Thursday, November 17, 2011

Just a Quickie: a series of 2 day trips!

The first time that I went abroad and lived and studied in Paris, for the most part we were only able to make weekend trips to different countries.  I loved that every weekend we were traveling to a different country but I think that we only were able to make two trips for more than two or three days.  After starting this trip I have seen how significantly different it feels to have visited and experienced a city for five or seven days versus two.  For the past two weeks I have been on a series of two day trips and have been amazed at the amount of cities that I have been to in such a short period of time.  Although, it is hard to truly get oriented with a city, switching from city to city is thrilling and exciting.  I feel like I am constantly walking around with my head spinning around on my neck trying to see everything and anything I can in the time that I am given in a new place.  After my birthday in Prague we went to Vienna for 2 days, back to Budapest for 3 days, I went to Interlaken, Switzerland for 2 days, Amsterdam for 2 days, Brussels/Gent in Belgium for a night to see the I love Techno festival, Bruges for 2 days, and finally now I am posted in Berlin for at least 5 days.

Vienna:  
It was interesting going from Budapest --> Prague and then to Vienna because Vienna has a completely different feel than the first two cities.  Vienna is pristine, crawling with classical music history, and a very pretty city.  I have been blessed on my travels so far to have gotten that excited and exhilarating feeling just from setting foot in a new city in almost every single city that I have been to on this trip.  I did not feel this same way in Vienna, although I believe it has a lot to offer.  I think that it is a place that you need to really dedicate your time to experiencing the kind of music that was created there in the past in addition to the surface level sightseeing.

We spent our first day walking around The Ring which contains the main part of the city and most of the exciting things to see.  Vienna has a lot of beautiful parks and one of the most amazing things about coming here was seeing the colors of Fall.  There were so many rows and rows of trees lining the city streets forming arches of yellow, orange, and red leaves. At the end of this day we went to Grinzing which is 30 minutes outside of the city and contains streets full of wine taverns.  We spent a few hours hopping from tavern to tavern trying their home-made wines.  It was such a blast to just try different types of wines in cozy taverns with locals.  Each tavern had a different feel to it and was wooden and homey inside.

Our second day in Vienna we went to the Schonbrunn palace.  It was massive from the outside but somewhat understated with it's yellow coloring and green shutters but it blew me away when we walked through it.  One of the best parts about this palace tour is that for the base student price you were able to get an audio guide with it.  This was really helpful to bring life to all of the rooms and to make you feel like you were watching the history happen.  It was really amazing when we came to one of the rooms that they held events and parties in because the audio guide explained that the six year old Mozart played his first performance in that very room.  I remember getting the chills thinking about that occurring right where I was standing and what that moment meant for him at that point in history.  The gardens and backyard of the palace were of course perfectly groomed and beautiful again with the fall colors lighting up the yard.  The trees were so perfectly trimmed at the top that it looked as if they formed a wall, all of them so closely fit next to each other without a space in between them.  We went to the zoo in the back of the palace grounds after the palace tour.  It was so fun to see all of the animals and feel like a little kid again, running across the window chasing the jaguar trying to get a better look.  I hadn't been to a zoo in a really long time and I was really happy that we decided to go because it was a spontaneous decision and the zoo is said to be the oldest zoo in the world.  We spent several hours there and it was a really fun time.

Budapest...round 2!  
After leaving Budapest the first time, all three of us felt unsatisfied and extremely sad to leave the hostel and the city.  We were planning to go to Salzberg and then Berlin our first night in Vienna and then suddenly on our second day it came out that Laura and Presley were going to go back to Budapest instead.  I did not know how I felt about returning to Budapest because I didn't want to have to cope with leaving everyone again and potentially getting sucked in again.  I also had the thought that I am over here for another month and I want to see as many places as I can!  I had decided that I was going to go to Salzberg.  By the end of the evening I could not suppress the feeling that I had had all day about wanting to join my friends in returning to Budapest.  I literally told Laura I would go with her to the train station and would decide once we got to the platform.  We got to the train station and I didn't stop following her and as we were walking up the steps to the train to Budapest I said, "Welp, it looks like I'm going to Budapest!".  I'm very very glad that we all ended up going back.  We were welcomed with open arms into our old hostel and even though they had no open beds for us, they made room for us in the staff room.  We fell right back into our Carpe routine and had a blast.  We all left Budapest feeling much more satisfied and feeling so glad that we decided to go back and see our friends and favorite city.  One of the days we hiked up to the Citadel which was a painfully long hike that we all thought would never end but had such an amazing view of Budapest.  We made the hike while the sun was setting and made it to the top when it had just set and the city buildings were starting to light up.  It was stunning, especially since it was in a city that we all felt such a connection to and comfort with.  We have made several hikes up towers, and up hills to see stunning city views of almost every city we've been to.  It was a different feeling looking out over a city that you have experienced so much in and have actually spent a significant amount of time in.  The hike and beautiful panoramic sight took on such a different and reflective meaning.    

