Green Park - move 30m of the main streets and you are in this peace oasis
Graydon and his war hero...
Tree Huggers?π
M&M... the craze continue...
Churchill war room... cabinet room
Sneaky selfie π€£
On The Golden Jubilee Bridge with the Lond eye, parliament and β Big Benβ under restoration until 2021 π€¬ Luckily we knew about it
Inside of the map room
Changing of the guard crowds were crazy!!! Loco - apparently we were lucky to see a full change of the guard - horses, bands...
Spot on!!! The machine got Addison as a Dark Pink... for being a True Friend...
Cathedral no 1 for the trip... Westminster Abbey
Leister Square with Shakespeareβ statue. Kids could not understand why we had to go here... until we went back this evening to have dinner... from a peaceful park at 08:00 to a mega explosion of people and activities at 20:00
As promised to Addison...we went to see Harrods lights...
FInally, photo in front of the original 10 Downing door... No Key and only opens from the inside...π€ It was replace with a bomb proof door...
The Map Room - probably would be the modern day Business Intelligence Department
Back in Chinatown for dum sim and Peking duck... Awesome meal...
Canβt imagine it was fun in these underground βbunkerβ
Closes we could get to potentially Boris Johnsonβs new residence - 10 Downing Street... way in the background
room where the generals met
One of the generals drew a picture of Hitler on the maps - Graffiti??
Finally away from the massive crowds... crossing duck pond... walking through St James Park
Addison discovering her true M&M colour...
Zoom out of map with hitler graffiti
Chinatown... early morning
Finally, the M&M store - Absolutely crazy to have 4 floors shop celebrating a bop of chocolate covered in candy... back for the OCD people... M&M sorted by colourπ³
Paparazzi storking the Royal Family again...
Our last day in London started en route to Madame Tussaudβs. We are tubing like locals!
Now you donβt!
Addi and will.i.am colabbing.
The one and only Madiba! It was interesting to watch tourists from every conceivable country, speaking every conceivable language, line up to take a pic with Tata. I felt very proud!
And what real life looks like!
Back to the hotel via Carnaby. What a fun place!
Lewis Hamilton. Who is shorter than Tom Cruise!
Hagrid out of LEGO.
Addi and Graydon having some fun with the Proton blasters. What special effects make it look like.
And ACTION!!!
The Lubbes with Sir Isaac Newton and Sir Charles Dickins.
Addi and Harry Potterβs invisibility cloak. Now you see me...
And some famous athletes! Usain Bolt.
An 11:00 am cocktail at the nearby Metropolitan Bar.
St Pancras Station. Farewell London! We loved every moment! Now on to leg 2 of our European adventure: Amsterdam (via Brussels) in the Eurostar.
And the ever-present storm trooper
A trip in a black can through the Spirit of London. The ride took us through the historical highs and lows of London - from the Black Plague to Queen Victoria, and everything between.
Traveling first class. Thereβs no other way to do this!
BB-8 out of LEGO.
Addi meets Alfred Hitchcock.
Yippeekayay, motherβ¬Β£%~>#s!!!
Nothing like love from a robot.
The one and only Nick Fury. And the Marvel heroes.
And no trip to London is complete without a visit to Hamleyβs. Graydon loved the Fortnite Merch - as yet unavailable in SA, and Addi bought, of all things, a drone! We did not see that one coming!
Ronaldo.
Because he was there!
Warp speed in the Millenium Falcon with Cheubakka.
Graydon and Churchill. Sir Winston was a theme of this trip.
The dark side vs the force, with the Emperor looking on.
The original license for Madame Tussaudβs exhibition, and the first admission tickets.
The Incredible Hulk is HUGE!!!
Waiting for the Search for Sherlock exhibit. What fun!!!
I was last at Madame Tussaudβs in 1999. It has become very interactive and we had a lot of fun Searching for Sherlock Holmes, a 4D Marvel movie and the Spirit of \240London cab ride through the history of London. We met movie stars, pop stars, world leaders, world thinkers, aliens, Jedi and many many more characters.
Atilla \240the Hun and Princess Leia.
Arrived Brussels station. We had to run to catch the connection to Amsterdam because the train didnβt stop in the zones it was supposed to!
Welcome to Amsterdam! We walked out of the wrong side of the station and then needed to find a way through to the other side. Sounds simple, but when you need a public transport card to open the turnstiles, itβs not so simple! Eventually a friendly fellow pointed us in the right direction and in 7 minutes we were at our hotel. The smell of weed is unmistakable. Graydon whispered to me: βMommy, I saw a guy smoking but it wasnβt a cigarette, so I deduced that it was weed!β He was most surprised to learn that marijuana use is completely legal here, and has been for years!
The other end of Spuisstraat. I can only describe the city as photogenic. Thereβs something to photograph around every nook and cranny.
The view from our table. Itβs 22:30 and itβs still light!
It looks like a lamppost fell on two bicycles some time ago. The bikes have just been left there, and so has the lamppost!
Eating Italian in Amsterdam.
Addi jumping for joy! This city is NOT straight! All the buildings seem to be leaning in one direction or another. Itβs a hodgepodge of tall, thin buildings that rely on each other to keep them standing. This is not a city for OCD people!
I ordered tagliatelle with truffle. This is what a R407 plate of pasta looks like! It was delicious!
Spuisstraat. The view to the right of our hotel.
Iβve found that I love the early morning in every new city best. European cities are awake until very late at night, and are slow to wake in the mornings. Shops only open at 10:00 (or later), and we struggled to find places to have breakfast at 8:00! I couldnβt stop taking photos of the canal houses. Every one of them has its own characteristics. Thereβs a surprise everywhere you look. This is my second visit to Amsterdam and I liked it much better this time round. When the sun starts to set, however, the seediness of the city is palpable. I donβt like Amsterdam after dark.
I found this very funny. A hoist was invented by a local butcher to fish out various items that had fallen into the canals. The picture depicts what was recovered from the water by the butcher between 1870 and 1884. It was especially funny later in the day when we saw a man trying to get off his boat and fell into the canal!
One the left of this picture is Johannesburg at 1600m above sea level. About half way to the right (next to the pyramid-looking structure) is Schipol airport, which is 3,9m below sea level.
The Royal Room in the Amsterdam Museum.
The Koeppelkerk opposite our hotel.
The carpet in this gallery is made up of 180 squares - each one representing a different nationality living in Amsterdam.
The youth collapse exhausted - connected to WiFi!
The entrance to the Amsterdam Museum. We spent some time learning about the history of Amsterdam - how it was reclaimed from the sea, how it became the capital of freedom in the 50s and 60s, and how itβs ongoing existence is dependent on the people who come from a multitude of nationalities across the world.
The Amsterdam Museum has a wing called the Kinder Weeshuis. It was an interactive exhibit that depicted life in the city orphanage. I reserve judgment on whether it was a terrible place or an oasis for desperate children.
