Episode 9: It's just Wright
This one feels like the episode where the move really hits us—in the best way.
After a little break, we’re back with something different: friends visiting us in Barcelona. Ryan and Antoinette (plus their daughter Aubrey—one of Amalia’s best friends) came over from the Bay Area, and we got to experience the city through fresh eyes again… while also sprinting straight into a four-day detour to Vienna’s Christmas markets because apparently we enjoy making travel logistics as intense as possible.
What we cover in Episode 9
1) The “power through” travel strategy (and why it worked)
Because winter means no direct SFO → Barcelona flights, our friends routed through Miami—then landed in Barca, had a quick reset, and we immediately turned around for Austria. The surprising part: powering through actually helped them flip to Europe time fast.
2) Vienna Christmas markets: magical, cold, and dangerously snackable
We hit multiple markets across the city—each with a totally different vibe: huge ones with skating rinks, palace backdrops, cozy alley markets, and everything in between. The running theme? Everything felt “fresh.” Hot donuts, giant pretzels, and the kind of holiday atmosphere that makes you forget you’re on your third pastry of the day.
3) The metro ticket mistake that almost got Ryan “arrested” (twice)
Vienna’s transit system is smooth… unless you don’t realize you have to stamp your ticket in the little blue validation box. We got checked by a wall of yellow vests doing ticket inspections, tried our best “confused tourist” routine, and then Ryan somehow got checked again while hunting for the elusive blue box like it was an escape room challenge.
4) The real cost of holiday markets (and why it was still worth it)
Yes, some souvenirs felt pricey (ornaments, nutcrackers, etc.). But we also talk about the difference between “tourist pricing” and the fact that a lot of what you’re buying is genuinely handcrafted—and honestly, part of it is paying for the memory of being there.
5) Back in Barcelona: seeing the city through your friends’ eyes
We hit the Gothic Quarter, Gràcia, and the beach—plus some nightlife and Gaudí. And it’s wild how having friends here makes us fall in love with Barcelona all over again—you notice details you stopped seeing once daily life took over.
6) The food quality gap (including… Five Guys?!?)
We get into what visitors notice immediately: food feels cheaper and higher quality, even at places you’d never expect. The shocker of the episode: Five Guys in Barcelona somehow tasted better than Five Guys back home (we said what we said).
7) Kids’ POV: freedom + friendship
Aubrey and Amalia jump in to talk about what it’s like being 11 in Barcelona, visiting best friends, and having more independence walking around than they’d have back in the U.S.
Practical takeaways (stuff you’ll actually use)
* If you’re going to Vienna: validate/stamp your metro tickets (the blue box is not optional).
* Christmas markets: go earlier than you think—it gets packed, and it’s dark surprisingly early anyway.
* Hotels in Austria: list the correct number of guests when booking—apparently it’s a legal requirement.
* Visiting Barcelona during the holidays: expect some rainy days, but the city still delivers—especially the lights, walkability, and neighborhoods that all feel distinct.
Visuals we’ll add to the post
* Photos of each Vienna market (Rathausplatz, Schönbrunn, Stephansplatz, etc.) + the “mug” souvenir situation
* Barcelona lights in the Gothic Quarter + Gràcia street scenes
* A beach shot from Gavà Mar (and the “we could retire here” moment)
If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like w