Travel Secrets March-April 2015 | Page 44

unless you’ve admired the elaborate entrance and intricate sculptures and gone inside to be awed by the beautiful stained glass and the sheer majesty of this structure. Don’t miss. It was coffee time, so I ambled into a local cafe and ordered ‘rétes,’ a delicious thinly layered Hungarian specialty pastry filled with cream and apple pie (strudel), and a Hungarian Kava (dark, strong espresso-like coffee). Now I was all perked up to go and see the great Danube. To do this, I had to walk down Budapest’s most famous street, Vaci Utca (pronounced utsa, for street). The beautiful facades and columns on either side of the narrow streets, jostling for space with block-style housing from the Soviet era make this an enchanting promenade. As I walked through what seemed to be the 100th park in Budapest, I suddenly saw her, the Danube. Dotted with boats that are actually restaurants that double up as museums, she flows majestically below the bridges and unites the cities. Crossing over to Buda from Pest, on the Lanchid bridge, I took in the concrete jungles in Pest that I had left behind and the castles that beckoned. Photo tip: Pictures from bridge look better early in the day and late at night, when the city lights come on. Take a tripod - Midday shots are the touristy ones! 44  Travel Secrets March-April 2015 A funicular train up to the Buda Castle, I was awestruck by the beautiful views that it accorded at 530m above the Danube. Walking on old cobbled pathways, I went back a few hundred years to kings and horses that must have visited. ‘You must see the Citadela – the views there are majestic – take a bus, it’s a long walk otherwise,’ a fellow tourist said, as he watched me gaze. He was right – the sweeping views of the cities and the Danube, more magnificent statues and old artillery, and pretty Hungarian dolls (not what you think) made it well worth the ride. As the shadows lengthened, I headed back to Pest to catch a cruise. Heady with the champagne served on the boat, I began to wonder if I would ever cruise down an Indian river like this. A voice from a tinny speaker alerted me to the breathtaking Hungarian parliament, in which every window seemed to overlook the Danube - politicians sure have strategic views here, I thought. A pretty couple from Canada read out this interesting snippet from a guidebook: ‘The Hungarian Parliament’s spire and the St. Stephens Basiclica’s spire are exactly the same height, symbolising that church and rulers were equal.’ Circling back from the Margaret Island, in the middle of the Danube between Buda and Pest, we were told