Friday, 31 October 2025

October 30 - That's A Wrap

Here is a round-up of some of the best memories from this fantastic vacation and links to photo albums.

Brian’s Memories

Best Meal

Despite comments from my dining partners, my most memorable meal was Seared Rabbit Kidneys. It wasn’t gamey as one would expect. It was one of the few dishes with a bit of seasoning. It got a thumbs-up from the waiter.

Most Scenic

The Abbey in Melk Austria is breathtaking in its beauty. Despite its small size, the beauty of the abbey matches St. Peters in the Vatican. It was too bad that you can’t take pictures, but the gift shop is a major source of income for the abbey.

Favorite Location

It would be a tie between the New Town in Prague and the Old Town in Nuremberg. I loved both locations for the same reasons. They had interesting architecture and an energetic vibe with multiple restaurants, cafes, and bars.

Favorite Memory

Without a doubt it was the night-time cruise of the Danube River in Budapest. Spectacular is an understatement.

Margaret’s Memories

Best Meal

From the Imperial Next Door Café in Prague - Ham & Cheese pate, followed by braised beef with cream sauce and cranberries, then chocolate mousse cake for dessert.

A close second was the four-course meal with wine tasting in the specialty restaurant on the Scenic Ruby.

Most Scenic

A tie between the train trip along the Elba River from Prague to Berlin, or the night-time Danube River cruise in Budapest.

Favorite Location

The Old Town in Nuremberg. Margaret loved the old buildings and the pedestrian friendly streets.

Favorite Memory

The night-time cruise of the Danube River. Sitting out on the deck of the boat, watching all the incredible illuminated sites of Budapest, especially Margaret’s Bridge, is a memory that will last a lifetime.

Trip by the numbers

Distance travelled by plane       16 hours and 12,800 Km

Distance travelled by train         1,250 km

Distance travelled by boat         700 km

Distance travelled by bus           650 km          

Number of days                          20

Countries                                    5

Cities and towns                         13

Pictures taken                             Close to 800

 

Photo Albums 

  • Open the selected Album
  • Click on a picture to open for viewing
  • Sometimes the description will appear on the bottom left hand corner, but if it doesn't try moving the mouse
  • If that doesn't work click on Information icon on the top righthand of the picture
  • Because of software incompatibility, if the description is blank, the actual description will be found by scrolling down the panel until you see the description in a field called “other”


Sorry but that is just Google being Google!


Nuremberg Germany

 

Regensburg Germany

 

Salzburg Austria

 

Melk - Austria

 

Wachau Valley Austria

 

Dürnstein Austria

 

Bratislava Slovakia

 

Vienna Austria

 

Budapest Hungary

 

Prague Czech Republic


Elba River Valley 


Berlin Germany


Danube River  


Life Aboard the Scenic Ruby


That is all for this trip. 

Our next vacation has been planned for a trip to the Scandinavian countries on a Celebrity Cruise in May of 2026.

 

 

 

 

Saturday, 25 October 2025

October 25 - Random Thoughts

It is so nice to be home, but we do miss being on the road in new cities. I guess you can’t have it both ways. One of the benefits of being at home is the ability to look at the vacation as a series of unrelated observations, instead of a succession of planned activities.

First, I must confess that most of the blog was supported by Co-Pilot which is Microsoft’s AI chatbot. I used Co-Pilot to generate paragraphs about histories and locations in the various cities we visited. I then went in and removed adjectives and adverbs that I would never use in everyday conversations and replaced them with descriptive words that I would normally use. It made it feel less of an ad from the tourist bureau.

I then checked for the proper tense of the verbs and made corrections where I felt it was necessary. Then I would add my own knowledge, observations, and opinions. So, I’m going to take credit for the blog and the heck with Microsoft.

So, here are some of our random thoughts.

You know you’ve got fantastic travelling companions when it is been a long time since seeing them and yet the conversation flows like you meeting them at the pub on regular Saturday night.

The weather was unseasonable cool for October. It never once got above the mid-teens, and the north wind made it feel like the end of fall instead of the beginning. Although there were a couple of days of rain, it didn’t interfere with our sightseeing.

The cobblestone streets and walks can be dangerous to walk on. A loose stone or a heaved walkway can lead to disaster. On our first night in Prague, Marg tripped over a raised edge in the roadway that we were crossing. She smashed both knees, both hands, a wrist, received a fat lip and chipped one of her teeth. A week later and her knees are still sore and stiff.

