Overview
Sometime around two years ago, Kayla and I (along with Wyatt, Magnolia, Alex, Carrie, and a few others) started planning an epic European vacation, something long and going through multiple countries, centered around Oktoberfest in Munich. It took us a few months to do research, 4 months to put a rough plan together, then another 8 months to book all the different lodgings and coordinate our group. The trip went about as smoothly as any of us could have hoped for and the things we saw and did were amazing. :)
In the end, here are the overall stats:
Cost: $7000. We spent $4100 before the trip on travel/lodging bookings and the rest during the trip. We only went slightly over budget.
Duration: 14 full days in Europe, 16 if you count flying from/to the states.
Distance traveled: Approximately 2000km/1200mi within Europe.
Places visited: Prague, Plzen, Munich, Lindau, Zurich, Vienna, Kutna Hora. Also the airports in: Oslo, Dusseldorf, and Stockholm.
People joining us:
Wyatt & Magnolia were with us for most of the trip, with the exception of Zurich (they went to Budapest instead)
Alex & Carrie were in Munich with family and we only saw them on the 24th and 25th.
Tyler and the rest of his family were on the same flight in as us, and joined us in Prague and Munich, but then stayed in Germany and most of them flew back before we did.
Beer drunk: unknown but large amount. I estimate that we averaged about a liter a beer per person per day, which puts the trip total for Kayla and me at about 28 liters of beer.
So here’s our journey....
Red markers are the places we stayed, yellow are places we visited by train, green are the airports and flights.
Sunday, September 20th – 21st - We fly to Europe!
Uber to Wyatt & Magnolia’s downtown LA.
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Uber from Wyatt & Magnolia’s to LAX.
Met all the Frenzels at the gate.
Flew 9 hours and 25 minutes!
Went through border control @ Oslo Gardermoen Airport
Flew 2 hours!
Arrive at Prague Airport.
No ubers at 10pm, so we took a taxi (only 675czk = $28)
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View from our hotel room! |
Tuesday, September 22nd - First day in Prague
Hotel Breakfast
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Alley of shops
Prague Castle Dungeon
Beer with the Frenzels
Cathedral
Palace
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Kayla in front of the Cathedral @ Prague Castle |
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View from Charles Bridge (That's the castle in the background) |
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Visited
O’Che’s - a very weird Che Guevara-themed Irish Pub.
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Tyler, Kara, Justin, me at O'Che's |
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Sketchy host, clearly predatory towards tourists.
Bill had tax + service included, but illegally stated that service was not included.
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From left: Magnolia, Tyler, me, Brandon, Hannah, Justin, Kara, Wyatt |
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Labyrinthine, several underground chambers.
Very very smoky, all of our clothes smelled like cigarettes afterwards.
Wednesday, September 23rd - Travel day to Munich, with a stop in Plzen
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Nice train! |
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Giant copper fermentation tanks
9km of underground cooling/aging tunnels.
Delicious unfiltered, unpasteurized Pilsner from oak barrels.
Brewery Tour ran late, so we had to rush back to the train station.
Confusion over train numbers, jumped on EC 352 (actually EC 350) to Munich.
Train runs over an hour late.
Tried to get Uber, a driver named “Elvira” cancels. :(
Met Sandra, our awesome AirBnB host, drop stuff off at the
apartment.
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Our street in Munich |
Ate a delicious dinner at the Italian Restaurant
Mediterranee by our apartment.
Thursday, September 24th - Oktoberfest!
Uber to Marienplatz, met the Duddy’s, Cliff, and associated party.
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Walked, then took a free metro to tent area
Oktoberfest!
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This is what Oktoberfest looks like. |
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On the Ferris Wheel. Oktoberfest is a giant carnival with BEER. |
Friday, September 25th - Relaxing in Munich
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The design museum exhibits were awesome. |
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Fun with shutter speed @ Cafe BarCelona |
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The bookshop was fun. |
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Thali @ Restaurant Sitar |
Saturday, September 26th – Travel day to Zurich + The Island of Lindau
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Tiny cactus at Cafe Joon |
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We saw military vehicles being transported by train through Germany |
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St. Stephan's Church on Lindau |
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Relaxed dinner on Lindau |
Sunday, September 27th – Zurich is expensive!
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Baked egg thing! |
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At the Zurich National Museum |
Walk to old town/Altstadt.
Lots of wandering around, kept being amazed at how expensive everything is.
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Walked around Zurich Hbf train station (pretty much a mid-sized mall)
Went to
Migros Market for groceries, one of the few local markets open on Sundays.
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We ate in our hotel room a lot on this part of the trip. |
Monday, September 28th – Lake Zurich ferry, gallery
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Lake Zurich was cold! |
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Focusing on contemporary artists.
