Tuesday, 02-July-2024
Tuesday had been a fairly relaxing day for me – I’d gotten my cell phone repaired, and…
Huh. You know what? I wasn’t going to write up a post about fixing my phone, but in retrospect I think I’ll put one together quick, since it was a fairly impactful event on my trip.
Back in Krakow, I’d cracked the screen on my phone. I’ve dropped and tossed my phone countless times; being as careful with it as I can, since it does happen to be a critical lifeline and safety tool, but also trusting that the heavy impact-resistant case would serve its duty and help to keep the phone safe.
While having dinner at Pimiento one evening, I’d slipped while taking a photo of the glorious dinner in front of me… and in trying to catch the phone as it fell, I’d smacked it into the corner of the table. The angle and force turned out to be just right, or just wrong, and a lovely shatterpoint appeared on the screen.
It was almost purely cosmetic, thankfully, and so I was able to avoid an emergency repair to the phone… but every time I flipped it on, it would remind me that it was damaged, and possibly not waterproof anymore, and maybe it would get worse, and…
Yeah, anxiety.
Once I arrived in Vienna, I looked into repairs. They weren’t cheap, and the first two places I went wanted a week to fix them. I’d looked in Prague as well, but they’d been even worse… wanting two weeks minimum, and frankly being kind of jerks about it (fitting in with Prague in general…).
One evening though, while picking up a bottle of wine and some snacks from a grocery store in the nearby mall, I saw a small shop off to the side… and walked in. They took a look, and apologized in advance for the price and the time it’d take – 10% less than their competitors, and only an hour to fix.
I… uhh… I played it cool, and told them I’d be back in the morning to get it fixed.
It was an anxious hour, truth be told, not having a phone on me. Which should probably worry me a little bit, but… ehh, I’ll think about that later, when I’m not travelling far from home. Thankfully it went quickly, just long enough for me to get a nice lunch, and soon enough I was back picking up my newly-repaired, re-armored, and happily working phone.
Moral of the story? It’s worth shopping around for expensive repairs, and I’m probably too attached to my phone. Good times.
Tag Archives: Vienna
Monument in honor of the soldiers of the Soviet Army – Denkmal zu Ehren der Soldaten der Sowjetarmee
Tuesday, 02-July-2024
I didn’t expect to find a monument to the Soviets in Vienna.
I didn’t expect to find a monument to the Soviets… at all, really. I mean, after so many countries that had previously been part of the USSR, and after learning about so many atrocities that were committed by the Soviets, the thought of a monument to them was a bit unthinkable.
Yet here I was, standing in front of a rather beautiful one, in the heart of Vienna.
Reading into it online, I couldn’t find much about why it’s still been maintained into the current era… but that it was originally built back when Vienna was separated into districts run by the different Allied powers after World War 2. Have I mentioned that, yet? Similarly to how Berlin was hacked in half during the Cold War, so too was Vienna… except that it was carved into four quadrants; USA, USSR, UK, and France. This monument was built in the Soviet block, but within easy viewing distance to the other three.
Regardless, it is a beautiful monument. And, I’m happy to add, has been added to recently… the large wall behind the monument, separating it from the Belvedere Gardens, has been repainted into the Ukrainian flag – a fitting way to add new context, in my mind.







Wikipedia link:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_War_Memorial_(Vienna)
The Vienna Natural History Museum – Naturhistorisches Museum Wien – Part 1 (The Natural History)
Monday, 01-July-2024
After an equestrian tour, three churches, and a crypt, I was ready for some SCIENCE.
Now… where had I seen some SCIENCE recently? Ahh yes – the Art History Museum!






Well… sort of. You see, dear readers, the Art History museum has a twin. Literally, a twin building, immediately across the gardens, built as a mirror. Art History, presented as one part of a twin pairing with Natural History. Kind of a neat idea, isn’t it?
I thought so. So did Emperor Franz Joseph, who opened both buildings simultaneously in 1891. Guess I’m in good company, huh?
I walked over. Bought tickets, had a slice of Vienna cake and a coffee, and then ventured into the exhibits.









































Holy crap were there exhibits. Rows upon rows, ranks upon ranks. Minerals, gems, meteorites, fossils and placards.
I tried my best to focus and enjoy and learn, but… I’m going to be honest here. I got pretty saturated. There was just so much to see, so much to enjoy and to appreciate and to just take in. Descriptions of how gems formed, detailed analysis of the mineral deposits found in Austria and abroad and how they impacted history. A full walkthrough of an ancient salt mine, in more depth than even the Wieliczka mine got into. Plants and animals and even an Animatronic Dinosaur! Placards in German and English, some in just German…
























































I walked, I learned, and I became overwhelmed. I enjoyed it, until I didn’t… and then I simply walked. I didn’t stay longer than I wanted to, but I will admit that the last few rooms and exhibits definitely went by a bit quickly.
Thankfully that was expected and planned for, though, and those final rooms were examples of taxidermy animals from… drumroll please… North America! That wasn’t an accident either – I’d made a point to save those for last, just in case I got overloaded… so they made for a nice little send-off before I headed out, and set my sights on dinner…