Saturday, December 12, 2009

5-8 novembre 2009

AMSTERDAM this weekend! I had class Thursday from 1-3 and then again from 5-7 and we were leaving from Fribourg on a 7:36 train! When German class got out at 7, I ran back to St. Justin, grabbed my backpack, and met Maria to walk the 5 minute walk to the station. This was the start of such an adventure – I don’t even know where to begin J There are 7 of us going to Amsterdam Jen and Vincent have been amazing – they’ve been working on all the details all week long. Roundtrip train tickets from Fribourg to Amsterdam usually cost around 500 francs. Instead of paying that, we decided to piece together trains from border to border – Fribourg to Basel (Swiss-German border), acroos Germany to Oberhausen (German-Dutch border), and then on to Amsterdam. It was going to be super cheap… we were totally going to “beat the system” and not have to pay the 500 francs. Yeah, we’d be traveling through the night, spending 5 hours in the Frankfurt airport, but it was all going to be part of the adventure (just making for a bigger adventure and better story afterwards) It turns out our super cheap (hint) tickets to get across Germany were only for the IRE trains (inter-regional express), not the ICE trains (intercontinental express). So, we crossed 3 countries on interregional trains – it was a slow process of nine legs. Little did we know that our biggest problems were ahead of us J It’s the middle of the night at this point and we’ve been booted off the ICE train that our tickets do not allow us to ride and are stranded in Offenburg, Germany – where the next train doesn’t leave until 6 AM. Luck was on our side though… There were 2 Californians, Colton and Steven, on the train with us when we got booted off. They lived in Offenburg and offered for the SEVEN of us to stay at their place until we could get on the 6 AM train. We contemplated it for a little while, but it didn’t take us long to decide to take them up on their offer after standing just a few minutes in the freezing cold outside the station. We wake up at the crack of dawn to catch the first train out of Offerburg and start making our way again towards Holland. Things are going fairly smoothly, no real disasters yet, and then we’re arriving in Oberhausen, Germany… It’s time to switch from train 8 to train 9 and Oliver, Jen, and I don’t get off the train in time! The other 4 are standing on the platform just watching as the train pulls off with Oliver, Jen, and me still on board. Just the luck of our trip! Luckily, the next stop wasn’t too far away. We jumped off there and then rode a bus back to the rest of the group. All of this causing us to miss the next leg of our trip, setting all our next trains an hour back. Hahaha, we all such good attitudes though – we had come to expect nothing less from this trip.

We finally got into Amsterdam around 9:20 Friday evening – over 24 hours after we left Fribourg and more than 10 hours later than we had originally planned to get into Amsterdam! Jen, Julia, and I got made-to-order tortellini served in Chinese to-go boxes from Julia’s the restaurant and then took a tram to the hotel. We’re stayed in the Marriot Amsterdam in the Leidseplein neighborhood. It’s perfect! The best location! We’re sleeping 7 in a 4 person room, but it’s still great! The beds might as well have been made for queens – we all slept like babies. We weren’t going to let our late arrival set us back at all so we showered and went out for the night. Amsterdam’s Christmas lights are up – sparkling everywhere and beautiful! It’s always different seeing a city for the first time at night… The night colors of this city are really incredible – Christmas chandeliers and lights hanging over every street, lights reflecting on the canals.

After just a few, but wonderfully pleasant, hours of sleep we woke up Saturday morning ready to squeeze in as much as we could in the little over 24 hours we had in Amsterdam. We had a big “English” breakfast – advertised-as-pancakes crepes, topped with strawberries and bananas, whitekaffee (café au lait), and fresh-squeezed orange juice. We walked up the Spuistraat and Raadhuisstraat boulevards to the Anne Frank house. It was raining, but it didn’t even bother us. We had a 45 minute queue for the house and then walked through. It’s a really sobering experience – to see the tiny quarters the five Jewish hide-outs lived in for so many months. I’ve visited the Dachau concentration camp twice now and several Holocaust museums, but this was a completely different way of witnessing the atrocities of the Holocaust. You witness the Holocaust on such a personal level – when you exit the museum and tour, you can’t help but feel like you personally knew Anne Frank. To have access to this one little girl’s profound thoughts and words on a situation that is still so hard to comprehend sometimes was incredible. After the Anne Frank House, we walked around for a bit longer ad then had a late lunch at the infamous Bagels and Beans. I had completely forgotten how much I love bagels! I had a whole wheat bagel with cream cheese, honey, walnuts, and thyme on it. It was great, by far the best bagel I’ve ever had. We split up for the rest of the afternoon – some went to the Reikmuseum and some went shopping through the winding streets. We met back up at the hotel, rested for a bit, got ready for the nights, and then headed out to cross some things off our to do list. We had several recommendations from friends and guidebooks, so we started with those. We didn’t have much time Sunday so we woke up, packed, and then headed to the Van Gogh Museum – amazing!

We had the same problem going back to Switzerland as we did coming – our super cheap tickets only allowed us to ride the regional trains. So, we had another day of piecing together short regional train rides to get across Germany. Instead of getting back into Fribourg Sunday night, we arrived at 7 AM Monday morning, just in time for my 8 AM class J I love, love, love Amsterdam! It’s never been at the top of my list of places to see and I’ve never put in a real effort to get there, but it surprised me in the best of ways! It’s incredibly beautiful, historic, alive, and fun! I’m ready to go back and spend more time there!

This trip was awesome for all its kinks, poor timing, and bad luck. It was so much more about savoring the moments and enjoying the adventure there and back instead… the true European traveling experience full of multiple set-backs, but hours of laughing and an irreplaceable weekend get-away!

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

More pictures!

venezia e verona. (Venice and Verona, Italy)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2023597&id=1490550154&l=8edf36d6fa

you say to-mah-toe, i say to-may-toe. (Florence, Italy)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2023837&id=1490550154&l=0931f165e7

Bike parking, allowed?? (Rome, Italy)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2024055&id=1490550154&l=51e46de2e5

Bisous. (south of France)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2024303&id=1490550154&l=015bbcce81

Surely. (Cinque Terre, Italy)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2024476&id=1490550154&l=da359a490a

best.birthday.weekend.ever. (Paris, France)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2025093&id=1490550154&l=064e46d84e

A side of earth apples, s'il vous plaît? (Bern, Switzerland)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2025426&id=1490550154&l=2cc5822a2e

Fêtes des Vendanges: confetti et les coeurs. (Neuchâtel, Switzerland)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2025427&id=1490550154&l=3d5d7cab54

Irene en Suisse! (Gruyere and Murten, Switzerland)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2026375&id=1490550154&l=8fc8dcee9f

Antsy to see Annecy. (Annecy, France)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2026378&id=1490550154&l=0ba541a637

un jour à Thun, Spiez, et Interlaken. (Thun, Spiez, and Interlaken, Switzerland)

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2027039&id=1490550154&l=dadf6a67c3

3 novembre 2009

Today was SO exciting for me! I bought a train ticket to Paris and plane tickets to Istanbul, Turkey and Lisbon, Portugal! It suddenly hit me that my time in Europe was coming to an end and that there were still so many places I wanted to see. I looked at my list of to-see’s, talked to friends, and decided on a repeatable favorite (Paris) and then two cities on complete opposite sides of the continent (Istanbul and Lisbon)!