Interlaken:
After three days in Budapest I decided that I wanted to take a trip to Interlaken because I have never been to Switzerland and heard the most amazing things from some of my best friends from San Diego about the Canyon jumping experience they had there while studying abroad two years ago.  I've never truly traveled somewhere new 100% alone without either being with at least one other person or knowing that I would be meeting at least one other person at my final destination.  I was both excited and nervous about this.

Interlaken was one of the most breathtaking places I have ever been.  It was so serene and I felt like it was a town straight out of a movie.  I would compare it to a tiny ski town like Banff in Canada would hold but to a much more fairy tale like degree.  The hostel that I stayed at was like a cozy ski lodge, the town took about thirty minutes to walk through, and there were beautiful mountains surrounding me on every side.  I tried to sign up to do the Canyon jumping which is what I came to Interlaken for but I was the only one to sign up and they needed at least 5 to go.  I did paragliding instead which of course was unbelievable.  I had the most hilarious pilot, Fabi, and was stunned by the outstanding views that I was able to see from the top of where we took off and were able to see while soaring through the air.  I was shocked by how normal and easy it felt just hanging off of a parachute and having to perfectly fit through the gap in the fog hanging over the tiny town of Interlaken.  It was such a cool experience and unlike anything I've ever done and it made me want to paraglide where ever I can in the future.  They dropped me off by one of the lakes in Interlaken and I took a two hour walk along the lake and river leading into the city.  It was a beautiful day and so peaceful strolling and enjoying the beauty around me with no agenda and no time constraints. 

Switzerland was also the first place that I learned how hard traveling can be without a means of communication and without knowing a single person.  On my train out of Interlaken to Basel, Switzerland my backpack got stolen from the baggage storage shelf directly to the right of my seat.  For some reason I had a bad feeling about the train in general, partially because I was traveling alone, but I remember thinking to myself that I should just set my backpack at my feet or next to me.  I reassured myself that it would be fine since both of my bags were just directly to my right across the aisle.  At about our second or third stop, everyone started filtering out, people started filtering in, I looked up from my book and my backpack was just gone.  I did a double take and stood up and searched around my seat.  I looked out all of the windows but couldn't jump off of the train because we were about to continue on and my stop wasn't for another hour.  I walked through about two or three cars over and did not find it anywhere.  I was so upset that I was shaking and fighting back tears.  I couldn't believe that it was just gone, right in front of me someone had taken it.  When I reached my stop, naturally I decided that the only solution was to go get a glass of wine..or two.  I wished so much that I could call someone, namely my mom, to vent about what had just happened.  I don't know if I've ever been in a situation like that, completely alone, without any means to reach a loved one to just talk.  However, I always try to look at the bright side of situations.  Luckily I had been traveling with two bags, and therefore only lost half of my clothes.  I had my passport, all of my credit cards/debit cards, forms of identification, eurail pass, the most essential and irreplaceable things.  Most importantly Doug, my stuffed dog/pillow that I've been carrying around was safely seated by my side as well.  It really sucked getting my backpack stolen especially since it was a graduation gift as well but I do feel fortunate to be safe and to still have at least half of my belongings. 

