8:00 Wake up and get ready for the day.
8:30 Head to the Mickey D’s! I discover a glorious thing, the “Nagy Coca-Cola.” A LARGE COKE. I order it for breakfast and it comes with ICE. It is the most glorious thing ever. I can feel it run through my veins seconds after my first sip.
9:00 I go hunting for the photo lab that has one hour photo. While I’m on the street I am noticing something I haven’t seen before: Young People. All week I’ve been shopping and hanging around the downtown and I mainly see middle aged and older people because the younger people are at school. This day was the national youth holiday so they did not have school (like a four day weekend). So there were teenagers and college kids everywhere. They were in packs and herds it was so weird after so many days of not really seeing anyone young.
9:15 I find the photo shop and the clerk does not speak English. She gets her co-worker and she can speak a little bit of English. We struggle with communicating that I am only going to be in Debrecen for one more day and she is trying to tell me that they are going to be closed the next day for the National Holiday (the 1956 Revolution). We finally figure out that I have until 6:00 today to pick up my pictures. I tell them the size I want and I pay for them. I thought we would be back in town by 6:00 for pick up.
9:45 I run into Rick on the street as I am heading back to the hotel. I stop at the corner pastry shop. I order the Alma Croissant (Apple). Rick orders a cinnamon roll. We walk back to the hotel and I start eating my croissant and I enjoy it. Rick opens up his bag and grabs his cinnamon roll. He takes a bite and says “That’s not cinnamon” and grabs the piece from his mouth and puts it back in the bag. His cinnamon roll was actually PAPRIKA. Now paprika is fabulous in goulash and stews, but not in pastry. It also is very hot tasting. So Rick took a bite of a roll with peppers in it.
10:00 We load up in the van to meet Pastor Csaba. He is going to take us to a mineral bath spa. But first we decide that I should go back to the photo shop and pick up my pictures because we won’t be back in time before the store closes for the holiday. We drive downtown but there is so much traffic and tons of people on the street that we have to park on a side street. I have to walk 6 blocks back to the photo shop. I felt like I was Frogger as I was trying to get across the street. I have never seen so many busses. I pick up the photos and start running back to the van. I jump in the van and check out the pictures. I was relieved that the photos were very good quality. There were 40 pictures total.
10:30 Drive out to the mineral spa. We didn’t know what to expect. We were thinking outdoors like in a park. A hole in the ground with hot springs–kind of like backwoods swimming hole. I scared the group because I started to talk about Mineral Baths and whether we might be heading there. In a bath you don’t wear any clothes and I read a whole section in my travel book about bath etiquette. Like men need to be careful of friendly neighbors and wearing a swimsuit is an insult.
11:30 We pull up to the HungaroSpa. We are still confused about where we are. We just see this big building that kind of looks like a hotel. We walk inside and it is like a giant health club, but with one big problem. Everyone is in a swimsuit and THEY ARE OLD!! It was like I was in the middle of Cocoon! Poor Christen, everytime she turned her head away from one disgusting sight, another one would be right there. IT WAS JUST OLD PEOPLE. There should be an age limit on bathing suits. One advantage was that my body image wasn’t too bad as there were enough repulsive people around to take my mind off it.
12:00 We find a dressing room and become our modest American selves. We go to the shower and ….sorry horrible mental images that cannot be shared. We enter our first mineral bath, which is like a large heated pool. The water is tea brown and when you look at it you can see the minerals floating around you. I, of course, have my milky white skin glinting in the sunlight and causing a glare. We think that maybe the brown water will give me a slight tan. It didin’t work. The water was pretty warm and it was very relaxing. You could easily just lay back and float around the pool.
12:30 We switch to another pool. This one is warmer. It is like a giant hot tub. We walk onto the deck and you can hear these ladies singing. There is a group of about 12 older women sitting on the edge of the pool singing Hungarian folk songs. I thought it was very cute and like out of a travel movie. Some of their songs had a haunting feel–like they could be about Nazis or Communists. I’m not sure. So the first 3 or 4 songs I liked it, but they kept going, and going, and going. They wouldn’t stop singing!!!! We also discovered that some women do not shave their armpits in Hungary. Quite the treat.
1:00 We switch to another pool. A little bit cooler this time, but still in earshot of the singing women. People are very possesive of the massaging jets around the pool. Even if you are standing in line to use one they give you a disgruntled look back because they don’t want to give their spot up. I am boiling by this point and I’m not a fan of pruning skin in the water. I switch back to the hotter pool and wait for a massaging jet to turn on. I take myself in and out of the pool to cool off every few minutes.
