Archive for April, 2005

All Over the Place

Whew!  Well, since last I posted we’ve been in Beaune, Bern, Venice, and now we are in Trento with Hawk’s aunt, uncle and their three kids.

Beaune was lovely.  We went wine tasting in a twelfth century wine cellar, tried 18 different wines, and had a great time.  Met a fifty-something British couple at dinner and went drinking with them at a British ex-pat pub.  I think they were excited to be hanging out with us kids and proceeded to drink us under the table.  At about 1:30am we told them we couldn’t handle another pint and stumbled back to our hotel.  I was in BAD shape the next day.

From Beaune we took a train through Dijon to Bern, Switzerland.  Switzerland is the one country that we didn’t bring a guidebook for, so we were totally flying blind.  Randomly called some hotel (the Goldener Schlussel), which turned out to be in the perfect part of old town, with a very cozy room.  We were so exhausted from the first two weeks of our trip that we didn’t have the energy to do much that night except eat dinner - at a thai restaurant.  After about forty minutes of walking around peering at menus in german, we finally found this hole in the wall thai place.  Yum yum!  I was so excited to have panang with tofu!! The next day, we were still pretty tired, but went to see the bear pits.  Bern is named after the first animal that its founder killed on that spot (a bear), so in honor of that, the town has five pyrennes(?) bears in two pits.  Then we took a walk by the river, had lunch of a mixed salad and baked potato (the only thing on the menu we could decipher), then slept until dinner time.  We had thai food again, had a couple drinks, then went back to bed.  When we fell asleep, there was a fantastic thunder storm, and when we woke up, it was snowing!  There was about a half inch of snow on the ground.  SO unbelieveably beautiful.

On Sunday, we took a train from Bern to MIlan, then on to Venice.  Since it had snowed that night, the trip from Bern to Milan was gorgeous - through the alps with snow on all the trees, rushing rivers.  Surreally beautiful.

On the train to Venice, we met Erin and Greg, a Canadian couple who are traveling for three weeks.  Turns out they were headed to Venice for the same amount of time we were, so we called ahead, booked rooms in the same hotel, and hung out with them for the three days we were there. 

Sunday night we had dinner, then went for a walk to San Marco square. There are the "dueling orchestras" in front of several of the restaraunts on the square, and they all play wonderful classical music.  To stand in that grand space, listening to the music on a chilly night was one of the most romantic experiences ever.  There are of course the annoying flower vendors who stick bunches of roses in your face every thirty seconds and won’t take no for an answer, but even they can’t ruin the ambiance. 

Then we went back to the room and proceeded to drink three bottles of red wine (between the four of us), and then Greg busted out half a bottle of JD that he’d been carrying, and he and Hawk polished it off.  The next day, I didn’t think Greg was going to make it.  He couldn’t raise his head at breakfast, so we put him back to bed and Hawk, Erin and I went for a walk.  We rousted Greg in time for lunch, then went to San Marco’s Basilica, which was incredible.  The whole ceiling is gold mosaic. Had a crappy cheap dinner that night, then crashed early.

Tuesday we went to Murano, the island just off of Venice where all the famous Murano glass is made.  Did some good shopping, had a pizza lunch where we met a couple from Houston who we talked to for a while.  Hawk and I came back to the city, and were planning on taking a nap after checking trains schedules at a small travel agency.  The bitchy girl at the counter, who barely looked up, informed us that there was to be a rail strike Wednesday and Thursday, so we wouldn’t be able to leave the city.  She offered no other information and told us to go to the train station.  So, in a panic, we hustled to the station, found out that she had her head up her ass and that there was no stinking rail strike, and were able to book a train to Trento for Wednesday.

That night we were determined to have a good dinner, but were wiped out from our train-related panic, so we walked a short way to a restaurant on the waterfront that sounded good.  It was so unbelievably bad.  Hawk had wild mushroom polenta that had gloppy, gluey mushrooms and pasty polenta for 17 euros. I had hockey-puck-like gnocchi.  We grudgingly paid and left in a huff.

We adored Venice, but that last dinner was really indicative of the whole scene there.  It has become a total tourist trap.  During the day, there are hourdes of tour groups and school field trips cramming the streets.  At night, it’s quieter, but the restaurants know that they are catering to tourists who will never come back to their shop, so they don’t care if they serve you overpriced garbage.  It’s just really a shame.  Venice doesn’t deserve that - it’s too beautiful a city.

So now we are in Trento, which we are already in love with.  It’s in Northern Italy, nestled amongst the mountains in a green green valley.  Take note, Mom and Dad.  In a few years we may pull an Annette and Jon and come live here for a year.  Had the best gelato of my life here - a scoop of chocolate and a scoop of lemon.  Yum yum!  Tonight we’re having dinner with the fam and then tomorrow I think we’re going to a castle or something.  Fun!

Ciao!

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God help us all.

And what is this I hear - Britney Spears is pregnant??!  Good lord, people, I’m gone all of two weeks and you let this happen??

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Barcelona Nice Dijon & Beaune - Whew!

Wow we’ve been a lot of places!  Barcelona was awesome - climbed (literally) the Sagrada Familia, went to Parc Guell, and had chocolate and churros, which, after the wheel, I am naming the best invention by humankind ever.

From there we took an overnight train to Nice, which, Neil, you are correct, is one of the most beautiful cities ever.  We had crappy weather there, but it didn’t matter.  It is charming and romantic, the ocean is beautiful (so blue!)  I strolled through the streets in the rain eating lavender ice cream and bought handmade soaps at the outdoor market.  Hated to leave.