Amsterdam:
After the tumultuous ride from Interlaken to Amsterdam, I was so ready to see my two lovely travel partners: Laura and Presley and to be in Amsterdam.  I knew that seeing them would make me feel instantly better and that Amsterdam is such a lively and fun city, that it would be the perfect place to visit after something like that.  I had been to Amsterdam for a weekend before while I was studying abroad in Paris two years ago.  Both Laura and I had but we loved it so much the first time around that we both without question knew we wanted to go back.  Amsterdam is such a beautiful city, with cobblestone streets everywhere, twisting and turning alley ways in every direction, and canals running through the city.  There is so much happening all around in the city, and you see such a diverse group of people roaming the streets.  We went to the Van Gogh museum and it was unbelievable.  I already knew that I loved Van Gogh's work but I had never seen it so concentrated before.  The museum was set up very well in that it thoroughly explained each room, what time period it was, what was going on in Van Gogh's life, and who/what was inspiring him.  I liked that they placed the artwork of people that inspired him next to the artwork of Van Gogh himself.  It was interesting to see the similarities and how those people affected Van Gogh's work.  All throughout the museum were amazing quotes by Van Gogh expressing his desire to capture emotion in his art.  I could see how strongly emotional he was as a person just through the brush strokes in each of his paintings.  He painted some of the most simple things but could make the sky look sad for example.  He was able to make paintings come to life, and could make you focus on the simplest of objects just from the coloring and emphasis of the brush strokes.

Another thing that we did in Amsterdam was the Heineken museum.  It was much more that I had expected it to be.  It was very elaborate with history, interactive videos and displays of how the beer is made.  It was a really fun experience and as they called it, it truly was the full "Heineken Experience".  It was fun being in an atmosphere where everyone that worked there was genuinely excited about their job and about the product.

Belgium: Brussels, Gent, and Bruges
In Prague Laura had heard from her friend, living about two hours north of Amsterdam, about a techno festival that was happening in Gent, Belgium.  It was called I love Techno and had tons of different electronic bands/DJs.  We had been researching different music festivals going on in Europe but hadn't found one that would work out with where we were going to be.  We were supposed to be meeting up with Laura's friend around the date of when the festival was so we all three were up for going to this festival.  We met her friends and drove up from Vlissengen in the Netherlands and went to Brussels where we enjoyed the beer and the company of Laura's friend's friends.  The majority of the people we have met while traveling have been Australians and I have not met a single one that I have disliked.  They are some of the nicest, most genuine, hilarious, and fun people I've met in my life.  Specifically the ones that we drove up with to the festival and hung out with were so welcoming and fun to be around.  We hadn't planned on going to Brussels so I was excited when I found out that we would be spending the afternoon there, staying the night there, and taking a tram to the festival in Gent.  The festival was crazy.  It was in a massive warehouse with about five or more different rooms of music being played by different people.  Each was deemed a different color room, shining Green, Red, Yellow lights depending on while color room it was.  It was a really fun experience and I'm glad we got to do something like that while traveling.


After the festival we had planned to go back to Vlissengen to where Laura's friend is living but Presley and I decided to go to Bruges since I had heard good things about this city as well.  Also, my friend Zach was there and Bruges was only an hour train ride away from Brussels.  Bruges was such a quaint little city.  You could walk from corner to corner in about 20-30 minutes.  The beer was delicious, the fries were equally delicious, shopping was great, and we heard "In Bruges" movie references all around us.  Bruges was a mellow two days just leisurely walking around the city, hiking up the clock tower, and enjoying great company.


It was a whirlwind of two weeks but also a great two weeks and very exciting.  I got to see so many fabulous and beautiful places and had a blast as well.  It was sad on Tuesday because Presley had to leave us to go back home :(  We feel really weird not having her around and miss her terribly already!  I can't believe how quickly the time has gone, and that I will be home in less than a month now.  I just booked my flight home to the US, and cannot even fathom what it will be like to leave this lifestyle.  I have had the most amazing time so far, it has been the best decision I've ever made.   

Monday, November 7, 2011

Praha: all you need is beer and sausage!

Prague is a gorgeous, charming, and fun city.  It is a combination of two of my favorite places.  If Budapest and Florence had a baby I believe it would be something like Prague.  Prague was one of the top cities that I wanted to visit during my travels so I was thrilled when we planned to come to Prague for my birthday!

It was really hard to leave Budapest and our Carpe family but Prague was probably the best place to go to after having such an amazing experience in a prior city.  My wonderfully generous mother booked us the cutest and quaintest hotel in Prague for my birthday to give us a luxurious break from the hostel lifestyle.  I had two packages waiting for me from my mom and grandma which made me feel a little better about missing all of my friends and family on my birthday. 

I was lucky to have a Prague nightlife guide sent to me from my dear friend David who had studied abroad in Prague.  So we knew right away that the place to be on Friday nights is Lucerna that has an 80s/90s music themed night.  We danced away the night to some of our middle school favorites and celebrated at midnight with (of course) Jager shots. 