I’ll be in Paris: Nov. 13-15

Istanbul: Nov. 27-30 (in Turkey for Turkey Day!)

Lisbon: Dec. 6-9

I’m SO excited! I feel so blessed to be able to see these incredible places! These trips are just the motivation I needed to get all my work done during the week and give me something incredible to look forward to!

2 novembre 2009

Every Monday and Thursday after German class, Kaitlyn and I try to decide what we learned that day so she can report back to her German roommates. For the longest time, it was a day of the week or a number (it’s been a slow process for us, but such a great learning experience J), but today we learned how to describe our hobbies. Daniel, Kaitlyn, and I decided our Fribourg hobbies were: reisen, tanzer, lesen, essen, und studieren (travel, dance, read, eat, and study).

31 octobre 2009

Happy Halloween! Today, I worked on a research paper for my course, An American in Paris. The roughdraft is due Monday. I’m writing it on the female protagonist in Hemingway’s Fiesta: The Sun Also Rises: Lady Brett Ashley. I love this book and am really enjoying writing this paper.

Spotted: three Americans at a Swiss Halloween party.

Tonight, Kaitlyn’s apartment is having a Halloween party at Beauregard, student apartments in Fribourg. We thought about dressing up as Haribo bears – the gummy bears from Bohn, Germany. Instead, we decided to be “Gossip Girls.” The show, just like at home, has taken over Europe, especially our European friends in Fribourg. It was a fun reason to get dressed up.

Xoxo, you know you love me. Signed, gossip girl.

30 octobre 2009

Switzerland is a small, steep country, much more up and down than sideways… Ernest Hemingway

This is just what I witnessed today, the up’s and down’s of the Swiss Alps. This morning, Jen, Vincent, Kaitlyn, Yohannaliz, and I decided we wanted to see some snow – some real Swiss snow. So, we got tickets to Interlaken! None of us had ever been and were anxious to see the “extreme sports capital of the world.” We left around 11:00 and started in to the center of Switzerland. Our ticket was not for any specific time so we jumped off in Thun and then again in Spiez. Thun and Spiez were beautiful! I can’t believe this is the first time I had visited them! We saw the top sites of any Swiss village – the lake, the cathedral, the chateau, the Alps, the café, and then back to the train station. Both Thun and Spiez were so laid back. We didn’t see anyone our age – only those way younger of way older. In Spiez, we made our way down to the harbor and made ourselves comfortable sitting on the edge of the clearest water I have ever seen. I don’t think I’ve ever been so relaxed. We had no agenda or schedule and were so happy to just sit on the water and watch the sailboats go by. It’s difficult to tell where the mountains and water meet – they almost seem like one. The sharp contrast between the towering, snow-capped Alps and the clear blue lake is breathtaking. Fall is in full bloom here, even though I believe it’s technically winter. The colors and piles of leaves around the Spiez Cathedral were beautiful, reminding me of a fall, football Saturday in Oxford. I tried to explain Oxford/Southern/Ole Miss/Grove culture to the Arizonians, Peruvians, and Cape Codian today… it’s very difficult to do. I so take for granted how wonderful of a place it is and must have assumed everyone else could understand the greatness of a football Saturday on the Grove, a TCBY cone from Chaney’s, sweet potato casserole from Ajax, and sweet tea that’s really just sugar water J We play Auburn tomorrow – hotty toddy! With daylight savings time, the sun starts to set here around 4:30… By the time we started the last leg of our trip to Interlaken, it was beginning to get dark. Even with the darkness, the ride into Interlaken was beautiful! Alps the whole way! When we got into Interlaken, we bought tickets for the mountain train up to Gimmelwald.

20 octobre 2009

Momma left this morning – she got on a train to the airport and I got on a train back to Fribourg for a 10:15 class a few minutes later. It was SO great having her here, for her to see my everyday life here and to travel throughout Switzerland and some of France with her! I am so blessed to have a mom that would jump the pond to come see me and can’t wait until our whole family travels in Europe together J

19 octobre 2009

I went to my courses this morning and Momma went to the local chocolate factory, Villars Chocolate, and got lots of chocolate to take home a few pieces of Switzerland. When I got out of class around lunch, we hopped on a train to Zurich! We checked into our hotel and then started off walking. First stop, one of the most expensive streets in the world, literally: Bahnhofstrasse. We spent a good bit of time in the Louis Vuitton store, oohing and aahing over future Christmas presents J and getting great advice from a Louis sales rep. on where to go, eat, and drink in Zurich. We took his advice and went to the water, crossed the Quaibrucke, and had an amazing hot chocolate and apple tarte at Café Schober. We walked through Old Town (incredibly beautiful winding, cobblestone roads) and had the best dinner at another place recommended by our Louis friend. I had my favorite, wiener schnitzel, with a fresh cranberry sauce J Such a great way to end the week with Momma in la Suisse!

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

17 octobre 2009

Annecy, France ("the Venice of France")

Orchestre des Pays de Savoie concert!

16 octobre 2009

Genève, Suisse: tour of the UN Office of Geneva

15 octobre 2009

Bern (capital of Switzerland), tour of the Swiss Parliament

Thai (my favorite!) for dinner with Anna and Momma!

14 octobre 2009

I had a lot of school today, so Momma got to know more of Fribourg on her own. It’s so wonderful having a mother come visit! They buy you the practical things that would be very nice to have but that you probably wouldn’t buy for yourself – a kettle/water boiler, warm socks, a Halloween/Thanksgiving pumpkin… Momma also discovered a local produce market in the heart of town – she got us beautiful raspberries, brioches, cheese, and bread. When I got out of class, we took a short train to Murten (or Morat in French). It’s only 18 km from Fribourg, but on a beautiful lake. It was bitterly cold today so we strolled for a little while and then ducked into a tearoom. Momma got a thé menthe vert (mint tea) and I got a melody of sweet fruits: fruit de passion, cassis, fraise, framboise… We had wine, cheese, a baguette, raspberries, and caramel wafer cookies for dinner back in Fribourg J After dinner, Momma and I met Myriam, her boyfriend (in town from Germany), Kim, and Anne-Pauline for drinks at Mondial. I am SO glad Momma got to meet them!

