Thursday

Seegrote: Gollum's Cave

The mysterious Internet informed us that Europe's largest underground lake was just outsideVienna and with advertising like that, who could resist? Obviously, not us. On the way out of Vienna, we decided to have a visit. It was a little out of the way, but totally worth it.

As you may have heard, we have been listening to the audiobooks of Lord of the Rings while we have been driving around Europe. We have also been watching the movies. But we had no notion when we went to Seegrote that we would find Gollum's cave.

It really is just a flooded gypsum mine, but it looks so much cooler than that. They used it to film parts of that Disney Three Musketeers movie. But they used it to be underground waterway in Paris and as a jail. But Andy Serkis could seriously be hanging out there in a green suit.

The mine was used as a place where prisoners of war assembled plane components, but after World War II, I'm not sure what they did with it but some guys decided to stick a Christmas Tree in the water and leave it there for two years. I guess they got bored. Needless to say it was completely calcified. They had it on display. I haven't been so cold since Orkney Island as in that cave.

We had a nice boat ride around the mine and Bilbo Baggins could have been waiting on the shore, hiding from orcs. But we had to return back to the shore and back up the mine shaft to the hot and sunny weather outside. Then before we left Austria, we drove to the next town and wandered around the town of Mödling. In the town square, they seemed to be having a town garage sale with some food stands. We stopped for some food for the car and started the drove through Slovenia to Trieste.

Slovenia was one of the most beautiful countries to drive through. We entered there, having very few expectations, but it was so beautiful. It had the green hills and mountains of Austria and Switzerland with the onion-topped church towers of a more Eastern Europe. Also, it was so clean. In most countries, there have been houses that are dirty, falling down, or decayed. But Slovenia had mainly older, well-kept houses. There weren't even that many buildings in a modern style. It was like we went back in time on the motorway. Seriously, we only saw it from the car, and it was still so beautiful, I actually considered how nice a rural life would be. Hiking through such a landscape would be as nice as hiking through Switzerland. It would be the best life of leisure.

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