This little car was known as a White Car. It was built in 1965 by a movement known as Provo. Itβs an electric car! Unfortunately the movement to electric cars failed because the city didnβt make enough charging parking spots available for the cars. They are apparently enjoying a revival now and we saw many electrical cars plugged in all over the city.
This building is known as the Eye. Itβs a cinema complex. Itβs Fugly!
The Westerse Kerk.
The boys learning stuff!
Finally! Dutch pancakes for breakfast (the fact that they were made by Indians didnβt make them less delicious)
I couldnβt resist these two little dogs staring out the window! Although we didnβt venture into the Red Light District (for obvious reasons), we did see some windows that offered the red light wares en route. That sparked a debate about the legalization of prostitution.
The Royal Palace on Dam Square. It was originally built as the City Hall, but there was a big debate whether it should be larger and more impressive than the Niewe Kerk right next to it. The debate centered around whether Law is higher than Church, or vice versa.
Addi noticed that every single pole on every single bridge (of which there are 1700 in Amsterdam) has the XXX that is depicted on the Dutch Royal flag.
Some scenes of Amsterdam when the tourists are out and about.
The Royal Palace from the other side of Dam Square.
Drinks at 22:00! We sat and watched people go about their business. It was so far the best evening weβve had - chatting and laughing. And watching a guy fall into the canal!
Some details on the Royal Palace.
We did a canal tour on a boat that gave us a view if the city from the water.
This is the Amstel Hotel. Itβs the most exclusive and expensive hotel in Amsterdam (and THATβs saying something!). Itβs where royalty and celebrities stay when they are in town.
The Niewe Kerk on Dam Square. It was built when the Dutch Reformed Church became the main religion in Holland and ousted Catholicism.
Check out the narrow little house between the two buildings! They are all over place and we wondered who lives there and how it came to be built.
This is the Homomonument - a monument to victims of gay and lesbian persecution.
Here Graydon and Addison pose next to a statue of Anne Frank. We could not get tickets to go inside Anne Frank House (even when we tried to book a month before our trip!).
A reproduction of the East India Company Ship called the Amsterdam.
The black object at the top of this building is a swing!
Addison chasing bubbles on Dam Square.
Early morning start, after pancakes in a small cafe run by Indians ( if India win... we are invited to a βfreeβ celebration party)
Below is Anne Frank House- it was booked full when we were doing all our reservations... so we just walked passed it
Kaas van die plaas... Hollandse kaas
After the boat cruise through the canals, we ended up eating βas much as you can sushiβ close to the flower market... Graydon and Addison made sure we got value for money... we had to roll home (but not before we had to stop at a shoe store...)
Westerkerk tower -Rembrandt is buried in this church...
After a great afternoon/evening nap, we headed out for sundowners and tapas at 20:00... below is Graydon posing form our cafe seat (just before we witnessed aβBritβ falling into the water while anchoring their boat... Just awesome to sit and watch life... the kids are growing to quick and both have the most incredible sense of humour - fun traveling with them
Dam Square with the Palace and the Nuwe kerk on the right
Anne Frank cont...
Street view of sushi restaurant...
On our way from the train station to our hotel, we flew past the Victory Column (known to locals as Golden Lizzie) which was erected to commemorate victory in the Franco Prussian War.
We took a 6 hour tran it was so tryring but we had fun
Another early morning stroll through the streets of Amsterdam.
South Africa is still light years behind Europe as far as tech is concerned.
Rowing a Spanish slave galleon.
If I didnβt see this for myself, I would not have believed it. A fly on which someone painted Van Goghβs famous self portrait AND a portrait of Charlie Chaplin.
A dinosaur made out of trumpets.
Inside the alien laboratory!
A view of Dam Square from Ripleys.
Breakfast on Dam Square.
And Addi couldnβt be left out...
Norte Dame made out of match sticks.
A picnic in our compartment. The conductor found it very funny that we had βinstalledβ ourselves with Dutch cheese.
Goodbye Amsterdam! On the train station waiting for our Intercity train to Berlin.
A piece of the Berlin Wall - appropriate because our next stop is Berlin.
You canβt leave Holland without a picture in a clog!
A giant man-eating clam.
More skew, beautiful canal houses.
Given that our next stop was the Van Gogh Museum, I thought it was appropriate to take a photo of his self portrait made out of toothpaste!
Even South Africa has an honourable mention in Ripleys - unfortunately itβs for a guy who wears sharpened teeth!
Dam Square before Amsterdam is awake and after a hard night of partying!
Trying our hand at shooting stuff. Despite the hours of Fortnite shooting stuff, Graydon was not very good at this!
Addi being eaten by a Megalodon.
Our first tram ride.
Revolving space tunnel.
Chrisβs soulmate!
Thousands of bicycles are parked all over city. Crossing a street is complicated! You have to look out for cars, pedestrians, trams and bicycles. Luckily none of us were knocked over, but it was a close thing!
Addi made her own comic book. Apparently itβs been emailed to her - we shall see...
Breakfast this morning was coffee and pastries from the corner bakery.
And one made from toast!
We spent a large part of the morning in Ripleys Believe it or Not. It was yet another great museum experience with so much to do and experience. The kids loved it!
Chilling in the park next to the Van Gogh Museum. I am a huge Van Gogh fan and we loved the visit in the museum. Unfortunately we couldnβt take photos in the museum, but we all wished we had more time to absorb all the stories behind his paintings.
Graydon trying his hand at VR.
Graydon investigating the planets.
The British Royal carriage made out of corn starch.
Graydon ordered a Dutch pancake with powdered sugar and Nutella.
A huge robot made out of car parts.
A motorbike made out of the bones of animals - cows, mostly, but also some roadkill.
An actual vampire killing kit!
Under the alien laboratory ...
Family portrait.
This is a depiction of the Mona Lisa as seen by a computer! How amazing is that?!
Some fun with the magic mirror...
Mnms
Traffic jam in the canals
Hamleys was awesome, there were seven stories, wow.
Ready to take on Berlin. Although I must say we were all a lot tired today, so instead of walking a lot, we mastered the U-Bahn and the S-Bahn. Even so, we walked 16395 steps today!
A photographic depiction of the erection of the Wall.
Uber Jump. We think itβs probably a step down from Uber X.
The first record of using code - for a recipe for ceramic glazing, no less - in 1500 AD!
The day was just too much for some of us!
A model of the Bridge of Spies, where many exchanges of spies between East and West took place during the Cold War.
On our meanderings in search of underground stations, we came across an actual working water pump!
At the Brandenburg Gate.
Addison is standing on the West side of the Wall and Graydon is on the East.
We do love Berlin, but we agree that it isnβt a pretty city.
The infamous Checkpoint Charlie.
Special ink that allows you to see text through a special magnifying glass.
On the ground are brass tracks of where the Wall used to be. grenzmauer means Border Wall.
On the S-Bahn.
