Sunday, May 16, 2010

A constellation of cows... and long overdue.

Written yesterday on an old slouchy leather couch in a house perched atop a hill in the middle of a forest…

This morning, after my jog through the French countryside, seeing more cows than people, I was nestled on the balcony of my residence for the long weekend (a house in the forest belonging to kind French souls) and I had one of those experiences that speak to the core of how awesome life truly is. While attempting to allow the rare rays of Normandy sunshine to saturate my skin (come on Vitamin D production) I was inspired to move my yoga mat onto the balcony and finish up my workout staring out over the fertile valley below, speckled with cows like the constellations on a clear night sky. There I was, trying to learn the lessons of yoga with a bit of the Cranberries for background music when the nearby village’s Church bells began to ring out. Sometimes life is yoga on a sun-filled balcony and sometimes music becomes even better when the surroundings chip in a note or two.

Today is day four in the forest. As vacation, holidays and long weekends are essential to the calendar of French teachers, I found myself faced with a five-day weekend and a craving for a change of scenery (as fun as looking out my window at a high school courtyard can be…). Limited by the financial realities of having traveled my way around Europe during the last seven months and the need to keep hitting the books, the offer of a secluded house in the woods and a willing German roommate arranged my agenda for the long weekend.

I have made it around my 4 mile running route each day; I have (finally) finished up the Collected Novels of Jane Austen as well as Eat, Pray, Love; my study books are not suffering from neglect (in fact, we have grown quite attached over the past few days); my cursed acne (who gets so much acne at age 22 after a nearly blemish fee adolescence?) has almost all cleared up; I have been up by 7am every morning without an alarm; I have done yoga every day; Germany indulged my lack of a workout buddy and finally gave in to doing some of my favorite exercises with me; my body is pleased with my meals AND we found a few VHS tapes of old Friends episodes. A few more days in the forest would be more than welcome, but the well-planned groceries will soon run low and like all great study-fitness vacations, it wouldn’t be so great if it could carry on forever.

The time has come for you my dedicated readers to be caught up with what the heck has been keeping me so busy the last few months or so…

Sometimes, long distance isn’t so bad after all.

While emails, phone calls, care packages, and skype may at times feel like a wobbly foundation for something as important as a committed relationship, nothing beats the moments of reunion and the reaffirmation that “it” (the not so happy parts of long-distance) has all been worth it. Back in March I had the TREMENDOUS good fortune to remove the words “long” and “distance” from prefacing my relationship for 11 incredible days.

Friday March 26th



After taking the RER B into Paris, we made our way to our hotel, snacked on sandwiches and PEANUT BUTTER. As is tradition when K comes to France, we were off to explore, not giving into the fatigue of travel and jetlag (when he visited me during my internship for Oxfam in the summer of 2007, we immediately ventured off to see the Louvre… I hope he remembers it!). We enjoyed meandering about Montmartre, walked all the stairs, took in the view, entered Sacre Coeur and gazed out at the glory of the Eiffel Tower lit up at night. Dinner in a cozy Italian restaurant near Notre Dame followed with a conclusion of walking the streets of Paris at night hand in hand.

Saturday March 27th



A sun-filled Saturday greeted us, drying up the early morning rain. Baguettes, coffee, metro rides, gardens, chats on park benches, walking most the length of the Seine, Notre Dame, and the Catacombs. Snacking, laughing, taking photos, being in love and being in Paris. We ended the evening with a train ride out to Alençon, dessert with the roomies and a few rounds of Jungle Speed.

Sunday March 28th



Baked goods for breakfast, lazy lounging and extra coffee followed by a Tour d’Alençon with China and Germany in tow. Imagine my surprise to find that the local museum (which I had actually never been in before even though it is attached to my beloved library) was actually OPEN and incredible. France wouldn’t be France without extra baked goods for the walk home where we prepared for a Raclette party complete with extra cheese & wine, all my favorite foreigners, Chinese Cauliflower, Jungle Speed and the British edition of Cranium.

Monday March 29th



After picking up our new wheels (and thanking our lucky stars for the wonderful friends who gave K a stick-shift crash course before he flew across the big pond) we made our way to Carrefour for road-trip supplies. The return journey and its mid-hill stoplight is a bit daunting to me and my bicycle following a session at the pool or with a backpack loaded down by groceries but even more scary when met by un-experienced stick-shift drivers. It is best to face the worst in the first twenty minutes of a new experience, right?

Geared with sandwiches and the confidence boost of a bit of internet research regarding being stopped on a hill in a stick-shift, we were off. We made our way to Falaise where we explored the Castle-Fort in brilliant sunshine. We then drove into dreary rain and visited the Canadian Military Cemetery where my grandmother’s uncle is buried, leaving behind red and white flowers and taking with us a good lesson on mortality as he died young enough to have been one of our friends.



Next stop was Bayeux, one of my favorite French towns, where we checked into our hotel, went for an evening stroll and enjoyed a nice dinner in a cozy restaurant finishing the evening off with a bit of wine, dessert and the film Where the Wild Things Are (which has greatly influenced my life philosophy as of late).

Tuesday March 30th

Baguette breakfast in the car and a wild drive to the radar museum (comes with dating a scientist) – only the museum is only open in the peak season of summer!?! Next we made our way along the Normand coast, seeing Sword Beach, Juno Beach (where my great-great-uncle disembarked and a VIOLENT downpour of rained soaked us to the bones), then a stop at Gold Beach followed a heavily fortified German lookout point on the coast and the realization that our physical state of being soaked and cold was becoming oppressing, so we returned for warm showers, dry clothing and the Bayeux Tapestry (which is truly remarkable!). We made our way through the enchanting shops of downtown and enjoyed dinner at a Creperie.



