Introduction
At
the beginning of April, I made the decision to leave work and have
the longest break since becoming an architect in the late '80's. The
reasons are not for this blog but the opportunity to travel was a key
part of the decision.
Initially
my thought was to crisscross America; as many do, but experiencing
large open spaces was not really what I was wanted to get out of my
time travelling. Through work I have visited many European cities but
normally by flying in, meeting and flying out without experiencing
the 'sense of place' (an architectural euphemism; you may need
to get use to these..).
A
journey through a number of countries, experiencing more of what
differentiates one country from another seems to have more
relevance to my understanding of the political and social cohesion of
Europe when considering the change in populist politics
occurring generally within Europe.
Britain
is currently racked with political division due to Brexit. I voted to
remain but I am also a pragmatic realist. Britain will leave the EU
sometime in the future and this trip will probably the last time I
will be able to travel through boundaries without checks or, more
importantly, being considered 'not one of us'.
I
am travelling through Europe at the exact time of the 75th
anniversary of the D Day landings; surely the most potent expression
of European and American cohesiveness and collective action to rid
the world of radical extremism; in this case National Socialism.
If
this is not a reminder of why countries should join together in
resolving current and future world affairs then nothing will.
That
said, I only have a couple of months so I have had to limit my
journey to the east of Europe. Sadly France, Italy, Spain, Portugal
are not on my list of countries to visit, as I know these reasonably
well. Neither are the far east countries that the European Song
Contest seem to think are in Europe, such as Azerbaijan, Israel,
Moldova (oh,and Australia...).
The
countries on the list are (in order):
The
Netherlands,
Germany
(north)
Denmark
Sweden
Estonia
Latvia
Lithuania
Poland
Slovakia
Hungary
Serbia
Austria
Germany
(eastern side)
I
wanted to visit Bucharest and Sophia but this was a journey too far;
another time. Likewise being so close to St Petersburg when in
Estonia and experiencing 'white nights' in June was so tempting but
again just out of reach; another time.
In
some countries I am staying in cities I have already briefly visited,
such as Belgrade, Munich, Vilnius, Riga, Berlin and Stockholm. Other
cities and towns I am intending to visit are Budapest, Bratislava,
Warsaw and Vienna, Arnhem, Ystad, Bialystok, Krakow, Linz,
Nuremberg and Dresden.
I
don't pretend that I will return with an in-depth knowledge of each
country visited but I hope to be more aware of the 'genius loci' (another euphemism) that defines the culture of places and
countries.
I
will upload the proposed travel agenda and hope to meet friends and
acquaintances along the way. I expect to write this as a
personal log/blog, not assuming that anyone will be hugely interested
in my travels. After all there are professional travel writers that
do this for a living and are much better at it.
My
first item bought for the trip was naturally a road map.
Google
Maps is great but doesn't really give a sense of how to inter-connect
places and physical environments; only snap shots of maps. But my car
satnav works so I don't expect to get lost... only sometimes drive
the wrong way.......
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