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I should probably explain, briefly, that I was travelling with 42 people - let's call them 'friends'.
Although 6 people had made the flight (surprisingly, all of them a more exalted type of friend than the rest of us), 36 of us hadn't. A very kind individual, whose generosity will remain anonymous, said that he and his partners would pay for us all to get flights the following day (Friday), and that they would pay for our hotel accommodation.
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Some people would question the sagacity of inviting 36 friends back to the sanctity of the paternal home. But to invite 36 friends home straight from a lock-in at the pub is verging on demented.
Although it would make for very entertaining reading to describe what happened when we arrived at Ed's house at 3:30 am, I will skip ahead.
Some of us landed in Munich, which is in a different country altogether from our ski resort. Others landed in Linz, which was not really where they were supposed to land. Others made it to Salzburg (much better). I was among those who landed in Munich, where someone was meant to be waiting for us with a car, but as it happens, no one was waiting, and so we caught a EUR 350 taxi to Kaprun, in Austria.
Arriving in Kaprun was depressing. It was raining, and there was no snow on the ground. The only thing I knew about Kaprun in advance of our arrival was that 150 had burned to death in a horrible accident involving the funicular train in a tunnel going up the mountain to the slopes. But we took consolation in Austrian pils, and what I must admit was surprisingly good Austrian food.
From this point, the weekend improved markedly (and so becomes rather boring to narrate).
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That night, while we were all embarrassing ourselves in front of the locals by dressing as characters from "The Sound of Music" (I think I'm the only man who didn't dress as a nun), it snowed.
The trip back was painful, and I've been running a sleep deficit every since we returned.
1 comment:
I love the word "sagacity"...
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