Wednesday March 31st

Geared with our to-go mugs full, we headed to Omaha Beach where the sunshine greeted us, the museum informed us, the quantity of graves depressed us and the shrubbery’s resemblance to North America amused us (imported?). We then made our way to the German outlook of the Pointe du Hoc and experienced one of Normandy’s QUICK weather turns followed by a decision to skip Utah Beach and race the rain south towards Mont Saint Michel – laughing, chatting and having the blissful peace of being in the car ensemble. The sunshine graced us with its presence and we enjoyed the winding roads, marveled at the stunning architecture, and reflected on the layered history (monastery/castle/fortress/prison/tourist attraction…).



Following a stop at a cookie factory, we carried on towards Saint Mâlo (with K taking a chance and following “Saint Mâlo par côte” resulting in glorious coastal towns and spontaneous stops for photo shoots). Saint Mâlo was suggested to us by a friend’s father and from the first experience of driving on semi-pedestrian roads and up ramparts (all in a stick shift mind you) I was enchanted. I may have felt differently had I been the one behind the wheel for the crazy ride (the gps even thought we were in the ocean) but from the passenger’s seat (a spot I never wanted to trade up from in the rental car), it was sheer bliss! We had a hotel room with the MOST amazing view of the sea and an island fort and with the sunshine streaming through our open window, life felt remarkably like a fairytale.



We did have the humorous experience of placing some cheese and mustard (wrapped in a shower cap) out our window to keep cool and having a seagull attack the shower cap (fairytale… romantic comedy… this wonderful thing called life). We made our way about the ramparts and decided on a Creperie perched up on a rampart overlooking the sea, a few islands, and the sunset. It was honestly one of the best dates of our 3+ years of courtship. Great view, delicious food, amazing desserts, ample beer and a wonderful walk back to the hotel along the ramparts hearing the waves crash and watching them extend as if they had arms to try and touch us with their salty freshness.

Thursday April 1st

I was not ready to loosen my grip on the glorious fairytale so we took the morning as it came. We enjoyed bakery fresh quiches on a quiet park bench accompanied by to-go mugs of steaming instant coffee before making our way ALL the way around the ramparts, marveling in glorious conversation and the simple bliss of a quiet moment hand in hand gazing out on the horizon. We made our way through spice shops- marveling in the aromas, souvenir shops- taking in the naval décor and all sorts of quaint little places. Eventually, midnight struck and Cinderella was left with a pumpkin and no prince charming, fortunately I still had a prince charming and a rental car, but also very little desire to leave Saint Mâlo behind.

Car tunes, the gps inspired scenic route and a quick stop at the grocery store found us back in Alençon where we prettied ourselves up for a fancy French dinner with some of my favorite foreigners at L’Escargot Doré (The Golden Snail- who would want their snails any other way?). All that needs to be said is that the cheese portion of the meal involved an entire cart of cheese options… mmmm cheese.



Friday April 2nd

Leonardo DaVinci spent the last years of his life in France… and so we were off! A beautiful drive through the Loire Valley found us in Amboise where we ate baguette-pizzas at the base of a castle hosting a wine festival before making our way to DaVinci’s old residence where we explored his old living quarters, saw the room he passed away in, explored the gardens with replicas of his inventions and hid from a bit of a hail storm in the model of his invention for a tank. We spent the evening cooking up the noodles I brought back from Italy and making pesto garlic bread while dancing our ways around each other in the kitchen.

Saturday April 3rd

The final day of our car rental was paired with a trip to see loads of other cars – the Le Mans Car Museum, but first we ventured into Alençon where I showcased the local market and one of my favorite stores – Le Couleur Orange (the color orange – which is fitting as orange is K’s favorite color) as well as the two chocolate stores in town (which always have the most amazing window displays!). Then we were off to the races – seriously, there was a race simulator. Old cars, all sorts of car info and the likes followed by a drive back to Alençon where we returned the rental car, picked up loads of baked goods and then spent the evening in with dinner, drinks, Jungle Speed with the roomies and then finishing Where The Wild Things Are – sometimes I like to draw out watching really good movies… drives K crazy, but he humors me.

Sunday April 4th

Happy Easter! Easter is one of my favorite family get togethers – food, chocolate, family and not the insane quantities required for Thanksgiving nor the added pressure of presents like at Christmas. This was the first Easter K & I were spending just the two of us and I wanted it to be superb. We took a bit of a bike ride, lounged about, made lasagna, ate, drank and were merry. His departure dangled in the air imposing itself like a giant elephant in the room, but there was room enough for the three of us.

Monday April 5th

Trains, planes and sad good-byes. I am not used to being the one left behind…

Naturally… the depths of solitude were a shock to the system, but before long I was off exploring Spain and Portugal… another blog entry soon to come!

Friday, April 9, 2010

Final solo-euro travels... commence!

It is 5:11 am.

Sandwiches packed. Everything else packed. Fingers crossed that the train strike does not mess too much with my vacation plans. BARCELONA or bust!

These past two weeks have been a whirlwind - an EPIC reunion with my person (detailed blog post will happen... I promise), recovering from the loneliness at the end of the day once he had boarded his return flight (Oh please don't go! I'll eat you up, I love you so!) and taking a group of first graders on a treasure hunt at the local library (plus all those other hours of work!).

NOW, to the train station I go.... and hopefully then off to Barcelona, Valencia, Granada, Sevilla, Lisbon, Madrid and San Sebastien!

WATCH OUT WORLD. Here I come, and I am in search of beaches, mountains and my final solo-euro ventures (aka my last vacation).

ALSO - photos are updated! Take a look!

Have a great two weeks!

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Borrowed bicycles, birthday cake, baguettes, and my boyfriend!