1:30 I’m so over it. I feel like a boiled bag of rice. The jets turn on and I can only take about 3 minutes of it. I head to the showers for more shocking visions and change back to my street clothes. I am tired of seeing old people in Speedos.
2:00 We head out and start walking on the steets in town. It is very cute there with lots of shops. They have a few street vendors. There is one that looks like it is selling real Hungarian crafts where other places were selling stuffed animals from China. I look at a couple of nice boxes. One is a puzzle box where you have to know the exact way to open it. I liked it a lot so I tried to haggle for it. I wasn’t too successful in lowering the price, but I got the box. The lady who sold it to me didn’t speak much English but was very persausive with holding her fingers up for the price and putting my stuff in a bag and handing it to me. Meanwhile the guys saw they were selling whips. The vendor did a little demonstration and swung the whip around to make a loud crack. These were very well crafted whips. The guys gave it a try and couldn’t make it crack like a vendor. People tried to talk him down on the price and he wouldn’t budge.
2:30 Lunch time. We find a restaurant and sit on the screened in porch. Every restaurant we have gone into has been very nice. They always have table cloths on the table, not like the US where they wipe the crumbs on to your seat in the booth. I order the chicken with a cheese sauce. It was very nice. Rick ordered the equivalent of 3 large dead animals, but they did look tasty. We order dessert and we get the Pancake ala Gundel. The picture look great in the menu, like it was a crepe covered in chocolate sauce. Christen was so excited. She loves chocolate and she took a giant spoonful and put it in her mouth. The look on her face, however, told a different story. She had a hard time swallowing the chocolate and she was very disappointed. The chocolate was like liquid baker’s chocolate. It was very bitter. Other people tried it and didn’t mind it so much. I think it was the shock of not having sweet milk chocolate that got her to react that way. I try a little bit of a cherry struesal and it was very nice.
4:00 We finish up lunch and the guys head out to Pastor Csaba’s parents home to see a pond. The women folk get a chance to shop for an hour. I see there is a ice cream place right next to the restaurant. Eventhough we just ate I said I had to have some ice cream. I get something very similar to chocolate chip. The ice cream, it is like homemade ice cream. It has a very icy texture. I love it and devour it. I walk up and down the street to check out the shops. I consider buying my nephews “Fieval” hats. Those woolen caps with a short bill that remind me of the movie An American Tale. I check to see where they were made and it said China, so I skipped it. I head back to the street vendor and buy my nieces and nephews some wooden flutes. They looked handcrafted and they make noise, so the perfect gift.
5:00 The guys come back and we head back to Debrecen for the evening.
7:00 We are back in Debrecen and realize that the night is still young. We decide to take a Latte Tour of the town. We start hitting all the cafes we missed so far. I still love the Latte Machiattos. We also head back to the pizzeria for dinner. I order the Greek salad this time and it is so good. We go to a chocolate shop and pick up last minute souvenirs. In the square there is a gathering of people at a statue with the Hungarians flag. It is the night before the holiday and I think the group was commerorating the Revolution of 1956. I also check out a bell display in the town square that rings every hour and plays auld lang syne with about 12 bells. It was very pretty, but the song played for a long time. We hit another coffee bar. This one is called Saxophone. It was the coolest place we went so far. It was very trendy inside with big couches and great lighting. I order the mocha and Christen has another disappointing chocolate experience as the mocha is too bitter for her.
10:00 Some people head back to the hotel. A group of us head to McDonalds to use the WiFi. I try to work on the blog before my battery dies again. I also ordered another Nagy Coca Cola. It was so refreshing. Also, if you need to use the restroom in this McDonalds you need a code off your reciept, FYI. There were a bunch of youth in the McDonalds. I guess everything else was closed and they had no where else to go.
11:00 The McDonald’s closed. I head back to the hotel. I let Michael use my computer to e-mail and he borrowed Rick’s converter to charge it while he worked. I packed up my room and went down the stairs to meet Michael. I find out that Rick’s converter blew up. Luckily my computer survived. Good news was Michael was let into the internet cafe and we got to email and blog for an hour.
12:30 Head to bed unable to charge my camera batteries or computer. Argh.






























