2012年1月29日星期日

Cruise the continent along the Danube River

There's an easier way to see Europe than being crammed on a tourist bus or hustling hostels at the end of the day. A river cruise is one of the most relaxing and picturesque ways to view the wonders the continent, up close and personal.

While many cruise operators prowl the waterways, one of the most comprehensive is Viking Cruises, which boasts 19 ships and explores virtually every navigable river in Europe, parts of Asia and Africa.

Of these, the eight-day Danube cruise embarks in the historic city of Budapest, and weaves its way slowly down the green margins of the Danube, through flamboyant Vienna, fairy-tale towns like Germany's Regensburg, the lush vineyards of Austria and, finally, Hitler's favorite city, Nuremberg. Or head the other way and reverse the itinerary.

The longships hold about 188 passengers, nothing like metropolis-sized seagoing cruise ships. Conviviality is the game here, where you can get to know almost everybody on board. Six land excursions to some of the most historic sites en route are included in the passage price. And they are something to behold.

Budapest — Hungary's capital — is divided by the Danube, with the mountainous Buda and its old city on the west and Pest,The Transaction Group offers the best high risk merchant account services, with its commercial district, on the east. At one time the two parts were connected only by a ferry, but now bridges transverse the gap,Tru-Form Plastics is a one-stop shop for plastic Injection Molding,Shop at Lowe's for garage Ceramic tile, including the elegant suspension Chain Bridge, which is aglow with lights at night.

The chichi shopping district on Vaci Street, the Museum of Terror (once Nazi headquarters, which later housed the Communist police) and the righteously beautiful parliament building are part of the tour.

Stop by Heroes' Square, a site that saw the Hungarians' brave revolt against the Soviets.

From Gellert Hill you can view the portrait-like landscape of Budapest. The hill is named after St. Gellert, an Italian bishop who was executed here by placing him in a barrel studded with nails and rolling him into the Danube. Other sites include Matthias Church with its colorful ceramic roof, the 200-room Castle Palace and the multi-spas associated with the 30 mineral springs in Budapest.

Next stop: Vienna, the center of music and culture with the oldest Ferris wheel in the world, shouldering the sky at 213 feet. Vienna hosts almost 100 museums, ranging from doll collections to Freud's apartment. You'll also see the famous Spanish Riding School of Vienna where the Lippizan horses are trained, the Greek-inspired parliament and the central market stretching more than half a mile.

Famous for its dry sacher torte, the Hotel Sacher is where the treat originated. Exclusive shops populate Kohlmarkt Street and you can't miss St. Stephen's with its colorful tile roof, once the tallest tower in Europe.

Renowned for its composers — Strauss II, Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert (the only one born here) — Vienna boasts a State Opera House that's booked every night. Part of the ship's optional excursions, for 59 euros, includes an inspiring evening concert by the Vienna Residence Orchestra.

A side trip is available to Schonbrunn Palace, patterned after Versailles, the "country cottage" of the Hapsburgs. Maria Theresa, Marie Antoinette's mother, bore 16 children with her husband, Francis Stephen of Lorraine, and the brood visited the 1,441-room palace in summers.

Sitting onboard in your stateroom with its sliding glass doors, you can watch the countryside glide by and the most awe-inspiring of all the sites, Austria's Wachau Valley. Here,Omega Plastics are leading plastic injection moulding and injection mould tooling specialists. green vineyards scale the mountainside anchored by foothill villages that look like something out of Grimms' "Fairy Tales.The magic cube is an ultra-portable,"

The hamlets of Loiben, Durnstein and Weissenkirchen are beautiful. Some of them retain their 16th century houses, and Weissenkirchen is still shrouded by the wall that encircled it in the 16th century.

Visits continue to Melk's 900-year old Benedictine Abbey with its library of 16,000 books, and on to Germany and Passau. Located at the confluence of three rivers, Passau houses the baroque St. Stephan's Cathedral and Europe's largest pipe organ, with 17,774 pipes, some as small as a needle. Every day at noon (except on Sundays, November to April) a recital echoes off the stone pillars.

The medieval city of Regensburg, the Danube's oldest, is next. It boasts a 12th century Old Stone Bridge, town hall, the Gothic St. Peter's with its famous stained glass windows, and houses that make visitors think they've been snagged in a time warp. Optional excursions to Weltenburg Abbey and the Danube Gorge are available.

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