Bucharest to Budapest Trip Report
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Day 11: Kalocsa, Hungary
We visited a show of horsemanship near Kalocsa, which was amazing! The horses were obviously well cared for and the show was so much fun. We had more Palinka, obviously.
We visited the Kalocsa Cathedral and listened to an excellent organ concert. The organ was played by Franz Liszt several times!
Kalocsa is one of the main paprika producers in Hungary, so look for the name when you buy paprika!
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Day 12: Hungary, Budapest
We sailed into Budapest in the early morning. We got up early so we could see the city as we arrived. We left our ship and transferred to our hotel, Hilton Budapest, which is in the castle district. While the location seemed amazing (and the views were excellent!) we would never stay on the Buda side again. There isn’t a lot to do other than look at the beautiful buildings. I mean, it’s amazing, but the Pest side is where people actually live and it was so much more fun!
Just a few restaurants but not much else and everything is overpriced. We did have an excellent lunch at 21 Magyar Vendeglo. I had the chicken paprikash with dumplings and it was delightful.
We hung out at Fisherman’s Bastion until dusk so I could take photos of the Hungarian Parliament Buildings.
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Day 13: Hungary, Budapest
Our last day in Budapest and my favourite tour! Attila from Budapest Flow Walking Tours was engaging, knowledgeable about both history and art, and provided context for each of the Mihály Kolodko mini statues we visited. My only regret is that we didn't have time to take his Street Art tour as well. Next time!
These mini statues are not commissioned works, but are put up without permission all around Budapest (there are also some in other Hungarian cities). While there are 35 or so mini statues, Attila chose a handful to visit based on location and how relevant they would be to travellers.
The dead squirrel is behind the Columbo statue!The newest statue (the drone) appeared about a month ago! Each statue has meaning, often relevant to its placement in the city.
My favourite was the axe.
A right-wing politician was angry about the original sculpture (a Russian hat, which the artist placed to criticize Russian influence in Hungary), so he destroyed the statue with an axe and threw it into the Danube. Kolodko replaced the missing sculpture with a new one: an axe.
Later, a new Russian hat statue with frog legs appeared on the bank of the Danube. Unfortunately, we didn't get to see that one though Attila shared a photo of it as he told the story.
We also went on a food tour of District VII in the evening. The food was delicious and our guide was lovely. We had AMAZING Celery cream soup from Bors GasztroBar, popped into one of the original ruins bars for some photos and had langos (fried bread covered in sour cream and cheese) at Gozsdu Langos Bistro along with Dreher Beer. We went to Szek for a traditional pork stew with dumplings (Porkolt with Nokedli - delicious!) and, of course, more palinka. Then we had a delicious chocolate layer cake for dessert called Somloi and sweet white wine at a place called Color Bar.
We did get to peek inside of the lobby of the Opera House. We wanted to take a tour but ran out of time. Next time!
That’s it! We had an amazing trip! I would totally go back to Budapest any time, and I’ll be interested to visit Bucharest in maybe ten years and see how it has changed!
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@dolmansaxlil wow, looks like a wonderful trip!! Thank you so much for sharing the beautiful photos and descriptions!
Also I've never heard of Pomegranate Lemonade but now I want to try it!
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@dolmansaxlil - What a wonderful trip!! Thank you so much for taking the time to post your travelogue here; I know it takes time to organize and post it all. It's so very much appreciated by this non-traveler. I feel like I just went on vacation. But without the the heat
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What a wonderful travelogue and such great pictures!
Thanks for posting it!
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Thanks, everyone!
@wtg Food tours are our go-to in every city we are in for more than 24 hours! Next summer in Italy we will be doing food tours in Rome, Florence, and Bologna. The best ones offer both information about the food and the culture so they are the perfect way to get acquainted with a city! We were exhausted when we got home! But we flew in late Friday night so Rob had Saturday and Sunday to be lazy at home before heading back to work. I’m on summer holidays so I spent lots of time doing a lot of nothing the week after we got home!
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Thank you so much for sharing your trip with us. I have long wished to visit both Budapest and Romania. Both my mother's parents were from Budapest --my great-great grandfather opened the very first photography studio there--and there are many fine and commercial photographers still on that side of the family.
