You've heard the expression: "Getting there is half the fun"? Not this time. Just got back from 10 days in Europe pitching my company's story to reinsurance markets. The meetings went great, but the traveling... was brutal. Explaining to people that you are doing some foreign travel for business is often greeted by "oh, how marvelous for you!", as if it's a paid vacation to exotic lands or something. Ha! Yes, there are sightseeing opportunities, which are great, but when the planes, trains, and automobiles part fail you... it is far from glamorous.
Suffice to say that spending the night sleeping on the floor of O'Hare airport trying to get to London, and having your train to Augsburg from Munich cancelled altogether due to a suicide on the tracks, makes you really glad for a few hours sitting at an open-air table enjoying a beer on the square. Simple pleasures grow larger when they follow after personal disruption. :)
But the third time was the charm, and heading home was comparatively easy. All you have to do is click your heels together three times, and say: (oh, you know the rest, right?)
On to the travel photos. I don't think I got more than a mile from my hotel on any leg of the trip, so all of these scenes are close by. First of the City of London:
Well, that was 6 days in London (meeting rooms and business dinners excluded). Someday, when we meet face-to-face, dear reader, I'll narrate them for you. Most, though, are self-explanatory as you've no doubt already found.
On to Germany, then, my second stop. I begin with the hotel, and what non-business sights there were to see over the course of 4 days. I found that my German came back respectably, so that I was able to converse with waitstaff and shopkeepers fairly well, not to mention reading menus and street signs decently. :) Augsburg is over 2,000 years old (1,000 years older than Munich), and was founded by its namesake, the Emperor Augustus, a statue of whom is prominent atop a fountain in the Rathausplatz. Technically speaking, it's in Swabia, considered by most to be part of Bavaria, although the alt-schule locals respectfully dispute that.
So there you have it, mate. Cheers! Und Auf Wiedersehen,!
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