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Taking a break in the not too distant future and which will include a a return train journey, Prague to Bratislava, looking on youtube for advice for the trains etc. This has got to be a joke by whoever did the video, see if you can spot it
it's £80 for the return ticket in business class and with it being a 4 hour journey looks good value although the trains appear pre Berlin Wall.
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Will look into this if time permits we have 3 nights in Bratislava and should have made it 4 as we have been to Prague for 10 visits (of the cities in mainland Europe ive been to, it's my favorite so should have cut a night from Prague) As to the train splitting and being on the wrong section that's exactly what would happen to me and 'err' and with the following blame game with a few expletives thrown in![]()
Madrid is quite interesting in that it's not one of the classic capitals in Europe but all the better for it (although I haven't visited the city for a while).
It was less of a rip-off than many capitals and had a certain honesty about it.
It used to be cheap to visit during what is normally the high season everywhere else as many of the locals decamp to cooler environments.
Spain's overwhelming jewel for me is Andalucia.
Seville, Granada, Cordoba and Ronda are a must.
I've not made it to Galicia yet but will do eventually.
I went to see Simple Minds in Madridquite liked it, IMO more interesting than Barca although i'd happily go to either again if the opportunity presents itself, our trip to Prague & Bratislava is in place of Porto, 'err indoors' didn't fancy it in the end, i would have liked to have gone but being the one who is non argumentative, i gave in and went for the peaceful life.
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We walked a section of the Camino de Santiago through Galicia last year - 110 miles over an easy nine days (three sections from Leon with the boring road bits missed out, then six days solid from Sarria to the end). I knew about the Celtic connection to Galicia but I didn't expect the landscape and the vegetation to be so like mid Wales, or for it to be so green and wet!
Some of it is great. Some of it is walking around the edges of small towns and industrial estates on hard tarmac.
To do the Camino properly you need to start in the Pyrenees near Roncesvalles I think (the Roland and Oliver and Moors/Basques battle site at Roncevaux - see 'The Song of Roland) and walk 500 miles to Santiago. The real hard core 'pilgrims' start in southern Germany!)
The last 100 km of the Camino (the section that has to be walked in full to get the completion certificate) can get very busy too. When we did it there were more and more school groups on the trail and towards the end it was a stream of humanity!