I have not been the best blogger as of late. I am not sure if it is the result of my life in France falling into a rhythmic pattern of teaching, swimming, hanging out with my foreign friends, and studying that the greatness of the experience simply slips into a matter of daily existence.

Let’s see. Life since the February adventures of Germany and America in Italy and Greece… well there was a good week or two of travel-recovery, a weekend or so of intense homesickness, some GREAT classes, some not-so-great classes, AND teaching the colors to preschoolers. I am not sure what it is about having started teaching the really young students, but it just seems to go so wonderfully. I was INCREDIBLY nervous, but the smiling faces and simplicity of it all (we are going into week 3 of learning the colors in English) really makes those two classes a pleasure. Smaller class size, younger students, no need to bother with written assignments (they can’t write after all) and teachers that are really and truly engaged with my presence in the class as well as with me as a person. One of the preschool teachers saw me at the pool and we had good chats about how neither of us can seem to get the backstroke quite right, and how (after two weeks of feeling like a drowning rat) I can now alternate breathing on my right and my left for freestyle. Tomorrow, I am headed to the circus for the afternoon with the preschoolers because their teacher remembered that I do not work on Thursday afternoons and invited me to join (I found it quite thoughtful!). However, to return to the initial list of Bs that inspired this Wednesday evening post…

BORROWED BICYCLES

The used man’s mountain bike has proven itself to not be one of my best purchases. Coming it at 70 euros, plus a 26 euros expense to replace the pedal apparatus because the pedal kept falling off. AND then, this past Saturday, I was at the library for some LSAT review when the time came to meet Germany in front for our weekly endeavor to the farmer’s market for eggs. Off we went… and then just off she went. My bike became really hard to pedal and started making an awful noise and swerving loads. Back when I was young and irresponsible, such an experience in my 1993 Geo Prism would have inspired me to turn the radio up… no such luck. I see Germany headed off in the distance and there I am, stuck with a broken bike. She eventually comes back with a look of utter confusion and we sadly pronounce my bike unsafe. We return chez nous on foot, accompanied by our bicycles, a dozen eggs, 4 kilos of apples and 2 bottles of cider (with our tummies happily satisfied by a shared pain au chocolat).

The good news is, in life, things sometimes work themselves out with too much hassle or worry. Monday was spent using Germany’s bike (what a smooth ride) and the night came to a close with a borrowed bike for as long as I need (cookies of appreciation have been made and delivered). One of the students from my Monday night class always gives me a ride, and we were chatting along the way about our weekends and I explained the tragedy of my bicycle and she informed me there were bikes going unused in her garage and after class we should go and investigate if any of them are fit for use. Some maneuvering around in a packed shed, giving her husband a bit of excitement for the evening, and uncovering a beautiful, barely ridden bicycle that they had won in a raffle, things were looking up in a wonderful way.

BIRTHDAY CAKE

Everyone deserves a special birthday celebration, and for our dear Chinese roomie, nothing is too good. Present purchased, and surprise party planned, she and I headed off to my Tuesday night English class (which she and Germany have taken to attending). Along the way, China asks where Germany is, and I pronounce her sick, horrible headache. China says she was fine a couple of hours ago, so I indulge – migraine, she may be vomiting… China looks worried, maybe I took it a bit too far. After English class, complete with cookies of course, we head home and have chats about what to eat that evening. I am a pretty terrible liar, but in a situation like this, with a surprise party on the line, I see it not as lying, rather as acting, and I do have a flair for the dramatics. I suggest the Won-Tons in our freezer and China promises Cantonese Rice, and so we chat till we arrive chez nous with a GRAND SURPRISE PARTY complete with a cake I had painstakingly decorated with a dark chocolate & honey frosting followed by white chocolate and hazelnuts and finally the words “La Chine” spelled out in M&Ms with a pink heart. Goat cheese on toast, salad, pizza, cake, cookies and good times made the night a smashing success.

BAGUETTES

I seem to have come down with a cold (pre-schoolers to blame no doubt). My throat feels as though someone has scratched it with sandpaper and the coughing and sneezing is getting old. I tried the tactic of a hot shower first thing to energize and motivate (it worked yesterday!)… but the illness won, today there would be no swimming, no adventures… just feeling sick and reading in bed. With one of the most important weeks of my time in France just around the corner, this is no time to feel ill! A true friend is someone who will bike to the bakery and buy a warm baguette for a sick friend. And what a delicious baguette it was indeed! I have recently taken to trying to cut back on the baked goods, but a sick day is a bread day and the warm bread, made into delicious sandwiches, hit the spot like magic!

BOYFRIEND

In less than 48 hours I will have the incredible pleasure of being reunited with my person in life! Paris, Normandy, rental cars, laughter, adventure, fancy dinner out with friends, board games, baguettes… everything about my life here promises to feel more real because I will be able to share it with my person. Cold or no cold, I feel like the luckiest person on earth.

OH AND BLESSINGS. Today I received a wonderful care package, complete with yarn and patterns for knitting socks, which lifted my spirits and made me smile to think about all the goodness and generosity in the world. These will be some pretty amazing socks, of that I am sure! (project to be started post-boyfriend visit... to keep me busy and happy!)

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Happiness is…

…a grandmother-esque travel agent providing a written description in Greek of an immersion boiler to a tourist in search of a cheap way to make coffee on overnight ferries.

…paying 1 euro and 20 centimes for a pita sandwich with extra tzatsiki and eating it in view of the Acropolis lit up at night (and having garlic breath the next day no matter how many times the teeth are brushed).

…two bottles of red wine, good company and the Trevi Fountain on Valentine’s Day.

… laughing at just how much the tower in Pisa is indeed leaning.

