Saturday, June 9, 2012

Ich liebe Deutschland


Temple in the British Museum
My friend Lindsey came to visit me the first week of May. Lindsey has been one of my best friends since high school so needless to say I was excited. Our first full day, I showed her around London. I’m still astonished at how much we managed to fit in—she got to see all the main sites, even if we couldn’t go into all of them: St. Paul’s, Tower Bridge, London Bridge, Big Ben, Buckingham Palace, Parliament, Westminster, Shakespeare’s Globe. We walked across Millennium Bridge and Lindsey fought her way through a gang of French schoolchildren to get some roasted nuts a man was selling on the street. Good times. One of the best parts was the British Museum, which I still hadn’t visited yet so we had a fun time getting lost in the monstrous complex and getting excited every time we saw a hunk of rock that looked vaguely like the Rosetta Stone.

The next day we fully intended a trip to Hever Castle but couldn’t manage to get ourselves up in time. We ended up sleeping in very late, which turned out to be an excellent idea as we had to pull an all-nighter for our 6:30 a.m. plane ride to Berlin the next morning. That day I showed Lindsey around Hatfield a bit, even taking her to the ever-exciting Asda and to get kebabs, one of my favorite fast foods here even though it’s not actually British, it’s Turkish. Even though it wasn’t very thrilling, we had a lot of fun just relaxing and catching up. That night we caught the 3 a.m. bus to the airport.

We were wrecked by the time we got to the airport and even more wrecked when we made it to Berlin. I have to say I was lucky to travel with Lindsey, because few people would have managed to stay in as good a mood as she did after staying up all night and running around so much. We hopped on the train from the airport to Berlin and figured out the S-Bahn that would take us closest to our hostel. Much like the scene when we went to Kansas City for our senior trip and drove to the wrong La Quinta, we had somehow printed directions for a hostel that had the same name as ours but wasn’t the right one. So we trooped back out into the growing heat with our backpacks and attempted to find the correct Berlin Mitte hostel.

At last we found it. Luckily we picked great hostels the whole trip. This one was clean and colorful with very nice staff who spoke perfect English. We changed, collapsed in a couple of armchairs in the lounge and chugged bottles of Coke like they were going out of style. We probably could have gone to sleep then, but there was a one o’clock free tour we wanted to catch meeting at the Brandenburg Tor. So we dragged ourselves up, took the U-Bahn (the subway), then another S-Bahn. Transportation in Germany is much less regulated than in London, where you have to slide a ticket through a machine to get anywhere. In Berlin you can pretty much walk on any train or subway you want. We never saw anyone checking tickets. Also, the subway doors slam shut violently (once almost on Lindsey) and I swear the whole thing goes dangerously fast. We decided somewhere along the way the Germans had a meeting about public transport in which someone definitely said the words,
Safety regulations...shmafety regulations.

Lindsey with the Brandenburg Gate
Anyway, trying to find the Gate was where things got tricky. We couldn’t find the train we needed to get to the Brandenburg Gate, so we got on one we thought was correct. I asked a lady who worked on the train if this was going toward the Brandenburg Gate, but she told us we were wrong. Even though she spoke very little English she was extremely helpful. She would say a few English words and then go into German. I took two years of German in high school and two in college, so I understood enough to get by and I even spoke a little (terrible) German back. We took the train back to the spot we’d originally been, then had to go downstairs in the train station to find the train we needed; it was in a really weird, hidden spot that you needed to take an elevator to reach. By this point it was 12:55 or so and we were thinking there was no way we would make the free tour, which would’ve been annoying because that was our only day in Berlin and we wanted an overview of it. Luckily we ended up right in the square with the Brandenburg Gate and found our tour group right away. There are a lot of pictures of us posing stupidly in front of the Gate in celebration of actually having made the tour after all the hassle.

Church in Berlin
The Berlin tour was amazing. It was a beautiful day and everything was so much greener than it was in England (it takes longer for spring to take hold in England since it’s farther north). Our guide was British and took us to the spot where Hitler’s underground bunker used to be (now it’s a parking lot), the Holocaust memorial, the Berlin Wall, Checkpoint Charlie, Humboldt University (where Einstein and the Grimm brothers went), and plenty of churches and opera houses. Berlin is a very artsy city and everything is new since most of the old buildings were destroyed in WWII, which is kind of a shame. For only having a day there and being completely sleep-deprived we saw the highlights (must…see…Berlin. Must…experience…culture). After the tour we found a restaurant our guide had recommended. None of the waiters spoke any English, which means the place was nice and authentic. Lindsey had currywurst and I had schnitzel, which was probably the best I had the whole trip. You’d think we’d crawl back to our hostel for sleep, but all the excitement energized us so we ended up walking all the way back to Brandenburg Gate, behind which a massive concert/festival was now taking place. No idea why but it was great to hear a German band sing various 80’s songs in English. The Tiergarten, a park, was right next to it, so we explored that for a while and found various statues and memorials. Then we returned to our hostel and still managed to stay up until 10 talking, so it was a good but very long day.

