Friday, 31 August 2012

Slovenia


29/8 

Jeff slammed a run at 12+ km/hour (lucky bastard) whilst I walked and shuffled still in the rehabilitation phase…….will it ever end?!!?

After our morning motions, we packed up, headed for a large Interspar, sent some post home and set the TomTom for Slovenia!

Over the border in no time, we entered a beautiful land (no real idea of borders apart from changing letters on number plates; no more “ausfart” signs and directions to acquire a Vignette - a motorway pass) with more alpine topography.



Notably is a German/Austrian influence on older housing design as it was part of Austria until 1918 but also the stamp of years of communism with decay of previously grand buildings & old bomb cars spewing out their exhaust.  But, their literacy is high, they are incredibly welcoming hosts to travellers (unlike our experience of Czech Republic) and their adult obesity figures are higher than Germany.  Despite it’s proximity to & history with Austria/Germany the main language and ethnic group is Slavic with 92 % Slovenes speaking 91 % Slovenian. The biggest slab of the remaining figures are Serbo-Croatians, Hungarian and Italian.  The countryside is very pretty with small working farms bursting with crops, fruit trees and cows. 

Our short drive passed a small sign to Vinta Gorge which we took.  It proved to be an unspeakably beautiful gorge carved by aqua water collecting in exquisite pools, some so small, intimate and delicate and others enormous, endlessly deep and inviting and cascading in petite as well as thundering waterfalls.  The path of the river is followed by a rickety old wooden board walk and the waters are criss-crossed a number of times by bridges offering mesmorizing view points.  









Kel’s imagination ran wild thinking as she does of her Utopia, BK Land and Wil kept exclaiming which pool he’d ‘mark’ if he were a resident territorial fish.   We walked a few addictive hours around bends and turns that offered unquenchable beauty. What a stop!









Only a few minutes on however,with our retinas dreamily swimming in their sensory overdose, we took a sharp turn to Camping Bled and just raised the visual bar another notch.  

A small road led us down into a valley occupied by the most exquisite blue/green jewel, Lake Bled (only 6kms in circumference) decorated with a castle on a sheer rock face, a small central island occupied by an old pink church with my favourite onion-shaped spire and brilliantly contrasting red buoys marking a rowing lane!!



We gasped in disbelief all the way down to the amazing campground situated just behind the lake beach.  No discussion was needed to decide on the actions for the rest of the day.  Togs on and we jumped, dived, snorkelled, noodled and did handstands until water-logged.
  






It took me a while to figure why we seemed so interesting to look at……. the only ones with hats, long-sleeved sunshirts and camped in the shade.  A sharp contrast to the purple-brown large bodies hanging out every mm of flesh possible and all lined up facing the optimum direction to put another layer of pigment on. Europeans south of the English Channel have such incredible smooth, evenly coloured forgiving highly enviable honey-brown skin.

30/8

A bike ride took Jeff & I up over the fluffy farmed valleys and mountain-ward.  We set the watch for a 45 minute climb up.  I don’t think I turned the peddles once on the way home.  As always, breakfast tastes sensational after a start like that.
We’d set a heavy school morning as the campsite has free WiFi througout - that means in our camper!   We’ve not had this since France!   So research dominated Wil’s timetable & Kel did usual maths and writing.  We’re experimenting with all sorts of different styles now including poetry which she loves.

After a heavy feed of German bread salad & wurst sandwiches (clearly a favourite), we cycled what Jeff describes as the most beautiful 45 minutes of riding he has ever done around the world’s most spectacular rowing course. 













Thereafter we hit the beach, hired a kayak (E15 for 3 hours) and that describes the rest of the day…… Wil played Venetian gondola man, Jeff & I paddled serenely until we ‘found’ ourselves in the rowing lane and pounding down the finish straight imagining the thrill, pain and glory of our Aussie rowing crews winning the gold here last year.










31/8

Soft rain pattered through the night forced us to rise early to pack away the matting & towels. Reluctantly,we decided against a morning ride - slippery,poor visibility and cold. Instead we snuggled back in for a delicious 30 minutes. Up for a last walk around the pretty lake, and home a bit wet via the shop for fresh seedy bread.
Wil woke a bit crook but we did a NAPLAN & maths test anyways.

Tuesday, 28 August 2012

South to Klagenfurt and Wörthersee


25/8  ERIN’S 12th BIRTHDAY!  Happy day darling girl!

