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Ms (Leigh) Bella St John aka Luxurious Nomad ~ https://ElegantisVitae.com/

Austria’s Wachau Wine Region

The Wachau region was inscribed as “Wachau Cultural Landscape” in the UNESCO List of World Heritage Sites in recognition of its architectural and agricultural history, and is known for its high-quality wines…

…and that is the River Danube to the left…

This was funny…  According to the GPS, this is a bridge…  🙂

After much reading of signs, we discover it is a car ferry of dubious quality, but…

…they are off on an extended lunch break!

…so we went in search of another way across the Danube…

Aha!  An actual bridge!

…and the ferry people gave us a good idea – lunch!

Beautiful Schloss Dürnstein, where King Richard the Lion-Heart of England was held captive by Duke Leopold V.

My friend Donna who came over from the States to do the drive from Vienna to Munich with me… (we will get to that soon)

…and back to Vienna…

Do you remember this (below)?  It is the red-eyed, fire-breathing incinerator that you saw in an earlier post, only this time in daylight…

What a glorious day – and home in time to get plenty of work done, including back to back calls with clients until late… (thanks to the time difference, I can explore during the day, and work with my US-based clients in the evening – perfect!)

Thank you SO much to Alexander and Donna who made it so much FUN!

~ Bella

 

Goats, headless people, and abandoned castles…

As we were touring through the Viennese countryside and in particular the Wachau Valley, we came across quite an assortment of ‘interesting’ sights…

Yes, these are headless people, complete with a happy birthday version of ‘do not cross’ police tape…

…and a park for bees…

The leaning tower of Wachau Valley, perhaps..?

…and another abandoned castle…

…and another abandoned castle…

This was funny…  Donna went off to explore the abandoned castle and came across this fellow having trouble getting his popcorn machine over the bump – so, of course, she lent a hand… although when she attempted to use her charm and his gratitude to let her in, unfortunately the language barrier prevented a successful transaction…  🙂

Hmmmm – you may note that we are on the ‘wrong’ side of the barrier… and the lady was sooooooooooooooooooo grumpy that she had to let us out…  🙂

This is the ticket office – seriously!

…but this was only still part-way through our day-trip adventure…

~ Bella

Vienna – a day in my life

In case you are interested, here is a snapshot of a normal day for me in Vienna… starting with the view from my window…

…then downstairs – and everything you are about to see is all within the same city block…

…I believe I showed immense intestinal fortitude to resist the urge to enter this shop, no matter how many times I walked past…

…a working lunch…

…then walk across the road to sit outside for a while, enjoy a glass of wine, and work some more…

This is where I go grocery shopping…

…another of my favourite hangouts to work…

…and note the cyclists who all stop for the traffic lights, even though there is no traffic…  Vienna is ever so civilised…

I passionately adore Vienna…

~ Bella

The Keys to Franz Ferdinand’s Crypt – literally!

Artstetten Castle (Schloss Artstetten) was the home to Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his family until the tragic events in Sarajevo in 1914…

The castle is still owned by the same family and they live in it all year round…

Note to self:  I want a bathtub like this, but preferable with steps to get in and out!  🙂

As we were leaving, the lovely lady behind the counter with whom we had been chatting in a strange mix of part English, part German, part Italian, asked if we wanted the keys to the crypt..?

This is the family crypt…

…and this literally is the key!!!

Hmmmmm…  but I couldn’t manage to get it to open……….

Not to worry – that’s what men are for!  🙂  Thank you, Alexander…  🙂

…and continuing on our way to our next destination…

~ Bella

 

Medieval Cow and Wolf Playing Backgammon

Donna, Alexander and I set off for a day of exploring the Viennese countryside, but first we went hunting to find a cow and wolf playing backgammon…

Success!

“In the 15th century, Enea Silvio Bartolomeo Piccolomini, better known later in life as Pope Pius II, described all the fine houses of Vienna as being painted inside and out with fabulous scenery. Like the marginalia found in illuminated manuscripts, the houses would have featured religious and historic portraiture, along with some humorous imagery for good measure.”  Source, Atlas Obscura

The painting dates approximately to 1509…  Yes, FIFTEEN-O-NINE.  Isn’t that amazing?  Well, I think it is…

Do you recall an earlier post where Alexander and I were discussing manifesting principles and we used a Bentley – since when he finishes his studies, that is his ambition – to own a Bentley…  Well, we three were in the car, again discussing manifesting Bentleys and what should cruise past us at the exact moment..?

