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It was on a whim that I purchased a ticket to Luxembourg on a pitiful Sunday morning in Brugge. I had plans to arrive in Cinque Terra on Italy\'s Amalfi coast in five days time but had left my arrangements at that. I had a departure point and a destination; I\'d just join the dots en route. Luxembourg seemed as good a first dot as any.
Some four hours later, amid a flurry of maps and guidebooks I stepped from the station out onto Place de la Gare in Luxembourg City. I have this unique ability to look flustered even when everything is well in hand. The blanketing rain that had forced me to take shelter in a Brugge Markt square caf?and drink copious amounts of overpriced cappuccino had been left behind, in its place, brilliant sunshine and just the slightest of breezes. I set off toward Pont Pareselle through the casually dressed Sunday crowd, impressed by the unpolluted streets and still buoyed by the last of my enduring caffeine buzz. Then I saw them, the first of many. Three brightly painted model cows on an island at the intersection of Places de la Gare and de la Liberte. A little strange, I thought, art on cows. This called for closer inspection. I crossed the road, a dangerous occupation even on the weekend in these parts. (Luxembourg has the third highest per capita road toll in the world - I was unsure who came second but at a guess I\'d say the Italians held the crown.)
What cows number two and three lacked in shock value they more than made up for in kitsch. Electra was a gold, blue, red and green Indian inspired piece of work whilst Elsa sported orange spots, a ten gallon hat and carried what looked like an oversized front half of a box brownie camera on her back. Marvellous stuff! At Pont Passerelle, with the newer commercial centre to my rear and views over the Petrusse and Alzette Valleys to my left and right, I got a snapshot of where this tiny capital had been and where it was heading. I liked what I saw. Behind me, the clean, brisk efficiency of a city with it\'s finger on the financial pulse. A city with a tax system that almost demanded personal wealth, yet lacking the signs of social decay that many associate with such an economic policy. Clean streets, affluent people and a service industry almost guaranteeing a prosperous future. And to my left and right, well....... Mighty bridges spanned both the valleys, held aloft by impressive stone arched supports. Inviting grassy plots shaded by an abundance of huge, lush evergreens were broken by steep rock walls and hefty perimeters - a comely legacy of Luxembourg\'s "Gibralter of the North" era. Majestic homes - three and four story affairs - with gray slate roofs and pastel or cream facades littered the landscape. The occasional turret breaking the horizon. Despite countless invasions over the centuries time had a been good to Luxembourg, aesthetically at least. Nature and the lay of the land had been even better. For a small city in a small country they sure did a lot of things on a grand scale. My search for the Place d\'Armes - one of Luxembourg\'s two main city squares and home to the tourist information centre - led me down quaint cobbled lanes and past more art on cows. I\'d passed maybe eight of the delightful creatures as I arrived at one of the city\'s smaller squares with a monument of the Grand Duchess Charlotte set atop her favourite mount as its centerpiece. A line of saplings ran along the centre of Rue de Fosse heading North. A cow of two halves stood at the entrance to Rue de la Congregation; the back a Friesian, the front an albino. A liberal slab of concrete separated the halves. Kind of odd, but I put it down to artistic license and pressed on. "Mooooo" I stopped in my tracks. "Mooooo" Okay, there\'s a twist. Who\'s to say art is merely an optical medium? After many more encounters with my newfound farmyard friends I arrived at the Place d\'Armes. At roughly the same time an orchestra at the east end of the square broke into the hard rock portion of Queens\' Bohemian Rhapsody. An engrossed audience of fifty or so took in the show from park benches and the steps of City Hall. Parisian style cafes with plastic seats and bow tied waiters and restaurants offering all manner of fare fringed the square. I chose a seat at an outdoor Italian cafe and ordered a coffee, quite content on letting the scene steal my attention. Locals stopped and chatted, idling away the afternoon hours in animated discussion. I\'ve always envied that aspect of life in European towns; the interaction, the sense of community spirit. The Spaniards and Italians seem to excel at it, adding a fiery dimension not seen in these parts. I\'m never sure whether they\'re about to exchange the triple kiss or break out the daggers. Luxembourgers seemed a little more laid back, a little less passionate but I envied their jovial exchanges all the same. A cow with a distinct identity crisis guarded the entrance to the tourist information centre. Kubraguti Bofifanaugi by Service graphique vum natur musee had the body markings of a tiger, a zebra, a crocodile, a giraffe and a leopard smeared across its body in a semi epileptic fashion. I snapped a picture before heading inside. I soon saw what I was looking for despite not speaking the language. In a pile on the counter was a stack of pamphlets with "MEUH!" printed across the top, set against a background of lush green grass. And
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