On our first day in Prague we decided to try out one of the infamous beer gardens that is up on a hill and overlooks the city.  We picked up our kiwi friend, Marc, who we met in Ios who happened to be in Prague for the weekend.  We made the trek to the beer garden that turned out to be closed and under renovation for the winter season.  We made the best of it and had a couple of beers and enjoyed the gorgeous view of Prague.  That night we had the most delicious dinner at a Bar, lounge, and club that was so perfectly decorated and had the best environment we could have sat there all night.  And of course we celebrated my birthday with at least 3 bottles of champagne that night at the 5 story club each floor having a different genre of music. 

Prague was the perfect city to explore by just wandering around.  It is a manageable size and therefore we were able to see several of the famous sites by just walking around for a day.  It is a bustling city with tons of travelers and tourists who all want to see the beauty of Prague.  The Lennon wall was one of the coolest things that I have ever seen.  I love how a cluster of art on top of each other can still look so beautiful and how each part of it can be so impactful.  This was one of my favorite parts of the wall that I saw.  "Ideas are inspiring but inflexible.  Fight for people, people change the world."  It is a discrete and small portion of the wall but I think the message is memorable and important. 

Our hotel was right at one of the ends of the Charles Bridge and I was so happy about this because while the bridge is such a site to see during the day walking amongst a sea of people and seeing all of the vendors and performers it is even more beautiful late at night walking over it when there is not another person in site.  Another stunning view of the city was from the castle.  It was amazing walking around the castle grounds just imagining what it was like back in the day with royalty wandering around their home.  We also spent a full day walking around the Jewish quarter of Prague which was very dense walking into synagogue after synagogue learning about the Jewish heritage and the oppression that the Jews have overcome.  The cemetary was unbelievable with thousands of deceased buried one on top of another and tombstones in every direction that you look bent in every which direction.  Leading up to the cemetary was a building with walls filled with all of the names of those buried in the cemetary.  It was truly one of the most impactful things that I have seen while traveling.

My favorite thing that we did in Prague was our microbrewery tour.  We found a list of four of the most highly recommended breweries to visit in Prague, marked them on our map and went from one to the other trying their signature beers and having goulash and sausage to accompagny.  I tried plum, chocolate, and banana flavored beers.  The banana flavored beer was my favorite and I could have drank it all day.  All of these breweries were packed with people from the time of 3pm onward with locals and tourists.  It was a blast experiencing this unique aspect of Prague.

I could have spent much more time in Prague and hope to get the chance to visit there again!            

Saturday, November 5, 2011

"You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave"

I always knew that Budapest was on our agenda of places to go and I was completely indifferent on that decision.  I didn't know anything about the city and hadn't really heard anything good or bad about it.  So once again Budapest was a place that not only was I pleasantly surprised about but it has become one of my favorite places that I have gone to on this trip so far.

The quote at the top of this page is what is written above the doorway at the hostel that we stayed at, Carpe Noctem "Seize the night".  We were recommended to stay here by some friends that we met in Rome who raved about it.  This hostel is the most amazing place that I have ever stayed and ever been to before.  The people that run the hostel and the people that I met here were some of the most amazing, unique, interesting, and fun people that I have ever met.  The hostel was in a tall building and we had to hike up about 5 or 6 flights of stairs to get to the hostel which was a flat with 4 rooms - one room for 6 people, two for 8 people, and a staff room.  Very intimate setting.  Music was always playing in the common room, no one hibernated in their rooms, group dinners every night made by the staff, and planned nights out every night!  The hostel fosters a family feel making us feel right at home and making friendships that I know will last.  We planned to stay for 4 nights, then it was 5, and then we extended another 4 for a total of 9 nights in Budapest at this wonderful hostel.  We left for one week and then decided to come back again.  We currently are back in Budapest because we missed all of the people and this amazing city.

When we first got to Budapest I was thrilled because I knew that we would be meeting up with a friend from San Diego - Zach who I worked with at Sushi on the Rock.  We have both been traveling for a month or so and have been trying to meet up somewhere but plans just weren't matching up.  Budapest worked out accidentally for us to get together and we had the best time.  Zach was one of the girls for the four days he was here.  Walked around with us, dealt with our girl talk, and saw the Budapest sights with us as well.  It was great to see a familiar face while being away from home.

