Posts Tagged ‘Tauck’

Day 3: Visiting People at Home in Bulgaria

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009
Bulgarian House

Bulgarian House

Monday: We spent the day travelling through Bulgaria. We had lunch at someone’s home in a town called Arbanassi. We split into groups of ten to make it practical and each group was assigned a local language student. It provided a nice contrast to the grimier, Communist era real estate. And our local student guide was a star – fluent in four or five languages, was starting college in England in a few weeks. This house was in the higher rent district – a gated community with one of Bulgaria’s Italian League pro soccer stars for a neighbor. They served beef stew and a salad made from cabbage and carrots with some tomatoes and cucumbers. They also served wine and cheese which they made themselves. This is definitely a nice middle class life style by US standards.

In the afternoon we visited an unused Orthodox church and had a concert. There were 4 singers who sang Gregorian Chants which was the music in an Orthodox church. They never used organs or pianos for music, just people singing. All in all, an interesting day in what had been an obscure part of the world for me.

Day 2: The Carpathian Mountains from Bucharest

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009
Dacian King Decabalus on Romanian Shore of Danube

Dacian King Decabalus on Romanian Shore of Danube

Saturday: We started to explore Romania today. We went with about half of our group on a 2 hour bus trip from Bucharest to Sanaia in the Carpathian Mountains. We had a local guide on board to explain the sights. It turns out that Romania was a kingdom, with a king and queen and princes and princesses for about 100 years until World War II. They had good kings who built roads and turned Bucharest into a capital that looked something like Paris at the time – a pretty good period for Romania according to the guide, who sounded like he would like to have the king back.

Our trip to the mountains was to visit the king’s summer palace called Peles. The king had relatives in Germany so the summer palace looked a lot like the same type of places in the Alps in Germany. He collected sword and shields and armor, so we got to go through room after room with armor from Europe and Turkey and India. Some pretty good stuff.

This area is really deep in the forest – people still go there to hunt. They have big black deer – not sure what those are – and brown bears. Our guide said there were 6000 bears in Romania – more than anyplace else in Europe except Russia. Outside the summer palace there is a prominent “watch out for bears” poster. I think they mean business.
We didn’t run across any bears and got back to Bucharest in time for dinner.

Bucharest to Budapest on Tauck Danube River Cruise: Day 1

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009
Our Tauck River Boat

Our Tauck River Boat

Friday: US Air from Philadelphia to Frankfurt, Germany and Lufthansa to Bucharest, Romania today. Frankfurt was an airport stop with about a 30 or 40 minute walk between gates. We didn’t get much sleep on the way and need to stay awake and meet the other people on this trip at dinner in an hour or so.

Tomorrow we are exploring – we are going to the Transylvanian Alps (Carpathian Mountains in Romania – town is Sinaia). This is the area that the original Count Dracula ruled hundreds of years ago.
It is pretty warm here – 90’s – just about the same as at home.

David and Maria’s Canadian Rockies Trip

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

One destination always stirred my inner Ansel Adams – the Canadian Rockies, Banff to Lake Louise and Jasper. Maria and I got the chance to go this summer and jumped on it. 

We went on a Tauck Tour, one that we knew covered everything well. But it was our first time with them and we weren’t sure exactly what to expect.  We started off by flying into Calgary and stayed overnight at a beautiful resort where the G8 Summit was held in 2002.  Calgary is a lot like Denver, a decent sized city at the edge of the Rockies. 

Elk Herds and Photo Opps

The first morning we went to Lake Louise and rode up the Icefields Parkway. Right away we saw some animals – a bear, a lot of elk and mountain goats. 

Once we settled in we realized that the scenery was spectacular and – with our digital camera – we could take pictures of all of it. My favorite photo spots were Maligne Lake in Jasper and Peytoe Lake, near Banff. Peytoe involved a little hike to get to the best view and photo opp point. But it is worth it. The blue water in the lake is a different blue than I’ve seen anywhere else.

We also walked most of the way around Lake Louise, which is another bluer than blue bodies of water. 

Athabasca Glacier and Athabasca Falls

Another highlight and great photo opp was the Athabasca Glacier and Athabasca Falls. We were near the continental divide, 5,000 feet up. It was a short walk on the glacier – not too slippery where we were. It was cool on the glacier, but a sweater was enough. The falls and the glacier are about an hour apart on the bus, so we had a chance to rest for a few minutes. Then we needed about a half hour to get to the falls, take pictures and get back to the parking area.

Bison Dinner in Jasper

We ate well on this trip – the highlight was the bison dinner in Jasper.

 Just Active Enough For Us

This trip was just active enough for us. You could do a little hiking and we went on a bike ride in Jasper. It was just enough exercise that we enjoyed the short break before cocktail hour and dinner. That seemed pretty typical. Most of the people in our group were 50+ and weren’t going to go for the river rafting option – but one couple did and survived to tell us what we had missed.

 Longer Trip Next Time

We had only one vacation week for this trip and concentrated on the Rockies. Some of the people we met were going on to Vancouver on the train – vintage cars from the 50’s. Vintage and 50’s doesn’t sound quite right –I was commuting on “vintage cars” when I started working in the 60’s – but VIA Rail Canada has saved their good cars. Maybe next year?