Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Hitch-hiking

I never told you about hitch-hiking back from Barcelona, did I?  Well, now that I got my hands on a few of Katie's pictures, I will.

It wasn't my first time to stick my thumb out.  My debut was this summer in Alaska: a group of us, after walking to town, piled into someone's truck bed to save us the 6 miles back to camp...  But the real hitch-hiking experience was at the end of the summer, the final seal on the two most adventurous months of my life... Reid and I had four days before our planes left Alaska, so we stood with our backpacks by the highway (one of the most scenic routes in the world) to see where we'd end up.  In those four days we hiked, camped, slept near a glacier, got picked up by a dog-musher (not in her sled with the dogs--that would've been really cool-- it was just her occupation) and made it to Seward, a seaport town and the destination we were shootin' for.

Hitch-hiking from Barcelona was different: with Reid, it had been carefree-- not for a minute did I worry about my safety-- but this time, being two lone girls, caution (and a tinge of fear?) was thrown into the mix. And while Alaska in the summer is a hitch-hiker's paradise, it's not as common in Catalonia and southern France.  You have to be more strategic because any old road isn't going to hack it.

We tried hitching straight out of the center of Barcelona, but saw pretty quickly that it was futile.  I was embarrassed with all the Spaniards driving to work and gawking at us.  We weren't well-placed, so we switched to Plan B and took a train to the outskirts of the city.  From the train station, we had to get to a gas station on a near-by highway.  This mini trek included traversing the tracks, crawling under fences, and hiking through weeds...



At the gas station, a couple of construction workers laughed at our attempts from afar, making me smug when our first ride pulled over 10 minutes later:  an 18-wheeler driven by a Polish man.  It was our first time inside a semi-- pretty cool being up that high.  I didn't mind at all that we were in the slow lane, as long as we were moving! Homeward bound!  The Pollock knew no English or French so conversation was limited; we smiled and nodded a lot, until he came up with the words "telephone numero?" to which we said no.  He dropped us at a big junction just south of the border.


At the junction, we used the bathroom and were making ourselves some sandwiches when a trucker walked by, saw our "France" sign on the ground, and offered us a ride.  It was like negative waiting time!  He was a 30-year-old half-Portuguese/half-Italian guy, very talkative, dancing to music, giving us soda.  I'm surprised he didn't ask for our numbers.  But, he let us off with a smile in Narbonne, France.

We were making good time, flying high off our success, singing while we waited for one more ride.
This time it wasn't a semi.  It was a French businessman in a nice car-- man, how that thing flew after being in the slower trucks!  He said he picked up hitch-hikers whenever he could because he had hitch-hiked around Europe as a college student.  Katie, whose French is better than mine, sat up front, allowing me to sit taciturnly in the back, worn out.

We made it, quite successfully, in fact.  Maybe it quenched our need for adventure for a little while.




For kicks, here I am in Barcelona eating octopus:

Monday, March 28, 2011

Andorra

It's a land-locked country between France and Spain, half the size of New York City, and it's where I decided to venture this Saturday.  I figured I'd never be this close again!
I love an early start, so it was still dawn when my train started south. The two and a half hours felt quick after the six-hour trip to Paris and back.  Andorra is so small and mountainous that it has no airport and no train stations.  Only by car, bus, or helicopter can you get in, so my train stopped on the French side of the border and left us to go the rest of the way by bus.  Thing is, the bus only runs every so often-- not often enough, it would seem.  Ninety plus people poured out of the train, all of us going the same direction, but the bus only held fifty.  The next bus wasn't coming for perhaps an hour, creating a chaotic scene.

The mob of people could be split in two: young people in snowsuits carrying skis and snowboards, headed for the slopes, and older, rough-looking people going to stock up on cigarettes and liquor in the duty-free zone. The latter group outnumbered the skiers.  I was at the very back of this "line" and saw that I'd be stuck at the train station if I didn't make a move.  I skirted around the back side of the bus and wedged myself right into the door.  I don't think they noticed amidst the shouting and jostling (a convenience of traveling solo).  It took a while to push my way onto the bus; one rude lady told me to respect the line; I got hit in the head by someone passing their shopping cart over the crowd to someone on the bus.  People got separated-- one person on the bus and the other not going to make it, so they were passing tickets out and making plans to meet later.  By the time I paid and was on the bus, I found the only remaining seat, in the back near a rowdy group of men speaking a convoluted style of French (definitely not civilized Parisians, these guys).  As I sat and the bus took off, I was proud of my pro-active self, glad I wasn't stuck with the forty people left behind.