13 octobre 2009

Momma became a student again today! On Tuesdays, my only course is the lecture: Transcontinental Hemingway. The professor, Dr. Austenfeld, is one of the people who worked very hard to establish the exchange between l’Université de Fribourg and Ole Miss. After we went to his lecture, Momma and I had lunch with Dr. Austenfeld in the Mensa. We had a great time talking with him. I think the exchange is going to be a really good thing! After lunch, Momma and I set out for Gruyères, Switzerland – a medieval village known for its Gruyères cheese and double cream. The village itself is inside of walls built between 1272 and 1280. Gruyères is exactly what I imagine when I think of a quaint Swiss village in the Alps. It’s almost too picturesque: rolling hills of green, lush farmland and vineyards, towering, snow-topped Alps, hundreds of roaming cows with bells around their necks, and then an ancient Swiss chateau surrounded by a petite village and protective walls. Switzerland is beautiful in all its fall colors right now! The trees are all brilliant oranges, reds, and yellows. Leaves are falling and piling up everywhere. J Momma and I walked all around the village, visited the chateau and cathedral, and then ended the night with Swiss fondue (the fist time for both of us)!

12 octobre 2009

Momma got here today!! She landed in Zurich at 7 this morning, ate breakfast, figured out her train ticket, and rode to Fribourg all while I was in class this morning. When I got out of class, I went straight to la gare and there she was! We walked back to my residence, put her things down, and then set out. We ate lunch at one of my favorite cafés just across from l’université, Le Mondial, and then I walked her all over Fribourg. I showed her the university, old town (basse ville), the shopping district, the cathedral, the Sarine River, the many bridges… anything and everything I could think of. Momma was very, very tired due to jet lag so when I had German class from 5 to 7, she went back to my place to rest. I told her not to fall asleep though (I’ve been trained well by Lou Lou J) and try to make it to 9. After I got out of class, we went to have hummus, falafel, and Turkish wine at a Turkish restaurant on Rue de Lausanne.

11 octobre 2009

My mom left and States today and will be here, in Switzerland, tomorrow morning! I CANNOT wait! She’ll be here for a little over a week. I’m so excited for her to see Fribourg and for the traveling we’re going to do over the long weekend! Fly safely dear – can’t wait to see you!

10 octobre 2009

Last night, Kristen, Anne-Pauline, Myriam, and I had apératifs at Anna’s place. Afterwards, Anne-Pauline, Anna, and I went to UniFesta, the 3 level party at the post office. We had a great time dancing to all our favorites, but called it a night around 2 since we had such a big night at Stalingrad the night before. Today, I did all my coursework for the upcoming week so I won’t have to worry about anything once Momma gets here. It’s finally winter in Fribourg and the weather changed overnight! Tonight, it will be 6 degrees Celsius, which is around 43 degrees Fahrenheit! Everyone’s a litter under the weather, literally, with the quick change.

9 octobre 2009

I wish I could explain how incredible this past month has been! No amount of photos or blog entries could do it justice. I love it here – in Fribourg, in Switzerland, and in Europe. The people I have met are so great. They stand as proof that friends can be found anywhere - in all shapes and sizes and in the most unexpected places and times. That was one of the things I was most worried about – not meeting people and being alone in Switzerland for a semester. God has provided like no other time in my life though. The people He has placed in my life this semester are incredibly wonderful. I am learning so much from them and having a BLAST! To say the very least, they are very dear to me.

In one of my courses, we talk a good bit about a sense of place in the novels we are reading. Studying abroad has made me think about “place” so much. Nothing will ever come close to home, but it is so cool to see how some place so far away and different from home can have such a homely feel. I have the habit of saying “I’m going home” to wherever I happen to live at the time. In Columbia, going home is to 1416 Ivy Lane. In Oxford, going home is to the apartment 1114. In la Suisse, going home is to Fribourg and to my room at St. Justin.

Hemingway said that one couldn’t write about or truly appreciate a place while you were there. You had to remove yourself from it in order to see it clearly and see just what it means to you. That’s why Hemingway could write about home, the States and Illinois in particular, while living in Paris. When he wanted to appreciate or write about Paris, he had to leave. I never really appreciated home until I left it. I had this whole new appreciation for Columbia and South Carolina when I left for Ole Miss. And now, I have this whole new appreciation for the States and Mississippi too. Home is such a wonderful place.

8 octobre 2009

So glad the weekend is here! My friend, Daniel (from Spain), was the guest DJ at the bar Stalingrad tonight. We had the best night – we danced from 10 until 14. There was such a good turnout, Daniel will be DJ’ing every 2 weeks for Stalingrad and we can hardly wait until the next time J

5 octobre 2009

If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast.

Ernest Hemingway

I’m studying Hemingway in two of my courses in Fribourg and have become a huge fan. Paris was just that to Hemingway – a moveable feast that he took with him every place he went. No place compares to Paris. It is absolutely wonderful and beautiful in completely unique-to-Paris ways. This was my third time to Paris and I loved it even more than the first and second times. I just can’t get enough of the city of love and lights. Paris is amazing enough on its own, but it was even more AH-MAZING being there with a group of friends that mean so much to me J I hope I keep a little piece of this weekend in Paris with me at all times.

I don’t even know where to begin in describing this past weekend. I had the most amazing time spending my birthday with friends from Ole Miss in PARIS! I left Fribourg late Thursday afternoon by train, with one switch in Lausanne. The whole trip, including a layover in Lausanne, only took 4.5 hours! So easy! I arrived in Gare Lyon and took the metro to Place d’Italie in the Latin Quarter, where we were staying. Lee (studying in Norwich, England), Kimberly (Bilbao), Leah (Bilbao), and I were the only ones staying together Thursday. I got in first, checked in, and was waiting in the lobby of the hostel when I heard Lee scream, “JJJPPPPP!” You would think we hadn’t seen each other in years – I think we made quite an American spectacle J Lee and I sat outside a café for a few hours catching up and then went back to the hostel to meet Kimberly and Leah! It was amazing to see Kim and Leah – SO surreal all of us being in PARIS together!