‘The Theft’ has us leave Vienna about 1-2 days earlier than we would’ve liked.  Wil was hoping to ‘hang’ in one of the many old, enormously grand coffee houses where scientists, professors of literature, philosophers and musicians have gathered and continue to gather for centuries.  They are usually in the most ornate and beautiful buildings yet have such velvety, cosy, lamp lit & polished wood corners - he’ll have to come back, and he can bring his parents!!  The other next time is a summer classical concert performed by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra on the lawns of Schonbrunn Palace beneath the triumphant Gloriette where, together with a fine champagne, we can drink in imperial views across the lit palace gardens and Vienna…..
So,10BX (4 rounds!!!) in the playground of the campsite, school and usual departing preparations.

Our most important goal was to find a police station to report the theft, thus enabling us a possible insurance claim but they were all closed on Saturdays.
After extensive family discussions, we’d decided to buy another “OK” bike whose purpose is primarily transport and secondarily, for exercise - no more offroading.  A stop at Intersport found the perfect replacement at only E240 this time (rather than E395).  Jeff walked out shaking his head in amusement as it was the first time in his life that he bought an inferior product for the same money as a much better one, just because it looked much cheaper/uglier.  But the inconvenience of attracting another theft underlay this decision.  Additionally, we bought two enormously heavy chains and U-bolt locks as they reckon Italy has much more crime.  Whom ever tries to cut these will have to have bloody enormous pockets for the bolt cutters required.

A quick shop at Lidl (3 large yoghurts, 4 boxes of b/fast cereal, deodorant, body wash, detergent, berries, large punnet’o’pears, 2 bunches bananas...and some, all  for E20!!) and then off slowly to Judenburg, an ‘old jewel’ historic Austrian.  Whilst Graz looks incredible, our highway pass is almost expired and we’ve yet to see the Wörthersee lake area before leaving Austria.

The drive was relaxing as we left behind a big, albeit charming, city to see the peaks increase in height and density, the air crisp up and the fields sprawl out green with crops with only the sweet farm house roof tops & church spires peaking over the top.




A POLIZEI sign along the way in a small town called Leoben was manned and the two officers really kindly made out a report, at 5pm on a Saturday!  Now it’s up to our insurance in Oz….

We’d sourced a stellplatz behind Judenburg where, together with only one other van, we were surrounded by fur-tree covered hills and quiet.

Jeff and Wil tinkered about outside setting up the new bike and Kel & I cooked up a yummy vegetarian stir-fry on cous-cous.
To bed, to bed.

26/8

Lazy wake up at 0900 (having rolled back over ½ a dozen times with the rain on the roof - too dangerous to cycle was the excuse).  It was so quiet.  So we all crawled out of bed & prepared breakfast together for a change.  After school, it was raining heavily and so we drove rather than rode through the pretty town on the River Mur, stopped for fresh bread and kept going to Wörthersee near Klagenfurt.  The clouds were low making for really beautiful, moody photographs.   



Finally we found a marillen streetside stall where we bought a punnet of the prettiest apricots.  Sadly they were a bit soft & more fermented tasting than those we love at home.  Good but different. 


Only an hour further and we arrived at  another spectacular blue/green mountain lake.  The water’s meant to be 21 degrees however as a hot spring feeds into it.  Gustav Mahler spent many creative hours here by the lake composing in the summer.

The campsite is beautiful and organized sitting at one end of the lake.   We put on raincoats (haven’t worn them for a while) and against a welcome fresh breeze, rode around the lake for a bit before the heavens opened.  Back home, we simply ate, played, had an Italian lesson, watched a movie and went to bed.

27/8 

A lot cooler but fine at 0700 so Jeff & I took off for his new bike’s first ride on a ‘castles route.’  We got horribly lost and so 1:40 later got home to two happy kids composing a song for Snuggie.  We got down to business after breakfast, schooling, interneting and putting on a load of washing (primarily bedding - ahh, my most disliked chore ‘cos crawling around the beds to re-make them sees me hit my head innumerable times & I end up sweating profusely).

Jeff took the kids to the lake beach to explore the enormous slide whilst I watched the washing, rode to the shops for bread and tidied the ‘house.’

At the lake the slide was closed, the trampolines cost E5 extra and by the time we had the cash out of the wall they closed too, but the diving platform/board and the clear blue lake were to die for, the warmest water we’ve swum in since Fortuna (Spain).  The kids leapt and climbed themselves silly, and met William, great 11 yo chap from Manchester.