The guys played Indian (?) music out of a little boombox, making me feel like I was riding through the Himalayas, not the Pyrenees.  The road was a series of switchbacks across the sides of mountains.  Within a few minutes, we reached the Andorran border, where it dawned on me that I didn't have my passport.  I had completely forgotten it, hadn't switched it from one purse to the other.  When I went to Spain we hadn't so much as tapped the brake at the border; I hadn't needed my passport, so I didn't even think of a border check, but there it was.  Turns out Andorra isn't part of the EU, that's why.  As the bus pulled over and the guards got on and everyone took out their National Identity Cards, I found my TX driver's license, however much good that would do.  I wasn't really nervous-- what could they do? Send me back; my trip would be short-lived, but all I'd suffer would be the minor embarrassment of getting kicked off the bus in front of all those people.

They let me in!  Where did I live? Where I was going? What I was doing?  They told me with a frown not to do it again.  The ordeal gained me some attention from the people around me on the bus.  "Une americano!"  Did I speak French? When was I going back to the U.S.?  "Great, I'm coming with you!"  Despite their gruff appearance, I could tell they were joking.  A sweet Moroccan lady sitting next to me took my hand, stroked it and cooed comforting, protective words-- I must've looked shaken up, but I really wasn't.  

With the uncertainty of getting back into France looming over me, I cheerfully went about my day in Andorra.  I shopped with the rest of them.  I wasn't in the market for alcohol or cigarettes or perfume, but I did buy shoes.  European shoes, you might envision heels and boots, but I got these babies:

First sneakers I've bought in four years. No more UT freebies. They didn't have any in burnt orange unfortunately.

Thankfully I found what I was looking for because if I hadn't, I would've had to buy things just to prove to the border patrol that I had shopped.  The shoe place gave me a huge bag so I looked legit.

I took another bus further into Andorra, to the capital city (not a drive for the easily car-sick).  Lots of ski stations along the way and a city full of stores.  A river ran through it, lined with beautiful trees:
Andorra-la-Vella

Andorra is reputed for its scenery; at least that's what's advertised to Europeans, but I wasn't blown away.  The mountains were nice, but not overly impressive, nothing compared to the Rockies.  The buildings and towns in the valleys could have been more aesthetically pleasing.  Andorra-la-Vella and Pas-de-la-Casa had nothing other than stores, hotels, and restaurants, which makes one appreciate well-rounded cities like Toulouse, London, Paris.  But it's unfair to compare it to cities twice the size of the whole country.  Eighty percent of Andorra's economy is in shopping and skiing tourism, so it serves its purpose and people enjoy going there!

Walking around, peeking in stores, reading in the park, watching the day change from sunny and 60 to snowing, drinking hot chocolate.. then catching the bus back out.  The moment of truth arrived when we pulled over at the border, but to my relief the guards got on, walked the aisle, gave us a look over, and sent us on our way without checking passports!  I was safe and sound back in France, headed home to Toulouse.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

A weekend in Paris

I never imagined I'd be in the position to spend a weekend in Paris on a whim, but there it is.  I canceled my Friday afternoon classes, scurried to the train station, and was northbound by noon, excited not only to see the City of Light again, but to explore it with company this time.  My friend Reid and his mother were the reason for the trip.  How nice to go on a trip where all I had to do was get myself there! He booked the hotel and made the plans.

The night I arrived was rainy-- I looked like Mary Poppins with my big black handbag/suitcase in one hand and my umbrella in the other.  After meeting Reid's mom and hearing about their bus ride over from London, we trotted out for a late dinner in a brasserie, which I happily ordered for them in French (they joked that I was their French-speaking guide, but in reality they could've gotten on just fine without me).  Vegetable soup, steamed potatoes, pate, bread, fish with the eyes still in it, and red wine.

The rain had stopped when we walked out of the restaurant.  We headed for the Eiffel Tower which was only a few blocks away.  As we stood admiring it (you always remember the first time you stand before it), it burst into sparkles before our very eyes-- must have been midnight.

Blurry, but I like it.

Other highlights of the weekend included an afternoon of reading in the sunny gardens of Versailles, a morning at the Louvre, buying bread, cheese, and six bottles of wine for nights at the hotel, a sunset boat-ride on the Seine, and a trip up the Eiffel that Reid finagled for us-- for half the price, we got to skip the 3-hour wait in line! (Let me know if you're ever in Paris and I'll tell you the secret).
We went up the Tower on our last morning, a clear sunny day-- Paris is a very white city from up there!

On the second story-- that's plenty high already, then you keep going up all that way!