Leah, Lee, Kimberly and I woke up Friday and were getting breakfast downstairs when Emilie and Ann arrived! Emilie is studying in Angers this semester and had stayed with a family friend in Paris the night before. Ann is studying in Paris this semester. We started off towards the Pantheon and then towards the Seine and Shakespeare and Co. I could not wait to see Shakespeare and Co. Along the way, we wandered through local street markets and oohed and ahhed at everything Parisian. It was so great wandering around Shakespeare and Co. – I felt like I was in a piece of history, but not a piece of history like a monument or a museum, but a piece of history that continues to live today in literature. The authors that spent nights reading and writing in the tiny, upstairs rooms of S. and Co. continue to move readers today. I guess that is one of the perks of being an accomplished writer – you leave behind such wonderful works of art for future generations to read, discuss, dwell on, and interpret for themselves in their lifetime. I bought a secondhand edition of Hemingway’s To Have and Have Not (with the official S. and Co. stamp on the inside cover J). It was our very own Square Books, minus the Bottletree leftovers and coffee. We walked along the river for some time and then decided to have lunch in a little nook we found. I had moules-frites J We walked to Notre Dame and then to La Tour Eiffel! After climbing the tower, we went to Chartier (ah-mazing!) to meet Susan, Courtney, and Tyler for dinner. Tyler and Susan just got engaged!! At Versailles! We were SO happy to celebrate with them – plenty of champagne toasts!

Samedi – my birthday! My friend, Ann Kirk, is teaching English in Metz, France for the next year and came into the city – it was SO great to see her! We had breakfast downstairs and then got coffee at Starbucks J Guilty… I know I can have this anytime I want in the States, but the caramel latté was just as good as I remembered it to be and was so worth it! We went to the Galeries Lafayette, where they had me close my eyes and surprised me with a Longchamp bag of my choice! I was sooo surprised and couldn’t have asked to spend my birthday with a better group of friends J We had lunch on the roof of the department store and had the best view of the city! Afterwards, we walked to see my FAVORITE building in Paris: Palais Garnier or the Opera House! I had my first ever chestnuts roasting on an open fire! Lee and I got them from a street vendor. They were so tasty! Later in the afternoon, Ann Kirk, Ann, and I got café au laits at a cute café and then headed back to get dressed and ready for the night. Lee had made us reservations at Le Café Marly in the Louvre courtyard! It was beautiful! We sat outside at the most comfortable table with heaters above us and the best view of the Louvre pyramids lit up against the dark sky. We had the best time at dinner – such a great way to end the best anniversaire. It wasn’t near to being over yet though – it was a Nuit Blanche in Paris! Nuit Blanche is a celebration of contemporary art – from 7pm to dawn. The installations are available and free to the public all night long. Lee and I had so much fun wandering around the city into the wee hours of the morning. We were nowhere near to being the only ones or the selected few out – they were thousands of people on the streets! It was so cool to see the streets so lively and active that late at night and early into the morning.

Sunday morning, Leah, Kimberly, and I woke up and went to the Musée d’Orsay – my favorite art museum in Paris! We had the BESTTT dejeuner at a café on the Place d’Italie, near to where we were staying!

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

28 septembre 2009

I love, love, love the first week of school! Not for the end of summer and end of the most amazing time traveling with Leah, but… For that nervous slash excited feeling walking into a class for the first time. For the school supply shopping (particularly fun in la Suisse). For realizing the world is such a huge place and then such a small place at the same time. For being inspired. And for realizing there is soooo much I have yet to learn.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

26 septembre 2009

“a des confettis plein les pieds, des coeurs sur les yeux, du vent dans les cheveux, un feu d'artifice dans la tête, et le smile over my face!”

Today and tonight, we went to Neuchâtel’s Fêtes des Vendanges! Anne-Pauline’s mother is Swiss and her grandparents live in Neuchâtel, Switzerland – just around the corner from Fribourg. She was already there visiting family so Myriam, Anna, and I drove to meet her for the wine festival in the beautiful Neuchâtel! The town is gorgeous. It’s on Lake Neuchâtel – a lake of crystal clear, blueist of blues water. The town was COVERED in confetti – it was beautiful! Kids and adults alike were throwing dyed and cookie-cuttered newspaper confetti pieces everywhere. My first (confetti) snow in Switzerland! I loved it. I was so amazed at how bright-colored bits of paper could entertain so many and bring so much happiness. I felt like we were living in a fairytale, where it rains confetti and smiles. We ate like queens – we barely said no to a tent/stand we passed. Anne-Pauline and I had warm Chinese noodles and vegetables for dinner, followed by barbe à papa (Daddy’s beard: cotton candy in French), Spanish churros, fresh passion fruit juice, a Chiquita banana dipped in Swiss chocolate and covered in rainbow sprinkles… The crowd during the day was very different than the crowd at night: more kid-friendly during the day and crazy at night. We moved from tent to tent, vendor to vendor, band to band dancing with les coeurs sur les yeux: light-up sunglasses in the shapes of hearts. We got to Anne-Pauline’s grandmother at the end of the night and she is precious! It was so great to see Anne-Pauline with her grandmother – grandparents are such wonderful people. I can’t wait to be close to mine again in Mississippi J

19 septembre 2009

I spent today in Bern! My friend, Myriam, has her car here and very kindly offered to drive a group of us to Bern this weekend. We had a blast! The group was one French, Anna-Pauline, one Canadian – Kim, two Germans – Myriam and Anna, one Finish – Suvi, and one Charlestonian – Kristen. I really, really like Bern. It’s the capital of Switzerland, but not a huge place. We ended the night making homemade pizza and having apératifs at Suvi’s place in Bern and then going out. It’s going to take me some time getting used to Swiss night outs – we got back into Fribourg around 4:30 Saturday night/ Sunday morning J

18 septembre 2009

SO much has happened in just one week! I have started classes and love them so far. I’m taking 3 literature courses (Terrorism and Literature, An American in Paris: 1920-1960, and Transcontinental Hemingway), 3 French language courses, 2 German language courses, and a Multiculturalism and Power-Sharing (case study: N. Ireland, Lebanon, and Iraq) course. Classes only meet once a week, but you meet for nearly 2 hours. It will be a really different schedule than I would have in Oxford, but I’m looking forward to it. In my department, Faculté des Lettres, students try out courses for the first 3 weeks. I can go to any classes I am interested in for 3 weeks and then must register for the courses I am actually going to take after the third week. Like trial and error - I really like it that way.

