My lovely Innsbruck Guide, Elizabeth, told me that Austrian bureaucracy comes from the Germans and their enjoyment of life comes from the Italians.
The Fraulein on reception duty at
Anyway, I am forbidden to use the mini bar, the telephone is barred and, if I want anything in the hotel, I will have to pay for it there and then.
As a small bottle of Heineken is, I later learn, almost a fiver, more fool anyone who uses the said mini bar or, for that matter, a hotel telephone. I use Skype on my laptop to call home for 17 Eurocents a minute, so, boo sucks to the front desk.
I must say the room is exceptionally well appointed, with all sorts of hi-tech things to confuse and entertain. I find it odd that the handset in the shower has not got a wall attachment on which to hang it and while I fiddle about with a myriad of gleaming knobs and buttons; I receive a soaking, fully clothed, by a large volume of water from a separate and very large overhead shower rose.
Fraulein’s revenge!
I decide that twelve quid for a club sandwich in my room is a bit steep, so I walk all of fifty metres to the local Spar supermarket and stock up with a pre-prepared egg salad, a freshly sliced fruit platter and a couple of beers; I have change out of a fiver. Advantage me. There’s even a knife, fork, plate and napkin provided in my room.
Game, set and match Souter.
I take a walk through the main drag and am hugely surprised by the graffiti, the number of vagrants, beggars and general riff raff. For the first time since I left home, I feel unsettled, ill at ease and clasp my bag even more closely to me. To contrast this impression, there are also vast numbers of veiled ladies completely covered in black, with only their eyes showing, darting in and out of the hugely expensive designer shops. It appears that
Down by the
I thoroughly enjoy the private dining facilities in my room and have a wonderful night’s sleep on a luxuriously appointed sheikh size bed.
My guide is art historian Alexa Brauner. But my brief to all the tourist offices on my itinerary has been clear. No museums, no art galleries. I want to see the unusual, the hidden spots, and the quirky.
Alexa sets off at breakneck speed, cramming what I was led to believe would be a full day itinerary into just two and a half hours. Well, it’s Friday and she has a two-hour drive to her family’s country home, west of the capital.
I am staggered by just how big
We take the underground to see the giant Ferris wheel in the vast
The very efficient subway has five lines, 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6. Line 5 was planned but never built.
Alexa takes me on a tour of lesser known
Nearby, a whole range of incredibly quirky shops and restaurants. My favourite is Gabarage, where former drug addicts, as part of a rehabilitation project to normal employment, make a wide range of useful objects from discarded materials. I am thrilled when Alexa propels me, by now almost at a gallop, towards her favourite coffee shop, the Café Sperl. I am gasping for a cuppa and am pleased to have the chance to experience somewhere rather less touristy than the over expensive tourist haunt of the Café Central. But, no, there are more shops to see, hills to climb, statistics to trot out. I wish I’d planned to stay the average 3 nights of the city’s 10 million overnight visitors. After this madcap circuit, I now need at least 2 nights to recover.
In the museum quarter, we stop at last for a much needed coffee. Alexa heads off for her long weekend and I limp a few more yards for lunch, seeing more city centre graffiti than I have seen in a long time.
The Glacis Beisl offers a very decent two-course lunch for just over six pounds, and I am lucky to get an outside table at this very popular local haunt, just at the edge of the museum quarter.
I spend the afternoon pottering the back streets, soaking up the atmosphere. While I know that every big city has its odd-ball characters, I am convinced that
The hotel has a superb steam room and spa area, so I repair there to recharge my batteries before committing these thoughts to paper.
On completion, I look at the room service menu, fall off my wallet, and so return to Spar.
I am beginning to feel rather like an American tourist. Tomorrow will be Saturday and so it’s
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