Church in Nuremberg
The next day it was time to take the train to Nuremberg. The train ride was four hours long but it was made up of gorgeous scenery—fields, hills, cute villages, meadows of bright yellow flowers, all of it growing steadily more mountainous the farther south we went. I didn’t know this about Nuremberg but it has a well-preserved old town since it wasn’t bombed in WWII. The architecture is really beautiful. We wandered through the city and found several churches, fountains, and markets. Just walking around was a cool experience. I kept getting excited to be able to read signs and understand snatches of conversation. Oddly enough Nuremberg was the city we got lost in most frequently, which was fun until we got very hungry and couldn’t find a good place to eat. At long last we found a sausage stand in one of the markets…delicious. They must have a big Italian population because gelato shops were everywhere in Nuremburg, so we bought some ice cream, sat in a quiet square, and had a deep discussion about growing up which was somewhat spoiled when I dribbled ice cream all over my pants like a kindergartener.

Nuremberg

Then we hiked up the hill to Nuremberg Castle. It was closed for touring but you can still walk around the courtyard and see the view of the whole city from there. They also have what I’m assuming used to be the moat filled in with gardens and tiny little houses where people actually live. That night we sat outside at a little restaurant and had sausages and pretzels. Naturally we got lost on the way back to our hostel and did some backtracking before finally finding our way. You win again, Nuremberg.

The Alps
We took the train to Munich the next day, but after dropping off our bags we set off for the famous castle, Neuschwanstein. It’s a major journey to get there…you have to take the train to Füssen, a town in the Alps, and from there a bus to a little town even farther in the mountains. From there you have to hike the forty minutes to Neuschwanstein or the twenty minutes to Hohenschwangau, the other castle in the mountains. Despite the hassle this was one of my favorite parts of the trip. The Alps were incredibly beautiful. We toured both castles. The best part is they give you live guides as opposed to audio guides. One castle was the childhood home of King Ludwig, the other, Neuschwanstein, was the one he bankrupted Bavaria to build. Hohenschwangau is this adorable yellow castle with scenes from German legends painted on every wall. Neuschwanstein is much larger and grander, even though the hike to it is tiring. Still, the views made it all worth it. We even took a horse-drawn carriage ride down the path from Hohenschwangau. It was very surreal.

Hohenschwangau
Horse-drawn carriage down the mountain
Neuschwanstein
Der Glockenspiel
Our last day we did a walking tour of Munich. Our guide was very strict and kept drilling us about Munich facts. I thought Munich was the most beautiful city we saw. Everything looks old and quaint and medieval but it was actually all destroyed in WWII; they just rebuilt it exactly the way it was, as opposed to Berlin where they rebuilt everything in a modern style. We saw the Glockenspiel, which chimes at noon and is one of the few things that actually is from the 1400s and doesn’t just look like it is. More markets, more biergartens. The Germans definitely like being outside better than the English do, but that’s probably because their weather is a bit nicer…at least it was while I was there. We toured the Hofbrauhaus, the famous beer hall which is crowded with locals and tourists alike. And we saw a ton of people dressed in lederhosen. We thought it was a tourist-attraction thing, but apparently it is very important culturally to Bavarians so they still wear lederhosen often.

Surfing in the Isar River
After the tour we toured Der Residenz, the palace of the royal family of Bavaria. Also largely destroyed in WWII, but Hitler loved old buildings and was so set on preserving Der Residenz he had people photograph every room so they could recreate it exactly as it was, which is what they did. Then Lindsey and I found the English Gardens, an enormous park in Munich and probably the prettiest park we saw in Germany. It’s more like a forest than a park, with the Isar River flowing through it. They also have a nude section; we tried to avoid it but still got a few unappetizing glimpses. The other interesting feature of the English Gardens is the surfers—there is a place in the river that forms a wave, which people in wet suits take turns surfing. That night we dressed up and went to the Hofbrauhaus for dinner. For a famous place it was disappointing. What I got tasted exactly like a microwaved hot dog. At least the rest of the German food I ate on the trip was good. The Hofbrauhaus did have a great atmosphere, at least, what with its mix of shouting Germans and tourists and its lederhosen-wearing band.
We flew back the next day and had a last night in Hatfield, where we ordered delivery kebab and reminisced about our adventures. The next day we went to London for Lindsey’s flight. We had so much fun and did a lot of bonding. Deuces, Germany.