Back to Ed and mumma for lunch and to help putting the washing away, which has dried so quickly given that the temp has risen 10-15 deg + since our cycle.  Yummy sandwiches, Jen savouring the German bread which we will soon bid farewell, then a big bath for Snug (about time mate) and back to the Lake for some afternoon fun.  Hey!!  The slide is open and William + Austrian mate Lukey are still here so the kids disappear for a few hours as we track them with the camera, in/out repeatedly ourselves, in between times lie on the grass reading, chatting and people watching.  







Wörthersee horizon


The scene is special - such a beautiful turquoise lake, the sun setting over the folds of mountains in the distance, the yachts sliding slowly about, the waterfront infrastructure for such a brief summer - slide, diving apparatus, 6 lane 50m pool, 4 long quays for baking bodies on, playgrounds galore, endless lawn and vendors selling beverages and fine food and ice cream.  What must it look like in February?

Big dilemma is do we move on to Slovenia as planned tomorrow or do we stay and slide?  We'll leave it to the weather.

Luxurious warm showers, a light yoghurt dinner (we don’t tire of it) and then we spent ½ an hour scanning thru some pics from Spain, quizzing each other on topics like: 
“what is this place called?”   
“what did we do here?”   
“who had a tanty here?”  
“how cold was it here?”   
“what are those mountains called?”   
“what’s the Spanish word for……”   
“what sort of architecture is this?”   
“who painted this?”
“what continent is that on the horizon?”
“what wall did dad crash into on the segway?”

Good to keep the memories alive, they fade so easily.


28/8 ALEX’S 12th BIRTHDAY! Ooo!

Jeff & I woke with discipline to our exercise/resistance/aerobic 10BX set by the canal and joined the kids for their wake up routine.  We drilled school with a deadline to skype Alex for her birthday. 

Thereafter the day was very cruisey with roller-blading, a large cooked mince curry lunch (con bad Austrian vino rosso!?!) followed by hours at the Wörthersee.  The kids ran themselves ragged with friends, William & Luke and each other and the olds paddled when hot between chapters of their books!




Wil’s favourite part: going down the slide with ‘squid’ holding her feet

Kel’s favourite part: playing on the slide with WilWil

THE DAY FROM A KIDS POINT OF VIEW
Wil speaking. 
Kel and I woke up when Mum and Dad were out doing their exercise, so we just lay in bed reading and thinking about how good life really is. Snuggy (Kel’s biggest beanie kid [soft toy] but don’t ever say he’s not alive. Squid has a wonderful imagination.) woke up too and was pestering me to play with him (it’s precious). When Mum and Dad got home from their exercise, we woke up and ran through our morning routine. Kel and I slammed school so we could skype cousin Alex for her birthday (and all sing a very out of tune, rowdy rendition of ‘Happy Birthday’). After school was finished and we had talked to all our relatives, Kel and I put on our skates and did some practice. This was broken by lunch (of mince curry) and then we went back for 10 more minutes of skating. After that, we whipped off our skates and headed over the road to ‘Strandbad,’ the beach. Kel and I did some diving boards and a couple of slides before heading off to find our mates William and Luki. We mucked about doing spastic dives into the warm water and playing football, before Kel went off to do more slides, leaving William, Luki and I to do boy stuff. That was more mucking about, more spastic dives, and eating chips. My life is good. 


Then, Luki and William had to go, so I said bye (sniff) and went to find Kel. Kel and I did some more slides and some more diving boards. Diving boards are great, because I get Kel to go first, then when her head pops up, I take the three-metre plunge and land right next to her, scaring her out of her skin. That’s fun. Kel asked me to do over & over. Then, I did the world’s biggest bomb dive into the lake before trudging home after a well-spent day. After dinner we did a bit more Spain reminiscing.

Arrividerci Wöthersee




Friday, 24 August 2012

Vienna


22/8

Warm, quiet night, good sleep and up for a 45 min bike bash along the Danube, J+J.  The morning is clear, the river is karkee grey according to Jeff, slaty green according to Jen, a source of ongoing amusing debate, kids seem to agree with dad.  However, all agree it’s not brown in any way.  A procession of cruise ships pass by, the guests all lining up for their buffet breakfasts and we wonder which one Gren was on 2 yrs ago.