Yesterday we were in Dijon, which is lovely.  Small and cute, we sat in a square and watched little kids ride a carousel (which France seems to be big on).

Today we are in Beaune, a tiny town just south of Dijon.  The center of the city is the same as it has been since the 15th century, and since it is in the heart of Burgundy, we will be doing some wine tasting this afternoon.

Tomorrow we head for Bern, Switzerland!  I can’t wait to see the Alps.

A lot more to say but this crazy European keyboard is driving me insane.

Au revoir!

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Madrid - Meh.

Madrid?  Hated it.  Just a big, dirty city with too much traffic.  We did go to the Prado Museum and saw Bosch´s "Garden of Earthly Delights", which was really cool, and there was a special exhibit by Duhrer.  Awesome.  And our hotel was kick ass.  Our first night, Danielle (Hawk´s mom) almost got her purse stolen from a cafe on the Puerto del Sol, but she chased down the thief (who was absolutely dumbfounded that this middle aged American woman was busting ass across the street to run him down).  Exciting!  We´ve also had a really hard time eating in Spain so far.  The Spanish are huge on ham and crazy seafood, and we just aren´t.  We had a nice dinner on Wednesday night, since it was Hawk´s 31st birthday (yay baby!), but drank way too much and were completely hung over for our day trip to Toledo.

Toledo is cool, but I´m glad we didn´t spend a couple days there like we originally planned.  It was perfect for a day trip.  It is a town on top of a hill about an hour outside Madrid, and the architecture hasn´t been updated since the 1700s.  Gothic and really beautiful.  Did some shopping and sightseeing, then headed back to the city.

We left Madrid this morning and took a flight to Barcelona, and it feels really good to be back here after five years (we were here for three days on our honeymoon).  This is an amazing city - beautiful, gothic, charming.  It has changed a lot since we were here last - got way fancier, with more stores and upscale cafes.  Yummy gelato!  We´ve been here an hour and already I have sampled one lemon gelato and am planning my next.  We are here till Sunday, then are heading north, to a small town called Figueres, where Salvador Dali built his museum, and then I think we´re going to a tiny beach town called Cadeques.

That´s all for now, so…

Adios!

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Viva Madrid!

Hola from Madrid!  It took us 14 hours on a train to get here, and let me tell you, that is way way way too long.  We took a TGV high speed train (super plush and comfy) from Paris to Irun, a tiny town just across the Spanish border, then a Spanish Talgo train (ghetto ass weak sauce) from Irun to Madrid.  We got here about 11pm last night and check into our hostel.  This one was much nicer than the one in Paris.  Got up this morning and checked into our new hotel, the Palace Madrid, where we are staying with Hawk’s parents.  They get in later this afternoon.

That’s about it for now.  Off for our first cerveza of the day!

Hasta luego!

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Le Pope est mort.

Well we come to Paris and all hell breaks loose!

We’ve been having a great time so far.  We got here Thursday morning around noon, and our bags were still back in Philly.  But we made the best of it and went and checked into our hostel, which redefined "fleabag".  We had to rent sheets, there were no towels, and since we didn’t have our bags, we had no soap, shampoo or anything.  So our first couple days here were very very dirty. 

Friday morning, we woke up very early (by Parisiene standards) and were up walking around by 7am.  We got some breakfast at a little cafe: a cafe creme (latte), croissant, fresh baguette with butter and jam.  Perfect.  We walked around a little bit more, then got another cup of coffee and drank it while sitting in front of Notre Dame.  The sun comes up very late here, so by about 9am, the sun was just rising above the cathedral.  Breathtaking.  After coffe, we went in the church, where they were saying mass.  It was totally quiet except for the voice of the priest, saying his sermon in French.  Very peaceful and surreal.  Later that day we went to the Louvre, and saw the Mona Lisa, the Winged Victory sculpture, and the Venus de Milo.  By the evening, we also had our luggage back, so that was good.  After almost three days in the same clothes, I never want to see that shirt ever ever again.

Yesterday we went to the Eiffel Tower, Champs Elysee, saw the Arc de Triomphe and tried to go to the catacombs, but they are closed until May.  We also checked into a different hotel in the Marais section of Paris.  It is much better than the last place, but our room is on the fifth floor, and it’s a walk up.  This place has FIRE HAZARD written all over it.  The staircase is about two feet wide, and at about a sixty degree angle.  But the room has a great view of the street below, bustling with people at all hours.

The best part about Paris is just walking around, people watching, stopping in to cafes, taking a break and having a cafe, a beer or a glass of wine.  And the clothes.  My god, Mom, you would die.  Parisian women have amazing style.  I really want to do a little shopping when we head back here in May.  Paris is also a city of dogs.  Dogs of all sizes.  It’s really cool to see people strolling the streets with their dogs.  There are a lot of poodles and french bulldogs, but also spaniels, pit bulls, German Shepherds, etc.

Last night we went out with Laure, a friend of our friend Makis, who took us to a bar on a boat on the Seine.  We had a great time with her and her boyfriend, Manuel.  He is from Costa Rica but has lived in Paris for six years.  We drank a lot and were out way too late but had a blast.  We will definitely call them when we get back to Paris in a few weeks.

Today we are taking it easy, going to the Musee de l’erotique and the Luxembourg Garden.  We have to get up very early tomorrow to catch our train to Madrid.  We will be in Madrid by about 11pm tomorrow night, and we meet up with Hawk’s parents the next day.

We are having a great time and I’ll check in later!

Au revoir!

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