My Hungarian grandmother was a fantastic cook, and judging from your report, many of her specialties were on your foodie tour.
I have been wondering about going on a Viking river tour. I was interested to learn that you stayed in hotels and not on the ship part of the time. Would you tell us more about your experience with Viking? Do you recommend them?
My main concern is having to stick to a strict itinerary.
I was amazed to hear about the pomegranate lemonade. I am drinking one right now. It's my favorite drink, and I make it myself. I thought I had invented it!
My father's mother was born in Romania and left for America when she was 12. One day, my father watched amazed as I mixed up my own lemonade. He wondered aloud if such things were genetic as his mother had drunk the same concoction every day when he was growing up.
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@dolmansaxlil
Super thread. And love your photography.
What camera did you use? -
@AndyD Thanks! All iPhone here! I used to dabble in photography and used a DSLR, but the best camera is the one you have with you, and I got sick of lugging around all the gear!
@pique We have loved cruising with Viking! This was our second Viking cruise, and I loved both for different reasons. Previous to this we had never cruised or gone on a “tour”. We had just planned travel ourselves. I worried that I would miss the spontaneity of self-guided travel. But on a river cruise, you get to go to smaller towns that you would never see if you were planning it yourself. I also like the forced downtime of “scenic sailing”, as when I’m in charge of the itinerary we pack so much in that we need a vacation from our vacation! We never would have seen some of the things we did without the Viking tours. For example, getting to sit down in a local’s kitchen and talk to her about the Croatian War for Independence! The included tours are usually very good. The extra tours that you can pay for have been, in my experience, EXCELLENT. They are usually a smaller group (8-10 or less) and usually include some private access or high quality food experience. If you don’t want to go on a tour, you just don’t! You can either stay on the boat or, in some ports, just walk off the boat to do your own thing. Once we got to Amsterdam, we ditched the provided tour and went out on our own. When we were in Cologne in 2023 with Viking, the ship was docked about a 20 minutes walk from the city centre so after the included tour we just stayed in the city and joined the ship later. We wandered several smaller towns as well when the ship was docked there. There are some people who never leave the included tours, there are some who never leave the boat! There are also some who rarely do the included tours but head off to do their own thing. They have you scan your key card in and out of the ship when you leave so they know you are off the ship, but other than that you are free to do as much or as little of the itinerary as you like.
Some of Viking’s itineraries are completely on the ship - our first cruise was. But when they are visiting cities that aren’t on the river (like Bucharest) or when the ship is continuing on because the section you booked is part of a larger tour (in Budapest that is sometimes the case, as it was with us), then they put you in a hotel for those portions. I don’t love the Viking hotel portions of the tour, but the itinerary we booked this time had no other options. When you are on the boat, they take care of everything and your meals and beverages are included. When you are in the hotel, breakfast is included but you are on your own for meals, unless you happen to do a tour where one is included, and usually those cost extra. Part of the allure of Viking is that though the upfront cost looks high, we don’t spend a dime when we are on the boat. It ends up being very similar in cost to when we travel independently, assuming we are also booking tours to sites during our independent travel, which we do. When you have a hotel stay with Viking, we found the value wasn’t the same. But for the itinerary we did there weren’t really any other options.
We always stay in the departure city an extra couple days independently because you generally don’t have time to see it as part of the Viking cruise. As an example, when we did Amsterdam to Basel, Switzerland, we boarded the boat at lunch time and sailed after dinner in Amsterdam. The morning we arrived in Basel was the day we headed to the airport. So if you want to see those cities you either need to book a Viking extension or book it independently.
I hope that helps! If you have any other questions let me know!
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@AndyD - @dolmansaxlil is a photographer extraordinaire. Some years ago she was doing a photo a day exercise and would post her pic on WTF; her creativity and technical talent are remarkable.
@dolmansaxlil - Do you still have any of those old photos?