Kids punch out some maths while we do the washing machine fandango - we do long for the wash/dryer stack in our little laundry next to our kitchen!

A slick pack up after some ball games with Kel and we exit Tulln via the Spar to buy more essentials - milk, yoghurt, bread, shoe deodorizer - still can’t find any of that and the shoes are on the pong.

Short (45min) drive into Vienna to a campsite by the Danube only a few km from the centre.  It’s hot (33deg) and dry, the grass is browned, somewhat akin to an Adelaide summer day.  Filling sandwich lunch, then a long read in the shade as we wait for the day to cool off, then on the bikes, across the New Danube (canal parallels the old one), 



up along the skinny man made island, a cable ski facility, large packs of sunbakers along the said “40km of Vienna beaches”, cyclists, runners, skaters, we dodge and weave till we arrive at the ReichsBridge which we cross heading into the center of Vienna, whose 1st impressions are of a very well endowed modern city of quite some size.  As we cross the bridge we see a church which is the 1st of the old world stuff we were expecting.





Again, the cycle tracks are superb and the drivers so aware and considerate - Australia lags way behind in this and in these days of atmospheric carbon concerns and an aging, obesifying population maybe it’s time we tried to catch up, at least in the bigger cities.

Park the bikes after crossing the Donau Canal and set off on foot into the centre.  The Stephans Platz with it’s impressive dom is the 1st stop for pics, the tile roof is different, the inside is a gothic overstatement.  

Stephen Dom

Outside we are accosted by some lads from Kosovo selling tickets to a musical feast with opera, ballet and orchestra, Mozart and Strauss, tomorrow night, 6:30, Kib for free, paid up, we have the tickets, but will we see a show???  Lets see.

Then the tourist neurones spark again and we find ourselves on one of those kitch horse and carriage rides, driver says with English commentary, only his speech impediment and English are so bad we settle for nodding and snapping rather than listening too much.  We spin and surge past so many captivating sights and know that we must come back on foot with a map and some more information.  And when the 20 min ride is up we hand him the 40 euro Jen thought he said and he says it’s 55!  Well it was a nice ride, especially for Jen and Kel who sat back fantasising about how they would have acted as the ladies of court in the time of Mozart.  Unfortunately for Wil a severe case of hayfever looms and he can’t wait to get as far from the horses as possible - bugger! 









On the way home in the cooling sunset we course along the Donau Canal and the into the Prater, a giant parkland crisscrossed by bike, walk and horse tracks, studded with playgrounds (picked out 1 to visit in the morning, wait till you see the slide!), also multiple social games of soccer and even a mixed tag gridiron event.



Back at Ed for a light dinner, shower (throngs of fellow campers in queues, mostly Italians in their dressing gowns, they do seem to love their hygeine), read, blog, plan tomorrow, bed. 

23/8 - AHHH, VIENNA (boom,boom......boomboom,boomboom......boom,boom........disczh)

A most wonderful day in a most wonderful city.  It’s like Paris, only Jeff reckons smaller & cleaner and I’d add, with outstanding ‘radwegs’ (bikeways) and MUSIC!  The French still have the most beautiful language & style though and their green spaces are hard to beat.  Maybe Vienna's green is better???

We skipped school with the excitement  & pull of Vienna just over and along the Danube a bit.

Our bike trip in traces the Donaukanal & crosses the Danube. It is augmented by great expanses of lush green lawns & city forests all studded with the fanciest playgrounds yet - The Prater.  What could take only 20 minutes takes about 1.5 hours as we stopped to experience these.  Jeff is exhausted & sweaty before we get to town having pushed the kids up and down enormous poggle embankments and on giant-sized swings.

one big poggle swing - lawyers wouldn't allow it in Oz





That slide


When in the zentrum, we welcome the cool air-conditioned tourist information office and quickly get the low down on the Vienna card (really adds benefit on public transport but our treadlies cancel out this advantage) & the best way to access the art & sights that interest us.