…boats, trains, buses and the hope of ending up in the right place on time for the next leg of the journey.

…spending the night on the floor of a quiet room that does not smell like cigarette smoke.

...returning from vacation to care packages, valentine's cards and love letters.

…adventure, friendship, learning, living, exploring and eating an entire bag of microwave popcorn while reflecting on the past two weeks.

Friday, February 12th

Day 1.




Snacks packed (two bags worth), to-go mug full of coffee and we were off. The first few trains were uneventful until about hour 8 of the journey when Germany stares from the food bag she has been carrying, to me and then back to the bag asking me if “Vagina” means what she thinks it means. I assure her that yes, yes it does. Somehow, by luck of the draw, she ended up being the pack-mule for my Vagina Monologues sack full of our snacks while I was carrying the non-descript red and orange striped food bag. Side-aching laughter ensued (and she become so found of the bag throughout the duration of the trip she insisted on carrying it).



9:26 pm – deeply engrossed in finishing The Time Traveler’s Wife I am drawn from my reverie to see a man in orange yelling in Italian at Germany who looks like a confused hot air balloon about to take off. I finally make out the word “Genova” and I figure he is trying to find out if this is the train going to Genova so I continuously repeat “Genova, yes, yes, Genova” till my laughter preventing any intelligible words from escaping my lips.

We spent the evening in a freezing overnight train from Genova to Rome with positively disgusting toilets… but WE WERE IN ITALY!



Saturday, February 13th

Day 2.

Around 6 am, we arrived in Rome. Physically worn out, but WIDE AWAKE after 2 euros well spent on two café americanos (a shot of espresso with hot water poured in). We made our way to our hostel – conveniently located a five minute walk away from the train station. What a glorious, glorious feeling it was for the front desk worker to allow us to not only leave our bags for the day even though check in is not until 3 pm, but also to enjoy showers AND free breakfast before heading out into the eternal city (maybe we smelled and looked hungry, maybe he was just very kind – either way, success).

The first thing we did, like the true tourists we were, was head straight to the Coliseum. It was amazing to be walking along and then – “ah, off in the distance, the Coliseum…”



We spent our time meandering about inside trying to block out the other tourists and tap into the energy and history of the place – imagining (to the best of our creative powers) what it must have been like.

We ventured around ancient Rome a bit, enjoyed another round of café americanos and headed to the Campo dei Fiori for one of my favorite European experiences – the market! The colors, sounds, and smells were all remarkable and bursting with life – the spice stands tempted my coin purse and Germany walked away with some authentic noodles.



Making our way through Roman streets – eyes peeled wide trying to take it all in – we headed to the Piazza Navona, showered in confetti from the Carnival celebrations and packed with art dealers, a theatrical performance, and musicians scattered throughout, we indulged in our first Italian pizza by the slice and soaked up the sunshine and our merry surroundings.

Following the Piazza Navona, the Spanish Steps were our goal and en route we visited the Pantheon and the Trevi Fountain.



Upon reaching the Spanish Steps we found our legs a bit tired but our ambitious minds were set on scaling the steps and taking in the view.

We headed back to the hostel where we checked in and agreed on a bit of an afternoon nap, followed by window shopping, visiting a nearby church, venturing to the supermarket and enjoying some Sangiovese, pizza and loads of laughter with a gal from Canada we met at our hostel.

Sunday, February 14th

Day 3.

Happy Valentine’s Day! Breakfast, showers and off we were to Republic Square, followed by a visit to the Teatro dell’Opera, loads of window shopping and entering into gourmet food stores, then we found ourselves in a random park with an enormous statue followed by the Quirinal Palace, where we knew nothing about the place, but had choices – to stand in line and visit it, or not to stand in line. Oh a whim, we lined up and it was a well-made decision! Before entering the palace there is some pretty tight security – metal detectors and x-ray machines with big signs showing swiss-army knifes as a no-no… as luck would have it, Maren was carrying her swiss-army knife in her purse… we again had two choices, back out of line… or cross our fingers. Fingers crossed and we were through! We visited the Italian equivalent of the White House and it was amazing – from the art and sculptures to the massive clocks (all made in Paris!) or the oriental art, what sights we saw!

We then wound our way back to the Piazza Navona to take in the music, art and inspirational surroundings a bit more, followed by a walk towards the Castel Sant’Angelo, enjoying calzones along the way (cheese, olives, artichoke, asperagus and garlic in a wonderful doughy crust!). The Castel Sant’Angelo had amazing views of the city, and we even saw a bridal party crossing the bridge below!

Upon exiting the castle we walked along the river and saw the Palazzo di Glustizia, the Mausoleo Augusto and made our way up the major shopping street (like the Rue de Rivoli in Paris) to the Piazza del Popolo where we climbed up Montmartre-esque steps (and were sprayed by Carnival lovers with silly string). After soaking up the view, we made our way to the metro and what do you know – down the escalator we went, and I was playing with my ticket along the side of the escalator when it stuck in the rut between two metal pieces and down we went, while up it seemed to go and I grabbed it back just in time (imagine explaining that to the metro police if they caught me without a ticket!).

We returned to the hostel for afternoon snack, instant coffee and relaxation before heading out to see Rome at night!

Valentine’s evening was a girls night out with our new Canadian friend, we started at the Coliseum to see it all lit up, then made our way through the eternal city to the Trevi Fountain where we drank wine out of plastic cups, enjoyed pizza and gelato and witnessed two proposals! We ended the evening merrily (even though I missed my love something fierce)!

Monday, February 15th

Day 4.