…and so from one type of beauty to another…

This is our first destination, the home of Arch Duke Franz Ferdinand and his family before husband and wife were brutally executed…

…but for that, you need to go to the next post…  🙂

~ Bella

 

Stairs of Reconcilliation, Graz

Leaving the majestic horses, we made our way back to Graz to find the ‘Stairs of Reconciliation’…

No matter where you look, there are cyclists everywhere in Graz…

The archway on the right is where we are headed…

…and through the small door on the left…

Completed in 1438 under the guidance of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III, this is the entrance to the Stairs of Reconciliation…

I love looking at the slight curve in the step, the result of centuries of feet having come into contact with it…

This is what is known as a Doppelwendeltreppe, or “Double Spiral Staircase”…

It is known as the “stairs of reconciliation” for if you go separate ways, you will ultimately reunite.

It is powerfully beautiful – just putting one’s hand on the stone and feeling its strength yet seemingly weightless quality as it rises into the air, one can but marvel at the craftsmanship of the unknown architect and builder…

As we were leaving, a lovely young couple arrived to play a delightful game that apparently dates back centuries…  The girl goes one way, the guy goes the other, and they kiss when they meet…

…and back home in beautiful Vienna after an amazing day!

Feeling ever so blessed…

~ Bella

 

 

Lipizzaner Stud Farm – Spanish Dancing Horses

…and now we head to the Lipizzaner Stud Farm in Piber, Austria – and being a horsey-girl, this was such an incredible treat!  Most know of the famous Spanish Riding Horses, but waht few realise is the breed, Lipizzaner, is Europe’s oldest cultural horse breed, with their origin going back to the year 1580.

Welcome to the Lipizzaner Stud in Piber!

This (below) is Piber Castle, and was formerly the Abbey of St. Lambrecht.  The administration of this amazing stud is housed in the castle, and has been since the stud was created 1798 for the purpose of breeding military horses.

The Piber Stud is the only location containing foundation bloodstock from all 15 classically recognized mare families; and only stallions from the Spanish Riding School are used as breeding stallions, with all six classic stallion bloodline families being used.

This girl and I became fast friends with lots of cuddles and her regularly burying her head into my chest…

Alas, they wouldn’t let me take her home…

This little guy was sound asleep and snoring!  I had never heard a horse snore…

(below)  Yours truly getting friendly with the little ones…

This fellow was born in 1979 – imagine it!  He is almost 40 years old!

…and on our way again…

Do you recall the building with no straight lines?  This was designed by the same fellow…

No matter how one looks at it, this (below) looks strange…

…and of course, every shopping centre needs a fully functional fighter plane in their parking lot…

…and next stop, back in Graz, the Stairs of Reconcilliation…

~ Bella

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger’s childhood home in Thal, Austria

From Graz, we made our way to Thal, birthplace of Arnold Schwarzenegger…

– but first, a leisurely lunch beside Thalersee lake… where apparently Arnold proposed to Maria in a small row boat…

…and then…  I certainly was not prepared for what we found when we reached Arnold’s childhood home…

Last I checked, Arnold wasn’t a transformer, but…..

This (below) is the house in which he grew up with his entire family occupying just the second floor – and with no electricity, and no running water…

The surrounding area seems to have changed little since he lived here…

…and now on to our next stop…  The world-famous Lipizzaner Stud Farm!

~ Bella

They built train tracks before there was a train…

Anyone who has seen “Under the Tuscan Sun” (or if you are like me and have seen it so many times you could just about recite the entire script), will recognise the following:

Martini: Signora, between Austria and Italy, there is a section of the Alps called the Semmering. It is an impossibly steep, very high part of the mountains. They built a train track over these Alps to connect Vienna and Venice. They built these tracks even before there was a train in existence that could make the trip. They built it because they knew some day, the train would come.

I have always been fascinated by that idea – and the person who had that dream to build it in the first place…

…and today I actually WENT THERE!  …and that was only a tiny part of an otherwise amazing day!

But first…

I was picked up – this time at a respectable 9:30am, and our first stop was what is proclaimed to be Vienna’s most elegant coffee houses (and having now been there, I do agree)…

…and along the way, it was fitting that we passed the Steiermark (Styria) festival, as this was where we were headed for the majority of our trip…  Styria [from wikipedia] “is a mountainous, forested state in southern Austria, known for its wine, spas and castles. Graz, the riverside state capital, blends Renaissance and baroque architecture with modern designs such as Murinsel, an artificial island made of glass and steel, and the alienlike Kunsthaus, a contemporary art museum. A funicular runs up Schlossberg, a hill topped by the Uhrturm, a 16th-century clock tower.”