It seems every time I go on a river cruise I come down with a respiratory illness. This trip was no exception. It started as a bad head cold that ran its course after a couple of days. Then as the vacation ended In Berlin, it spread to my lungs, and I’ve been coughing like crazy since then.

This is our third river cruise with Scenic. I can’t say enough good things about this cruise company out of Australia. The rooms, although small, were clean and functional. The food was amazing and service top notch. The locations that were on our itineraries will provide memories that will last us a lifetime. Their entertainment, as the expression goes, was the icing on the cake. Although it costs a bit more than some of the other river cruise, I think it for us it was well worth it.

It can be frustrating trying to reconcile your credit card statement with your receipts. Not only do you have to do a currency conversion, but it can sometimes be impossible to find the name of the merchant on the receipt.

You literally take your life into your hands walking in some European cities. There doesn’t seem to be any consistency as to which side of pathway belongs to bicycles. With the speed which they ride their bikes, you would think the riders believe they are trying out for their national Olympic cycling team. The only safe city that we visited was Prague. That is because the major roads have little or no room for a bike lane because they have two lanes dedicated to automobiles and the wide centre lane is for trams. Of course, you have to watch sidewalks to ensure your don’t trip over a hole in the cobblestones.

Most of the story lines on our tours of various cities had three main themes. They are the history of the city and the effect on the city due to the second world war; how the holocaust decimated the Jewish community in the city; and how the fall of the Iron Curtain shaped the political landscape of the country.

There was little information on the Roman influence and even less on the Holy Roman Empire of the Middle Ages. Both eras were important in the development of the region.

I don’t believe that the traditional continental breakfast exists any longer. Each hotel and the Scenic Ruby had huge breakfast buffets. These breakfasts included cereals, eggs, meats, yogurt, vegetables, baked beans, cheeses, and all types of breads, buns, pancakes, and pastries. There was a variety of coffee and fruit juices to choose from. Getting gluten-free options was not a problem.

You don’t need to worry about carrying local currency. No matter how small the purchase, all the stores and cafes that we visited accepted our credit cards. The only exception was one store that refused to accept Visa. The Europeans are more advanced when it comes to electronic commerce that we are in Canada.

There is something about the water you use to shower with in Central Europe. It strips all the natural hair oils from your scalp. For days after washing my hair, I looked like an unmanageable mop top, which some cynics would say was an improvement.

For data on this vacation, I used a company called Saily to provide Internet data. It was reasonable priced, and it was easy to install their eSim. Their connectivity was stable, with very few dead zones. All the hotels we stayed in had WiFi, so there never was any problem accessing the Internet.

Our fellow passengers, that we usually cruise with, had WhatsApp installed on their phones. It was too inconsistent to recommend. Some people could send/receive messages, while others could not. We used it to talk to Marg’s family in Canada, and it worked fine for her to talk to her daughter and sister, but not her son.

If you want to watch English TV in your hotel room, good luck. Of course, you can’t expect a full slate of English networks, but you’re lucky if you get BBC News or Sky News. We ended up watching Netflix on our small twelve” laptop.

Central European food is the definition of substance over style. All the meals that we had were filled with lots of meat and potatoes. Unfortunately, rarely did you have a dish where there were any spices or seasonings. I think it will be a long time before I have any more schnitzel.

I’ll give them high marks for their pastries though. I think Marg could have apple strudel several times a week, and I loved their chocolate cakes.

Red Bull, the world's most popular energy drink was created by a citizen of Salzburg. If you can find it, it is an interesting read about Red Bull and how in the beginning it went about marketing itself. Its cooperate footprint can be seen all over the city, with its ownership of Salzburg's major sports teams and sporting venues. 

Beer and wine are plentiful in all the restaurants and cafes in Central Europe. I was under the mistaken impression that their wines were mostly whites, but we did have some wonderful red wines. Their local beers taste amazing because they don’t pasteurize their brews. They are poured out of the tap and drank, before they could become stale.

I use a Canon point and shoot camera on our vacations. After this vacation, I’ll be switching to a phone. It seems like the colours are more vibrant when I take a picture with my phone and the software allows me much more flexibility than my camera. The final straw was at the Berlin Cathedral, where I couldn’t get proper exposure in the low light of the chapel. I tried every trick in the book, but I just couldn't get a picture that gave the chapel justice. There was no problem with the phone though.