So, having tied up bikes in another grand Parisian-like platz loaded with fine statues, fountains and ring roads lined with palaces & grandeur, we walk over to the two palaces of Belvedere.  


musical metal thing


Belvedere Gardens





The upper one houses the largest exhibit of Austrian born Gustav Klimt paintings in the world.  It’s meant to be one of the finest examples of Baroque architecture and has incredibly extensive gardens and a knock out view across Vienna.  It was built in the 1600s as the summer residence for the general Prince Eugene of Savoy (who’s that?).  Wil does an art commentary on Old Man Dying, a rare realist piece of Klimt’s and Kel is delighted by his gorgeous gold and ‘scrap-bookey’ style fancy lady portraits.  We walk around them sideways admiring the shimmering silvers & golds in beautiful swirls and sometimes angular shapes.  Our favourites are stylish, sexy Judith, elegant Fritza Riedler and distant Emilie Floge.  Neither bambino is moved by The Kiss!  An engaging Canadian couple ask Jeff to take their photo and end up inviting to come to Toronto where they’ll show us around - travelling seems to so rapidly connect people. 

With our tummies rumbling, we catch a cab across town to a Lonely Planet recommended authentic  wiensnitzel house and as the cabbie pulls away, our shoulders slump in the oppressive heat as we see the ‘closed for business’ sign. A beautiful local women just appears next to us and gives us directions to another favourite snitzel spot, "Schnitzelwirt."  Check out the photo - we spent an hour over lunch and ate almost every little tiny bit!  


Bloated, fulfilled, sleepy and immensely satisfied, we walked ‘1000 miles’ back across town taking in amazing baroque and art nouveau architecture, making our way to the splendid Imperial Hofburg Palace. 



The stables and performance arena for the Spanish Hofreitschule are housed in one enormous wing.  Outside, DVDs run on big screens showcasing these beautiful white Lippizaners…. Nags doing an athletic type of dressage.  I’m sure Jeff would’ve liked to have secured a ticket but at $120 each and Wil’s explosive allergic response yesterday, he says he’s happy to simply have seen the extraordinary location.

An Ozzie!!





In search of a coffee, we end up in the foreplatz of the Rathaus where a few weeks of film festival, indigenous food stalls and local theatre & dance performances bring the late afternoon alive.  We happen upon a group of about 30 very attractive Russian kids doing explosive dynamic traditional dances.  Just behind is an iced coffee stand - perfect!  A double expresso iced cafe latte puts Jeff back on his feet in readiness for our evening of music.

So, we march on to find the Palais Auersperg where we’re welcomed by an enormous cool white marbled hall with sweeping staircases, the turns of which are marked by grand fountains, and red velvet carpets, broad gold hand railing & glittering chandeliers.  We are led into a gorgeous, rather intimate oval shaped room with really high ceilings and walls of pink and green marble.  Wonderful fat low hanging chandeliers provide soft lighting and somehow, all the seats seem to be at the front.  So, the Kosovo lads had the goods! ( E39 x 2;E29 for Wil  free for Kel - who was 7 tonight.)








Settled in, a thoroughly engaging evening of chamber music, orchestral movements, opera and ballet completely disappeared the 2 odd hours.  Wil had a moment of wet eyes when realizing how much he loves this stuff and how does one fit it all into one lifetime.  I must say, I get this.  Once again, I teared up regularly next to Jeff with the glorious uplifting acoustic feast and noted again how my classical music experience is completely unquenched.  And here I sit, IN VIENNA, with my family who are all so enjoyably drinking it in.  Kel can’t stay in her front row seat for her excitement!  She bobs up & down telling us that she’ll play this ‘song‘ at her wedding; “I know this song”;”‘isn’t her voice a cracker - I thought it’d explode a chandelier”…….and the beautiful blonde ballet dancer (whose frocks brushed against Kel as she came & went from the stage) was the subject of a serious girlie crush.  Kel wasn’t quite ready for it to end - “ aw! Is that it!” - and so, played it on in her imagination, twirling & humming her way through the gardens & streets back to our bikes.

By this time, the gorgeous city had a completely different feel with mod music pumping off lit up roof tops & sidewalks full of pretty people.  Our ride home, whilst enchanting as we cruised past Viennese supping wine and chatting along the banks & in the "beach bars" was a wee bit scary because the long evenings are done and it’s dark by 2045.  Invisible without bike lights, the adults were relieved to reach the campsite by 2100 safely and after a cleansing & cooling shower, collapse into bed (our snitzels still distending our guts & occasionally, pleasantly repeating - will we be ready for breakfast in the morning?)


24/8
  
“VIENNA WAITS FOR YOU…….”