Reid and his mom at the Louvre


Some trees were in bloom and there were daffodils and tulips in the parks-- a change since I saw it under snow at Christmas!
Versailles
 

The sunset we witnessed on our sight-seeing cruise-- we marveled at the perfect timing of all of our excursions and the beauty God blessed us with.  When the boat turned around and we trolled back toward the Eiffel, the sun had set and everything wore its night-time lights.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Excursions

Stonehenge
While in London, my companions and I took two excursions into western England to see the country-side and break up the city pace.  Both were bus tours: not my favorite mode of travel by far, but I can see the attraction: it's the easiest and cheapest way to see lots of sites without bustling for different train tickets and admissions yourself.  Even if I had to sit next to a Bangladeshi man that smelled like smoke and kept asking me stupid questions despite my obvious "I don't want to talk" body language (shoulders facing square out the bus window), it could've been much worse.

One of our guides, a bald Englishman named James, was top-notch.  His accent was melodic, his speech well-practiced, and he gave us interesting facts the whole way (for example: Her Majesty the Queen likes to drive herself to Winsor in her Range Rover every weekend).  Sadly, our second guide didn't have the expertise nor the professionalism of James, which made the tour less enjoyable and informative.  I sometimes felt like a herd of cows getting hurried past the sites, embarrassed to be seen as such a herd-able tourist.  Oh well.  Mainstream tourism is admissible every now and then, I suppose, if time necessitates it.

One of the days brought us to Winsor Castle, Stonehenge, and Bath.  Winsor has character-- after seeing numerous grand buildings and chateaus, they tend to start looking the same, but even so, Winsor stood out.  I decided I'd rather live there than at Versailles-- more homey, less gawdy.

Bath was the epicenter of leisure back in the Victorian era.  Jane Austen had a house there, so her stories were influenced by the social lives of the idle rich that met there for mingling.  There is a bath in Bath, which we toured.  It's an ancient Roman bath built around natural hot springs-- the only hot springs in the UK.

The second day trip was to Warwick Castle, Stratford-Upon-Avon, and Oxford:

Warwick Castle, which has fun medieval displays and re-enactments, wax figures of Henry VIII and his six wives, and birds of prey.
Taken from the ramparts of Warwick: very nice grounds with a little river, sheep in the fields, and peacocks.

Shakespeare's house in Stratford


Oxford. We saw Christ Church, the square where they shot the first race scene in "Chariots of Fire," the pub where Bill Clinton liked to play his saxophone, and the other lovely buildings.  Also where Harry Potter was filmed. It reminded me of Princeton.
All of these sights were strung together by rolling green hills, hedgerows, grazing sheep, pig farms,  and houses with thatched roofs.  I'm glad I got to see it all!

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

London!

My ten days in London flew by!  Only thing that went faster was my money (60 euros gone within 2 days on food alone. eek!  By the end, my wallet was empty but for a few pounds!). But it was worth every pence!

Where do I begin?... what I liked about London:
-the brightness of the red double-decker buses and red phone booths.
-the pubs on every corner with names like The Red Lion, The Blind Beggar, or Dirty Ducks, where you could look in and see friends having a pint on dark mahogany tables.  At night there'd be standing room only in some of them and groups of men would overflow onto the street corners to talk while having a smoke.
-The taxis, which are still the old-fashioned cars.
-The "look right" written on the ground of every crosswalk--reminders that have probably saved many a tourist.
- the free museums!  Makes London seem like such a generous place.
- hearing my own language spoken by passer-bys on the street.
-lively Soho-- our hostel was in the middle of what felt like the epicenter of cool, young people--pubs, clubs, and theatres-- if I lived there I'd go to all the musicals!
- fish 'n chips. They tasted like America.  I realized I hadn't tasted ketchup since coming to France.
- the parks, full of daffodils- SPRING!
-the musicians playing at the Piccadilly underground station.
-public bathrooms everywhere I looked. I never needed one, but it was comforting knowing they were there. Again, it makes Londoners seem generous, as opposed to these crazy French.
-the tudor-style buildings popping up here and there. the window-boxes.

I could go on, but here are some pictures!

Parliament- a magnificent building!
 As you can see, I hit a lot of the “must-see” historical sights and saw the public parts of London.  We even went to mass in Westminster Abbey (the only way to avoid the £17 entrance fee). Some of this I did with my two travel companions, Francoise and Josyane, two French ladies from Toulouse.  Most days, however, I sent them off without me since their repertoire was a little too museum-heavy and their pace a little too slow for my taste (I did my share of museums, though, and saw lots of great art, for FREE!). Plus, I had people to see. I spent one day with Erin: we watched the changing of the guard at Buckingham and ate fish and chips!

