Tuesday, August 7, 2012

So here goes my last post on this blog. How odd.

Just before leaving Paris I finished up my internship, then jetted off to London. I spent three days there, and I saw just about every London sight. I took a tour of the Tower of London, walked across Tower Bridge, which is boasting the Olympic rings at the moment.

 I saw Big Ben, Westminster Abbey, Parliament Square, Piccadilly Circus, some major churches, etc. My hostel was I think my favorite out of every one I've stayed in, though it was also a bit expensive. London in general is ridiculously expensive, though- a one-way metro ticket is 4.50 pounds, which comes out to about $7. The museums were free, but things like the Tower and Westminster Abbey were 16 pounds for the entrance fee (though they did come with free tours). I spent so long in the Abbey, and I wish they had allowed pictures! Elizabeth I, Mary Queen of Scots, Anne of Cleves, Charles Darwin, Isaac Newton, and a host of others are all buried there.
This particular side of the church reminds me of Notre Dame. 

My last day in London I went to Hampton Court Palace and had an absolute blast. I am a huge Tudor nerd so it was amazing to see all the rooms and paintings and the chapel is so gorgeous! I ran around the gardens for a bit, too. There are lots of pictures of the palace on my Facebook- I took almost 500 pictures during my London trip.


Unfortunately I stayed at Hampton Court Palace a bit longer than I intended, then when I got back I got lost, so I was freaking out trying to catch my shuttle on time to get to the airport. I made it with time to spare, but it was nerve-wracking all the same. When I landed in Dublin I found my hostel and then spent the rest of the night inside.

The next day I found O'Connell Street, which is the major street in Dublin, and got one of those cheesy tour buses to take me around. There isn't much to see in Dublin, unfortunately. I ran around Trinity College for a bit, which was established by Elizabeth I, and the bus went by the Guinness factory and the Jameson distillery. I saw quite a few churches there, too, and got a printout of the history of my last name for my Dad. I also took a trip down to Walkinstown, about a half hour from Dublin, and stopped in to a pub there just to brag about my last name and get some lemonade.

The town is tiny, only about 5,000 people total.

After Dublin I only had one more day in Paris, so I packed and did a bit more sightseeing, then got up at 4:30 am to catch the RER to Charles de Gaulle airport, caught my 8 am flight to Iceland, then had an hour and a half layover until my flight to Boston. I arrived in Boston at noon local time, but that's 6 pm Paris time, so I'd already been up for over 12 hours at that point. J picked me up and spent the rest of the evening keeping me from sleeping, though I was allowed a nap.

It's now been two weeks since I got home and Europe feels so far away. I went through my souvenirs from the trip and I have over 60 postcards! All the more to decorate my room with, I suppose. My family all loved their gifts and I've finally got my room back in order. Now only another week and a half until I leave for school, when I'll pack my room up again.

Thank you all for following this blog throughout my semester/summer abroad! I hope you enjoyed it, and if I go back to travel some more in Europe, I'll come back to this. Bye, everybody!

Monday, July 16, 2012

As my time here winds down I am even more busy. I am realizing just how much sightseeing I have left to do  (not going to get done) and I have a lot of work to finish before my internship ends Wednesday, and I have a lot of travel plans to do before London on Thursday, and tons of packing and prep to do before leaving for home next Wednesday. Basically everything is really hectic. As I leave for London on Thursday, don't expect anything this coming weekend- I won't be here! Last bit of travel before the big voyage home :)

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Only (almost) 10 more days until I get home! Right now it's 10 and 18ish hours, so round up to 11, but almost 10!

Today is Bastille Day, the celebration of the end of monarch in France (kind of). The Louvre was free today in celebration, which meant every single tourist had lined up and caused a two hour wait. No thank you, I'd rather pay the 10 euros and wait in a 5 minute line than a two hour one with no sunscreen.

Instead I ran off to La Defense and the St. Denis Basilica and the Madeleine and Place de la Concorde. I'm trying to knock things off my list, but realizing that there is simply no way I'm going to get all of it done.
Chateau de Fontainebleau? Nope, too far. Musee de Vin? Probably not (how unfortunate!). Catacombes? Nah, more important things to see. Pere Lachaise cemetery? If I have time.

The issue is that I have tomorrow (going to the Louvre, finally) and then after work Monday-Wednesday, but then I leave to travel until next Monday night, so then I have next Tuesday to sightsee but that day also has to include packing. And then I leave Wednesday. So I have very limited time left to see everything. I'm going to get as much done as possible, but I won't be super upset if I don't get hit everything. That's what my next trip to Paris is for ;)

Monday, July 9, 2012

I'm sorry I didn't get around to updating you all on my travel plans right away, but that's because it took me until about 5 minutes ago to complete them. Here is my schedule for the rest of my stay in Europe:

July 10-12: Work
July 13-15: Sightseeing, Bastille Day, etc.
July 16-18: Work
July 19-21: London
July 22-23: Dublin
July 24: Pack, sightseeing
July 25: Come home!