I had a full day of courses Monday. Walking into that first class at 8 am on Monday was a little frightening not knowing what to expect at all, but everything worked out great. Monday, I met Jen – the first American I have met in Fribourg! I can’t believe it took me this long to run into another American – she was a breath of fresh air and familiarity. Jen is from LA, but is studying in Fribourg through a University of Arizona exchange. She’s great! Monday night, I went to Anna’s place for dinner… she made us a great meal! She’ll never admit she’s good at cooking, but I love it! Anna was the first person I met in Fribourg! It’s a really funny how we met. I was running a few days ago with my Ipod and I saw her walking towards me waving her arms. She was lost and looking for directions… I definitely don’t know my way around yet and was probably lost myself so couldn’t be of much help to her in getting unlost, but we had the best time talking. She got my information and voila, my first friend in Fribourg! It just stands as proof that friends can be found in the strangest of places J

Tuesday – not so many classes but a great, great night! Anna and I met to go to an exchange student/ Erasmus (European exchange network) apératif get-together. This was just what I was looking for – we met SO many people! I met people from all over – Germany, France, Finland, Canada, Norway, Luxembourg, Belgium, England, just to name a few…

Wednesday night, I went with a group I met at apératifs Tuesday to a back-to-school party at the To See Club in Fribourg.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Saturday, September 26, 2009

6 septembre 2009

I had the best weekend in London! It was very cold though – I’m talking 50 to 60 degrees, fahrenheit not celsius. It was my first time not checking any luggage – I packed everything I needed in my carry on Northface, hard to believe I know! But, I only packed summer-ish things so that came back to bite me. Lou Lou, Syra, and I saw “The Mountain Top” at Trafalgar Studios Friday night and I loved it. The entire play is in one room, room 306 of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis where Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated. It was a two-man show – MLK, Jr. and a motel maid. The play was especially powerful and I’m so glad I was able to see it – it closed in London Saturday night. I realized how little I knew about MLK, Jr.’s “I’ve been to the mountaintop” address and have been doing my reading since. Saturday, I got to see Emmmmm!! Her school, flat, roommates are all so great. It was really neat to be able to see where she’ll be living and going to class everyday. Lou Lou and I walked the Heath and Hampstead before picking up oven-baked pizza, cookies, Corona and limes for dinner J Em, some of her flatmates, and I ended the night in a karaoke bar in Islington and had a really good time.

It’s hard to believe the summer is coming to an end… I’ve had such an amazing time traveling these last few weeks and wouldn’t have changed anything. Thanks Pops and Dear for letting me have this adventure – it was incredible and once in a lifetime.

3 septembre 2009

Earliest morning so far – my alarm went off at 5:15! I had to catch a 6 am train from Fribourg to Geneva in order to make my flight. The train and flight were super easy! I met a real life Tom Sawyer (his real name) on the train that I thought was to Kentish Town who kindly informed me I was headed in the complete opposite direction – oops J I got to Lou Lou’s flat around lunchtime and really enjoyed catching up with her. We went to see Pedro Almodóvar’s newest film, “Broken Embraces,” and had Wagamama in Camden town for dinner.

2 septembre 2009

I’m in Fribourg and all moved into my room! Living out of a suitcase gets a little tiresome after a while. I got here early evening of the 1st. As soon as I got into my foyer, it started storming (first thunder and lightning I’ve experiences this trip).. weather not fitting at all for how I was feeling. I felt the complete opposite – blue skies and sunshine would have been more appropriate. It is just hard to believe that this day, this time, this moment are finally here – the moment where the thrills of summertime are almost gone, where traveling throughout Europe with one of my very best friends is almost over, and where I’m alone in this place where I’ll be until Christmas. A moment I had done my best all summer, and probably even longer, to prepare for – a moment that I don’t really think you can prepare for.. But, a moment I made it to and was happy to be in, right then and right there. This time in Fribourg is the ultimate adventure – one I’m so ready to take and one I need to take. I know it’s not always going to be a walk in the park – it’s going to be challenging, it already has been, but I’m ready. I’m going to take it day by day and try to make the most out of every moment I have here. I just still can’t believe I’m finally here!!

It worked out amazingly – Leah and I were on the same train, Munich to Fribourg, for 7 hours! She had much farther to go after the train dropped me off in Fribourg, but it was still so great and unexpected to have a little 7 hours on the same train. The little I saw of Fribourg, when it wasn’t raining, is beautiful! You can see the Alps in every direction you look. Someone in the train station told me 19,000 people live in the dowtown area and nearly 13,000 are students – very similar to Oxford! I have some time to kill before orientation and classes begin so I’m off to London for a long weekend to see Lou Lou and Emily (just arrived in London!) and I cannot wait!

1 septembre 2009

This morning was insane! Our train to Munich left at 7:05 from Milan. We set the alarm, but must have slept right through it. At 6:48, Leah woke me up: OH MY GOSH, JP, IT’S 6:48!!! We thought about it for about 30 seconds, basically still asleep, and decided we were going to try to make it. We figured ok, 17 minutes: 4 minutes to pack, 4 minutes to checkout of the hotel, 5 minutes to run to the station, and 4 minutes to figure out what platform we needed to get to and to board the train. We totally made it!! Talk about a rush of adrenaline. This was the beginning of a day where everything could have either gone disastrously wrong or amazingly perfect. Everything just happened to work out for us today J Once we got to Munich, we went straight to the DB office to work on booking Leah’s long trek to Spain for tomorrow. She was first told she was going to have to go from Munich to Paris and then down into Spain. Luckily, the head of the DB is American (from Illinois) and decided he was going to help make Leah’s trip as easy as it could be. He was such a blessing and helped SO much. Leah is now going to go through Switzerland to get to Spain, the much more direct route. We picked up our semester luggage from Ian, who so kindly let us store it in Munich the whole time we were traveling. It’s hard to believe that Leah and I will be headed to our respected cities tomorrow! It hasn’t really hit me yet, but it’s so nice to be back in Munich for a night – somewhere that is so comfortable and familiar to me.

31 août 2009

Today was our last day in Cinque Terre. I’m going to miss it a lot! We paid the older man for our room, ate at the same wonderful café for breakfast, and then headed to Vernazza. The ocean is such a beautiful backdrop to the bright colors of all the umbrellas in Vernazza. Later in the day, we took a train from Monterosso to Milan. Milan’s train station is amazing! It’s by far my favorite train station I’ve ever been to. We were just going to be in Milan for one night, so we stayed in a really nice hotel near the train station. The AC, Wifi, clean bathroom, comfortable beds with plenty of pillows, etc. were such a luxury compared to the rest of our Italian accommodations. We were living the life – give us some AC and we turn into queens. J

30 août 2009

Leah and I definitely accomplished what we wanted to in Cinque Terre – relaxing, laying out by the water, and swimming. We woke up this morning, hung out on our terrace over-looking Riomaggorie for a little while, got breakfast down the lane (the best omelet and coffee), and then got dressed in bathing suits and cover-ups for our beach day. We did a little bit of shopping here and there, ate gelato to cool down, and went one village over to Manarola for laying out and swimming. The views were breath-taking – I took a lot of pictures, to say the least. The water is like nothing I have ever seen before – it shimmers. I can’t think of any other way to describe it.. It’s hard to look at it for too long or you end up looking at it for so long and wondering what you were thinking about the entire time you just spent staring at the shimmering, glittering water. After showering and getting ready for the night, we ate at this beautiful café on the main drag of Riomaggorie. I had the BEST meal – stuffed mussels, gnocchi, and a great bottle of wine.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

28 août 2009

Travel day:

Marseille – Nice – Genova – La Spezia – and finally, in the wee hours of the morning, to Cinque Terre!