Over the course of this vacation, we went on three extended bus trips. Except for our trip from Passau to Salzburg, most of the time was spent on major highways. I thought the 401 through southern Ontario was bad, but the traffic on these roads was even more congested. I would estimate that two out of every three vehicles was a transport truck or cargo van. I guess that means the factories are working at full capacity, which is a good thing.

On this vacation we decided to try Uber for the first time. Most travel sites will tell you that taxis are the number one source of travel scams. Uber eliminates this problem because the price is set when you make your reservation. Our drivers arrived on time, and their vehicles were immaculate. The only problem that I had was that each of drivers thought they were Michael Schumacher, they way they raced to our destination.

Berlin is one of the greenest cities that I have ever visited. They have multiple huge parks, with dense forests, meadows, and sports fields. Several of these parks were hunting grounds for the aristocracy. The mass majority of the wide boulevards in Berlin, that we saw on our Uber trips, were lined with tall mature trees that form a wonderful shady canopy.

Germany is just starting to develop its own North Sea oil wells. But like most of Central Europe it gets its oil and gas from various countries, such as Norway. Since it stopped buying its supplies from Russia gasoline risen to $2.85 / litre in some cities. This is more than twice what we pay in Port Stanley.

In Czechoslovakia they only had one toilet paper mill in the country, because the state ministry determined that was all they needed. Unfortunately, there was a fire, and it took eight months before the supply of toilet paper was back on the selves. Our guide in Prague, told us that the best Christmas present the family had ever received was a package of toilet paper from a friend in West Germany.

The Intercity Express trains are marvellous. High speed with a smooth ride and comfortable seats, who could ask for anything more. It is too bad as Rick Mercer says that Canada leads the world in high-speed train studies.

Along the Spree River in the Friedrichshain district of Berlin, you can see one of the longest sections of the Berlin wall still standing. The East Side Gallery is a 1.3 kilometer-long open-air gallery painted directly on a preserved section of the Berlin Wall. In 1990, one hundred and eighteen artists from twenty-one countries painted murals of freedom and hope on the wall.

On our bus trip from Budapest to Prague, we stopped in Bratislava for lunch. We went to a beautiful restaurant overlooking the city and the Danube River. It was next to the Slovakian parliament building. Again, another class act by Scenic.

The Cold War did have its humorous side. Along the border between East and West Berlin was West Berlin’s top newspaper. They erected a large scrolling marquee on their roof, so that East Berliners could see the uncensored news. The East Berlin authorities, then erected three large apartment buildings to block the view. These apartments were designed so they didn’t have windows that faced West Berlin.

Looking back at the blog, I realize how comprehensive this vacation has been. Marg thought the river cruise might have been too busy, as she would have enjoyed more time on the boat cruising down the river with a glass of nice local wine in her hand. Still it was one of the best vacations ever! We enjoyed it so much that in the back of my mind, I'm planning a return trip to Prague, Vienna and Budapest and then taking a river cruise from Budapest Hungary to Bucharest Romania. But that is way in the future.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, 23 October 2025

October 22 - Mid Atlantic

Well, welcome back to reality.

My worst nightmare came true on our flight home. It was an eight hour flight from Frankfurt to Toronto. I had just settled in, when a drunken sloth with terrible body odor sat next to me. A more annoying cretin you could not imagine in your worst nightmares. For some reason, that only his demented mind could imagine, he thought I would be his best friend during the flight. He kept putting his stinking breath in my face in an attempt to get my attention. After twice politely telling him to stop annoying me, I lost it and told him to F*Off. That worked for about an hour.

During this time, he kept whistling and snapping his fingers at the flight attendants for more beer. I don’t blame them for cutting him off. Unfortunately, as the alcohol kicked in it got worse.

For some stupid reason, he started flaying his arms around and came close to elbowing me in the head twice. On his third time, I grabbed his elbow and told him, in no uncertain terms, that if he touched me there would be serious consequences. He apologized like most drunken assholes do when they play the victim. Thank God he passed out shortly thereafter.

I give high marks to the Lufthansa crew. They handled it with upmost professionalism, although I’m sure they wanted to strangle the idiot.



There will three more posts to come. One is a collection of random notes that I made during the vacation, there will be overall review and links to photo albums.

