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Saturday, September 25, 2010

The first week of classes, the Vienna Phil and one quiet weekend!

My new comforter! Haha!
Montag 20 September: Today was the first day of real classes! I only have one class on Mondays and it's not until 1:15! I woke up early non-the-less because Meg's phone went through the wash and she needed me to set an alarm since she has class in the morning. Oh well. Every other Monday the cleaning lady comes and cleans our apartment and brings new sheets. Today's sheets are very funny! My new comforter (the sheets consist of a fitted sheet and then a comforter, no other sheets, just the comforter) has a pattern that is a zebra print center and then side borders on the right and left that are red with these kind of Grecian heads on them. They're so funny! I had lunch with Amanda and we tried a new place called Mama's Kitchen. I got a snitzel semmel sandwhich, which was really good! My one class today was Austrian Art and Architecture. I'm so excited for this class! Every Monday we have a lecture and then on Wednesday we go on a field trip! We get a free museum card so we can get into several museums for free! Another part of the class I'm really excited about is our journals. We have an ongoing assignment that is this journal. There are a few required entries, right now I'm working on my "What is art to me?" entry and then we are supposed to make entries for each of our field trips and have some entries of individual experiences such as travel or other Viennese excursions. We were so pumped about the journal that Kristin and I went out to shop for Moleskines right after class. After some searching I found one! I made dinner for everyone tonight. I wanted to make grilled cheese, but I don't know the word for groyere cheese in German so I just went with the easy way out and made pasta. Pesto with sundried tomatoes and artichoke hearts. Yum!

Dienstag 21 September: Today begins the long days. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday I have class at 9 and then have another class at midday and then another night class. I can finally go home around 8. Marathon days with awkward breaks in between. Today started with German and then I had Classical Symphony, which is a musicology class. At night I had Nations and Religions. I'm trying not to buy a weekly U-bahn pass until October so I can buy a month pass. Plus this week is supposed to be really nice out, so it's not so bad to walk. After Nations and Religions Katie and Ben and I went to get sushi. We have this favorite sushi place near our house and all the maki is always 50% off. It's so good!


Mittwoch 22 September: I start Wednesdays with Nations and Religions again. My professor lives in Budapest so he takes the train to Vienna, teaches Tuesday night then Wednesday morning and goes back to Budapest. In Art and Architecture we talked about all the field trips we'll be going on which makes me super excited! Today was the first day of performance workshop which was stressful to say the least. We tried to discuss schedules for ensembles... I'm playing in ten ensembles... This is a very difficult thing to coordinate... For the time being we had to sacrifice our Friday afternoons for two coachings, which is pretty upsetting considering that most people are done with class at 10:30 or at 1:00 on Friday and can then go and travel. I will not be done with class until 4:00 on Friday now. Frowny face. I'm not very happy about this. I was even more unhappy when I found out that while all the string players were trying to figure out schedules everyone else in the workshop got a free standing room ticket for Friday's Vienna Phil concert that will be conducted by Dudamel! What?! Are you serious?! Dinner tonight: more sushi! haha. They love us there! While we were waiting for our sushi they brought us four of these honey schnapps drinks and then three fortune cookies and some sort of special candy just for us! So great!

Donnerstag 23 September: No performance workshop today, which is exciting and means that I get done with class at 3! This entire week has been just great for practicing! I've been very productive! Not a whole lot going on today, just homework and a little bit of shopping on MariaHILF. (The shopping street, really called Mariahilferstraße.)

