Obviously, for this summer's trip to Europe I want to have some Swiss francs and some British pounds. I already have a decent amount of Swiss francs from my last trip to Switzerland. It should be enough until I am able to get to an ATM there.
I should mention that one thing I like about the ATMs in Switzerland is that you can select the denomination of bills that you receive. I wish that banks here in Mexico would adopt that custom instead of always spewing out large 500 peso bills.
I was looking at the Swiss banknotes, and I saw "Twenty Francs" in both French and Italian... "Vingt Francs", "Venti Franchi".
Of course, I know that French and Italian are both official languages of Switzerland. But where's the German?
I turned the bill over and there was the German... "Zwanzig Franken".
But there was also a fourth language. Many people have never heard of Switzerland's fourth official language... Romansh. Romansh is a tongue that developed from Latin (notice the similarity to French and Italian) that is the primary language of around 40,000 people in Switzerland.
I have Swiss francs, but it did not have any British pounds. So, I went to a currency exchange located inside the World Trade Center and asked for 300 pounds. I was happy to receive the cash in 20 pound notes.
I don't know whether or not the U.K. has started to issue banknotes with the portrait of King Charles, but these crisp bills still had the face of Queen Elizabeth.
When I turned a bill over, I did not recognize the person pictured on the back.
At first I did not notice the name printed in small type to the side, but after studying the bill a moment, I recognized the image in the background as one of the paintings by J.M.W. Turner, an important 19th century English painter and a precursor to Impressionism.
Moneywise, we are now set for the trip.
By the way, I converted these photos to black and white because I did not want to possibly violate any anti-counterfeiting laws!