Monday was Vatican day, an entire day reserved for exploring the depths of the Vatican Museums and St. Peter’s Basilica. The initial line was intense, but the student discount made us happy campers as we soaked up the lavish and overwhelming works of art surrounding us on all sides! Raphael, Michelangelo – and no I do not mean the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! The Sistine Chapel knocked the wind out of me. Germany was overwhelmed by the massive crowds and rude tourists sneaking photos, and I was overwhelmed by the passion, dedication and legacy staring down at me from above.

We wrote postcards and used the Vatican post before heading to St. Peter’s – where security seemed to be paying attention to the monitors and we were quite glad Germany’s swiss army knife had sat this one out. It was remarkable, the most massive church I have ever seen. I could not believe it.

I am better at describing meals and crowds than sights, but words fail me in detailing the overwhelming presence and energy of St. Peter’s.

We picked up some provisions from the supermarket and had the not-so-pleasant (but hilarious) experience of realizing I had locked the key for our lock in our locker at the hostel. A saw, lock-cutter, and Taiwanese guy insisting he help because he is a man later (grrrrrr)…



Tuesday, February 16th

Day 5.

Off to Bari we go (to catch our ferry to Greece!). An uneventful train ride, followed by losing each other as we separated to search for information about getting from the Bari train station to the port later, we were aboard the number 20-slash bus and soon encountered 4 ticket controllers who scared poor Germany even though our tickets were perfectly valid (apparently, someone has a history with the German ticket controllers). Upon finding the port we checked in for our ferry and searched for food, resulting in the most amazing pasta meal of my life, fresh noodles in a delicious pesto sauce with a fishbowl of red wine. We walked around for a bit, enjoyed some coffee and were taught in a rather wicked downpour as we wandered around the port figuring out exactly where one gets on the boat.



We were the first two people in the Air-Seat section of the boat and settled in for our journey. The best moment of the ferry journey was being awake around 5 am, splurging for coffee, and taking in the spectacular views from the deck in perfect solitude.

Wednesday, February 17th

Day 6.

Our SuperFast Ferry was late getting in Patras – hungry and dirty, we found the train station, reserved our tickets to Athens (or so we thought) and ventured out for pita sandwiches and French fries with aioli. I adore Grece, but one thing I am not sure I will ever get over was the lack of synchronization for the train station clocks. I do not mean a matter of ten minutes difference; I mean that none of the clocks in the station were even on the right hour. With the time difference between Italy and Greece, some serious fatigue issues and general confusion about what time it was, we were in a state of sheer confusion. A few deep breaths later, we were on our train where I dozed in and out of slumber with the warm sunshine pouring onto my face and either views of the sea, mountains, or lemon trees greeting my eyes whenever I pealed my eyelids back long enough to take in the sights. Ah, to sit back and relax until Athens, what a pleasant, pleasant thought.

Reality soon set in as Germany poked me awake and the conductor was yelling and making hand gestures that meant absolutely nothing to either of us. Conversing in French and trying to figure out what the heck was going on, the world sent us a helping hand in the form of an elderly Greek man who explained in broken – but understandable- French that we have to get off the train, get on a bus, then get another train to get to Athens. Dear lady at the train station who helped us reserve our tickets, a bit of warning would have been nice. Bustling off the train we were faced by two buses, stashing our bags below one of the two buses and piling on all we could think was “please let us get there, please les us get there…”



A bus ride, another train, and two metros later we found our hostel – a steal at 12 euros and 50 centimes a night for a private room with bunk beds, our own bathroom, and breakfast. After washing away layers of dirt from trains, buses, boats, buses, trains and metros, we ventured out to Monastiraki – right by our hostel, where we ate delicious pita sandwiches for 1 euro and 20 centimes and stared up at the Acropolis all lit up at night. It seemed to be welcoming us to Greece!

Thursday, February 18th

Day 7.

Waking up it seemed to take me forever to find the strength to climb out of bed – a bit of a cold or sinus infection from all the traveling I suspect. After a wonderful hostel breakfast, morale was back about where it should be we decided to spend the day figuring out the rest of our time in Greece. We reserved tickets to get back to Patras for our boat to Italy, we grocery shopped, we explored options for visiting islands or Delphi, I made a massive amount of trail mix in a gallon sized ziploc bag, and we eventually made our way to the tourism office and a travel agency where we booked a ferry to visit Aegina, a nearby island. Given limited funds, we decided to spend most of our time exploring Athens and not burst our budget by trying to do too much.

While at the travel agency, we were helped by the loveliest, grandmother-esque lady. Inspiration knocked me upside the head, and I inquired if she knew where we could find an immersion boiler (only I did not know the name even in English and so I did my best to explain that I wanted a coil that heats up one cup of water). The wonderful woman not only wrote me out a description in Greek so I could show it to shop keepers, she also drew a picture (like she knew I am artistically challenged!).



We explored, shopped, showed my little piece of paper to workers at a bagillion stores, ate pitas, soaked up the sights, bought proper tennis shoes for Germany whose feet were a bit sad and in need of comfort, purchased souvenirs and the ended the evening with strawberries from a fruit stand, pitas, Greek wine and the glory of hanging loads of handwash up around our room (promising clean clothes in the near future).

Friday, February 19th

Day 8.

Bright and early we rose, and off we went to the Acropolis. We wound our way through small side streets, taking in the Ancient Agora and the sights and sounds of Athens waking up. It was amazing. There were hardly any other tourists up at such an early hour, so we were able to meander, reflect, and take in some of the very things we had each studied in high school history. I had numerous flashbacks to 9th grade and was amazed by my surroundings.



After getting our fill of the sights, we headed to the Acropolis Museum where our reflections and experiences of the Acropolis were complimented by exhibits and facts. I liked having the time to ponder and reflect what could have been, soaking things up and then approaching the museum armed with my own notions and observations.

