Art & Design Magazine

Budapest 6: Night on the Danube [Sky Watch Friday]

By Shattman
On the last night of our Road Scholar Budapest tour, the group was treated to a buffet dinner cruise on the Danube. The weather was perfect, the food delicious and the photo-ops mind-boggling. The  first seven images below were shot from the deck of the ship. The moderate speed gave me ample time to get off many shots. All were hand-held and shooting in the Manual Mode: 1/60 sec, f5.6 and allowing the camera to choose the ISO [3200 in all cases]. In the top two images, you can see both the illuminated Liberation Monument atop Gellert Hill and the Liberty Bridge (1894-99) [rebuilt after WWII restoring all its original features].  Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
   Next we come to Buda Castle and the Mathias Church, with the Chain Bridge below.
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
   And now, my favorite structure in Budapest, the Parliament building.
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
At the conclusion of the cruise, we got a surprise; viz. we went by bus up to the Buda Castle area where there was an overlook that offered a magnificent view of the Danube and its bridges. Needless to say, a lot of other folks/tours knew about it, too; so I was fortunate to get myself into a  position to get some good shots, despite the crowding and short duration of our visit. 
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
Budapest 6:  Night on the Danube  [Sky Watch Friday]
This concludes our visit in Budapest.  Next week I will start a new series of postings devoted to the Prague leg of the tour. {By the way, I learned that Westerners generally mispronounce Budapest. Phonetically, it is pesht [not pest] because a free s is spoken as sh; in contrast, sz is spoken like our s.} In German, Pest means plague or pestilence.

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