Freitag 24 September: Thank Gott it's Freitag! What a long week! Wow! Today I just had German and Performance Workshop. There was an Alexander technique lecture in workshop and it was really funny to observe everyone watching their posture during the lecture, haha. Ben gave me his ticket to the Vienna Phil for tonight!!! I was so happy! It was so incredible. It was another one of those experiences like seeing the Eiffel Tower! The program was Gioacchino Rossini: Ouvertüre zu "La Gazza ladra", Julián Orbón: Tres Versiones Sinfónicas, Leonard Bernstein: Divertimento for Symphonic Band, Maurice Ravel: Pavane pour une Infante défunte and Maurice Ravel: Boléro. There was this one part in the Bernstein that was a string quartet bit and I actually got a little teary eyed, it was just so amazing and beautiful. It was just so incredible! I can't even really express in words how amazing it was! It was so clean and shimmery and beautiful. It was just inspiring to see an orchestra where everyone clearly cares! It was also amazing to see this sold out concert hall where people pay to wait outside an hour before the concert to stand for two hours in the back of a concert hall and even that is packed! The concert hall was amazing too. I don't have pictures because cameras weren't allowed (even though many people disregard this rule). Dudamel was just incredible too! So amazing. The dynamic range was unreal! It was so insane how quiet they could get! Everyone in the audience was so into it and it was just so crazy to see that many people so into Classical music! No one was asleep or looking at their phone, they were just there. The Vienna phil will only actually be performing in Vienna two more times while I'm here, but I will gladly stand for two hours with a bunch of smelly people to see it again! Basically, thank you Ben for the ticket. After the concert we went to Chicken Dinner, which is totally my favorite night time hang out now! Zan really wanted to make Austrian friends, but I the norms here are very different than in the States. People don't really go out here to meet other people. They already have their people and they go out to hang out. There is no penetrating those bubbles. Just because someone is looking at you, does not mean that they are interested in talking to you or approaching you. They just like to stare here... When we finally got home, I was so tired and ready for bed!

Packing up at the Flohmarkt
Samstag 25 September: So this weekend Lauren and Meg are at Oktoberfest so I have my room to myself, and I'm not going to lie, it's pretty nice! I slept in this morning and then had a relaxing day of homework, laundry, grocery shopping. Just getting done what needs to get done. It was really overcast and rainy today, so that was kind of a bummer. I was going to go to the flea market, but I didn't make it until it was shutting down since I didn't want to go while it was raining. I got a coin purse for only funfzig cent! (50 cents) I was really exciting because I've been looking for a coin purse everywhere! Marisa made dinner for us tonight and it was so delicious! She made dill chicken with rice and bell peppers, yum! It's quiet with two of the roommates gone. (It's kind of nice, seven girls can be a lot at times) After dinner Marisa and I worked out to one of her work out dvd's, which was really painful and fun! At night we took it easy and Emily and Zan and I went to Phil to get some hot chocolate. I got a hasselnuss cho, which is an Italien hot chocolate with hazelnut! Yum! Tomorrow the plan is church, practice, Beethoven house. It should be a fun Sunday! 

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Chicken Dinner, München and Oktoberfest-Eins, Zwei, Drei, Super!

Chicken dinner. Can you see the movie?
Donnerstag 16 September: Today I took it easy. We are home in Vienna for the day and then tomorrow we leave for Munich to go to Oktoberfest. My feet hurt like crazy so I'm staying in bed as long as I can today! I stayed in bed until 3:30 then Marisa and I walked around near IES and then Mariahilf. I started coat shopping, since it's starting to get a little bit chilly, but I didn't end up buying anything yet. At night Emily and Elizabeth and I went out to a new bar Emily read about. (Not new, but new to us) It's called Schikaneder, but we call it chicken dinner. It's super awesome. They play independent films on the wall and have really cool music, and it's not too expensive. I think it's my new favorite bar in Vienna.