This was the only time the whole trip we didn’t book somewhere to stay in advance… We took a cab from the La Spezia train station to the top of Riomaggiore, the first of the five seaside villages making up Cinque Terre. We looked down a slope of a hill, completely cobblestone, and started making our way down with our luggage. About half way down we decided we didn’t want to roll our luggage all the way down to the ocean if we were just going to have to head right back up the slope, so I sat with the luggage while Leah ventured down the main street of Riomaggiore to find us a roof to sleep under. She came back a few minutes later and told me we were meeting someone at the corner in 5 minutes haha. She had done like so many of our friends had told us to and gone into a pub to ask a waiter about somewhere to stay. Mind you it’s late into the night now – the waiter made a call and sure enough there was an elderly man waiting for us at the corner soon after. We ended up renting a room on the third floor of his family’s house – it was great! All we could do when we saw all the stairs was laugh... I’m talking 150 to 200 winding stairs leading first up to the house and then up to the room. The room had this amazing terrace though with lounge chairs, a table, and awning that we put to full use. We finally made it and got a great story out of it!

27 août 2009

We slept in again today, but woke up to a beautiful morning. Delores, Emilie’s GPS, led us to Cassis, France where we spent our afternoon on a boat tour of the Calanques, wondering around the seaside town, eating gelato, and jumping off cliffs into the chilly and very salty Mediterranean! The Calanques – natural cliffs formed by river mouths – are incredible! We rode in and out of the Calanques on a tour, surrounded by the bluest of waters. I literally had to hold Emilie’s hand crossing some parts of the cliffs, before I got the courage to jump. It’s really funny actually – I claim I’m going to go skydiving this semester and then I get spooked jumping off a measly cliff! It was so great though and I’m so glad I jumped.. The weather wasn’t on our side for long and it started to rain so we packed up and headed back to Fos to swim at Opa and Oma’s. We went to a local Vietnamese restaurant for dinner – my first time eating Vietnamese – and I LOVED it! I got Oma’s favorite, boeuf à la citronelle, and it was fantastic! We did apple-flavored shisha in a Moroccan tent on the beach after our beurre-sucre and nutella crêpes for dessert.

26 août 2009

I cannot say thank you enough for Emilie’s invitation and Opa and Oma’s kindness! Opa and Oma are two of the most hospitable and kind people I know – it’s just such a treat to be back in Fos-sur-mer! I cannot believe it was a whole year ago that I came here for the first time to stay with Emilie and her sweet grandparents, Opa and Oma. We slept in this morning and then went to lunch at dare I say the best restaurant ever: le Pili Pili! I tried moules-frites for the first time at le Pili Pili last summer when Opa told me they were amazing and they easily became my favorite meal. I LOVED them just as much today and even made Leah try a mussel.. not her favorite J The mussels are soaked in a white wine, cream, and onion sauce, served with a bowl of french fries.. SO good. In the afternoon, Emilie, Ann, Leah, and I walked around Martigues, where Emilie was born and her parents were married. We came back to Opa and Oma’s to drink le vin blanc avec le sirop de cassis, eat pizza by the pool, and watch Notting Hill! Leah and I loved picking out the places we had been and seen in the movie!

une autre partie de 25 août 2009

I can’t do this day justice unless I write about the most interesting conversation I had on the train. On the 3 hour train ride from Nice to Marseille, Leah and I couldn’t find seats next to each other, so we ended up sitting on different rows. The man diagonal from me had on a Florida State shirt, so I attempted to ask him if he was from Florida or had visited there. Turns out he spoke no English and it was a gift from his daughter that he was on his way to visit. The man next to me translated. Supposedly, the man in the Florida State shirt talked about how much he actually disliked the shirt but was wearing it because it was a gift. The translator (man sitting next to me) and I talked the entire next 3 hours to Marseille. He is half Italian/ half French – Italian father and French mother. He calls Bologna, Italy home, but his mother sent him away to boarding school in Paris because “she has little to no faith in the Italian education system.” He ended up going to l’université and l’école de droit (law school) in Paris. After practicing law in Paris for a few years, he applied for an internship with the UN. He said he was craving some type of international experience and knew he wouldn’t stop until he did it. His first internship with the UN was a 3 month stay in Lebanon, where they began teaching him Arabic. After the unpaid internship in Lebanon, he began working for the UN as a full-time employee and was stationed in Palestine as a UN representative for reconciliation on the Gaza Strip. He told me all about this experience – the times he felt they made a difference, the times he thought it was hopeless, the times his life was put into danger, the food, the UN compound he lived in, Israeli sonic bombs – anything and everything I could think to ask about. After 4 or 5 years with the UN, he wanted to settle down and so moved back to Paris, where he is an attorney working on his own, but also with the ICC. The International Criminal Court prosecutes individuals for genocide and other war crimes – the human rights and international part of law I find so interesting. He told me all about the Rome Treaty, the ICC’s founding treaty, and how/ why the US is not a member of the court. Right now, he is one lawyer on a team of 6 representing a bishop charged for ordering the murder of thousands of people in Darfur. The trial is taking place in Tanzania right now – he and the other 5 lawyers fly to Tanzania for a month on September 10. I could go on and on about the things I learned in this conversation. One of the coolest things is that even though I know all these things about this man’s life – from his excitement and anxiousness for the trial in Tanzania to his siblings, nieces, and nephews – he is still a perfect stranger. I don’t even know his name and he had that profound of an effect on me. These types of conversations don’t come around everyday, at least not for me – I know I’ll remember it.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Pictures!

I can't quite figure out how to put photos up on the blog so I have put the links below to the photo albums I've created so far!

London: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2022501&id=1490550154&l=d0c394af15
Munchen: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2022625&id=1490550154&l=7e9b49dbed
Praha: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2023056&id=1490550154&l=c2c7d54451

Monday, September 7, 2009

25 août 2009

Today was a long, long traveling day:

Rome – Genova – Ventimiglia – Nice – Marseille

We’ve changed our plans again and are so excited to be going to the south of France to see Emilie and Ann again! We’re staying with Oma and Opa, Emilie’s grandparents, in the Fos-Sur-Mer and are so glad to be in the most welcoming, friendly home and not a hostel for a few nights. I’m really enjoying the flexibility of our trip. Our travels so far are so different than what we originally planned and I love that. I’m a list person and am happy to say I haven’t made one list since I’ve been traveling. J I love just going where we want to and deciding our next destination the night before we get on the train. Leah and I have got trains under control now. We’ve got a little system – it’s totally efficient and hilarious to watch, I’m sure.