The famous Enigma machine
The exploding cigarette. Chris was warned to stop smoking...
We spent a couple of wonderful hours at the German Spy Museum. It was a completely immersive experience. Much to my dismay all the quizzes I took indicated that I would have been a terrible spy. Graydon was also dubbed βtoo honestβ, but Chris and Addi would have made excellent spies. I have mixed feelings about this...
I front of where each house used to be is a plaque in the ground indicating how many people fled their homes into West Berlin and when.
Bond. James Bond.
Looking for hidden messages.
A lift from the underground tube station to , literally, nowhere!
Hiding a code in a walnut!
Addi tested her passwords. The computer hacked it in 0,00025 seconds. Graydon made one up that would take 236 tectillion years. He wonβt say what it is.
The only remaining part of the actual Berlin Wall.
And the cameras were tiny!
When in Berlin...
Even Chris got into the swing of things in the laboratory.
Addi successfully disarmed the bomb!
These stepping stones are indicative of the path of an escape tunnel dug in 1962.
Graydon failed the mission.
Back on the S-Bahn.
Turkish food in Berlin. The world is really just a global village!
Preparing to save the world. The mission is to disarm the detonator by making your way through a maze of moving laser beams.
Addi posing at a model of Tunnel 29, which was one of about 70 tunnels dug under the Berlin Wall to help people escape East Germany. The tunnel is named Tunnel 29 because 29 people escaped through it, although chronologically, it was the 32nd tunnel to have been built.
The spy equipment was almost too fantastical to believe!
The Hollow Tooth in the distance. Although it was on the itinerary, we ran out of time to see it up close and personal today, so we will try take it in early tomorrow before we catch our train to Poznan.
As we emerged from the Potsdamer Platz underground station, we spotted these three slivers of buildings.
This used to be the dead zone between the Wall on the Eastern side of Berlin and the smaller barricade on the Western side of Berlin. Today it is a lovely park where people picnic.
Graydon trying to crack a code.
The stop and go men are so cute with their little hats!
The Berlin Wall Monument runs for about 3km along Bernauer StraΓe.
Looking for bugs...
Probably the highlight of the day was the Berlin Underworlds Tour. We did the tour that highlighted the many attempts (some more successful than others) to cross the Berlin Wall. We could unfortunately not take any pictures during the tour, but here is Graydon standing whether the Wall used to be, along Bernauer StraΓe. The Berliners have put up an incredible monument to the Wall, and to the people whose lives were changed by its erection in 1961.
Some pieces of the Berlin Wall.
Getting into disguise
Proton - a Russian underwater propeller machine that could travel 6,5km/h for 24km.
We took some time to explore the Checkpoint Charlie Museum. It was filled with so much stuff and information that we were completely overwhelmed. The curators of this museum could take some guidance from basically all the other museums weβve seen to make so much information more accessible to the public.
The prospect of dinner and putting our feet up put a smile on our faces.
The Wall was built along the front doors of a row of houses along Bernauer StraΓe. The people who lived in these houses simply opened their front doors and walked from East to West, so the Stasi boarded up the front door and ground floor windows. The people started jumping out of the first and second storey windows, so eventually they were evicted and all the windows boarded up. The facades of these houses actually formed the Wall in some places! These are the excavated foundations of one of these houses, which is a monument today.
TODAY WAS SO FUN AND VERY \240TRYING \240WE WENT TO THE SPY MUSEUM AND WE PUT OUR OWN PASSWORDS AND FOR GANDON WILL TAKE 236 tech till ion years π± AND MY WILL TAKE 816 million \240years \240it was really \240awesome π
Unfortunately we didnβt make it to the Hollow Tooth, but we did see it in the distance en route to the train station. Next time!
Goodbye Berlin! Weβll be back!
And as a parting gift, we saw the Dom Cathedral from the train. Also on the itinerary for next time!
Graydon entertaining himself on the train to Poznan. I donβt think he noticed a single thing outside the window!
The whole Square is surrounded by these old apartment blocks that were completely rebuilt following WW II. The one we are staying in is called Apartamenty Neptun and is the little dark one right in the centre of this photo.
Some other houses encircling the Square.
An old mosaic clock I spotted along the way.
Of all the places we stayed in so far, this was by far the best. Two bedrooms and this lounge overlooking the Old Square.
Addi peeking out from our window.
The view of the Old Square from the lounge.
We took a stroll through Poznan (not a very long one because it was too hot to move). Our aim was a shopping Centre called Start Browar, in which there is a shop that sells these amazing fudge sweets we havenβt seen anywhere else.
Some sights on the way from the main station to our apartment on the Old Square (Stary Rynek). This is the City Hall (called the Ratush) in the middle of the Old Square.
The bathroom. Very cute and worth an honourable mention.
This is also a city where old and new coexists. This is a random old building en route to Stary Browar.
Addi was much wiser with the time on the train and had herself a nap!
And here is a new building. It looks like a metal Crinkle Cut chip.
Dinner with our attorney (and friend) on Stary Rynek.
Lunch at Bravaria, a restaurant on the Old Square chosen because it was the only one with misters! It was a scorcher today and we were told by our taxi driver that it wa expected to go up to 37 degrees tomorrow!! Holy Cow!
Somewhere between Berlin and Poznan is a place called Pczczew. We inherited some agricultural land from my aunt that is situated here, and looks something like this.
Today was so relaxing we arrived in poznan
To
Well, of COURSE Europe would be experiencing a heatwave while we are here! We saw one city thermometer that said it was 43 degrees! I have honestly never been so hot in my entire life!
You can see the open wooden doors just above the clock.
The tradesmen houses next to City Hall. They are completely gorgeous!
A couple of buildings we saw as we wandered around the city (in the shade and VERY slowly!)
There are old and beautiful murals all over the city.
Piotr and Julia Muth in their incredible garden. We had breakfast fit for royalty!
We spent the morning with family friends. Graydon and Addison were also struggling with the heat and snoozed on the way to their house in the air-conditioned Uber.
At noon every day, the Bells in the City Hall tower chime and then two tin goats emerge from the wooden doors just above the clock and head butt each other 12 times. It drew quite a crowd!
Look at the size of these cherries! And boy are they delicious!
Graydon and Addi doing like the Europeans are doing today - splashing around in the closest fountain. This is a fountain on Freedom Square.
Iβm not sure how I feel about the modern architecture in Poznan. It feels as if the more outrageous the design is, the better.
The legend behind the goats in the clock tower.
Even the pigeons were hot and congregating around the fountain.
The heat and a touch of flu getting to Chris. He had some much-deserved shut-eye in the train from Poznan to Krakow.
Back in the Old Square.
We arrived in Krakow at 23:30 and were ecstatic to see this welcome note when we found our apartment - a little two bedroom place with aircon!
Itβs a very small space!
It was so hot (although a little cooler than in Poznan) that a bit of a rest in the shade was called for.