Freitag 17 September: So I'm kind of sad this morning because my train doesn't leave for Munich until noon and Marisa and Ben leave for Munich at 6 am. I really wanted to go to Dachau, but it closes at 5:00, which is when I'm getting to Munich. So I decided to wake up early and go to the train station to see if there's any way to change my ticket. Here is the time line of my fabulous morning:
5:00 wake up ugh...
Sitting on the floor in the train, eating lunch.
5:20 leave for the Wesbahnhof train station
5:50 get turned down for a switch in ticket by that same bitchy girl that I always get at the öbb office
6:00 decide to ask how much a ticket to Munich is. It's 83 Euro, forget it.
6:30 arrive back at my apartment and realize I forgot my keys, ring the doorbell and call my roommates
6:35 fall asleep on the steps of Dürergasse 18
7:00 wake up and decide to go to a bakery and get breakfast
7:15 finish breakfast and head to the grocery store. It doesn't open until 7:30 so I sit on a bench
Still sitting on the floor, yep right next to the WC, Super!
7:16 look at the time. 7:18  look at the time. 7:19 look at the time. 7:20 look at the time, you get the idea
7:30 go to Zielpunkt and buy snacks for the train
7:35 reach in my purse to pay and find my keys. ugh.
Dinner, yummy!
Weißer Bräuhaus. Isn't it so Bavarian?
Walking around Munich. This is their Rathaus.
So then I went to my train at noon. For the first stop we had to sit on the floor because there were no seats that weren't reserved. For the rest of the ride we got to sit but we had to seat hop at every stop which was kind of annoying, but not too bad. David packed sandwhiches for us and I packed drinks and snacks so that was pretty good too. Marisa and Ben met us at the stop near our hotel and I got all checked in. After that we went to get dinner. We went to this traditional Bavarian restaurant called the Weißer Bräuhaus. It was founded in 1490. Isn't that just crazy to think about! We had to wait a while to be seated, but it was well worth the wait. It was really awesome too because every time we spoke German to the waitress she spoke German back! She didn't even try to speak to us in English which was refreshing from Vienna where everyone switches to English. I ate two meatballs and potato salad. I drank a radler (lemonade and beer, it's super yummy!) and then for dessert Marisa and Ben and I split these apple doughnut things with ice cream and whipped cream! It was so delicious! After that we decided to rest up for Oktoberfest tomorrow so we headed back to the hotel and went to bed.
Ready to go back and go to sleep!
Waiting to get into the tent. Oy!
Playing Sabateur, waiting for festivities to start!
The tent, it was huge! And this was just one tent!!!
Standing on benches!
It says something about "you are madness to me"
I'm wearing a travel money thing, can you tell?
This is where Hitler played pool. Kind of eerie.
I have a bruise from holding this beer...
Samstag 18 September: Well today is the first day of the 200th Oktoberfest! We were up by 6:30, breakfast at 7, on the Sbahn by 8 and at Oktoberfest in line for a tent at 8:30. Breakfast at the hotel was amazing! It was this incredible buffet! I had smoked salmon sandwhich and this granola that tasted exactly like the vanilla granola I buy at Sunflower Market at home! Ok back to Oktoberfest. We got there and realized that we were some of the only people not dressed in liederhosen or drindels. Kind of embarrassing, who would have thought that so many people dressed up! So originally our plan was to go get a table (you need to be seated at a table if you want to order beer) drink one beer once the keg was tapped at noon, sober up and go to Dachau before it closed. That didn't happen. We finally got into the tent (we were at the Pschorr-Bräurosl tent) around 9, but that didn't mean we got a table... We wandered around asking every table if they had room for four for about an hour. What people do is they send in one or two friends to snag a table and they hold the table for all their friends. So each table only had one or two people at them, but they were all "taken". It was incredibly annoying and frustrating! So we kept looking, but we weren't having any luck. We finally decided to split up. David and Ben went off and Marisa and I stayed together. Eventually we decided to just stand near a bunch of tables with empty spots, since they weren't letting anyone else into the tent. There were other people doing the same thing and we would kind of smile at them and shake our heads every time someone would turn us down for a seat. It was crazy, David and Ben were offering people money to sit down, Marisa and I would go to tables of boys our age with puppy dog eyes. There was just no way to find a table. Finally this group left a table near us and a group of friends sat down. Some of them were the ones we were smiling and kind of joking with us and they offered for us to sit with them! Yes! Finally! We succeeded in getting a table at Oktoberfest! YES! (David and Ben were still searching, but Marisa and I got lucky!) At this point it was 10:30 so we had a while to wait before it all would start. The group we were sitting with all work or go to school together in Munich but they all came from Italy, Pakistan, Malaysia, Finland, France and Germany. So it was a really international table and we all just spoke English to each other. One girl had a card game with her called Sabateur. It was kind of complicated and had a lot of different types of cards, but the main point of the game was to build a path to gold and some people were trying to get to the gold and some were trying to not get to the gold. It was really fun once we got it and I think I'm going to try to find it in a store here so I can play with my brother Adam when I get home! Near noon the parade came through the tent and things started getting crazy! (ok so they were already crazy before this) People were standing on benches and chanting and cheering. It was just nuts. We made friends with our waitress whose name was Frannie (pronounced Francie) She kept coming by to look at our card game and chat with us, this turned out to pay off because she served us first! We were the first table in our whole area to get beer, it was really cool! Beer at Oktoberfest comes by the liter, that's a lot of beer! Ben and David told us they got a table outside and we decided to meet outside at five. So for the next five hours we drank beer, sang a lot of German drinking songs and I probably spent about an hour and a half of my life waiting in lines for the bathroom! We had such a great time with the people at our table and talking about differences in our countries! It was awesome! I had two beers, but I didn't finish my last one because it got kind of warm and gross after I was gone at the bathroom for so long! Marisa and I also enjoyed a very large pretzel and then later a gingerbread cookie. After we met the boys we noticed that someone who shall remain unnamed was acting kind of weird. The moral of this story, don't take candy from strangers. Especially at Oktoberfest after three liters of beer. I'll leave it at that. We decided it would probably be best to get dinner and then reassess after that. We went to a restaurant where Hitler used to play pool. We ate a ton there, the portions were huge! I had chicken and rice and frites (and water!). It was very good. We wanted to play a game of pool, but with the circumstances the way they were, we decided to go back to the hotel and call it a night instead. We went back and I watched children shows in German for a bit. (That's the best because I can understand everything they say!) Overall it was a good day though.
 My Tips for Oktoberfest:
1. Get there super early. 8:30 wasn't early enough!
2. Wear traditional Bavarian clothing, if you don't you look silly. (Believe it or not)
3. Bring something to do while waiting, like Sabateur.
4. Try to be friendly and make friends with other people waiting, you can look out for each other.
5. Pace yourself, things can go downhill fast, and the bathroom line is long!
6. Pretzels are yummy and good to fill up your stomach while drinking beer!
7. Don't plan anything else for the day. You will be here all day!
8. Don't take candy from strangers! I'm serious!
9. Have fun and go with the flow, you might have to be flexible and don't get frustrated.
10. Eat a good breakfast, it's going to be a long day!
Another early morning. Yawn