October 21 - Frankfurt

Today is our penultimate day of this fabulous vacation. We will be flying home from Frankfurt tomorrow afternoon. Like all vacations, it is a two-sided coin. We’re sad to see it end, but happy to be on our way home after three weeks away.

We took the train from Berlin to Frankfurt. I don’t know how we scored it, but we got a private compartment, so we had plenty of leg room and space for our luggage.

The trip took about four hours, and we got to see lots of diverse scenery. We went through large industrial cities, such as Hanover, and many smaller hamlets. The countryside consisted of rolling hills with lush green pastures. The fall colours of the trees added to beauty of the countryside, although there was a lack of the red leaves that you would see in Canada.



In Frankfurt, we stayed at the Anor Hotel & Conference Center. It was a nice hotel with spacious rooms. I don’t think that any large conferences will be held here though, because it is rather small. It is supposed to be an airport hotel, but it is right in the middle of an industrial park, and the hotel is about a twenty minute Uber drive away from the airport.

This evening, the desk clerk pointed us to a nice casual restaurant called the Motion Café, where we had our last German styled meal. It seemed like it might be a local meeting spot where people went to meet friends and have a beer. It was a wonderful way to end the trip.

Tuesday, 21 October 2025

October 20 - Berlin

The museum Gods strike again. On two previous trips to Florence Italy, we arrived on a day when the world famous Uffizi Gallery was closed. It is Monday in Berlin, and it turns out that all the major museums are closed on Mondays. Had we known this, we would have visited some of them yesterday and taken the Hop-On Hop-Off bus today. Live and learn!

So, we decided to try Microsoft’s Co-Pilot AI and have it design a tour for us. It seemed to work well and was simple to use. It told us to go to the DDR museum, walk across the bridge to the Berlin Cathedral, then take public transit to Check Point Charlie.

We’re getting used to using the S Bahn and U Bahn transit system. Sometimes, the signage is not all that clear, but we always manage to get to where we want to go. Today we had assistance from a student studying in Berlin, who is from Elora Ontario. She is studying International Affairs and wants to have a summer job in the Canadian government in the future. It is a small world. 

The DDR museum is along the Spree river and it was a scenic walk from the S Bahn station to the entrance of the museum.

The DDR Museum offers an interactive experience that shows visitors what daily life in former East Germany was like. The exhibits allow you to step inside a recreated apartment, see what consumer goods were available in East Berlin, and sit behind the wheel of a classic Trabant car. It showed the wages of different occupations and what goods it could buy. For example, an IT technician earned 1,600 East German marks but a TV cost 4,000. Rents were cheap, but the living quarters were small and often housed multiple generations. One of the scariest exhibits was a map that showed the invasion plans of West Berlin. It was good to see the museum filled with school children.

East German Trabant car

A short walk over the Liebknechtbrücke bridge and we were at the Berlin Cathedral. The Berlin Cathedral, known locally as the Berliner Dom, stands as one of the city's most iconic landmarks. Its grand façade and magnificent dome dominate the Museum Island skyline. I had a good chuckle to myself when I entered. I had read in the morning about Trump and his White House ballroom and then saw the Main Nave of the cathedral. Yes, Trump’s architectural legacy in Washington will look like a fast-food restaurant in comparison.

Berlin Cathedral

The Main Nave of the Berlin Cathedral is breathtaking. It is well known for its grandeur and architectural details. I had a sense of awe when I entered. There was an enormous dome with beautiful paintings on the ceiling, soaring columns, mosaics, and intricate stained-glass windows. The central aisle has elaborately carved wooden pews and altars. The pipe organ looks like it could rock the foundations of the entire city of Berlin. As with other world famous cathedrals the acoustics of the are renowned, drawing both music lovers and performers for special concerts and organ recitals. Several Prussian kings are buried here. The atmosphere is truly majestic.

Alter in Berlin Cathedral

I could have climbed to the top of the dome, with 200+ steps, but I’d be writing this blog from a hospital bed had I attempted it. 

Then the fun began. Co-Pilot had told us to walk to U Museumsinse and take the U5 to Alexanderplatz station. There we transferred to S9 toward Warschauer Straße and exited at Warschauer Straße. From there it was supposed to be a 5 minute walk to the museum. We opened Google Maps to see which direction we needed walk to and found out that Checkpoint Charlie wasn’t anywhere near there. In fact, it was over 40 minutes away by public transit. After double and triple checking, we got back on S9 going back to where we started. Using Google Maps, we eventually arrived Check Point Charlie.