Eating Pierogi.
We visited the Wieliczka Salt Mine - the oldest salt mine in the world. The mine is 327m deep, but we only went as deep as 160m under the surface. The first level was reached by taking 378 steps down to 138m under ground. The tour was 3km through a maze of tunnels and chambers, but the mine has about 300km of tunnels. The mine only stopped commercially mining salt in 1997. This is a picture of the stairwell from the top. It was about 14 - 16 degrees in the mine - a welcome respite from the searing heat.
Farewell Krakow and Poland! Here we are waiting for the first of three overnight trains we will be catching this trip. The kids couldnβt wait!
Another exquisite chandelier. This one is in a chamber that is 90m high and supported by a series of beams that defies logic.
Some pictures of architecture along the way.
Some buildings on the Old Square.
A statue of Pope John Paul II
This is yet another chamber that is 50m high, carved entirely out of rock salt.
The entrance to our apartment, but this photo was taken at 7:30 the next morning when we were on our way out and to the train station to stash our luggage in a locker there.
This is a 3D tendering if DA Vinciβs βLast Supperβ in one of the walls in the chapel.
Addi checking out the salt walls.
The floors all along the tour were made of salt, and I wondered who had thought of carving the βtilesβ into the floors.
This scene (all the statues in it are made of salt) depicts the legend of how the salt mine was discovered. Princess Kinga was promised to a Hungarian prince in marriage. On her way to Hungary, she dropped her engagement ring in the mine and wished that all the salt in Hungary was gifted to Poland. According to the legend, her engagement ring was found in the first salt rock excavated from the mine.
This is a salt bust of King Kazimierz the Great.
An inside lake in the mine.
The first chamber we reached was excavated between 1669 and 1689.
The piece de resistance - St Kingaβs Chapel. Everything except the benches is made of salt - the statues, the walls, the floors, all the artwork, and the chandeliers. The chapel is thought to have been excavated in 1862, and was found in 1896.
Addi and I were squashed into a minersβ lift to the surface. Thank goodness none of us were claustrophobic!
Back in the apartment waiting to check out. Thatβs the other thing about Europe - they do not start work until 10:00!!! But then they close shop from 20:00 onwards.
We took a walk to the Wewel Castle, which is built on a grass hill that legend says houses the Wewel Dragon. In fact, the dragon is a symbol of Krakow.
This is a salt bust of King Kaz
A salt statue of a dwarf. All the statues in the mine were sculpted by the miners themselves, which is an incredible feat considering the detail of these statutes and the fact that when they were sculpted, the mine was dark and lit only by lanterns carried by the miners.
Graydon and Addi standing in front of an old tunnel.
This is St Sebastianβs cathedral. The two spires are completely different because legend has it that two brothers were commissioned to build them. Being competitive, the decided to see who could build the taller one. Unfortunately the brother who lost threw the winning brother off his tower to his death. We could not go into the cathedral because there was a special mass being held there.
The steps leading down to the second level of the mine.
On our way back to the Old Square, we stumbled on the worldβs smallest sweet manufacturer and saw a demonstration on how they make their sugar creations. It was fascinating! It starts out as this huge lump of sugar and eventually is formed into these tine sweets that look like orange slices. They have 67 different flavors and each sweet looks like a mini work of art.
Back on the surface, we made our way back to the Old Square. We crossed the Votive River.
The biggest chandelier in the chamber is made of 2 500 salt crystals and was list by candles until the mine was electrified.
The first βtouristβ to the mine was none other than Copernicus- he of the βearth revolves around the sun and not the other way aroundβ theory. The statue is made entirely of salt. He visited in the 15th century.
A bronze sculpture of the historical walls of the City of Krakow that are still standing! They were built in the 15th century. Thatβs the thing about Europe - there is so much history that is not only being preserved, but highlighted and celebrated - the good with the bad. It all form part of what each country is today. Itβs something South Africa can learn from!
Addi and Graydon on their top bunks.
Breakfast is about to be served!
Hello Austria! We arrived in Vienna at 7:00 and decided to take a day room so that we could shower and stash our stuff.
42km of the river front has been converted to an entertainment area for the citizens of Vienna.
The UN buildings.
The Art Museum on the one side...
The famous Blue Danube. The river cuts through Vienna in various places and is not at all blue. It is the second longest river in Europe, being 2 800km long and crossing through 10 cities.
This is the river that inspired Johan Straussβs Danube Waltz. Strauss was born in Vienna.
The Viennese are very proud of the fact that the city has the purest water in the world. It makes its way naturally without any pumps from the Austrian Alps to the taps without any purification process. Although we were told that there were 900 drinking fountains throughout the city, we didnβt see a single one. And the water tasted bad! Iβll take y chemically purified water over this stuff any day (although Graydon and Chris disagree with me).
This is the Votive Church - the most beautiful building I have ever seen. This was where we would meet our Big Bus Hop On Hop Off tour.
None is us is sure of what Running Sushi and Running Fondue is.
The State Opera House. It was burnt to the ground at the end of WW II and was rebuilt completely. It is also the scene of filming of Mission Impossible 5.
We visited the Schunbrunn Palace - the summer time of the Hapsburgs - and had a bite to eat before we went in.
A view of the βpool houseβ from the Palace.
The HofBerg Palace. No-one knows exactly how many rooms there are in the Palace. Estimates are that there are about 3000!
Some scenes I snapped as we whizzed past in the train.
The hills in the background of this photo are gone to wine farms that produce the famous Austrian white wines.
How cute are these traffic lights?!
A view if the Kaiser Wilhelm Jubilee Church from another side.
And so we depart...
The floor is made of solid wood. It is absolutely beautiful.
The French Embassy in Vienna. It has been dubbed the Building of Bad Taste.
The spire of St Stephenβs Cathedral (which we did not go to see) is the one in the right. It is 140m high and can be seen from anywhere in the city. After WW II, a fire almost destroyed it, and it was rebuilt using private funds donated by Austrians. The bell at St Stephenβs is not rung very often because it is so loud that it may cause structural damage to the cathedral.
Some buildings along the bus route. My criticism of the tour is that there wasnβt information given on all the buildings we passed.
And itβs twin, the Technology Museum on the other.
This is the worldβs oldest (and for a time, highest) Ferris wheel. In 1916, the city obtained a court order to have it demolished but there was never enough money to give effect to the order. Itβs since been revamped and is operational as part of an amusement park that was once referred to as the Las Vegas of Europe.
This is the Palace. Itβs a massive place and the tour we took only covered the state rooms. Unfortunately we could not take photos inside.
The Palace has seen its share of historical events. Mozart performed here for Queen Maria Elizabeth when he was just 6 years old! And it was here that the famous Kennedy - Khrushchev meeting took place.
The Coptic Orthodox Cathedral.
Now this is travel! First class sleeping compartment on the train from Vienna to Rome.