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Awww, thanks, @wtg ! I’m surprised you remember that! I let my Flickr account crumble into disrepair - for awhile it was also posting everything I put on Instagram, which is just a bunch of nonsense! However, before that happened I organized photos into albums on Flickr so those albums are more intentional. They have some of my travel photography from when I actually took the “big girl camera” with me.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/dolmansaxlil/albums/ -
Day 3 Bucharest, Romania
We made a last minute decision to book a private tour to the medieval Snagov Monastery. Our guide, Radu, was FANTASTIC. On the drive to the Monastery, which is on a small island, I head a noise over the sound of the car and air conditioning. When we got out of the car I realized it was cicadas. I have grown up hearing them my entire life but they were louder than I have ever experienced. I did a decibel reading at one point and it was over 70!
The Monastery was established in 1408 and was at one time a centre of Orthodox spirituality. Only the church, bell tower, and a fountain are still standing. Vlad Tepes may be buried here, though as the body they found in the forest where he was killed was headless, no one ever knew for sure. The entire inside of the church is painted with idols and scenes from the Bible. It was absolutely incredible to see.
We also visited the Mogosoaia Palace. Originally constructed around 1700, it was used in the 1920s and 30s as a meeting place for high society and politicians. During the communist regime the interior was stripped and most of the art disappeared. The exterior of the palace is stunning, but the interior is mostly empty with a small art gallery and museum.
After our tour, we headed into Old Town to visit Caru’ cu bere, which is an absolutely stunning restaurant/bar. On the advice of Radu, we had a drink but didn’t eat there, as he said the food is mediocre and overpriced.
Yes, the heat was a major topic of conversation and my Instagram stories the entire time!After Caru’cu bere, we visited Carturesti Carusel, which is one of the most beautiful bookstores I have ever seen! It was originally a bank headquarters and then a general store. It eventually fell into disrepair but was purchased and repaired by the book chain Carturesti in 2015. They had delicious iced latte and we bought a small ink drawing by a local artist as a souvenir.
After the book store, we headed to Hanu’lui Manuc for traditional Romanian food for lunch. We had mici, a casingless garlicky sausage and the best fresh pita I have ever tasted.
In the evening we had dinner at the Museum of Communism after closing. This was one of the top three experiences of our entire trip! It is a small, private museum, created because, according to the guide, the government still does not want to accurately tell the story of what happened during communism. It is made of four rooms that are set up like an apartment would have been in 1970/80s communist Bucharest. An interesting thing the guide told us, which a thinly veiled dig at current events: In 1965, concerned about low birth fathers, abortion and contraception were outlawed. There were also mandatory pregnancy tests, taxes on childlessness, etc. Illegal abortions became the norm and large numbers of children were put into orphanages. This led to a homelessness crises for children and teens in the 1990s when orphanages were closed after the revolution. (Our guide the following day shared that she was part of the “unwanted generation” of the 1970s and 80s. While her parents kept her, she has a strained relationship with them as she was not a wanted child.)
Our guide shared the history of Communism in Romania while showing us artifacts from the 1980s. School books all had Ceausescu’s picture in the front and many of the stories in the readers were about how to be a better Communist supporter. You needed a license to have a typewriter, and each key stroke was recorded in your registration so they could figure out who had written anti-government messages.
After the tour of the museum, we sat down to a dinner in the “dining room”, using 1980s dishes and eating traditional foods. My favourite were two different eggplant dips, a white bean dip, and the stuffed cabbage. We tried Palinca, a fruit brandy (our first of MANY shots of this stuff…they gave us a shot of it on every tour we went on in every country in Eastern Europe). I loved this tour so much and would recommend it to anyone visiting Bucharest!
After the Museum of Communism dinner, we had reservations at The Vault for a drink. This was the bar in our hotel and it was inside the original bank vault safety deposit box room. The keys hang in the boxes and, when you look inside, there are often notes from previous customers. The drinks were, as expected, ridiculously expensive. However, they were both AMAZING so at least the high cost got us a good drink along with the photos for Instagram!
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Thanks @Bernard I love that colour as well and we use it throughout our home in small doses! I didn’t realize Kolodko had sculptures in NYC! NYC is still on my bucket list, but it’ll have to wait until the situation changes before I can cross it off!