Calder, Klee, Damien Hirst, Banksy
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Damien Hirst @ Vertes Moderne |
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Erin's roommate painted these. |
Tuesday, September 29th – Last day in Zurich, zoo, running out of francs
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Indoor rainforest biodome was incredible.
Amazing (and fairly happy looking) family of elephants with a very large area.
Very open, you can see many animals up close.
52CHF = $52 for the two of us… ouch. :(
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Baby elephant at the zoo! |
Went to
Beers’n’More upon Erin’s recommendation. Awesome beer shop run by an Irish-born Ethiopian.
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Wednesday, September 30th – Travel day from Zurich to Vienna
Tram to Zurich Hbf
Relaxed at the Zurich Hbf first class lounge (very nice, free with our Eurail passes)
Train from Zurich Hbf to ZRH airport.
Germanwings flight from ZRH to DUS airport (Dusseldorf).
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Germanwings plane goodies. |
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Flying over Dusseldorf! |
Train from VIE to Praterstern Hbf.
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Sketchy check-in to a Soviet-style decrepit 70’s/80’s apartment building, had to call for late night lockbox keycode, everything was closed.
Uber from apartment to
Bodeguita El Pulpo, fantastic little restaurant, where we met back up with Wyatt & Magnolia after they had Hugarian adventures in Budapest.
After dinner, went to
The Match Box - small bar with funny music videos. Cheap drinks.
Thursday, October 1st – Slightly disappointing first day in Vienna
Quick market breakfast.
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Very disappointing - few real artifacts, all documents are bad replicas, very small, kind of expensive for what it is.
Coolest part was ringing the bell to get in.
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Disappointing :( |
Tried to go to the
Josephinum, but it was closed :(
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Uber to the
Augarten (allegedly huge 17th century baroque garden with a palace in it)
Very disappointing as well, basically a huge park, lots of families with kids.
A couple of abandoned flak towers (impressive, but boring)
Couldn’t find the palace (seriously!)
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Large and useless. |
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Even the bathroom door in Da Capo was fancy. |
Afterwards, wandered over to
Blue Bar, a locals spot nearby.
Got approached by a very drunk Viennese guy who introduced us to his friends, then got too drunk and left.
We ended up talking with a local student nurse named Anna who was 19 years old and very jovial. She also chain smoked her hand-rolled cigarettes the ENTIRE TIME. (Probably smoked half a pack worth in 3 hours). She also bought us a round of some sort of peach schnapps shots.
Friday, October 2nd – Better time in Vienna
Kayla prepared a local breakfast with groceries from the previous day in our apartment, and we enjoyed it with Wyatt & Magnolia.
Walked to Praterstern Hbf
Train to Vienna Central Cemetery
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Incredible, huge, and beautiful. Tons of giant sculptures and crypts.
Famous classical composer graves - Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, etc…
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Beethoven's grave. |
Afterwards, found a fantastic restaurant called
Schloss Concordia in an old building.
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Schloss Concordia |
Wyatt & Magnolia went back to their hotel, but Kayla and I kept walking and ended up at the
Onyx Bar on Stephansplatz.
Kayla and I were slightly underdressed, it was very fancy.
Beautiful views, and even though the bar was packed, one of the servers managed to find us a seat by a window, where we enjoyed our drinks for a bit.
Saturday, October 3rd – Travel Day to Prague
Check out from Vienna Inn Apartments
Uber to Praterstern Hbf
S train from Praterstern Hbf to Vienna Hbf
Relaxed at the Vienna Hbf OBB First Class Lounge
Kayla bought new shoes for 9 euros because her Converse were falling apart.
Railjet train (they go 150mph!) from Vienna Hbf to Prague Hl. N.
Metro from Prague Hl. N. to Mustek station.
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Tried to get a reservation at
Čestr Restaurant, but we were pretty late so ended up reserving for the following day.
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Classic Pilsner ad in Kolkovna |
Sunday, October 4th – Prague & The Bone Church @ Kutná Hora
Hotel breakfast (pretty good, but not as great as Hotel Constans on the first leg)
Given that our trip was concluding, and the fact that Prague was a cheap city, I resolved to find a new messenger bag/briefcase for work trips, since my existing one was proving too small. We walked around a bunch of stores but didn’t find what I wanted.
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Ouch |
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Rural Czech Republic |
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These are all REAL human bones. |
Monday, October 5th – Last day in Prague, and the trip as a whole - beer spa!
Hotel breakfast.
We wanted to go visit the
BeerLand Spa, but unfortunately found out online that everything was booked 3 days ahead. As a last effort, we called the spa directly and they found us a free slot (with the sauna room!) at 2:00pm. Lucked out!
Kayla and I went bag shopping for me and after wandering the giant
Palladium mall, I finally found one at a Domi/Samsonite store. Hooray!
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Terrible photo of a really good time. |
Dinner at
Agave Restaurant, figured it would be fun to try Mexican food in Europe.