Saturday, June 30, 2012

I'm finally in Sucy, suitcases and all. I'm doing laundry for the first time in almost a month, and I am desperately trying to use up all the products I have accumulated during my 5 months here that will not fit in my suitcase on the way home. My goal is to only have one checked bag and two carry-ons on the trip home, even though I do have another bag that could be a second checked bag if necessary (I just don't want to pay for it!).

Today I'm unpacking a bit more and trying to figure out my plans for this month. I have an idea in my head, but I've waited a bit long to buy tickets to London, Dublin, and Rome, so I'm hoping they won't cost me an arm and a leg. I'll get on that this afternoon and then post again and let you all know my plans!

Monday, June 25, 2012

Would you like to know how I'm spending my night in? Packing up all my belongings for the second time in less than a month. Very depressing.

Though, that means I will be coming home in exactly a month! As much as I love Paris and Europe in general... I miss home. I miss knowing where things are and not having a language barrier and being able to buy whatever I want because I have plenty of room and won't have to transport it in a suitcase. I miss normal shower heads that aren't detachable and having a front lawn and hot weather (I know you're all complaining back home about how hot it is, but I have been wearing long sleeves and/or jackets since I got here because it hasn't topped 75, okay? I want summer!). I want to see my family and my dog and my boyfriend and my room and all my clothes back home (I do actually have a full wardrobe, right?). I miss salespeople who smile and being able to find what I want in the grocery store (I went looking for Wheat Thins the other day, or the equivalent... nope. Only cookies).

In other news, I made a giant list of things I want to see in Paris while I'm here. Some things have already been done so they aren't on the list anymore (like Disney Paris) and others have been seen but I haven't done everything related to it that I wanted (like the Eiffel Tower- saw it, but I want to go up it again). Here it is:


Paris Sights by Arrondissement

1:
Louvre
Conciergie
Les Halles (soldes 27 juin-31 juillet)
Jardin du Palais Royal
Jardin des Tuileries
Sainte Chapelle
Comédie française
Musée des Arts décoratifs

4:
Notre Dame + crypt
Place de la Bastille
Maison de Victor Hugo
Hotel de Ville

5:
Panthéon
La Grande Mosquée de Paris
La Sorbonne
Musée de la Sculpture en Plein Air (Tues-Sun 10-6, Mon closed)

6:
Musée national Eugène Delacroix
Jardin du Luxembourg
Luxembourg Palace

7:
Eiffel Tower
Musée d’Orsay
Musée Rodin
Le Musée de Vin

8:
The Grand Palais
The Petit Palais
Madeleine
Chapelle Expiatoire
Place de la Concorde

9:
Palais Garnier
Musée Grevin
Galleries Lafayette

10:
Pink Flamingo resto

11:
Musée Edith Piaf

14:
Catacombes
Montparnasse (14/15)

16:
Flame of Liberty

18:
Sacré-Coeur
Montmartre
Musée de l’érotisme

20:
Pere Lachaise Cemetery

21:
La Défense

Outside of Paris:
Versailles
Saint Denis Basilica
Chateau de Fontainebleau

Sunday, June 24, 2012

At the beginning of June I went to Berlin. My hostel was on a street which was the sight of a famous protest during WWII which I learned about in one of my Smith classes. The protest was by a bunch of Aryan women whose Jewish husbands had been arrested, some even deported to Auschwitz already, and the rest were being held in a building on my street which no longer exists. The women protested outside the building to get their husbands back, and they made such a fuss that the men were brought back, even those already sent off to concentration camps, and there was no retribution on the women or their husbands. How awesome!

To be perfectly honest, while the sights in Berlin were great, I didn't have that great of a time until the last night. I got lost countless times- while first trying to get into the city from the airport, I took the right train in the wrong direction and ended up in Rangsdorf, aka middle of nowhere. I was later told that it's a good thing I'm blonde and that I didn't make it known that I don't speak German, because it's not safe there. Great. Anyway, I learned that day that I'm a true traveler: I was able to get myself back into the city and to my hostel without simply taking the same train back in the other direction and then figuring out how to get to my hostel from there, as the directions I was given were no longer useful.

Once I finally arrived in Berlin, I had a hard time finding my hostel despite the fact that I was in reality quite close to it, simply because it's a small street and the map was weird. Some people were really nice and spoke English with me, but there was a salesgirl who yelled at me.