All the walls along the Danube Canal have been designated Graffiti Walls. This was done in an effort to limit vandalism of historical buildings in the city , and has seemed to have worked.
Modern Vienna. According to law, skyscrapers can only be built in this part of Vienna. In the older parts of the city, the height of buildings is limited.
The Coptic Orthodox Church built by Russian prisoners. Quite different to the ornate Kaiser Wilhelm Jubilee Church. In the background are the UN buildings.
Kaiser Wilhelm Jubilee Church on Mexico Square. It is also known as the Mexican Church. Kaiser Wilhelm ruled Austria for 68 years. He was married to Maria Elizabeth, who herself became a legend (and not in a good way) and earned the nickname βSisiβ. They were the parents of Marie Antoinette, who married King Louis V of France. She is famously quoted as saying βLet them eat cakeβ when the Bourgeoisie revolted in France.
This is one of 3 Flak Towers in Vienna built by the Nazis in 1944 during the occupation of Austria in WW II. The walls are 2 m thick and were not demolished after the war because of the cost involved in doing so. One of them has been turned into an aquarium.
Fresh from the shower, we set out to explore Vienna in 7 hours, an impossible task but we were up for it.
The Historical Fine Arts Museum, built by the Hapsburgs to house their private art collection.
This Dome was erected as a memorial to all the victims of the Black Plague.
These pics were taken at about 20:00! Then it was lights out for a good nights sleep on the 14 hour train ride to Rome.
Some buildings in the Jewish Quarter on Vienna. This neighborhood was home to Siegmund Freud.
We finally saw the inside of a cathedral! We went into the Votive Church. At first sight, \240it is quite simple and modest, but if one looks closely, the detail is unbelievable and sumptuous. The stained glass windows are especially beautiful.
The cutest little traffic lights, only in Austria
The integrated architecture in Vienna
We drove past the UN hq. holly smokes itβs big.
A really old church:)
Stairs, stairs and more stairs π
The salt mines were amazing, we went 130 meters underground and walked roughly 3km, this was our highest walking day so far with over 20 000 steps and over 12km. Thatβs a lot of walking πΆ.
Scammers right in the station where we arrived, may have colored my opinion of Rome a little bit, but we have 36hrs to change that. We have taken a taxi to our hotel and walked a little bit as well, my opinion is already changing.
Having spent a very comfortable night on the overnight train from Vienna, we reached the outskirts of Rome at about 8:30. These are some pictures of what we saw as we approached Rome.
We were once again not allowed to take photos in the catacombs because it is regarded as disrespectful, but I downloaded some pics from the internet that show what they look like. We saw probably about 5% of the vast network of catacombs, and all the remains have been removed. Our guide told us that they are finding remains in the newly excavated areas of the catacombs.
Our third and last stop on the tour was the Church of St Clement. It is an operational church and a live archaeological site. Again, we were not allowed to take photos, but I got a bit fed up with this (because the last thing I am is disrespectful to God) and snuck a few photos in while the guide was not looking.
St Clement was a narrator at the Roman Forum and worked under three emperors. The church is very interesting in that it was built in the 12th century, but there are two churches under the one we can see above ground. As the story goes, the priest of St Clement heard running water and starting excavating a corner of the church to find its source. He uncovered a series of chambers that turned out to be an entire church! It is estimated that this church was built in the 4th century! But still the source of the running water was not found, and excavations continued. A third series of chambers was found - this dating back 4000 years! It was a temple of the Methrite religion. Methrites are star worshippers and the altars in this area were all testament to the stars and constellations. At lastvthe running water was found - part of the Tiber River was flowing under the church.
This picture was taken in the main church and is of the very ornate ceiling - almost out of place in this very simple church.
More drinking from fountains. It felt really weird to trust water coming from taps without any purification. Everyone was walking around with water bottles and filling them up at these fountains.
Rome has about 1000 churches. This is the Church of St Mary Major.
The Altare della Patria (the Altar to the Fatherland). The Spanish steps are just behind the monstrous structure, but we only realized that once we had sped past in a taxi and couldnβt snap a pic.
The size of the walls, built thousands of years ago, is breathtaking.
And on the other end.
It reached about 37 degrees today, but water fountains are available throughout the city where everyone is free to drink from the fountains or fill water bottles. Here Chris is drinking from a drinking fountain right next to the Trevi fountain.
Pasta and pizza in a restaurant across from the Piazza Barberini.
This is the famous Bartolucci Toy Store. It is famous for hand crafting every single toy from wood.
Running at its base is an aqueduct.
And of course, the Trevi fountain. I had no idea that it is so big. There is no question that it is beautiful, but itβs size is noteworthy. It pumps 80 million liters of water through its system every day! The crowds were something, too. Rome is an incredible city, but it is ruined by the tourists (yes, I see the irony of that statement). From all the cities weβve visited, this is really the only one I felt I needed to check my bag all the time. If you know what to look for, you can spot the scammers and pick pockets. Graydon made it a point to try and spot them.
The statue in the middle of the Piazza Barberini, which was our meeting point for our tour of the Capuchin Monk crypts and catacombs tour.
The best ice-cream ever! Itβs pronounced βVenkiβ and not βVenchiβ as our helper told us. They were very interested in the fact that we came from Africa.
Our first glimpse of a really really old structure.
Ciao Roma!
We spotted some padlocks locked into chains around the city. Itβs reminiscent of the Bridge of Locks in Paris (which, the kids told me, has been removed because the weight of the locks collapsed the bridge!).
Chris made very good use of Google Maps and CityMapper. These little streets can be very confusing!
These columns are monstrous!
I did manage to snap a picture of the interior through the front door.
Addi throwing a coin into the Trevi fountain. The correct way to do it is to throw it with your right hand over your left shoulder. It is said that throwing a coin in the fountain means you will return to Rome one day.
This is Piazza Novona.
Our first glimpse of the Pantheon. Despite having bought Fast Track tickets, we could not go in as the Pantheon is an operational church and today was the Feast of the Saints Peter and Paul so it was closed to the public.
Having arrived at Romeβs train station, we needed to reserve seats on the train from Rome to Venice. So we joined the queue to customer service of Freccia Rossa, the intercity train service. These are rather specific opening hours!
After visiting the crypts, we were taken by bus to the catacombs outside what used to be the city walls. The most amazing thing was to see that some of the city walls are still standing!
The tour was great, and we got our first glimpse of the Colosseum!
These are my undercover pictures so are a little unfocused, but they are of the second church.
This is an actual Roman Road and lead down to the third church. I couldnβt take any photos of the third church because the guide was starting to look at me very closely!
The view on the one end of the Via Dei Fori Imperiali.
On our walk home (which took a detour we shall not mention) we saw some ruins that are clearly still being excavated, but we couldnβt find any information on what they were ruins of.
The Basilica Santa Maria. A church can only be a basilica if relics of saints are kept there.