Walk/run/sit ups etc and then breakfast.  Yes, amazingly, there’s room!
The kids settle into epic writing.  Kel writes an editorial for a Parisian journal about her life in 1800 Vienna as Lady Lucy of Belvedere and WIl writes up his Klimt analysis followed by some research on European Rivers.

As yet unknown to us, this’ll be our last bike ride into Vienna despite having another day or two planned.

What a magical display of summer facilities as we whizz past monster sized cable water-skiing on the river, dedicated running tracks for miles up the guts to centre city and playground choice so plentiful that one spins in indecision.  The bike tracks are complete even zipping along on architecturally groovy cycling bridges suspended beneath all major traffic bridges crossing the Danube.  The system is so well lubricated that one only really appreciates the massive crowds when looking back over the days photos.  Interestingly, we’ve never seen so much elaborate whole body tattooing and piercing as in this very old city characterized by elegant and immensely grand palaces.  In fact, we wonder how many mountains have been moved & holes dug to put all this stone work above ground. 

Anyway, speaking of nature, our first excursion is thoroughly joyful from the very beginning - suggested to us by the lovely Aunty Lotte.  We tie up in the overgrown leafy cafe gardens of the playful Hundertwasser Kunsthaus and begin a delightful journey over uneven tiled floors, crazy curves to accommodate ‘tree tenants’ and enlivening, hippy, cacophonic art about love, nature & simplicity.  The orgy of colours and spirals that this crazy old chap uses take our eyeballs into an utter utopia of mesmerizing sensual design.  I could plaster our walls with it!  We can see why you loved it so much Lotte, and Glen and Steve too......he was a naturist!!  Delivered some famous speeches starkers!






the uneven floor


boy's room


Almost giddy, we take the bikes further into the zentrum and have planned a pull up at a wurst stand where we order one of each of the bloody massive sausages & pull out our chopping board, knife and seedy bread for an Austrian stand up lunch.

across the road from the crime scene


Stinking hot, we slink along in the shadows cast by grand shopping streets stopping to gawk at two, 3 story air-conditioned Swarovski superstores before reaching the Musikhaus.

Here we spend an absorbing 2-3 hours learning about some of the composers born in Vienna (Schubert, Strauss, Wagner, Mahler…) and those who made their names here (Brahms, Mozart, Beethoven……..)  In the 1700-1900s 3 % of the population were musicians, a figure I’m sure now has steadily grown when you experience the buskers.  The calibre & number of exemplary young performers singing, in brass quartets, jazz and junk as well as traditional string ensembles is striking.  One just needs to buy a coffee and wander the streets for an evening of outstanding live music for only a few bucks in tips.



compose a waltz.......
then waltz!


hit it harder!


fart sounds, eternally amusing!








The kids lost themselves in The House of Music as there were 4 levels that in  addition to the formal learning stuff also included interactive sound sensory displays, massive instruments to pound and experiment on (Wil and I thrusting our whole bodies against an enormous drum & jolted backwards, we could stand in the wonderful resultant vibration) and of course all those giggly things like farting noises.  They could compose a waltz by throwing a dice over an electronic template and best of all they stood for ages interactively conducting the Viennese Philharmonic Orchestra, members of which played along for a while to their woeful leadership but then stopped and gave them lip!  Wonderful dark, airy atriums with sumptuous surfaces allowed us to lie on our backs in surround sound hearing the thumping tunes of the Philharmonic Orchestra and in another, curl up to sounds of the womb.  So not surprisingly, we left just before dark and blissfully enjoyed a bubble tea listening to street theatre.



they played "Smooth Criminal" !!!




Back at the bikes, weary and ready to slog home we notice some F****** has cut the lock, put Wil’s bike back and stolen Jeff’s!!!  Arghhh!!



OK, so Jeff cabbed home to dig out the insurance papers and the kids and I warily made our way home discussing the concept of theft and what we’ve learned as a family.  Kel reckons we should buy another great bike and put cheap stickers on it; Wil reckons the thief chose to impact a great man and would feel ashamed if he could loom into Jeff’s eyes, Jeff wants to see the guy on his bike from the cab, pull over and bash his teeth out but then satisfies himself that the buggar stole a crap bike… Mum says, whom ever stole it is worse off spiritually than us (sappy hey?).
So no more Vienna tomorrow.  We’ll leave but via a bike store ‘cos it’s how we get around and how we enjoy to exercise as a couple.

25/8  ERIN’S BIRTHDAY