…but back to the coffee house…

From their website:  Franz Landtmann, 1873 – Franz Landtmann did not plan to open just any old coffee house: it was to be the most elegant in the city. When he unlocked the doors on 1 October 1873, Landtmann demonstrated his pioneering spirit – with nothing but construction sites all around the new establishment. The splendour of the Ringstraße was nowhere to be seen; there was no Burgtheater next door; the Rathaus and the University were only just being built. But the residents of Vienna were thrilled, and Café Landtmann was a hit.

…and I love any establishment with this selection of automobiles in the parking area…

Since 1976, the Cafe Landtmann has been owned by the Querfeld family, who saved it from being turned into a bank!

 

Here, you can view some of the Landtmann Magazines that give you even more information:

 

Now, on to our next destination, the world-famous dancing horses of Vienna…

This was just the prelude for our real horse-related destination – their breeding ranch up in the mountains… but more about that soon…

For now, this is a sneak peek at their exercising…

Then back into Michaelerplatz and on our way…

I love the architecture here… whether it is baroque, medieval, Victorian or modern – it all blends beautifully…

…although I am not so sure I would want this on my house…

…and we head up, up, up into the Alps…

Oh, and from what I can gather, this sign is essentially ‘roadworks ahead’…

Past some more medieval castles (there are soooooo many of them here, it is wonderful!)…

…along a road that reminds me of the crazy narrow, winding roads in Italy…

Lots of energetic cyclists…

…and finally, Gloggnitz where the Semmering line commences.

The Semmering Line was the first mountain railway in Europe built with a standard gauge track and is commonly referred to as the world’s first true mountain railway.  It was the brainchild of  Carl von Ghega, and built between 1848 and 1854.

…and tucked away down here…

…is one of the original carriages…

She’s so cute!

[from Wikipedia] The Semmering line “features 14 tunnels (among them the 1,431 m summit tunnel), 16 viaducts (several two-storey) and over 100 stone arch bridges and 11 small iron bridges. The stations and the buildings for the supervisors were often built directly from the waste rock dug out when making the tunnels.

Across an overall track length of 41 km the Semmering railway overcomes an altitude difference of 460 m; on 60% of its length the gradient is 2.0-2.5% (equivalent to a 1-meter difference in altitude on a 40 m route distance) and 16% exhibit a curvature radius of only 190 m.”  …and you can see one of the viaducts in these pictures… and some of the tunnels later in this post…

One of the other elements I love about this is that the Semmering railway had a focus on “landscape gardening”, in that it attempted a harmonious combination of ‘technology and nature’.

…and, of course, this being Austria, there are people walking in the middle of nowhere…

Welcome to Graz…

…and one of the original Semmering locomotives…

From here, we continued on to our next destination, being the childhood home of Arnold Schwarzenegger…

~ Bella

My dromomanian, mundivagant, solivagous life as a female flaneur

While that statement may not be totally grammatically correct, it does sum up my Luxurious Nomad life.

As you may know, I love words – not just writing, but the actual understanding of language, how it is used to convey meaning, when and where that meaning is sometimes lost, and so much more…

While it is arguable both directions that vocabulary has increased/decreased in the past one-hundred years, what is noticeable is a very pronounced change in the manner and use of language.

Texting has lead to many being more focused on brevity than spelling, grammar, or punctuation.

Emoticons are used to convey sentiments that previously would have been conveyed within the language itself – and sometimes one emoticon takes the place of a whole sentence.

In noting these changes, I am not advocating one over the other.  Languages are alive – they change, they evolve… however as the saying goes, “if you don’t use it, you lose it” – or is that the other way around…  🙂  (emoticon use intentional)

As recently as 2012, the world ‘lost’ another language.  The Cromarty dialect of Northern Scotland originated from people who moved north from the Firth of Forth in the 15th and 16th centuries, however the last native speaker of that language died at the age of 92 in October of 2012.

As I live my solivagious life, my travels take me to various parts of the world where I am constantly challenged to understand and be understood in other than my native language of English.  Even when I geek-out (a new addition to the Merriam-Webster dictionary in 2017) and resort to Google Translate, there is still always the challenge of correct pronunciation.

In today’s world where English is virtually ubiquitous, the task of effective communication is made significantly easier than it was for mundivagants one-hundred years ago.

Just as I find it fascinating to explore how people viewed the world and their place in it at various points in history (such as when children were given radioactive materials in science kits during the 1950s), I also find it fascinating to look at how language has changed – and continues to change.

…and I also love listening to the variety of languages being spoken all around me – that together form a type of linguistic symphony.  It truly is glorious to just listen to the sounds, and looking at the shapes made by the words…

So, what is the point of this post?

Nothing other than to share some new words, explore some that have essentially disappeared from our vocabulary, and to highlight yet another blessing that comes from being a Luxurious Nomad – that of the phonology of this glorious blue planet we call ‘home’.

~ Bella