How to spend a weekend in Hungary?
Budapest, of course, has its own "face" - on the one hand it's old, but on the other - it's not obsessed with this olden time. In this way it differs markedly from many European cities, beautiful streets with their ancient narrow paved streets and cute cafes, and in the evening they have absolutely no place to go. In Budapest, everything is different, you can walk here all night long, and there is something to do at any time.
So over the weekend in Budapest you will have time to go to the seemingly toy Fishermen's Bastion, to admire it on the opposite bank of the Danube and the parliament building with a dome for a hundred meters .Here the spirit captures from the expanses of the city: the streets climbing the hills, passing into the stairs, the beauty of old houses and the indispensable pots with flowers on the windowsills .Returning to the sights, do not miss the chance to visit the most beautiful castle of Buda - the former residence of Hungarian kings, and in the squares of Liberty and Heroes there and where to take a walk, and what to look at .
Concerts, performances and musicals are constantly taking place in the city. And the music can be heard both in concert halls, and in some restaurants and cafes, where often well-known performers (both local and touring).
If you are traveling with children, there is also entertainment for them here .For example, the Budapest Zoo is one of the best in the world..Or the funicular of the Buda Castle or the funicular of the Szechenyi Hill, from where you can get to the Children's Railway .Of particular delight is the fact that the narrow-gauge railway in the Buda hills from the Szecheni hill to the Huyves valley is managed entirely by children from 9 to 14 years old, and only adults work ±$ $..After that, no one will refuse to visit the Transport Museum, where, among other things, you can climb through the exhibits, and then sit in a cafe arranged in an old railway car .
And, of course, a nourishing and very tasty Hungarian cuisine deserves a separate mention. After all, it is believed that if you did not eat goulash, you did not see Hungary!
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