On the train ride to Salzburg from Regensburg, the train stops somewhere after Munich and will not start. An announcement comes over the speakers in German, and the lady next to me was nice enough to translate. She said that the train could not continue because the rails were locked. Ten minutes later another announcement explained the rails were locked because there was a police barricade on the tracks. Another ten minutes passes, and another announcement finally explains what is going on. A man had committed suicide by jumping into the front of the train in front of us. Not my train, the one before. I almost took that train, decided to get food instead.
So, it took the police half an hour to clean up the tracks and then we were on our way. Wonderful omen for the start of a trip...
Anyways, once I arrived in Salzburg I made my typical beeline to the hostel first, where I met my friend Brett. We were in a 6 person room, which we shared with an Icelandic guy who plays Team Fortress 2 and an awkward American/Romanian couple that never left the room. Awesome. Once Brett and I settled down, the two of us and the Icelander went to the old city to find food.
of the Stiegl Brewery!
The entrance led to a nice courtyard in the center of the brewery, which was decorated in Oktoberfest and pumpkin themes. The whole place seems very...non-industrious.
The courtyard was filled with people eating the local ham stew (which I had and loved) and drinking various beers (biers), such as Goldenbraus and Radlers. Right next to this courtyard was a gift shop, where we bought the tickets for the tour. It was only 9 euros, a wonderful price! This 9 euros included more than just a self-tour...
The museum was based in the old brewery rooms and were filled with various nicknacks and trinkets of the past. There were many different rooms, but my camera kept dying and messing up the pictures it took, so this is the only room picture not distorted. You can see a pyramid of bottles from the past 100 years or so of production.
This crazy lady was one picture on a wall entitled "How Do You Open Your Stiegl?" I think this lady's answer was "without the help of my meds."
At the end of our tour we were given three beers and a free glass. Three beers cost 9 euros by themselves, so by taking the tour they just gave me a free glass...ok! The beers here (from left to right) are a Weiss (very smooth and sweet), a Radler (half GoldenBrau and half raspberry juice), and a typical GoldenBrau (not my favorite and not that bad). Definitely worth 9 euros...Brett and I left happy with our glasses to set out for the next tour.
Oh, and my blog has a new fun feature! Notice the fish at the bottom of the screen? Click to feed them :3
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