We had a bit of afternoon down-time and then headed out, exploring markets, searching for an immersion boiler, and wandering in and out of interesting looking shops. We found a strike in front of Syntagma Square, where we were to take a bus from the following day to get to the port city of Piraeus so we decided not to chance it and use the metro. We shared the most delicious piece of baklava, picked up dinner supplies from the supermarket and then ventured out for some ouzo – and a second round of baklava at the neatest café right by Monastiraki. It was an excellent girls’ night on the town, and ouzo tastes like alcoholic licorice.

Saturday, February 20th

Day 9.

Sandwiches packed, we were off to the metro to head to Piraeus. Ah, Greek public transit, where sometimes one is left with no choice but to blindly follow the masses as they exit the metro, wind through streets and markets, board a bus, travel to a different metro stop, and eventually end up in the right place (Piraeus, a port town not far from Athens).

I had left my little piece of paper about the immersion boiler at our hotel, but Piraeus seemed touristy, and we had a bit of time before our ferry and what do you know – we found an immersion boiler, only it was bath tube sized and 14 euros so not OUR immersion boiler, but it was reassuring to show Germany that we were after did exist. As the people in the shops kept telling us – “You have to search for it.”

The weather for our island day was dreary with a side of overcast, so our decision to not break the budget on a several-island tour seemed well justified. Amidst the cloud cover, we enjoyed our time exploring the ancient ruins on Aegina, winding our way around the island, seeing olive groves, lemon trees and cactus plants. We sat along the sea and read our books, enjoyed a proper meal at a restaurant and found baked goods from a local bakery to eat alongside the sea. With a bit of time left before our ferry, we did a bit of shopping and, on a whim, tried a couple of shops for our immersion boiler. Our final attempt was at a store with no name, run by a mother and daughter who had a SELECTION or TWO different immersion boilers. Euphoria. When we explained we had searched all over Athens, the mother took great pride in plugging it in and showing us how quickly it heated up. I shall never forget the feeling of hilarious relief when we found ourselves an immersion boiler.



Sunday, February 21st

Day 10.

Our final day in Athens was spent at the local flea market, Hadrian’s library, the Temple of Zeus Olympic, the National Gardens, and eating baklava and spanikopita while writing postcards or reading our books beneath the beloved Greek sunshine. We even wrote a postcard to the Alençon train station, thanking them for helping us make it all the way to Athens! We ended the evening with the daunting task of making everything fit in our bags, but challenges can be good – they make us stronger (and the weight of my backpack promised to strengthen my back muscles).

Monday, February 22nd

Day 11.

Showers, 2 metros, 2 trains, random snacks and one bus ride later and we were in Patras, ready for our ferry back to Greece. Now, on our first ferry, we did not know there would be showers available, thus we packed strategically, ready to shower the following morning and feel less gross after the whole experience. AH, alas, no two ferried are created equally. Tragically we did not even have Air Seats, rather we were destined to spend the evening in the lounge, which opened down to the bar which turned into a disco at night (including drunk soccer players chanting “Olé, olé, olé…”and buckets of cigarette smoke wafting its way up promising headaches and stinky clothes). My beloved Germany lasted till midnight, when she marched her way through the bar to the reception desk and demanded a cabin because she had “booked a ferry, not a disco!” We spent the rest of the evening asleep on the floor of the Air Seat room – which, for some reason, was not for passenger use but the kind SuperFast worker happily opened it for us following Germany’s rant at the reception desk.




Tuesday, February 23rd

Day 12.

We started our day with immersion boiler instant coffee in the seclusion and quiet of the Air Seat room where Germany explained her nighttime exploit to use the toilet – the fastest she had ever peed in her life because she had to leave a shoe in the door of the Air Seat room so as to not be locked out and was horrified that someone would come and attack me during my deep sleeps – ah, true friendship.

We happily saw the Italian coast, and off we were, to find the Ancona train station. A bus ride later, we reserved our tickets and what felt like half a day later we arrived in Florence. Ah, Florence, where our hostel had listed an address and directions that… did not match up. An hour later, we had seen all of Florence, walked nearly entirely around the Duomo (MASSIVE Cathedral) and found our way to our hostel, where we enjoyed a free dinner and ventured out to explore a bit before calling in an early night.

Wednesday, February 24th

Day 13.

Art. We started our day by seeing two exquisite masterpieces – Michelangelo’s David (who stole Germany’s heart) and Botticelli’s Birth of Venus. We began our day at the Galleria Academia, soaking up the sculptures and enjoying the heck out of the history of musical instruments exhibit, where we saw the oldest known pianoforte! We then ventured through the enchanting streets of Florence to the Uffizi Gallery, covered by staunch religious art, and them like a breath of fresh air, The Birth of Venus. We studied paintings by DaVinci and were once again taken aback by our surroundings. Minds full of beautiful paintings and fascinating sculptures, we ate salads for dinner (craving the fresh produce) and wound our way through market-lined streets to the train station – and off to PISA!

The leaning tower of Pisa sure is leaning!



Back to Florence for pasta dinner (when in Italy!) and a quite evening of dark chocolate, red wine, and loads of laughs!

Thursday, February 25th

Day 14.

UP and out in search of our favorite travel companion (other than Theodore!) adventure, which we found along the oldest bridge in Florence – lined with jewelry shops! We followed our good friend adventure throughout Florence, in food markets where we bought noodles, wine, & spices… through street markets where all sorts of items tempted us from every direction. Adventure showed us the love locks along the river – people had taken padlocks and closed them along the river throwing in the key – it made us think of the tragic fate of our poor padlock in Rome!