I also saw Reid, whom I worked with in Alaska all summer.  I met his friends; we went to a couple pubs and clubs (nightlife!) and caught up while rummaging through vintage sales on Brick Lane.  It’s not where you are; it’s who you’re with!

Lots done but lots left to do! Reason to go back some day!

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Barcelona!

I have a whirlwind couple of days-- arriving home from Barcelona today, lots of errands tomorrow, and flying to London the next, so this is going to be an accordingly whirlwind post: all the great things Katie and I saw and did in Barcelona!

Katie and I at the beginning of the trip.
We found a ride on a French carpool site with a woman and her 13-year-old son.  Cheaper and much faster than the train, we sped across the border of Spain without so much as a slow-down.  The first leg of the drive ran parallel to the Canal du Midi, along which I rode my bike in October, so I got to see many of the places I saw then.. a stroll down memory lane... 4 1/2 hours later, we're among the hills of Barcelona; the lady drops us at the airport and we catch a bus into the center of town.


In front of the National Palace

The National Palace-- in these photos it looks like the Washington or Texas capitol building, but in actuality, it's much more Persian looking.  Sitting atop a hill, with steps, fountains, and boulevards leading to it, it reminded me of something from Aladdin.  It was surrounded by exotic Asian gardens; in front of it, this guitarist was playing:


That first night, in front of the Palace, we watched the Magic Fountain come to life! With lights and music, the orchestrated show was perhaps the most romantic thing I've seen in Europe (considering I saw Paris at Christmas.. that's something). The jubilant atmosphere of the square and the warm night air seemed like a celebration of our arrival!  Welcoming us to a magical city!


La Rambla is the main drag of Barcelona-- the strip for tourists, for strolls to the port, for eating, drinking, for the creative and persistent to make money off of tourists... There are live statues, flower kiosks, artists selling sketches or caricatures, sidewalk cafes..




Eating seafood paella on la Rambla
Most days, we'd explore until the walking and sun wore us out, then we'd take a siesta.  We saw famous Gaudi architecture, walked along the Mediterranean, wound through the narrow streets of the Gothic quarter, past Roman walls and into cathedrals; we didn't rush; we stopped to listen to side-walk musicians or to admire the boats at the port.  At a huge covered market called La Boqueria, we bought garlic-stuffed olives and fruit. It was different than the French markets I'm used to-- there was less bread and more meat-- sometimes quite crude, like tongue or skin or sheep heads with eyes and teeth intact:

Being on the sea, there was lots of fish! And instead of apples, carrots, and cabbages, there were pyramids of colorful tropical fruit:



I bought "pitaya" or dragon fruit because it looked so pretty with its magenta outside and poca-dotted inside.  Turned out to be rather flavorless, unfortunately:


Barcelona is in Spain, where, surprisingly, everyone speaks Spanish!  I never thought to actually pay attention to the little phrases in guidebooks, but we discovered that we couldn't even ask simple questions with our limited vocabulary of hola, por favor, si si, gracias, adios. A few times it was convenient to have two languages at our disposal and we did some business in French. Barcelona is such a tourist city, though, that our vocabulary of hola, por favor, si si, gracias, adios, served us adequately.  We never actually needed anything else (be thankful that you speak English; you can go anywhere!)-- it just would've been a nice touch to be able to big our waiter a good day.


On the roof of La Pedrera, a famous Gaudi building
That's me, under the palm tree




The video above is something we just happened upon in front of a cathedral-- big circles of old people doing a traditional dance that you could tell they had learned in their youth. 

Upon arrivial in Barcelona, I knew little about the city; leaving, I had learned that the mixture of exotic and European, ancient and modern, Spanish and worldly, makes it a difficult place to pin down.  I'll leave you with one of my favorite Barcelona moments:

Katie and I were catching some rays in Park Ciutadella, under a palm tree and some squawking green parakeets.  As we rested our feet, we people-watched.  A couple of guys were slack-lining between two trees; two others were practicing walking on their hands; a shirtless hippie was doing tricks with a ball while his buddy played a metal drum; on the other side of us, a group was ribbon-twirling; a little further off a man was making huge bubbles for the a group of kids; in a gazebo, two guys were hardcore tap-dancing to a friend playing a beat box... Now I've seen all of these things before, but never in the same place at the same time... We wondered if Barcelona was home to an uncommon number of talented people or if everyone's sole occupation was to entertain and awe the visitors.  It's certainly a place where people take their hobbies seriously.  The city feels like a big live circus, where fountains play music, dancers twirl fire, and there's always a spectacle to catch your eye on the street.