Friday, June 1, 2012

The Europe Highlights Tour 2012

Aunt Karen, Missy, and Mom on the Thames River cruise
On April 2 my mom, Aunt Karen, and cousin Missy came to visit me. I took the train to London and got to the hotel, checked in, made myself a cup of tea, and waited around, enjoying being able to watch TV for the first time in ages. And I waited. And waited. Their plane was due at around 9 a.m. so I figured they would be at the hotel a couple hours later. By around one I was starting to get panicky, so I texted my sister back in the US and asked her what was going on. She told me their plane had been delayed for eight hours and they hadn't flown out until that morning. Yikes.

So needless to say I had the day in London to myself. I went shopping in Oxford Street and spent way too much in Primark, which was near our hotel, and then walked to Piccadilly Circus. My family didn't end up getting in until around one a.m. Even though everyone was exhausted, it was great to see them again.

Our first day in London we took a red double-decker bus tour so they could get an overview of the sights. Missy and Karen wanted to do the Tower of London, but since I'd already done that and it's pretty expensive I said I'd go do the London Dungeons while they did that and my mom offered to come with me. But Missy and Karen wanted us to stick together, so I ended up dragging them to the Dungeons as well. Big mistake. Someone had told me it was really good, but I thought it would be an actual historical experience and not just a glorified haunted house. So between people dressed like Jack the Ripper jumping out at you and the guy in the video about the London fire of 1666 yelling "FIIIIIRE!" over and over again, it was not what you would call a must-see attraction if you only had about a day in London. And it took forever. We ended up asking the lady dressed up as some sort of witch at the end to let us out a side exit. Someone had brought their baby along (WHY?) and had to duck out early, so we asked if we could go too and the lady said irritably, "You too? Fine" and let us out. We managed to race over to the Tower of London and see it before it closed. Luckily everyone thought the whole thing was pretty funny, but I'm still going to be haunted by the stupid London Dungeons my whole life. We later took a river cruise down the Thames, ate in a pub near Big Ben, and took an 11 p.m. walk to Buckingham Palace (no late-night parties for the Queen - the place was deader than Derby after 10).

Clifford's Tower, York
The next day my mom and I woke up early and took the tube to St. Paul's Cathedral. Since it was Good Friday the cathedral was closed to visitors, but we were allowed to come in and sit and look around. It was really beautiful inside...not as big or old as Westminster but very beautiful. Then Mom and I got tea at a little bakery beside St. Paul's.

Afterward the four of us headed out for York, a place my aunt and cousin wanted to come to because they said it was known for chocolate and ghosts. The old part of it still has many preserved medieval buildings and the old town walls are still in place around the city, which we walked over. We visited the cathedral called the Minster, popped in and out of some cute shops, and walked through the old-fashioned cobbled streets. For dinner we went to an adorable tea parlor called Betty's, where my mom and aunt split afternoon tea. The best thing we did in York was that night - we went on a ghost tour. Our guide led us through the dimly lit medieval streets and told us various gruesome stories from the area. We saw Clifford's Tower at night, which was eerie and impressive, and walked through streets called things like Mad Alice's Lane. Afterward our guide, a really nice gentleman whose name I can't remember, took us to a pub called the Swan, the oldest pub in York—from 1407 I think it was. We all bought drinks and then he took us up to a room on the top floor with some dilapidated tapestries and a massive fireplace and told us stories about the supposedly haunted pub. Good times.
Bath

Then we were on the move again—this time to Bristol because we’d found a cheap flight to Dublin out of Bristol airport. We ended up going to Bath that day instead of Bristol because our hotel was close to both and my family really wanted to see it. I’ve been to Bath but I enjoyed going again. We toured the cathedral and the Roman baths, and even got to see a wedding leaving the cathedral later. All the men wore kilts, even one of the little boys who looked adorable in his. Mom told me to take pictures so I wove through the wedding party as they left the church to get a few pictures. No wonder they hate tourists. We ate dinner at Sally Lunn’s, which is in the oldest house in Bath. The place had something called a Jane Austen room which my aunt thought was a fancy name for the bathroom, so bathrooms became Jane Austen rooms for the rest of the trip. One of the highlights of that day was our taxi driver who took us to and from our hotel. Most of our taxi drivers the whole trip were extremely kind and helpful, but this one was this really sweet old man who chatted to us the whole way—or mostly he and my cousin Missy talked. I’m pretty sure she promised to come back and visit him someday.
River Liffey, Dublin

