Monday, July 26, 2010

Palace of Miracles Exhibition

This is an interactive scientific exhibition and education centre. Primarily it teaches children, showing them the rules of the natural sciences. It is a fusion of didactic approaches particular to a museum, a school, a playground or amusement park, and a cultural centre.

New features are added to the permanent exhibition annually, called e.g. 'Everyday magic', 'New illusions', 'Do not believe your eyes', and 'Tune into us'. Visitors can touch and try out all sorts of things in order to discover and get familiar with natural laws. They understand by experience how they work.

There is a square-wheeled car, a sticky wall, and a virtual moon walk; you may try out the monocycle, the blue-box, and others. These are all easy to use and no knowledge of more complex scientific theories is needed.

We really had fun there yesterday. Unfortunately the batteries in my camera decided not to work despite all of the other miracles.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Wellness

A cave within the spa.

I Love standing under the shower part and getting a shoulder massage.

Kamilla drinking a virgin Pina Colada in the water bar.

Hungary is blessed with an enourmous number of spas, some for medical treatment and some for pleasure and of course most of them for both. Thus, wellness is a big business and a common scene here,as 90% of the population goes to a spa at least once a year. It is also a big part of the national image. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9IvM4fVhx4

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Folk Dancing

My favourite Klezmer band

Jewish dance

A great Roma folk band

Folk Dancing is a huge pastime in Hungary. In my hometown, there is a dance every Wedesday and Sunday night with different live bands and teachers. I especially love it in the summer since between June and September all the dances are outdoors. You can be a beginner or an experienced dancer, and you are guaranteed to have a great time and get a great workout. Furthermore, you can learn about various cultures, because every time a different minority group, living in Hungary, leads the dance. This summer we participated in Hungarian, Romanian, Serbian, Greek, Roma/Gypsy and Jewish dances. You can get more info and pictures of the dance houses in my previous postings (see June 25, and July 29, 2010).

Friday, July 23, 2010

Hungarian Bread

Kamilla and I eating hungarian fried bread with sour cream and cheese on top


If you ask a Hungarian who lives outside of Hungary what he misses the most from his country, he will list Hungarian bread in the first three items. Above you can see two pictures from one of our neighborhood bakeries. Too bad the smell does not go with the photos.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

From Trash to Treasure





Buying second hand clothes in Hungary, and generally in Europe, is very popular and considered normal. People are not ashamed of it. There are groups that go on a hunt, usually girlfriends, and they are extremely proud if they find something great for almost nothing. It's an inmportant part of life because European women love looking great, and who can afford, especially these days, to buy expensive clothes? And since there is a market for it, retailers make sure that their businesses go well. Many times the second hand clothes shops look better than a boutique, with a very unique and pleasant atmosphere. They also sell jewelery, usually have a cool bar section, and maybe an art gallery or exhibition garden. And you can get a henna painting or a gel tattoo while shopping as well.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Drink up




http://www.liligo.co.uk/travel-blog/travel-tips/2010/07/20/10-destinations-to-drink-up-1904/

Hungarian wine has a history dating back at least to Roman times. There are 22 wine regions in Hungary, and an extended network of wine tours, where you can taste all sorts of different wines. The most famous ones are Tokaji, a white dessert wine which is called "the wine of kings and king of wines," and Bikavér, or Bull's Blood, a very rich and delicious red wine.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

International Dance Groups





Just stumbled upon this dance show the other night with all these beautiful costumes. Kamilla was in an awe watching them dance.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Travelling Funfair Games




Hungary's largest alternative traveling game park, with its colorful swirls, covers downtown Pécs for ten days; throwing huts, colorful, magical cupboard games, player tents, drill machines, impatient contestants waiting in lines, trying to beat the famous wandering company. No one can go without playing.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Artists from Agrentina Straight from the Cosmos



The Puja Group unites various branches of art, theatre, dance, circus, extreme sports, architecture, and physics, only to be topped by multimedia technology and live music.

In this unique show eight acrobatic performers put on a breathtaking show, as they are suspended in the air by a crane, centered around the "La Bola" (The Ball). The piece is a cosmic allegory that motivates us to look into the infinite universe. The show is called The K@osmos.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Living Statues Championship





The magic of living statues, living immobility . . . I don't think I need to comment much more on this. Above you see a couple of our favorite ones.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Cirque and Street Theatre Festival



Now, this is cool! I hope Bill Patti will check out this posting. For two weeks "A Miracle is Occurring on the Streets," as the local newspaper said. The steets and squares of the inner city of Pécs are occupied by street artists, street theaters, circuses and knockout performances. Unexpected and exhilarating things are happening all over. Anyone at anytime might become the protagonist of a play; a player in a street game might pass by a statue that turns around, or one might just be caught up in a processional mass. More details to come...

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Csik Concert

I had no idea I would get this lucky. I love this band and I had never seen them live. And last night as part of the CHERRY FEST in Ujfeherto, Hungary, where my brother lives and I am visiting, there they were. Amazing. As Emese said, the Fusion they do is fantastic. They turn old folk songs into world music and new rock songs into folk music to get the young generation to like this genre again. All my respect to them.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D6RaU9n4ZuI&feature=related

Csík Zenekar - Most múlik pontosan

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Life in the Country

Hungarian demijohns (demizson) from my dad's collection.

Kamilla in a typical Hungarian wheel barrow. My dad and uncle pushed her for five miles to the cemetary and back and of course she loved it.

We are spending a couple of days in the Hungarian countryside. These two things inspired me to share the experience with my friends. The demijohns came up in conversation, not long ago, at Blue Ridge Music when Tom Nixon was explaining the word to me as part of a bluegrass song he was teaching me on the guitar. At that time I had no clue that they were the same things that I used to play with in my dad's cellar as a child.