Walked to the
Hemingway Bar for one last drink before an early night.
Fancy cocktails: Hibiscus Fairy & Aviation Collins
Wyatt & Magnolia left early because they were tired.
Kayla and I stayed for one more drink, and ended up talking for two hours to a couple of Irish ladies from around Belfast? Very friendly and interesting conversation.
Tuesday, October 6th – Fly back home
Woke up at 5:00am & checked out of the hotel.
Uber to PRG airport.
Flew 2 hours, from PRG to Stockholm Arlanda airport.
Wandered around, Sweden is expensive! 100SEK = $12, water bottles were 30-40SEK = $4-5!!!
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Flew 10 hours from ARN to LAX.
LAX FlyAway bus to Union Station.
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Uber back home!
Random Bits, in no particular order
Prague was incredible in every way: easily walkable, good public transportation, cheap, beautiful, modern, old, cosmopolitan, great food, fantastic hotels, fantastic service, great people.
Munich was great as well: felt familiar, easy to navigate, modern, good public transportation, affordable, kind people, great food.
Zurich felt very fancy and extremely cosmopolitan. It also had great food and was easy to navigate. Zurich was also incredibly expensive, everything being almost triple (sometimes even more) than the other cities we went to, and about double USA prices.
After learning some German and getting comfortable with basic day-to-day stuff, Swiss German makes no goddamned sense.
Vienna had inconvenient public transportation, sketchy neighborhoods, and a lack of sights other than museums. It also felt somewhat economically depressed.
Our Eurail passes worked out very well, and taking first class trains everywhere was comfortable and convenient. The first class lounges in the stations were very nice and comfortable to relax in. If we had bought first class train tickets for all the journeys we took, we would have spent over a thousand dollars easily.
Huge thanks to Carrie’s dad for covering our nice dinner in Munich.
Huge thanks to Erin for cooking us dinner in Zurich.
Getting around by train in Europe was easy and pretty comfortable.
Google Maps was usually pretty good with figuring out local public transportation and mostly ok with walking directions, but it was AWFUL with regional/cross-border trains. Wrong schedules, missing lines/stops, etc… We ended up utilizing the local train system sites exclusively because they were much more efficient and accurate.
SC (SuperCity) trains in the Czech Republic were the nicest, we only rode one. Free champagne, water, coffee, and sandwiches in first class, as well as good free WiFi.
RJ (RailJet) and ICE (InterCity Express) trains were the fastest, with nice first class and dining cars. Shitty WiFi usually.
IC (InterCity) and EC (EuroCity) weren’t fast, but also had nice first class and dining cars. Also shitty WiFi if there was any at all.
S Bahn, Regional, and other trains were generally the bare minimum. Roughly equivalent to Pacific Surfliner Amtrak in the states.
We got very used to the high quality European food. Less stomach issues compared to the states, even cheap street food was generally made with good ingredients. Coffee was amazing pretty much everywhere and made even high quality California coffeeshop pale in comparison.
We definitely saw some signs of World War II and other wars throughout Czech Republic and Austria (not so much the parts of Germany we were in). A lot of rural Czech & Austrian towns had large abandoned/bombed out factories. Passing by train through
Brno in particular looked somewhat post-apocalyptic. Also a cabbie told us that some damage on the National Museum in Prague was from Soviet tanks in 1968.
Norwegian Air has a reputation for being hit or miss - either they’re efficient, fairly comfortable, cheap, and easy, or they cancel/delay flights, have non-existent customer service, and have a terrible refund policy. We got lucky on our trip and had no issues whatsoever with them, but who knows for next time.
Magnolia has a very severe peanut/lupine/legume allergy, and we were happy to discover that most of the restaurants we went to had allergen information right on their menus, and even if they didn’t, the waiters were always very understanding and did their best to make sure Magnolia was safe.
European airport security is different than the US - they’re not as strict with the body/clothing searches beyond a metal detector, but their bag X-Rays are very very thorough, and their agents check everything that looks even remotely suspicious. I don’t think a single European airport that we were in had us take off our shoes, unlike the US.
Communication/phone service was problematic. Given our experience last time, I opted to buy international SIM cards for Kayla and me to use in Europe. They’re pay-as-you-go and allegedly work better than roaming carriers. I used
KnowRoaming and Kayla used
OneSimCard since she has a CDMA/GSM phone on Verizon and KnowRoaming doesn’t support it.
We both paid roughly $150-175 over the course of the trip, using almost exclusively data, communicating using Facebook Messenger.
Making calls was OK, but there was a callback process and the connection had a huge delay.
I could send and receive SMS messages (though it was very slow), but Kayla couldn’t send any (awful!)
Wyatt & Magnolia had the best service - they use T-Mobile and seem to have the best overall phone experience, even back in the states.