At that point I was tired and hungry and not having it, so I rested in the hostel for a bit and then went to find schnitzel, which, for those of you who have never had it, is essentially a giant chicken finger (assuming you get chicken and not veal). I ran around a little bit to see Museum Island and get lost a bit more, and then, honestly, I just went to bed, because as I said before, I just wasn't having it.

The next day was a bit better: I went to a museum I've forgotten the name of but it was essentially about daily life under a socialist regime. They even had an old car which had been made especially for East Germany, because steel wasn't available so it was some other material. Anyway, here's me in it:
Then I headed off to a concentration camp! I should specify that that explanation point isn't a "Aren't concentration camps cool?!" It's a, "This is something I really wanted to see and didn't think I'd be able to so I'm glad I did!" I saw Sachsenhausen up in Oranienburg, north of Berlin. There are tons of pictures with explanations on my facebook, so please go there to look at them. But I will tell you a bit about the history of the concentration camp that I didn't put with those pictures:

Originally the SA took over an old brewery in Oranienburg to turn into a camp for political prisoners. When the SS took over, they also took over the camp, and they used labor from the prisoners there to build the Sachsenhausen camp nearby. It was planned by an architect and everything, and the guide said the only "bad" thing about it was that the design made it impossible to expand the camp, as it as in a triangular shape with walls. They did eventually expand the camp, but it was outside the walls. They had a shooting...ditch? I don't know what the term is. And they also had gas chambers and ovens, though those were built later and destroyed by the Nazis before abandoning the camp. They conducted medical experiments and killed patients in the infirmary, and there are mass graves that were discovered by the Soviets later on. After WWII ended, the camp was taken over by the Soviets who used it for political prisoners again.

The majority of the buildings aren't there anymore, or have been heavily renovated. To give visitors an idea of what it used to look like, they have building outlines filled in with rocks to show where buildings used to stand.

That took me about all afternoon. After getting back to Berlin, I grabbed dinner and then headed back to the hostel to sleep.

The next day I went to Checkpoint Charlie, which was the American checkpoint near the Berlin Wall and across from the Soviet one.

(Checkpoint Charlie above, and what's left of the Berlin Wall below).

After that I did a small walking tour past a bunch of buildings which were important in the Third Reich, like Hitler's bunker and such. Most of them are no longer standing, though a few remain and have been converted into other uses. Then I headed over to the Brandenburg Gate:


My dad specifically requested a picture of me in front of it, so here you go, Dad! Sorry for the awkward fence, not much I could do about that.

Would you all like to know where the American embassy is in Berlin? Why, it's right next to the Brandenburg Gate! So if you lose your passport or something, you can kill two birds with one stone haha.

 Finally, I met G's friend S for dinner, along with my professor for the aforementioned Smith class, DB. I had Vietnamese food for the first time! It was great and I had fun. They got me on the train for the airport after (no getting lost!) and I headed home.

So that's Berlin. I know I didn't have as great a time there because I only had 118 photos from the trip- normally I have at least 150, if not 200 or more. Oh well, I'm glad I at least saw it, and I had fun with all the WWII-related stuff.

On to what's been going on in Paris: I've been working from this week, which basically means goofing off and not getting enough work done. Oh well. Why work when you're in Paris?!

M came to visit with her family from the states, and it was great to see her. C took us all to a cute little restaurant near the Eiffel Tower with delicious food, and we caught up for a bit. I also went to the Louvre with them on Wednesday night and discovered that some ticket checkers will accept my Swiss residency (if you're under 26 and in the EU you can get in for free at night) and others won't, because technically Switzerland isn't in the EU, it just has accords with them. I had a great time, despite getting super lost because I didn't have a map. I will definitely be going back because there's no way I could see everything in one night. Anyway, here's some pics of me:


The first is me with winged victory (also creating another video from 2009) and the second of me with the Mona Lisa (I got all the way to the front of the crowd!).

I also recently took a walk up the Champs-Elysees to the Arc de Triomphe, and I saw the Invalides as well. On Friday A, F, and I went to Disney Paris for the day! There are pictures on Facebook, but it was fun, though a bit cold.

Today I went for a short walk to Notre Dame and did some touristy shopping. I was going to go inside Notre Dame finally but there was a HUGE line, probably because it was raining, so I said to myself, "I live 5 minutes from here. I am not waiting a half hour to get into this church. I will come back later!" and I did.

Random things about Paris:
  • Some people are really weird. There was some man randomly jumping and talking to me outside a pharmacy the other day, and I had two guys say stuff to me as I walked by- not harassing me or anything, just asking weird questions.
  • YouTube has so many more ads here! It drives me insane.
  • Metro tickets are the bane of my existence. I have so many of them, they accumulate in my pockets, I'm never sure which ones I've used and which I haven't. Sigh.