After that we took the hour-long flight to Dublin. I really liked Dublin, even though I only got a taste of it. We walked around the Temple Bar area—shops, restaurants, pubs, lots of Irish flags. We browsed around there, then walked to St. Patrick’s Cathedral, then came back for dinner. The Irish are so friendly. We ate at a pub/restaurant named Oliver St. John Gogarty’s (love the name) and the second we walked in one of the guys at the bar called out greetings to us and let Missy take a sip of his beer. We got fish-n-chips and corned beef. The nightlife in that area was really thriving—wish I could’ve stayed longer. After that we walked along the River Liffey, which is lit up with green lights under the bridges at night. We went to what was supposedly the oldest pub in Dublin, but it turned out to be a bit boring. I made sure I had a Guinness, though! The other cool thing about Dublin was our hotel—part of it was a castle from the 1100s. They had a great hall area inside and everything.
Me posing on a mountain road

We wanted to see the countryside while in Ireland, so the next day we booked a countryside bus tour. We got picked up from one of the main streets by our jaunty Irish tour guide and driven to the seaside and then through the mountains for most of the day. I think that was probably my mom’s favorite bit; she was beaming the whole time. For most of my life I’ve listened to her talk about how Ireland is “on her bucket list,” so I could tell this meant a lot to her. Anyway, it was predictably gray and rainy but still amazing. I don’t know how our guide managed to talk to us about everything and drive along the narrow mountain roads. On one of the cliffs he pulled out a bottle of Irish whiskey and gave everyone a shot. I’ve never seen my mom take a shot, so that was a magical moment. We saw waterfalls, little villages, lakes, mountain goats, and had a tea break with massive sugary scones. So a great day all in all—or grand as they say.

Notre Dame
Before we could get too cozy in Ireland it was time to leave for Paris. Paris was a bit cold and damp when we were there, but the buildings were still beautiful. One of the first things we did—after getting some French soup, bread, and cheese—was Notre Dame. Very cool and basically made me want to yell “SANCTUARY!” a lot. We did another bus tour and got a pretty good overview of the city. The buildings there are all so fancy, and I love how many streets are lined with trees. The Eiffel Tower at night is incredible, and for the first five minutes of every hour it sparkles. The second day my aunt and cousin did their own thing for a few hours while my mom and I took the short train ride to Versailles, which I’d always dreamed of seeing. My mom was there a long time ago and she said they had cleaned it up a lot since she’d been. I loved getting to see the Hall of Mirrors. I wish the audio guides had been more informational, though—one thing I’ve learned since I’ve been here is that I hate audio guides, which mainly end up telling you about furnishings and architecture when all you want to hear is some scandal and history. Which Versailles would have had a lot of. Oh well. Still so worth seeing, despite the giant line at the entrance.

Versailles
After that she and I hopped back on the bus tour and went to see Napoleon’s tomb at Les Invalides. It’s gigantic—as my mom said, “Little man…big tomb.” Then we decided to go to the shopping street, Champs-Elysees; we have a painting of it in my house that my parents actually bought in Paris years ago so it was great seeing it in person. We bought some bread from one of the bakeries there and sat outside for a bit despite the cold, then wandered down to the Arc de Triomphe.
Mom and I with the Eiffel Tower!



We met up with the rest of the family, got dressed up, and went out for dinner at a place called Le Coude Fou…which could mean “We’ll Spit in Your Food” for all the French I know. The waiters spoke almost no English but were very friendly. I wanted to try authentic French food so I got paté as a starter and then duck as the main course. So many regrets. What everyone else had was delicious, but I could barely stomach mine. Paté is disgusting. Or at least that one was. Never again.

