Friday, July 10, 2026

Bucharest to Budapest and Vienna Observations, slightly updated, plus more miscellaniii and maybe a book review or two and a movie review

 

WHAT THE HELL IS THB DOING IN PATRIOTIC GARB???

           THB ain't no senator's son

For sure THB is no patriot, he don't believe in nation states!
  THB has caught World Cup fever...it goes away quickly
   once the US team plays a real soccer team: the Belgian Waffles
   easily sending the US to the back of the line




WHAT IS THIS: A NEW SANDY TRICK, HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT?

In less than 2 days from now, THB and DB will be taking a Tauck land tour in Ireland. THB and DB have never been to Ireland nor taken a Tauck land tour. 

What in the hell is Schengen? See wikipedia explanation at end of this post. 

Per THB: Schengen is a way to make the traveler go crazy if they think the EU has no border control for people moving around that part of the world. 

THB and DB and the Martin 4 are going to Ireland in a few days, DB and KM are going to Norway in February next year, THB and LB are going to Texas and Pennsylvania in September, DB is going to Washington  in September, THB and DB are going to Venice and London in October and THB and DB may be going to LA in the next month or two. 

Can you please repeat any border controls for these travelers. Will paying $250 for a DJT passport put DJT take over $4B (B as in billions) before the mid-terms?

In this post, if you haven't figured it out by now, THB is mixing and matching again, more mixing than matching. 

From the Eastern Europe river cruise: On the other side of the river, maybe daylight savings time might be just something that was made up by Serbia, sort of like the way climate change is a myth that science imagined to help make sense  of the really strange way the weather has been behaving nowadays. 


Said a different way, there seems to be a race occurring for THB: somehow as he gets older he is getting both stupider and wiser. 


Would THB's Observations after that upcoming trip be more astute, insightful, and helpful to followers of Travels With THB, or would most of the followers (and THB) have forgotten what THB had to say about this trip?

Let's test the waters.

  • Nobody would write about how beautiful this par to the Danube was because it wasn't pretty at all. 
Hmmmmm, that seems pretty safe, especially since when you are floating just above the water level and looking around, you can't see much of what lies just beyond the banks of the river. 

  • Being able to unpack everything you brought on the trip (which in general was too much stuff) and not think about repacking for another week left THB and DB with much less anxiety about forgetting things when departing lodgings. 
Also a pretty safe Observation...until you remember THB manage to leave his wallet in the cabin's safe, mostly because after a week without carrying his wallet he totally forgot it was missing. 
  • Let's try another one: THB lost weight on this trip. Given the number of pastries eaten in 2+ weeks, is that possible? Yes, mostly because THB and DB decided to skip a lot dinners. And not only did we feel better, we also realized later that the food at most dinners wasn't all the good or enjoyable. 
  • And this one: AMEX doesn't work Eastern Europe. On the other hand, pretty much every place you spend money accepts VISA and the tap function of the I-phone works beautifully
  • Contemporary art was everywhere, and excellent

AHA! Back to our days before leaving for Ireland...

the new two-burner bbq is smaller, better engineering than the old rusted out one
LB and Dug-Digger take the new chair for a test-nap



Nick from Tutka Bay Lodge in Homer, Alaska, is now the chef at the Inn at Newport Ranch.  Newport Ranch is 4 hours from the loft, and about 10 minutes north of Ft. Bragg, on Highway 1. 


We follow Nick around including hosting a small dinner party that Nick catered at the Loft and now two nights of  tasting menus. The first night: exceptional...and on the second night the meal was better than the first! Seven courses each, both creative, and we shared a bottle of sauvignon blanc over the two meals, plus a glass of cabernet sauvignon on night two; $200pp for each meal and the wine was comp'd. Worth a detour. 


a brief stop before and after Inn at Newport Ranch. A great bakery just off 101 in Healdsburg. They moved to this new location 6 months ago



we're going light, we know what's  for dinner tonight. Canale, very good
Mendocino, we're getting closer to the Inn

our room at the Inn, very expansive, very expensive and a hot tub outside; THB has no clue how he got this grey bar at bottom
main building: reception, two large rooms for dining and several bedrooms upstairs
The spa and more bedrooms, some with kitcheoneettes 
our room is in a duplex behind these huge water tanks
2200 acres, the area around the main building is full of wildflowers 
another building next door
these weeds belong in a Kiefer painting




OMG: another grey bar???

while on stroll in the afternoon the marine layers starts coming ashore


most of the benches have rusting sub-structures from old farm equipment
an enlarged map of the Ranch property
THB and DB share fish and chips and local brewski, and check out the catch of the day
harbor seals waiting at the back of the boat
Glass Beacjh
Negra Banderas sez these big boys would look good at Monterey Dunes



BOOK REVIEWS: pre-trip to Ireland reading

Land,  Maggoe O’Farrell (novel, read by Dane Whyte O’Hara): An Irish family of 6 in the 1850s in rural Ireland struggles to escape their past and present full of poverty . A bit of Irish demons, fortunately the myths do not overwhelm the prose in this novel.


Fatherland, a Memoir of War, Conscience, and Family Secrets, Burkhard Bilger (read by the author, pub’d 2022): Bilger wrote a piece in the NY'er on the growing menace of a new-to-the USA, tick. After listening to the article, THB went back looking for more work by Bilger and found this well crafted search for the “truth” about his German grandfather’s tilt toward Fascism. It turned out that his grand-dad was really on the fence, working for the Nazis while protecting his assigned French workers and students.

DOCUMENTARY REVIEW: Andre Is An Idiot (streaming on Netflix) about an unstoppable quipster who made a bad mistake. After watching this one, you won't (or shouldn't) ever procrastinate taking a test that in retrospect you really want to pass.



Schengen Area (Per Wikipeddia):

The Schengen Area (English: /ˈʃɛŋən/ SHENG-ən, Luxembourgish: [ˈʃæŋən] ) is a system of open borders that encompass 29 European countries that have officially abolished border controls at their common borders. As an element within the wider area of freedom, security and justice (AFSJ) policy of the European Union (EU), it mostly functions as a single jurisdiction under a common visa policy for international travel purposes. The area is named after the 1985 Schengen Agreement and the 1990 Schengen Convention, both signed in Schengen, Luxembourg.

Of the 27 EU member states, only two, Cyprus and Ireland, are not members of the Schengen Area. Cyprus is committed by treaty to join the system and aims to do so in 2026, although its participation has been complicated by the occupation of Northern Cyprus by Turkey since 1974.[3][4][5] Ireland maintains an opt-out in order to maintain the Common Travel Area with non-EU member United Kingdom and operates its own visa policy.

In addition to the member states of the European Union, all member states of the European Free Trade Association, namely Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland, have signed association agreements with the EU to be part of the Schengen Area. The microstate of Monaco is de facto part of the Schengen Area as border controls are administered as part of France. Three other microstates – Andorra, San Marino, and Vatican City – have open borders with the Schengen Area due to their small size and difficulty of maintaining active border controls


No comments:

Post a Comment