Dinner in the ancient streets of Rome. Our waiter took one look at Graydon and called him (much to his disgust) βJustin Bieberβ!
A beautiful insert into a wall of St Paulβs-in-the-Wall Church.
And off we set to explore Rome.
Some more random sights on our wanderings.
Like all the ancient Roman structures, the Pantheon is immense. Itβs really difficult to comprehend how such enormous buildings were built so long ago, where there were no machines.
I took this photo to show how big the columns really are. Graydon (who is 1,5m tall) doesnβt even reach the top of the base!
After meeting our tour guide, he sent us across the road where we found a fountain with the coolest water we could access. The kids took advantage to cool down.
Fields and fields of sunflowers.
Pinocchio.
Very similar to the Pantheon at first sight, this is the Temple of Hadrian.
I downloaded some pics from the internet to give an idea of what we saw. The quote in the first crypt was βWhat we are now, you shall one day also beβ.
Addi strutting her stuff in front of one of the many designer stores.
The entrance to the Capichin Monks Museum. Unfortunately we were not allowed to take photos in the crypts because it was considered disrespectful to the dead. We also had to ensure our shoulders and knees were covered. There were 6 crypts that were decorated with the bones of 3700 dead Capuchin Monks. The most interesting thing was the symbolism used in the decorations. The theme throughout was the fact that time flies, and that one day we too shall be dead.
Graydon thought it was a scam until we read that the coins are collected every night and donated to a city charity which loads the money into rechargeable cards that are given to the needy to enable them to buy groceries. About β¬3000 is fished out of the fountain every night. And it is a crime to take coins out of the fountain!
That water looked wonderful, but we couldnβt get near it.
En route to the hotel, I took photos of all the buildings that looked old or grand without really knowing what they were.
And of the small side streets that seem to breathe the history of this city.
Day 2 in Rome and we had big things planned, starting with the Colosseum and the Roman Forum. And we had our first drama of the trip because we didnβt check the meeting point for the tour and were late. When we finally got to where we were supposed to be, we had to beg to be included in a later group. I actually started crying. THAT got the boys at the tour company a bit panicky!
Finally they found some spots on an unguided tour, which was fine because it meant we got priority entry to the Forum and the Colosseum. The queues were crazy and we simply didnβt have the time to stand in them.
This is arch of Titus - one of four arches that led to the Colosseum (although only 2 remain standing).
But we still went out for drinks on San Markβs Square. It was 22:45 and we were tired, but we knew that we would not have another opportunity to see Venice by night.
The second remaining arch - the arch of Constantine.
βTemple of Venus and Romaβ
The right hand side colonnade leading from the bottom of Vatican Square to the Basilica.
Next stop: the Vatican. In deference to aching feet and frayed nerves, we took a taxi to Vatican City. Our minibus taxi drivers donβt hold a candle to Roman taxi drivers.
Michelangeloβs βPietaβ. I spent a lot of time taking this statue in. It is so quietly beautiful amidst all the ostentation that it brought tears to my eyes.
Our first look at the Basilica Di San Pietro, or St Peterβs Basilica. It is a magnificent and imposing building that hold court over Vatican City. There is no mistaking what the heart of the Vatican is.
The balcony where the Pope appears when he is at the Vatican.
All these brands on the way to our apartment like the breadcrumbs Hansel and Gretel followed. Chris just put his head down and walked really fast! Addi and I declared that we would come back on a girlsβ shopping week!
Poor Graydon was kaput!
And surprise surprise, even the Colosseum is under construction. This is a sub-theme if our trip: Europe under construction.
Even panoramic photos donβt tell the full story.
This is what 21st century children do when sitting at the Vatican waiting for entry to the St Peterβs Basilica. Sigh.
St Peterβs statue. It flanks the Popeβs altar.
From St Peterβs to the Square.
Altar of St Jerome and the Tomb of St John XXIII.
A view of the Colosseum from the Forum Romana.
The Popeβs altar from the main area of the Basilica. Only the Pope or his delegate can hold mass at this altar.
This was the first time we really got bad service at a restaurant in Europe. We sat down at about 22:50 and I asked the hovering waiter whether their kitchen was still open. He confirmed that it was and we placed our drinks order. When he came back with the drinks at 23:05, we wanted to place a food order and he says βah, sorry Madam, but our kitchen is closedβ. After picking my jaw up off the floor, I asked him when it had closed and he says β5 minutes ago.β I NEARLY lost it!
On the water taxi.
The Rialto Bridge by night.
It was so difficult to take photos that really do the size and scope of the Forum justice.
The Door of Sacraments.
And finally, our room!
Some remaining marble flooring. We were told that the Colosseum was cladded in marble from top to bottom, but when the Roman Empire fell, the marble was used to build other monuments and churches.
The Chapel of the Baptism.
Look! A Vatican Guard!
The Chapel of St Sebastian and the Tomb of St John Paul II.
On foot from the water taxi to our apartment.
We walked up Palatine Hill to get a good view of the Roman Forum.
There was a quartet playing lovely music on the Square.
A panorama photograph of the Popeβs Altar.
My first impression of the inside of St Peterβs Basilica was βoh my God. This canβt be real!β It is so ornate, so over the top, so gilded and so gold that it is difficult to believe that something like this actually exists. It is beautiful - in fact, βbeautifulβ is a complete understatement. And there is so much to take in that it is difficult to know what to focus on.
This is the top of one of the columns that used to line the passages of the Colosseum.
Look how tiny Addi is! This is the Domus Tiberiana, built by Emperor Hadrian.
The Monument of Countess Matilde of Canossa. The Countess is the only woman to be buried in the Vatican.
The Lubbes on the steps of St Peterβs Basilica taking a break from the heat.
The audio guide called this the βHeart of the Vaticanβ. It is the Chapel of the Sacraments, where the host and holy wine are kept.
Goodbye Rome! On the train from Rome to Venice.
A side view of the Popeβs Altar.
On the train crossing the Laguna Di Venezia, which separates mainland Italy from Venice.
The mosaics on the ceiling in every chapel are masterpieces.
Some more ceiling murals.
When Addi first saw the Colosseum, her jaw literally dropped. βAaaahhh Mommy,β she said, βlook, itβs really the Colosseum!β
It is an enormous structure. One can almost feel, see and hear the crowds as they watched gladiators, slaves and animals battle it out to the death. The place pulses with bloodlust.
A list of all the Popes since St Peter himself.
These photos were taken from the water taxi that took us from the train station to our stop at San Marco.
The Altar of the Transfiguration.
Hello Venice! I got butterflies in my stomach when we emerged from the train station to this. Of all the cities we visited, so far Venice is my absolute favourite. It is such a beautiful city - so picturesque that I couldnβt stop taking photos.
Before entering St Peterβs, we walked into a side chamber. The ceilings were magnificent, but little did we know that we ainβt seen nothinβ yet!