Before long, the time had come to say farewell to the enchantments of Florence and head to Venice. Finding our hostel was an adventure which ended in me standing in the middle of six intersecting streets shouting to Germany what we were looking for while she dodged around craning up and reading all the signs to no avail and a grandfather-esque Italian man walked passed, looked back, and then doubled back speaking rapid fire Italian and eventually leading us to our hostel. Germany was incredibly weary of following some random man in a dark overcoat, I had faith and voila – we found it! Sometimes faith is the best option when we have used up all the potential of our capacities.

Our hostel was the worst and most expensive of our travels… ah Venice! After dropping our bags, we headed out, bought two beers, and perched ourselves on a little dock along the Grand Canal where we watched all the boats (and the waterbuses) go by. It was the perfect Venetian moment.



We, naturally, got lost exploring the evening away, eating calzones for dinner and loving every minute of it.

Friday, February 26th

Day 15.

Our final day started out rather… well… wet. Downstairs we went to head out for Venetian exploration and STEP-PLOP-SPLASH-SCREAM into six inches of freezing standing water – the building was flooded. It was a wet, wet day. Toursit shops were selling these wild boot cover contraptions...



Meandering about on raised sidewalks the city was still incredibly magical. We wandered, took photos, explored, found San Marco, went inside, explored, shopped, ate delicious bakery treats, wandered, explored, and meandered. The best part was truly walking in every which direction. We returned to San Marco once the waters had receded a bit – it was a very different experience without the flood! We purchased some provisions at a grocery store, explored markets, shops, churches and the likes, eventually ending the day on our special dock with our special drinks



before we ate one last slice of Italian pizza and headed to the train station for our overnight train to Paris. Along the way we locked our friendship to a bridge over the Grand Canal and through away the key.

_

Sometimes friends become more like family than we could ever have predicted. Ours is the story of a German and an American who speak French and have one heck of an amazing connection.

The night train was to pass through Switzerland so the conductor took our passports, which felt a bit weird but he said it was in order to not have to wake us at the Swiss border because Switzerland is not part of the schengen zone. The weirdest part was the orange lock installed on our compartment (which we were sharing with 4 other people) door. The conductor told us to be sure and lock the compartment and one of the women in our compartment explained that there have been troubles with people boarding the train while it is stopped at the Swiss border and stealing things (comforting… yet I still passed out around 9:30pm). And what do you know, around 1 a.m. I am awoken by some serious commotion in the corridor and exclamations of “valises… billet… voler, pourquoi voler?” (luggage, ticket… steal, why steal?). Yes, yes I do think some thief was aboard the train. Germany soon thereafter ventured off to the toilet (love that girl) and the police were shocked to see her and told her to be sure and lock the compartment. AH adventure!

Saturday, February 27th

Day 16.

PARIS! Where we had a full three hours to wait at the train station for our next train. While I was off pricing out coffee (I was nervous about using the immersion boiler in the station), Germany made a friend while watching a broken toilet door for some lone traveler. Germany then proceeded to get her towel out of her bag and set herself up a little nest on the floor by our bags, complete with a crumbly sandwich from the “Vagina Activist” bag. When I returned to ask her is she had any small change for the coffee machine, she handed me 90 cents from the corner of her towel. Yes, yes the woman from the toilet had watched her set up camp and given her some money. Germany tried to refuse it, but apparently the woman was very insistent. Words fail me on this one.

And here we both are, one week later, still laughing, still friends, and showing off our immersion boiler to our (jealous) roommates!

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Hello adventure, fancy meeting you here.

It is nearly 11 pm – my bags are packed, my ipod music selection updated, a pair of jeans sacrificed for the collected novels of Jane Austen and a bowl of oatmeal to appease my antsy stomach.

This time tomorrow I will be in Italy. The country of gladiators, Nero, Cesar and the setting of Romeo and Juliet… it could only be made better when paired with Greece, a German roomie and a Eurail pass.

Adventure, my good friend, shall we?

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Simple pleasures, the Welsh girl who drove to France and 3 years ago today….

The past week or so has been filled with a refreshing combination of the simple pleasures in life.

This weekend I read an entire Nicholas Sparks novel in under 24 hours, had a girls’ night out with my German roomie (during which neither of us understood a word of the French dubbed Sherlock Holmes and indulged in take out pizza and a good red wine), had my best lap swim session to date and finalized some of my vacation plans (I know where I will be sleeping each night of the trip, so that’s an accomplishment).

As for this week, there has been ridiculous amounts of chocolate chip and chocolate chip with nut cookies – (baked for the family of my Monday night students they keep inviting me to stay for dinner… cookie time had come), excellent lessons, delicious food, laughter  (I love my foreigners in France), a great run, and our own Valentine’s celebration. I am a natural born organizer, so yes, we did have our very own Secret Santa meets Valentine’s Day a few days early gift exchange!

In other news, there is this moment when working out where every muscle feels like it is moving in unison, forward, toward something and everything else seems to cease to exist except for that moment and the forward motion. I have only ever gotten this feeling running, and much to my delighted surprise, I found it yesterday at the pool! I think it had been waiting for me to get my stroke in better shape, and voila, I would do FAST free style, followed by leisure breast stroke, then FAST free style, leisure breast stroke… it was amazing. My heart was pounding, my muscles burning and my spirit was positively delighted and refreshed. Two and a half weeks till my next pool session and I am already looking forward to it.

A fabulous pool story that cannot be left out – one day, Wales and I were chilling on the bench while the other American finished her post-swim beauty routine. Wales and I were chatting animatedly and sort of forgot we were in France and that animated chatting in English is not the norm… so these two young girls come out of the changing room and are walking in front of us then STOP, pause, turn and stare at us like we were aliens. Confusion ran wild, and once the girls were safely up the stairs we had a great outburst of laughter at the thought of Wales exclaiming “What?!?!” to the poor frightened little French girls, fortunately no what’s were said but the mental image is priceless.