24 août 2009

Today, we visited the smallest country in the world – with 550 citizens to its name, Vatican City! We saw St. Peter’s basilica, St. Peter’s square or the much cooler sounding Piazzo di Saint Pietro, the Grottoes, and the Vatican museums. We climbed all 327 stairs to the top of the cupola (dome of St. Peter’s) and had an amazing view of the entire city. Stairs are becoming a thing, a habit, several hundred stairs a day – totally the norm. I loved being with Leah on her first visit to the Vatican. Being Catholic, she was able to explain so much – it definitely made my day there. Seeing Pope John Paul II’s grave was especially memorable. I wasn’t able to see the Sistine Chapel the last time I visited Rome so we rushed to the Chapel and Vatican Museums before they closed. Do not be fooled, once you enter the Vatican Museums, you have a good hour until you reach the Sistine Chapel. It was so worth it though – very crowded inside, but amazing. It’s hard to take it all in, standing on the ground looking up.

We decided to go to the opera at Teatro de Marcello! We picked up dinner at that same corner café from the day before on the bike ride. We got extremely lucky! The same waiter who gave us directions yesterday served us today and just happened to be friends with the guy working the ticket booth for the opera. He thought he could get us a discount – turns out we got in for free! Not to mention, his friend put us in front row, reserved seats. It just made it that much better. The performance was outstanding – a seventeen year old playing the most incredible pianoforte, most pieces by Bach.

I think it’s more than safe to say Leah and I have had gelato everyday since we’ve been in Italy. I’m more a fruit fan and she’s more of a chocolate fan. This city, the Eternal City, is beautiful – it’s definitely at the top of my list. The next time I plan a trip to Roma, I’d like it to be in April or October though J

23 août 2009

It’s a total understatement to say Rome is hot. It’s scorching. Leah and I changed locales this morning – to the Pop Inn Hostel. We rode the metro to the Colosseum with the intention of renting two bikes to explore the city on all day. Instead, we rented the coolest thing – a two-seater bike where you sit on a bench side-by-side instead of one behind the other. It was great! I know we provided some entertainment for passerbys, especially as we struggled to get up Rome’s hills. Three nuns stopped to take pictures of us as we were huffing and puffing! We rode all over Southern Rome – Roman Forum, Palatine Hill, Piazza Venezia, Ponte Garibaldi, Ponte Fabricio, and my favorite building in all of Rome, the Monumento Vittorio Emanuele II!. On the bike ride, we stopped by one of Rome’s oldest theaters, Teatro de Marcello, to see about opera tickets. We asked a waiter in the corner café for directions and had no idea it would help us out so much the next day. We picked up sliced watermelon and headed back to the hostel to get out of the heat for a little while and get ready for the night. We ate at a chic restaurant decorated with Japanese latterns and twinkle lights and had a wonderful, long dinner with plenty of bruschetta, pasta, pizza, wine, and limoncello shots. We were able to see the Trevi Fountain a little later in the evening and made our wishes. Right hand over left shoulder or your wishes won’t come true.

22 août 2009

We left for Roma today and could not wait to meet up with Emilie and Ann later in the afternoon! We got off the train and saw a man holding a sign with “Leah Tucker” printed on it! A rep from our hostel picked us up at the train station and took us to the room we would be renting for the night. The room was not what we were expecting – it was a room in someone’s apartment rather than a hotel-like setting with a reception and other guests. We decided to stay one night and then to switch to another hostel tomorrow morning. We met up with Emilie and Ann at their hostel and walked all over Rome – Spanish Steps, Via dei Condotti, Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, Via Nazionale, Piazza della Repubblica.. We ended the night on the Palazzo Navona and had a great dinner in a café ideal for people-watching. I had gnocchi for the first time and loved it! We were so entertained by the street performers and artists – two men singing opera and a group of break-dancers. The four of us had a blast catching up – it had been since May since we’d seen each other. Rome is unbelievable once the sun goes down! The night’s colors and the lights were beautiful. I’m so excited to be here! Ciao bella!

21 août 2009

We’re staying at the Academy Hostel in Florence and love it! We’re just a block from the Duomo! The hostel has AC and wifi, no elevator but a great staff that helped us with our luggage J We had breakfast in the hostel and then set out – Duomo, Piazza di Santa Maria Novella, Piazza della Repubblica, and the Ponte Vecchio. We walked up flights and flights of stairs to the Piazzale de Michelangelo where we had a wonderful view of the entire city. It was incredible! I love that each place we’ve visited has a characteristic color. Florence is a less deep red than Prague but gorgeous nonetheless. We did our job as tourists and checked out postcards, football jerseys, and gelato. I have my very own “Carrie” (Sex and the city) necklace now – a local artist made me one that says jpt. We started making our way back to the hostel for 6:30 happy hour – sangria, bow-tie pasta salad (close to yours, Momma :-), and cantaloupe kabobs. We met a ton of other travelers at happy hour – mainly from Australia, Canada, and California. We ended up going out with them for the night and ran into a big group of girls from Elon studying in Florence for the semester! It was a fun night – Leah, our new friends, Jena and Amber (no words can do them justice), and I had a hilarious walk home including the most amazing pizza.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

20 août 2009

I totally forgot to write about our train ride from Venice to Florence! So cool.. It was the section of the train where four seats surround a table in the center and face each other. Leah and I were sitting in side-by-side tables so there were 8 of us total - a young couple from Naples, a 20-something man from Pakistan, a girl our age from Canada, a parent-age couple from Bilbao (where Leah will be studying), Leah, and me. It was the coolest thing - all 8 of us talking. English was the common language. We talked about everything - school, what we were studying, who has better pizza (Venice or Naples?), American football and European football.. so many things. It was so comforting to hear the couple from Bilbao describe to Leah what Bilbao was like and how much she is going to like it. It was just a cool hour and a half - I don't know where else I could experience that.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Today was jammed pack with first's and I loved every minute. We spent the morning in Verona, Italy - such a pretty place. We ate breakfast on the square, in front of a Roman arena. It is opera season in Verona right now, so an opera is put on almost every night. We were disappointed to not be spending another night and seeing a show ourselves. We caught the 1 pm train to Venice and were there by 2. We left our luggage with the luggage-storage men in the Venice train station and then headed out into a city I had very low expectations for. I was completely surprised by how much I enjoyed Venice - it's hot, that's for sure, but it's absolutely beautiful! I loved it! We rode a water taxi to a large square on the opposite side of the island from the train station and then began winding our way through the narrow streets. Besides all the people walking around and the gondola men, striped shirts and all, singing, the city was so quiet. I realized it was because there are absolutely no cars - it's crazy how quiet it can be without cars. We had our first real Italian gelato of the adventure and were very pleased - Leah went with caramel and melone, I went with melone and cookies. We walked around markets all day - snapping photos left and right. With our 2.50 euro map, Leah navigated our way through the tiny roads back to the train station, where we caught a train to Florence. We're in Florence now and very happy with the hostel we're staying in. It's just a few blocks away from the Duomo. Can't wait to get out into the city tomorrow!