The poor kiddies bearing their heavy loads. We dropped our luggage off at a luggage locker place nearby and set off to explore Venice.
Piazza Di San Marco by day.
A 24 hour clock.
Basilica Di San Marco. Entry to the basilica is free and at 9:15 the queues were already stupid (the basilica opens at 9:30). So unfortunately we didnβt go in, but itβs a great reason to come back!
We crossed a few bridges...
Hercules slaying the Hydra.
The inner courtyard of the Dogeβs Palace. The domes are those of Basilica Di San Marco.
The Golden Staircase, so named for the 24 carat gold stucco ceilings. This was the ceremonial staircase that lead to the Dogeβs apartments and to the various chambers in which the state matters were discussed. The ceiling was completed in 1557 and is meant to be a tribute by Venice to itself. The ceiling depicts Venusβs conquest of Cyprus.
We had tickets to see the Dogeβs Palace. This is a corridor that leads to the entrance of the Palace.
And found a place to have breakfast. Addi complained that the plates were so small, but then told us that she layered her breakfast like Rome! Iβm glad the kids have learnt something on this trip!
Every nook and cranny has a story to tell.
I could not stop taking photos of the ceilings!
This is the Senate Chamber. The Senate was made up of representatives of the most important Venetian families and decided matters of finance and politics.
Taxi rank.
The view of the Basilica of St Markβs from the exit from the Dogeβs Palace.
A clock showing the signs of the Zodiac.
Graydon and Addi on board.
Goodbye Venice! We will definitely be back, and for much longer!
A few narrow passages.
Back in Venice.
And off we go!
Lobster pasta. The lobster was priced at β¬18 per 100g, and with 250g of lobster in the dish, this was by far the most expensive pasta I have ever eaten!
I was understandably very interested in the various rooms dedicated to the administration of justice. I noticed that the further one moved away from the Dogeβs apartments the less sumptuous the rooms got. This is the first of the chambers dedicated to the rule of law.
Dessert was basically a peach infused lemon meringue (it sounds mush better in Italian). Which was great until I realized that the meringue was not baked - effectively it is raw egg whites. Not my piece of pie at all! Chris liked it, though!
Having established that we cannot afford a Murano glass chandelier, we embarked on a 25 minute boat ride to Burano.
Some views of the city from the canals.
We attended a glass blowing demonstration at the New Murano Gallery. It is one of only 3 glass factories that is endorsed by the Venetian Chamber of Commerce because it complies with all standard set as far as quantity and methods used are concerned. There are over 1000 glass factories!
Some more views of Venice.
The Chamber of the Council of Tens. The Council was made up of the Doge, his six advisors and 10 members chosen from the Senate by the Great Council. The Council of Ten gained a reputation for being ruthless and all hearings were held in secret.
You could also book a gondola ride with a singer on board.
Glass blowing.
You canβt be precious about your boats or your walls if you live in Venice. Thereβs a rule that you have pass a gondola on the side away from the oar so that the oar can move unencumbered.
Graydon taking some pics from where the Doge may have stood.
The Chamber of the Great Council. Now this is what a court should look like! Itβs completely intimidating. And guess what comes after this room? The Bridge of Sighs!
This particular factory specializes in chandeliers. One chandelier was for sale for β¬250 000!!!!
A 6 hour clock. They were big on their clocks, these Venetians.
The next item on the itinerary was a tour to Murano (to see the famous glass blowing) and to Burano (to see the famous lace-making). En route we saw this temporary statue by Anthony Quinnβs son called βBuildng Bridgesβ. It depicts 6 pairs of hands joining to build an arch.
Some interesting detail on the floor.
What starts out as a red-hot blob...
Murano Island.
On board the ferry.
Is very quickly transformed into a rearing horse. And by very quickly, I mean under a minute!
A few more chambers.
Inside the Basilica Di Santa Maria della Salute. It is big but a far cry from the Basilicia of St Peter.
A proper view of the Realto Bridge.
Some views along the way.
And then we got to the prisons. They are austere, unhappy, haunted places.
It is organized chaos on the Grand Canal. Everyone knows what theyβre supposed to do, but it looks very disorganized. We were told that there are 400 water rules!
And onto the Grand Canal.
A wall mural in the process of being restored.
Historically, Burano was a fishing island, and the houses on the outside were painted bright colours to enable the fishermen to see the island in thick fog. In time, each house was painted. The law says that no two houses next to each other may be painted the same colour, and anyone wanting to repaint their house must apply to the city council for consent as to the colour to be used. No white or grey would be approved.
Another church along the way to the restaurant chosen by Addi for lunch - Lineadombra.
I also made it without overturning the gondola.
Two of our 4 musketeers were feeling the exhaustion from the whirlwind trip and took naps wherever they could.
The view of the lagoon from one of the windows from the Palace.
Lunch! There are worse places on earth to eat!
The armoury.
And the view from that window.
And not so narrow.
The furnace, but I must say that it wasnβt much hotter than outside!
A staircase.
Venice to Munich was an overnight train so we missed the views of the Alps, but there were still some beautiful country views to be appreciated.
The Allianz Arena, the worldβs largest LEGO building. It took builders 4 209 man hours and over a million bricks to build.
Addi catching some extra zβs.
The power tower. They kids had to pull themselves up to the top and then release the rope to plunge to the bottom.
The detail is incredible.
Having checked in, we took a lovely stroll through the forest to get to the Legoland theme park.
The Lubbe team getting ready to show the Germans how itβs done! They had to pump water to move the truck, put the fire out and move the truck back. They came 3rd!
The Flying Ninjago.
Thousands and thousands of little LEGO people!
Addi made our family out of LEGO!
At last, we saw Hollow Tooth (which we missed in Berlin).
The LEGO versions of the worldβs tallest buildings, built to scale.
Darth Vaderβs ship.
And then we visited Venice. We had just left the real one and it was fun spotting the things we had seen.
The passage to our room.
As soon as we saw the Pirateβs Village, Addi was beside herself with excitement!
And some piggies!
Spot the human!
I was done and went to bed after dinner. The kids and Chris still played Pirate Mini Golf until 23:00!
And we finally got to see the Berlin Cathedral (the Dom), which we also missed.
The cutest little owls!
This is what 21st century children do on a train, even when they are standing on it!
So we had brakwurst for breakfast!
Dinner at the Pirateβs Tavern.
We arrived in Munich and had a few moments to kill before our train to GΓΌnzburg.
Even the torches are LEGO!
Our room. The kids were sent on a treasure hunt for clues to find the code to the safe.
The foyer.
The first look we got of our hotel - the Dragonβs Castle.
A Lego mosaic.
And the Victory Column.
Master Wu at the Ninjago Village.
We saw Einstein in wax in London, and now in LEGO bricks!
Some fat birds guarding the Dragonβs Castle.
Our first glimpse of LEGO blocks! Legoland is so near we can taste it!