Sadly my mom left the next day—she only got to be with us a week. We missed her a lot for the rest of the trip. Karen, Missy, and I had a relaxed day wandering Paris. We had a long lunch near a square with a fountain. We passed a statue of a strange man with a golden face, at which point my cousin said, “Wait…I have to see this little golden man” and walked up to it, only to have the statue bend down to look at her when she came close. We all screamed bloody murder and walked away quickly. As Missy, who is from NYC, said, “I’ve seen people dressed as statues before, this ain’t my first rodeo.” Rookie mistake.
We bid adieu to Paris and flew over the Alps to Venice. Getting to Venice was one of the most exhausting parts. You take a plane to an airport on the mainland, then a water bus to Venice itself. We also had a lot of confusion finding our bed-and-breakfast, which involved me texting an Italian who spoke very little English but put a lot of exclamation points and smiley faces as he tried to explain where we should go to reach his hotel. It was about 11 p.m. when we got to Venice, and despite our exhaustion we were impressed—St. Mark’s Square was still well lit and an orchestra was playing nearby. Over cobblestone streets and dilapidated bridges, through winding alleys…it was a lot to take in even at night.
Karen and Missy on top of St. Mark's, with a view of the square

Venice was amazing just because it’s so different from every other place. They don’t have cars—everyone walks or goes by boat. The water in the canals is this pretty green color. St. Mark’s Basilica was our first stop. The ceiling is all 24 karat gold and inside the treasure room are saints’ relics in gold cases—old bones, withered fingers, skulls. Gotta love it. I loved all the buildings—they all looked worn and old but they were still so elaborate. My cousin loved all the fanciness. We had some spaghetti carbonara at an outdoor café, then saw the Church of San Zaccariah for the body housed in it that supposedly never decomposed. The body was a bit of a bust because you couldn’t even really see it very well. You could go into the crypt for a euro which we gladly paid. I wanted to see some bones or bodies or something gory. But sadly the crypt was flooded. My aunt and cousin retreated, but I wanted my euro’s worth so I waded a few steps into the crypt. Instant regret followed, along with the unfortunate nickname “Crypt Feet.” Alas.
Venice!

We then hit up the Doge’s Palace. Lots of gold and grandeur, and we got to walk through the Bridge of Sighs. That night we did a gondola ride. They are more expensive at night but it’s also less crowded and everything is beautiful all lit up. That was one of the highlights of Venice. Our gondolier spoke excellent English and told us facts about the city and also about his life growing up in Venice. We rowed through the quiet city to the Rialto Bridge and the area around there. All the lights on the water were gorgeous. Afterward we had a quiet dinner outside near one of the canals. Venice was definitely a highlight of the trip.
Missy and I on the gondola ride

The next day we took a train to our last stop, Rome. I’d always heard drivers in Rome were terrible, which was demonstrated when our cab driver made a few most likely illegal turns and hit the curb a few times. The first day we basically raced to make our tour of the Vatican on time. Loved it…there was so much gold and grandeur and so many beautiful paintings that it’s hard to separate it all out in my head. The Sistine Chapel was cool to see, of course, but I thought the room itself seemed smaller than I expected—but that was probably because it was packed to the gills with tourists. St. Peter’s was also beautiful and slightly overwhelming for how massive a scale everything was on. My aunt really liked the Michelangelo sculpture, the Piata.

Since we were starving by this point, we hunted down a restaurant our hotel recommended only to find out it wasn’t open until 6. We ducked into a little pizza shop for a snack, and the mozzarella pizza we had there turned out to be the best pizza of the whole trip—much better than the more expensive pizza we got at other restaurants. Wish we would’ve gotten more food there! After dinner we walked to Trevi Fountain, which I loved, and then basically collapsed back at our hotel.

Trevi Fountain
I really like ancient history, so we went to Palatine Hill and the Forum the next day to see some Roman ruins. I wish we’d gotten an audio guide or something because there were times we didn’t know what we were looking at, but our faithful Rick Steves book was of some help with that. My aunt had also been before so she remembered a lot of cool facts. The Colosseum was incredible to walk around in as well. The only downside was the windy, rainy weather. Our next step was the Pantheon, the best preserved Roman building because it’s been in use for thousands of years. After that my aunt took us to a quiet, less touristy square where we walked through a church and listened to the fountains as evening fell. It was a more relaxing end to a somewhat hectic day.

We flew back to London for a night, ate excellent fish and chips at Poppie’s and strolled around Piccaddilly Circus, and they left on the morning of the seventeenth. I had a wonderful adventure with them—still can’t believe we did it all without dying of exhaustion, really! So grateful to my family for coming and so happy I got to see them!
Cousins at the Colosseum
I’m still really behind on this blog considering this happened about two months ago and I’m leaving the UK in less than two weeks…oh well! More updates to follow!