19 août 2009

This day can officially be dubbed a travel day - 13 hours of train rides. We had a 7 hour train ride from Prague to Munich, a 5 min. switching-of-trains in Munich, and then a 6 hour ride to Verona, Italy. The differences in the two trains were incredible - the German-Italian train is much more comfortable than the Czech train. We met a nice guy from London who chatted to us most of one leg and then we read, slept, listened to music, and did sudokus and crosswords the rest of the time. Leah and I might just be crossword pros when we return home :) I finished The Shack and loved it. I can't stop thinking about it. Leah is starting it now and I'm so ready for her to finish so we can talk about it. Grandmomma, I'm excited to talk to you about it! We got into Verona and cabbed it to the hotel - the nicest place we've stayed so far!

18 août 2009

Prague is incredible! The Czech Inn Hostel where we are staying is awesome - I highly recommend it. Prague is the first Eastern European city I have ever seen so I had no idea what to expect. I was a little unsettled for the first time since I jumped the pond when we first got to Prague. The taxi situation is a little sketch, but it ended up working out fine - just got a little ripped off on prices but it was a safe ride so that's alright. I think Leah and I broke our record of the longest time standing up - we walked all over the place with no breaks. The markets were really cool - I grabbed some souvenirs, along with the other thousands of tourists. The city was super crowded with tourists. I saw a lot of fanny packs to say the least. Charles Bridge, the Castle, National Museum were all really neat to see. We ate dinner on the roof top terrace of the U Prince Hotel on the Old Town square - unbelievable! We had a great meal with an amazing show of the sun setting over the Vltava River and Old Town of Prague.

17 août 2009

James got on a train for the airport about 8:15 this morning - Leah and I would have been happy if he could have just kept traveling with us. We checked out of the hotel and brought our luggage to some good friends living in Munich. They are so nice to let us store our luggage in Munich for the next few weeks - we're free to jump on and off trains as we each only have one bag now to worry about. We headed to the Swiss consulate to discuss my student visa - I couldn't have asked for better news. I was issued my visa and don't have to worry about it anymore! We got on a late afternoon train to Prague, where we're going to spend the next few days.

16 août 2009

Dachau concentration camp

15 août 2009

We went to Salzburg for the day today! Getting there was more difficult than it should have been - one part of the track was being worked on so we had to ride a bus for part of the way. I loved seeing Salzburg again - it's such a great day trip. Leah and I rode to the top of Mount Untersburg on a cable car with an amazing view of the Austrian Alps from the top. James chose an art museum and a cold beer over the cable car. We walked all over the place - my favorite was the walk, or hike, from the Salzburg modern art museum to the Salzburg fortress. The view was so great - looking out over the valley and the city below - by far my favorite spot last summer. We sat for a while at the beergarden of the fortress and then made our way back to the train station.

14 août 2009

Munich (amazing weather) - so glad to be back!

Marienplatz, Hofgarten, Odeonsplatz

13 août 2009

We flew to Munich today from Gatwick. Leah gets credit for our first celebrity spotting - Tilda Swinton was behind us in the check-in line! We flew Aer Lingus and thought we were allowed 24 kg per piece of luggage - ends up we were only allowed 25 kg per person. The extra lbs. cost us some hundreds of pounds that we weren't expecting to spend. But, after the intial shock, we quickly made it part of the adventure. We got to the hotel in Munich around midnight and met up with James. He's been studying in Innsbruck, Austria this summer, but is spending the weekend in Munich with us before flying home.

12 août 2009

We've been giving ourselves one very nice luxury these past few days: sleep :-) We slept until 11 and then headed to Westminster and the Houses of Parliament. We easily spent 4 hours in Westminster. It was like nothing I'd ever seen. My favorite room in the Abbey was the Lady Chapel - it's awesome. Its high ceilings and stain glass windows are beautiful. It has two rows of wooden seats on each side of the chapel where Knights of the Order of the Bath sat and still sit to this day when others are being granted knighthood. There was a very nice robed man in the Chapel that spent a good deal of time answering all of mine and Leah's questions - we learned a lot. I loved seeing Poet's Corner. We saw the graves and memorials for practically everyone we studied in Dr. Quinn's Eng 226 - Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Lord Byron, Shakespeare, and my favorite, Tennyson. We walked to the London Eye, but decided against the long queue. Next, it was to the Tate Modern, thinking I would prefer the impressionism of the National Gallery. I surprised myself and really enjoyed the modern art. Leah and I walked out into a huge thunderstorn, got soaked, passed Shakespeare's Globe Theater, and then headed to Covent Garden for dinner and the rest of the night.

I'm such an amazing time already - I can't wait for the next few weeks. Everything seems just right, just how it should be - I don't think I should be anywhere but right here, right now. It's hard to believe that just a few weeks ago I was in Mentone, AL at Desoto. I can't imagine spending the month before this adventure in a more special place than Desoto. There is nothing that some Phil and Marsha Hurt, little girls, and the mountains can't prepare you for.

11 août 2009

Leah and I hit the ground running today - Trafalgar Square, the National Gallery, a walk down the Mall, Buckingham Palace, Hyde Park to see the infamous Peter Pan statue (Winning London :-), Princess Diana Memorial.. We walked to Notting Hill for the night and loved seeing that part of town. We ate at a gastropub where they served strawberry beer - I'm a big fan now.

10 août 2009

I'm off! I left Columbia around 3 this afternoon. I was in Atlanta by 4:30 with six hours to kill. I couldn't believe I was about to leave - it definitely hadn't hit me yet. Leah got into Atlanta around 9:30 - it was so good to see her! We planned most of our trip Mentone to New Orleans this summer over email and the occasional night-off conversations. We landed in London around noon UK time. It took us 3, almost 4, hours to get to Lou Lou's flat in Kentishtown. I'm not sure if I would do those few hours over again - four 50 lb. rolly suitcases, 2 backpacks, and 2 pillows between the 2 of us - up and down flights of stairs in the tube stations. The Oyster (Lou Lou :-) got us there just fine though. We skyped home to report our safe arrival and then set off into the city. London is just as amazing as I remembered! I'm so excited to be back.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Better late than never! I will post soon about our first week - it's been amazing. We're headed to Prague in a few hours and I can't wait.