On our second day in Budapest we decided to go caving which is crawling and squeezing through underground caves of Budapest.  It was the most amazing experience.  I normally don't like to do things that push my comfort zone and am somewhat of a scaredy cat, not even enjoying roller coasters and always being the one holding peoples shoes and belongings as they cliff jump at the Gorge in Washington.  This wasn't a major risk taking activity but I was nervous to do it.  We had the most hilarious Hungarian tour guide who constantly was motivating us and was trying to crack jokes in english that would not have been funny if he wasn't Hungarian.  Our entire group bonded and laughed and had the best time the entire caving trip.  We had to maneouver our bodies in the weirdest of ways to get through some of the tight spots and wore full on jump suites and helmets with headlights on them.  I must admit I felt pretty cool in that getup. 

Two of the other things that we did in Budapest were the Terror Museum and the World Press photo exhibition.  Both of them were very moving and very memorable.  The Terror Museum walked us through the history of Hungary under Nazi Germany occupation, suppression, internment, etc.  It consisted of three floors of artistic, thorough, and thoughtful combinations of historical presentations of this period of time in Hungary.  The basement of the museum consisted of the execution rooms and the types of torture tactics that they used back during that time period.  It was very eerie and difficult to take in but also very moving.  The muesum was good about having handouts explaining the succession of events and what each room was portraying.  The combination of videos, artistic presentations of material, music, and informative handouts was perfectly executed.  This made the museum interesting through and through.  The world press exhibit was unbelieveable.  This is the compilation of photos of the winners from the world press contest.  The photos are equally beautiful and horrifying.  Some of the pictures were hard to look at with how much pain and turmoil they captured but it was amazing to see photos from all over the world.  It made me stop and think really hard about my life and how lucky I am.  It also made me have perspective on the types of things that I sometimes forget happens in other countries.  Some of the things in these photos were disease, natural disastor, wildlife, competition, war, crime, and many many more.  I've never seen so much emotion portrayed through simply a picture.  I feel very lucky that they happened to have this exhibition here in Budapest while we were here. 

Budapest has been a place that it has just been enjoyable to walk around, shop around, and just take in the beautiful architecture surrounding you.  The train station right by our hostel and one of the bridges were designed by the same man who designed the eiffel tower.  We were able to see the beautiful sights along the Danube river at night on our booze cruise with our hostel.  The buildings were all lite up and glowing and the boat sold bottles of champagne so everyone was popping bottles of champagne while enjoying the breathtaking views around us. 

Our hostel truly made our experience here.  The night life has been the most fun I have experienced in any city.  We've had a booze cruise, a pub crawl of ruin bars that are abandon buildings that they decided to turn into bars, a reverse pub crawl of the same bars in reverse order, themed night when everyone dresses up in ridiculous costumes just because, open mic night (the best night), and Jager trains where you become a member of the club if you do 10 Jager bombs in an hour and a half.  It doesn't matter what night of the week it is because the Carpe Noctem staff insists that every night is "an epic night" and you definitely cannot miss any night.  One of the places we went to had tunnels leading you to different dance floor rooms with different music and one night we stumbled upon the room that was playing Hungarian music and everyone was huddled in groups chanting and jumping up and down.  We knew none of the Hungarian words but we just acted like we did and tried our best to blend it yelling random words that we hoped sounded like what they were saying. 

Our Carpe family tried their best to get us to stay for my birthday but since they wanted to celebrate with me they decided to have a Buda-birthday bash on our last night, the Thursday before my birthday.  We went to the ballet at the Opera house which was such a beautiful ballet and I was amazed at the dancers and the story line and then danced the night away at a bar called Instant. 

Budapest has become one of my favorite spots that I've been to on this trip and it is beyond my ability to put into words what is so special about this place.  Part of it is the amazing hostel we stayed at and are staying at again for a few days but there is just something about Budapest - the people, the night life, the architecture, and so much more.  All of the staff that work here came to Budapest at one point planning to stay for 5 days or so and some never left after setting foot in the hostel and some left and came back indefinitely.  You get sucked in to Budapest in the best way possible.  After Budapest we went to Prague, Vienna, and now we are back in Budapest for a few days.  I think I will go off to Switzerland for 2 days and then to Amsterdam!

Stay tuned to hear about Prague and Vienna, it will be sooner than later :)