Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Spain and Italy


Well, I have put off updating this for far too long. My trip to Spain and Italy was AMAZING. We went to Valencia and Barcelona in Spain, and Venice, Rome, and Palermo in Italy.
Valencia was first, and it was beautiful. The beaches were gorgeous, and the building of the old quarter where we stayed were really neat. We even got to climb up a castle that used to be the entrance to the city. Also the weather was wonderful while we were there: blue skies and 70 degrees. One day we went to the aquarium there and got to see a dolphin show; it was so cool!We also went out and had a traditional Valencia meal--paella. It was delicious. Probably the strangest thing about Valencia, and Spain/Italy in general, was how different their sense of time is. We went out for dinner at 8 or 9, and that was still early by their standards. We wandered around the plaza de la virgen at 1:30 am and the place was packed. Some of the clubs we saw advertised didn't even open till 2 or 3 am. Crazy.

After Valencia was Barcelona. I liked Barcelona compared to Valencia, mostly because Valencia was a very chill place, not a lot of tourists. But in Barcelona the atmosphere was totally different: very busy and lively (and touristy). We wandered Las Ramblas one day, which is the main touristy street in Barcelona. It's actually a sucession of five streets that are connected, and it's basically tons of shops, street performers, cafes, and markets. I also saw the Sagrada Familia, a famous church, as well as many Gaudi buildings. In Barcelona we met up with other people from the London Centre and walked along the beach at night before heading out for tapas and a flamenco show.


The least fun part of our journey was trying to get from Barcelona to Venice. It took us about 12 hours of ridiculous travel; we took the metro in Barcelona to the train station, which didn't take us the airport as we thought, but to some random bus depot which then took us to the airport, which flew us into "Venice", which was actually a bus ride away from Venice, the bus then took us to the outskirts of Venice where we had to jump on a boat to get to the island our hostel was on, which we then had to try to find in the dark. Yuck. The next day was very wet and gray, but it was amazing to see the city on water. We basically just wandered around, checking out the sights.



From Venice we went to Rome, which started out horribly due to a downpour and no umbrella and no idea where our hostel was. However, once we found our hostel things cleared up a bit and we went to the Vatican that day. The next day we got to see quite a lot by foot because a) it was somehow gorgeous out (it was supposed to rain, thank god it was sunny) and b) Rome is much smaller than I thought. We saw the Colosseum, the Pantheon, random ruins of ancient Rome, the Trevi fountain, the Spanish steps, and a bunch of other places I can't name from memory. We also had really good pizza and gelato while there. In fact, we got kicked off of the Spanish steps due to our messy gelato. Oops. Oh-another interesting thing in Rome was a huge march that weaved all through the city. 100,000 university students from all over Italy were in Rome to protest the new privitazation of the schools. At first we would just see lines of armed police blocking streets, and we didn't know why, but eventually we ran into (and kept running into) the marchers.



Our final stop was Palermo, Sicily. Getting there was also interesting; at first when we looked up trains from Rome to Palermo we were concerned because it's a 12 hour trip and we really didn't have that much time, but then we realized we could take an overnight train and the timing would be perfect. Yeah, good in theory but our train was uber sketchy and just weird in general. And we were woken up at 7 am, despite having another 5 hours of traveling. Once we got to Palermo, things were bad for a bit because we could not find our hostel. It was ridiculous and frustrating; the numbers on the buildings made no sense and there was no visible hostel. Eventually, we found the entrance to our hostel which was all torn apart and messed up. Then we took the six flights upstairs (even though apparently it's on the 3rd floor) and finally found our hostel. Depsite it being difficult to find, it was one of my favorite places. It was actually more like a B&B, and the owner made sure we had maps and recommended places to see and was all around the sweetest man ever. Sicily wouldn't have been nearly as good without his help. Anyway, the city of Palermo was neat; there were cool churches, another gorgeous beach, an interesting catacomb, etc. But my favorite part was taking a bus ride up to a village of Palermo in the mountains, overlooking the sea and the city. It was breathtaking. We also had dinner with another guy from our hostel one night, which was interesting because we had no idea what the menu said and literally picked things randomly and got a surprise meal. It was delicious though. And I got a canoli from this really fancy bakery while there, which was also delicious.






Overall the 10 day break was extremely hectic (5 cities in 10 days will do that), but it was SO worth it!

Friday, November 7, 2008

Obama!/Flogging Molly!/10 Day!

What have I done with myself in the past few days?!?
I don't even know; I've been busy with schoolwork and such mostly.
Tuesday night was election night, so I stayed up nearly all night watching and also studying for a Bio midterm. I, and pretty much everyone else here, was extremely jazzed with the results. YAY OBAMA!
Wednesday was the midterm and nap day and...
FLOGGING MOLLY!!
The concert was absolutely amazing!
The bands that came on before were really good too, except one was exceptionally loud and I was right near the giant speaker so I can't hear that well out of my right ear...
I'm sure I'll be fine. :P
It was so cool to see Flogging Molly in person and be right there; I was in the front row so I was literally like 10 feet away from the guitarist. They had so much energy and are such cool people in general. They even talked about the election and they dedicated one of the songs to Obama.
I took a ton of video and pictures, but my laptop isn't working so I'll have to upload them another day.
Today was spent mostly on writing a midterm for my British Life and Culture class as well as planning for the 10 day trip.
I won't be updating my blog until at least the 17th, so until then you will all have to wait for news about Spain and Italy!

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Shenanigans: Halloween and Pictionary

For Halloween Kat and I were going to go to this club SIN, but when we got there the queue was really long so we just decided to wander through Soho and find a fun club. We met this one girl who was dressed as a cat, I believe, and she told us about this club and took us there, but it ended up being an older crowd so we kept on wandering. Eventually we found a club that Kat had heard about before and we hung out there for the night. I danced until about 2 am when my body finally gave into exhaustion. On the way home we got a huge batch of hot chips with salt and vinegar on them and it was pretty much the tastiest thing ever.
Saturday I was going to go to Portobello Rd to get my eyebrow pierced (!), but the place was closed. Perhaps when I get back from my 10 day break. Speaking of, Sunday Kat and I planned our 10 day trip; we are going to Spain (Valencia, Barcelona?) and Italy (Rome, Venice?, SICILY!). I am ridiculously excited!
Sunday was also wonderful because the DeStasios, the biology professors here, invited a bunch of us over to their flat for dinner. Having a real meal was so awesome! And it was so delicious! And we played pictionary and just hung out; it was a nice night.
Today we took a trip to the Imperial War Museum for the British Life and Culture class; it was an interesting museum, mostly for the sake of it creating interesting discussions about the nature of war.
Later we all went to a play that was actually really good. It's called War Horse, and it's originally a children's book. It's about this boy and his horse whom he loves very much but is given to the soldiers for WWI. He ends up actually enlisting just to find his horse and be with him. The story itself was really cute, but what was impressive was that they had life size 'puppets' for the horses. There was this sort of horse frame with two people inside controlling the leg movements and one guy outside controlling the head. It sounds bizarre but it was really well done.
Check out this video if you want to actually see some clips of it: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=trIFlkJBFhw