Oh Wales. A nation with great leek related pride (yes, my roomie can incorporate leeks into most any dish). My particular Welshie is a lover of things. Her room is honestly bursting with some of the most useful (and useless) items a girl could ever ask for. Need a sleeping bag, she has at least three, blow up mattress, check… you get the idea. So we are sitting around eating lunch yesterday and I mention how bummed I am that I forgot my backpacking backpack at home because Germany will be wheel free while I struggle with a rolly-bag to keep pace through ancient Italian and Greek cities. AND what do you know, Wales proclaims she has a spare stored under her bed. Yes, a spare. Now I am equipped with the green “Karrimor” – and I love it. So the question must be asked, did she need to drive from Wales because she has so darn much stuff, or does she have so darn much stuff because she drove? What came first, the Welsh girl’s random positions or the trunk space?

On a slightly different tone- three years ago the 11th of February was a Sunday. On that particular Sunday I was wearing sweatpants (the grey ones with the hole in the butt… only pre-hole), writing a poem for my French Composition class and restricted to my room as I was the Resident Assistant “on duty.” The evening ended with Shrek inspired peanut butter M&M’s (so they were green and orange and HUGE), an AWEFUL movie (which I only suffered through because of the company) and a kiss goodnight that made all the difference in life. I hereby proclaim today the third year anniversary of sweatpants, Shrek peanut butter M&M’s and the type of first kiss to last a lifetime.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

A Tai Chi morning and a pretty darn magnificent weekend!

This morning, Wales, China and I met up in the kitchen, each adorned by our respective work out gear (China looks like a model for Adidas or some other classy line, Wales has on a fuzzy scarf and the trusty American is sporting baggy sweats and a hoodie – with the hood up). Then we trotted our-little-selves out into the middle of the high school courtyard in a drizzle of rain where China led us through some Tai Chi warm up exercises and started us off on a routine. We must have looked magnificent – the red-headed Welsh girl, China looking super classy with each move and me – doing my best to follow her movements without losing my balance. It was awesome.

FLASH back to last Friday. Lap swim with Wales and another American assistant, where I managed to alternate crawl-breast just about every other length. Then, geared with the money from our roomies and hungry bellies, we ordered some pizzas, hopped over to the supermarket to pick up salad ingredients and dessert supplies (sending 3 hungry anglophones to the supermarket post workout proved to be a dangerous endeavor!). Weighed down with our purchases, we picked up the pizzas and headed home where our other favorite foreigners were waiting for us for a night of over-eating, laughing, and WAY TOO MUCH dessert.



It was magnificent. During our glorious meal, it started snowing out… which made me feel a bit unsure of our morning plans to jet off to Mont Saint Michel…

When Saturday morning rolled around, the ground had a light dusting of snow, and we were off – MONT SAINT MICHEL, or bust. It was wild, we ended up driving through a little bit of a snowstorm for maybe 45 minutes or so, and then THERE WAS SUN- glorious blue skies and aggressive rays of suns, fighting off the chill from the cold winter air. It was splendid. We wound through ancient French towns (attracting quite a few stares as the driver is on the other side of Wales’ car). At one point, we were in need of a bathroom break, thus we ventured around a charming little town called Domfont where we found a toilet right by the Cathedral, on top of a big hill on which the city is built.

Armed with baguettes, cheese, jam, fruit and all sorts of random snacks (including left over pizza), we arrived at Mont Saint Michel and it was GLORIOUS. A picnic quickly ensued (although Wales and I had enjoyed elevensies during the drive) and we were off, exploring. As France is all about education, we had free entrance (as “educators”) to the old Abbey – which was AMAZING. Loads of stairs later, we wound our way through ancient architecture, rooms with more history than I can possibly imagine, all the while taking in incredible views overlooking the sea and soaking up as much vitamin D producing sunshine as possible.







Once we had our fill of this magical place, we were back in the car, winding our way through small towns in search of an open café – which proved quite difficult, and the café we ended up in had the French version of “Super-Nanny” playing on the TV – it was weird to be enjoying my warm beverage and hear children having temper tantrums in French in the background, AH France, at times, you amaze me. We had aspirations of finding a Creperie for dinner, but our efforts proved to be fruitless and we made our way back home. After a bakery stop, I was fairly certain the trunk had not been properly closed following the deposit of baked goods – it was like the wind was whistling in my ear. Although everyone scoffed at me as the crazy American, Wales pulled over, and sure enough, I was right! Victory is sweet. We returned home for a leek and mushroom omelet (sort of like a crepe, right?).

On Sunday, Wales and I were up and off to the pool. The weather was AMAZING. I could not help myself, I went for a run. I spent most of Sunday afternoon feeling completely exhausted.

In other news, our vacation plans are shaping up nicely! Germany and I have reserved our trains to and from Italy (yes, we reserved a bit late, so we must transfer 5 times and spend 22 hours getting to Rome – ADVENTURE here we come). We have a hostel in Rome, reservations for our ferry from Bari to Patras and then Patras to Ancona… and WIDE EYES. We will probably spend this weekend filling in the blanks on our travel plans – hostels in Greece and plans for Florence, Venice and the likes. It’s the story of an American and a German who speak French and are off to Italy and Greece.

As for the rest of today – LSAT prep, laundry, grocery shopping, lap swim, Taco and Chinese cauliflower dinner (that’s globalization for you) AND… DANCE CLASS. Yes, I started my day with Tai Chi and shall end it trying to be graceful and likely tripping over my banana boat feet. When in France with a bunch of adventurous friends, that’s how it goes!