Checkpoint Charlie is one of Berlin's most famous cold war sites, serving as the main crossing point between East and West Berlin during the Cold War. Located on Friedrichstraße, it became a symbol of the divided city, witnessing dramatic escapes, tense standoffs, and significant moments in post-war history. Today, the site features a replica of the original guardhouse and a museum with informative displays that recount its pivotal role in international relations and everyday life during the time of the Berlin Wall. The exhibits detailed stories of escape attempts, the ingenuity behind these attempts and the political tensions that made Checkpoint Charlie a focal point of the global cold war tensions. There is also a hall that details the fall of the Iron Curtain and the Ukraine war.

Map of the Berlin Wall

Back in 1976, I visited Berlin and went into East Berlin. I had a boring time and was harassed by the East German border guard when I was leaving. I went through Check Point Charlie to the return to the west. It was a strange experience as the entire two block area was a military zone with lots of soldiers with automatic guns and barriers to stop any vehicle.

Checkpoint Charlie

Today was Marg’s birthday. I had promised her an excellent German meal in Berlin to celebrate. What I didn’t count on was how hard it was to find a place. There doesn’t seem to a specific area where the best restaurants would be located, or at least one that we could get to easily. We eventually found a restaurant called Maximilians. It was packed and the waiting queue was about a 30-minute wait. We were not disappointed.




Monday, 20 October 2025

October 19 - Berlin

Last night after arriving at our hotel from our long train ride from Prague, we went to a tiny restaurant close to our hotel called Gaststätte Zum Bohnsdorfer Eck. It was packed with locals, so we knew the food would be great. We were not disappointed. 

Berlin had frost last night. As you can imagine the walk back to the hotel was brisk. Now I wish I had brought a warmer coat on this vacation. We are staying at the Loginn Hotel near the Berlin airport. It is a budget hotel with the normal European small room, but it is clean. It is a rude return to reality after staying in the Cosmopolitan Hotel in Prague. This hotel is next to the SBahn station, so we can get into downtown Berlin with a minimum of fuss. 

Berlin’s history stretches back to its emergence as the capital of the Kingdom of Prussia in the 18th century, becoming a centre of political power, culture, and innovation. In the 19th century, Berlin flourished as it became the capital of the newly unified German Empire in 1871, expanding rapidly during a period of industrialisation and cultural identity.

German’s defeat in the first world war, signalled a major decline in Berlin importance in the world. It was more known for its lewd nightclubs than anything economic or political. The Weimar era of the 1920s, was marked by instability, hyperinflation, and the rise of extremist political forces. This would eventually lead to the collapse of the Weimar Republic and the ascent of the Hitler and his Nazi regime.

During the Second World War, Berlin became the epicentre of Nazi Germany’s military operations and political strategy. As the war progressed, the city endured relentless Allied bombing raids, which left much of it in ruins and resulted in significant civilian casualties. In the final days of the conflict, Berlin was the scene of fierce street-to-street fighting as Soviet troops advanced, culminating Hitler’s suicide and the city’s capture in May 1945. The devastation was immense, and it took years to recover.

After the Second World War, Berlin became a focal point of the Cold War. The city was split into sectors controlled by the Soviet Union, the United States, Britain, and France, with East Berlin serving as the capital of communist East Germany, while West Berlin remained a Western enclave deep within the East. Tensions escalated in 1961 with the construction of the Berlin Wall, a stark symbol of ideological division, which separated families and friends for three decades. Life on either side of the wall was drastically different, with the West experiencing greater freedoms and prosperity, while the East remained under strict government control, surveillance, and limited personal liberties. It should be noted that many of Berlin’s pre-war iconic buildings were in East Berlin. The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 marked a pivotal moment, signalling the end of the Cold War and paving the way for German reunification. Berlin became the capital of a unified German in 1990.

When we come to a new city, one of the ways we get oriented is to take the Hop-On Hop-Off bus. We take the full tour and then decide which places we would like to see in more depth. We have mixed feelings about the Berlin bus. We got to see many important sights and the commentary was informative, but there were several stops that served no other purpose than to place in you in a shopping district.

