Just
arrived on Summer holibags with the family. Nothing has actually happened yet,
since we’ve spent a little time catching up with our sleep since we got here,
but the place seems nice enough – hot, though. We are staying in the Austrian Salzkammergut, the Lake
District . We are at Lake Wolfgang , and it’s about 45 minutes into Salzburg by the local
Postbus route #150 – haven’t been there yet, that’s for tomorrow.
I’m gently
getting on with my 1809 Danube campaign reading, and have been scoring some
minor Napoleonic spotters’ points around these parts. The Austrian army’s
crossing of the River Inn into Bavaria ,
on 10th April 1809 took place fairly close to here. The left flank
of the advance - the Armeekorps of Hiller and Archduke Ludwig - crossed the river at Braunau, which is just
a little way away, and the left flank was covered by Jellacic’s VI Korps, which
was at Salzburg
itself, in the superb old castle.
Only other
thing I’ve seen of relevance thus far in the little town is a rather
interesting establishment called the Hotel Radetzky, which has impressive
murals on the outside walls of Wagram-period Austrian soldiers.
The picture
at the top of the post is the view from my balcony at 06:30 this morning, which
is pleasant enough, but I was especially taken with a little electric robot
lawnmower which the hotel has clipping the grass in the early mornings and late
at night. I’ve seen similarly inspired devices which clean the bottoms of
swimming pools, and I’ve heard of one which vacuums the house while you’re out,
but I’ve never seen one of these grass-cutting gizmos before. Not only is it clever, but it’s also hilariously funny –
my son and I happily watched it bumbling about like a demented electric sheep for
at least half an hour, with Nick providing commentary subtitles, such as
“uh-oh!” when it was headed for a tree or similar. It always sorted itself out
of problem corners, though there appeared to be a few emergency stops. We keep
expecting to meet it in the hotel’s corridors, patiently clipping away, keeping
the carpet neat.
These
things may be very common – possibly every home in Santa Barbara has one – who knows? – but such
technology is new to me, and we definitely want one. No matter that we would
have to redesign the garden so that it would not have to cope with stone steps
– there must be a way. Anyway, we want one, though we may have moved on to
something else by tomorrow. This one is Italian, by the way.
Broadband
wi-fi is not good here, and is switched off for large parts of the day – in fact
I have a suspicion I may be hacking into a network I’m not supposed to, but I'll keep trying intermittently.
The little
town has an interesting WW2 war memorial, which I hope to get a decent look at.
We are going on a day trip to Berchtesgarten and the Eagle’s Nest next week,
which I’m looking forward to, and the hiking and cycling potential around here
seems very good, so once we’ve recovered from the 2-hours’-sleep-a-day regime
which early morning charter flights from UK provincial airports force upon us
we should be busy enough.
Excellent.
On a slight
downbeat note, I am a little disappointed that the local representative
of our British holiday company speaks no German at all, though she has been
based here for a couple of years. Not a bloody word, though this is not an area
where English is spoken as widely as in, say, the Tyrol .
She even appears to take a pride in this achievement. Oh well – no point having a
national stereotype if we don’t take the chance to reinforce it now and then,
though it does seem a bit like employing a man with no arms as a goalkeeper. I
must say that the British tourists here are well looked after, but we seem to
be expected somehow to be a bit dim. Very like Americans used to be regarded in
Paris when I
used to go there years ago.
Not to
worry – Oi, Radetzky! Get us another beer, will you, me old son?
Looks fantastic! Have a great time.
ReplyDeleteYou'd think they'd have taken the trouble to get a little sheep's costume for the hungry robot.
ReplyDeleteLooks like a wonderful spot for a vacation.