And then we found the Star Wars area of Legoland. This is Endor from Return of the Jedi.
Some prehistoric birds built from LEGO.
Weβve arrived in GΓΌnzburg! Itβs a picturesque little town in the heart of Bavaria.
Yoda
Ninjago warrior Kai.
The dragon is hungry!
The name of an actual town between Munich and GΓΌnzburg.
The Millenium Falcon on Tatooine.
The Brandenburg Gate.
Neuschwanstein Castle was the first LEGO model to be built entirely in Legoland. It was built by 6 model builders over 6 months using 300 000 LEGO bricks! It weighs 300kg!
A water ride to ease the heat.
The detail in the cross section of the Arena is amazing!
Addi and Graydon avoiding water bombs being exploded at them by their dad.
The mini cities in Legoland made entirely out of LEGO were breathtaking. This is the Hamburg floating docks. The model is about 9m, made of 367 400 LEGO bricks and weighs 417,5kg.
Italy was by far my favorite country so far, from the inches of wall keeping the sea at bay, to the 2 000 year old structures that define Rome and the great empire that once was. Here are the best photos during our Italian job.:)
St Peters bacilica, in my opinion too ott.
And so we left Legoland at sparrowβs fart to catch a train to Ulm and a connection to Paris...
A pano shot at the entrance to the Tuileries.
The unmistakeable Arc de Triomphe on the one end of the Champs Elysees.
The Place de la Concorde.
And then we saw La Damme de Ferre! I got 10 points for seeing her first!
The Grande Palaise, built in the 1880s for the World Fair, aimed to showcase French innovation to the world.
It is MUCH busier than I remember it to be. Too many people!!! And the shops are much less exclusive than they used to be.
In case we werenβt sure we had arrived on the Champs Elysees...
The Louvre. We arranged a private tour of the Louvre, but 15 minutes before our meeting time, we received an sms from the tour guide wanting to know if we had entrance tickets to the Louvre. I mean, WTF??? When we met her, she explained that it was no longer possible to buy tickets over the counter. While we were trying to figure out what to do, the Louvre was evacuated due to some alarm being sounded and thousands of people were waiting outside the Louvre to get back inside. We took that as a sign and told the guide our tour was obviously not meant to be.
Some Lamborghinis and Ferraris to confirm.
And arrived at Gare de lβEst at around 12:30. Bonjour Paris! π«π·
A skew little house on the way to our hotel.
Waiting to check in - very Parisienne!
So, our afternoon having been freed, we strolled to the park that runs at the foot of Eiffel Tower. We rounded a corner and there she was in all her glory.
Having checked in, the first order of business was a stroll along the Champs Elysee. On our way there, we crossed the Seine and spotted the amusement park outside the Louvre in the distance.
We started our second day in Paris with a tour of the Eiffel Tower. When she was built in 1887 for the World Fair, Parisians hated her. She was initially painted bright yellow and then red. Today she stands proudly with the city at her feet.
When the Seine flooded in 2008, the waters reached this statueβs ears!
This was another opportunity to photograph ceilings. Versailles is sumptuous and luxurious and completely OTT. There is just too much of everything, and unless you have hours to appreciate every detail, the best you can do is get an overview.
And had to do some monkeynastics on the way.
Graydonβs is 340m above the ground, and Addi is 320m above the ground.
And up we go!
Again, there were hordes of people. And the heat was back.
We had a lovely lunch at 58 Retaurant, on the first level of the Eiffel Tower.
Our view from our table. Could be worse.
The locals line the river banks, have picnics and parties and even learn to dance!
The Bridge of Locks.
A beautiful wooden bridge at Norte Dame.
Do splits on...
And dance on.
The views from the top are spectacular.
The Queenβs bedroom. The last queen to occupy this room was Marie Antoinette. She was very unpopular with the French population due to her spending habits. She was called Madame Defecite.
Some shenanigans on board by certain members of the family.
The Kingβs bedroom. We were told that there was a waking up ceremony and a bedtime ceremony every single day until the day he died!
The view upwards from the second level. Itβs like reverse vertigo.
A note from the chef.
Norte Dame. We couldnβt visit because of the fire which all but decimated her. The damage can be seen even from the river.
Adventure nr 3: a cruise on the Seine.
A dining room.
And down we go to terra firma.
Every room is named after a planet. This is the Venus Room.
Ready for our tour.
Addi getting a birdsβ eye view.
On the first floor, there is a glass floor that kids decided would be fun to stand on...
At about 22:15 the Tower suddenly lit up the sky.
It was American Independence Day!
The hunting room.
My pics along the way.
An opening in the opening of the elevator that took us to the top.
Graydon taking a closer look.
Dinner time at 22:30. Our last night in Paris and we went out on the town! On hearing that we were from South Africa, he says βHey, bru!β With the French βrβ. It was so unexpected!
The views from the second level of the Eiffel Tower.
And weβre back at home dock!
Some fears to be conquered.
Louis XIVβs desk. I want one!
On the first level looking up.
The exit. Much less ostentatious but still very beautiful.
The view from the second level of the Parliament buildings.
The Council Study, where the king held his meetings. Only the king was allowed to sit, hence the only armchair in the room.
The Tour de Montparnasse in the distance.
And down we go!
Adventure nr 2 for the day was a visit to the Palace of Versailles. We very nearly missed it and took a taxi that would make any South African taxi driver proud!
Versailles was initially a hunting lodge. Louis XIV began the conversion from hunting lodge to chateau, which took 40 years. He is represented in every room by statues or paintings as the epitome of strong, handsome, healthy king. In truth, Louis XIV was sickly all his life.
Lie on...
The Eiffel Tower from the River. We departed from a pier at the foot of the Tower.
And, of course, the Hall of Mirrors.
Modern Paris.
The beautiful night sky.
Sunset on the Seine.
Our route and the sights we were to see.
We took the stairs from the second level to the first level. Itβs 10 minutes from the one level to the other.
The Arc de Triomphe in the distance.
Our last morning in Paris and we visited the market on Rue Cler.
The most beautiful cherries!
And so the trek home begins. Our first train is from Gare de lβEst to Karlsruhe in Germany.
Our EuroRail tickets. Without taking local subways into account, we took 14 trains as we criss-crossed Europe.
Trying to look like locals (and failing!).
And tarts!
And bonbons!
Snow over the alps.
The brilliant colours of the sunset from the plane seemed a perfect ending to our epic adventure holiday!
Arrived at Frankfurt Airport. Our train was 40 minutes late, so not much time left for duty-free shopping!
Impatient EU passport holder watching ZAR passport holders trying to get through passport control (again).
20 Days,
24,587km,
190,8km walked (avg 10.6km avg per day)
11 Cities(+3 transit cities)
7 Countries (+2 pass through countries)
7 different transport type
5 nights slept on the move
3 currencies
2 time zones
1 Epic Journey!!!
So proud of my family for making it a bucket list adventure