Our first stop was at the Berlin Victory Column which is in Tiergarten park and commemorates Prussian military victories in the wars German unification. It is topped by a golden statue of Victoria. Apparently, there is a fantastic view of the city from the observation deck at the top of the tower.

Berlin Victory Column

Our next stop was the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church. The church serves as a symbol of peace and reconciliation. Originally built in the 1890s to honour Kaiser Wilhelm I, the church was destroyed during an air raid in the Second World War. Rather than being fully reconstructed, its ruined spire was preserved as a memorial to the devastation of war and a reminder of the importance of peace.

Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church

After passing through embassy row, we entered what was East Berlin. Here we stopped at the last remaining section of the Berlin Wall. Interesting enough, it forms the outside wall of the courtyard for a museum about the horrors of the Gestapo.

On our return trip to the railway station, we passed several imposing museums on Museum Insel (Museum Island). 

Berlin Cathedral

We then headed down Unter den Linden to the Brandenburg Gate and rounded the Reichstag Building, Germany’s parliament building with its stunning glass dome.

Reichstag Building

Overall, we could easily spend several days in Berlin.

I'm not sure if this design for soft drink and water bottles is a great idea because it makes putting the cap back on simple or a pain because it interferes with your ability to take a drink out of the bottle. The twist top has a hinge so that you can't completely take the top off of the bottle. You need something sharp to cut the plastic.



Saturday, 18 October 2025

October 18 - Prague

Last night was our last night with the group I call the Cruise Crew. We went back to the Next Door restaurant. What a difference a day makes. The service was one of the worst I can remember having in a high-end restaurant. The waiter was physically abusive to a couple at our table, pushing them to get their attention. When I admonished him, he acted like he hadn’t done anything wrong. Only when Marg asked to speak to the manager did he apologize. We didn’t get served bread with our meal and Margaret did not get a table napkin. All this on top of being told that we had to vacate the table in an hour, which turned out to be blatantly false.

On the positive side, I tried rabbit kidneys, and it was delicious!

Today we are moving on from our fantastic Scenic river cruise with a trip to Berlin. It has been an amazing experience with lots of memorable sights and meals that will live with us for the rest of our lives.

But again, the highlights will be time we have spent with our friends, both new and old. Our regular cruise crew has been a rock in many of our vacations. It is hard to say goodbye to Coleen, Ron, Janet, Keith, Oliva, Debbie, Bob, Joyce and Jimmy. When we see them, it seems like no time has passed since our last vacation. It doesn't matter that this group spans British Columbia to the northern UK, we seem to be a united family.

Coleen and Bob


Janet & Keith

Joyce and Jimmy


Olive and Marg

Coleen & Ron

Debbie

We have also made new friends. Margaret and Twyla and their husbands from Saskatchewan. Both Margarets have the same uniquely coloured coat, so you could see them together from distance. Loretta, Bob and Anne Marie and Terry from the GTA shared their stories. Kathy and Peter from Australia provided that Aussie feel that each Scenic cruise needs. Each of them made our trip most memorable. 
Hopefully, we can meet up with these new friends on future vacations.

Our trip from Prague to Berlin was a long 5-hour train trip, but it had some interesting stops along the way. This area was the sight of major battles during the final weeks of the Second World War. Our first stop was the city of Dresden Germany. During the Blitz of England in 1940, the Germans launched a saturation bombing of Coventry that was aimed at the civilian population. In 1945 the Allies retaliated by launching a tweleve hundred bomber raid on the city and created a firestorm that wiped the city off the face of the map, with the lose of more than 25,000 civilians. As our train went through the center of the city, you could see a couple of old church spires, but the rest of the skyline was made up of new towers and apartments.

The train track followed the Elba River valley. Today it is a popular tourist attraction because of the fall foliage and rugged terrain. It reminded me of the Gatineau Park in the fall. During the late stages of WW2, it was the site of the first meeting between the Allied army and the Soviet army in the city of Torgua on the Elba River. The Elbe River served as a de facto boundary between Soviet and Western Allied forces at the end of World War II, but it was not the official postwar border.


Elba River

The train station in Prague is a beautiful building with a very classic feel to it. On the other hand, the main terminal in Berlin is an efficient terminal that manages the flow of hundreds of thousands of passengers daily. It is like comparing a beautiful castle to an ant hill. Each serves its purpose.