The snack I packed. Isn't this just creepy?!
Sonntag 19 September: Even though I slept for eight hours, I was so tired when I woke up! My train was at 8:24 this morning and I wanted to catch the Sbahn by 7:30 because the subway system of Munich is very weird and then next train wouldn't come until 7:50 which was cutting it close. Breakfast started at 7, so I wanted to leave the hotel by 7:20. We ate fabulous breakfast and I packed a few snacks for the train. I went to check out thinking it wouldn't be too long, but it turned out that fabulous breakfast was not free. Oh no, it cost 10 euros a breakfast so I had to pay for that and it took time for the payment to go through. Needless to say we missed the 7:30 Sbahn. We waited 20 minutes and thankfully just made it onto our train back to Vienna. We were off and about half an hour into the trip the train suddenly stopped. There was an announcement in German and all I got was "Vienna" "Get off the train". So we got off the train. No one spoke very much English so we kind of spoke Gerglish for a while and determined that a train ahead of us derailed (assuring, I know) and we were going to have to go back to Munich and catch another train to Vienna. We took an Sbahn back to Munich and got a new train to Vienna through Salzburg. We made that train and were off again. I fell asleep for a few hours and when I woke up the train was stopped. This time all I could make out was "working" and "20 minutes" (the Bavarian accent is very different from the Austrian one, and it kind of sounds like a different language!) That was great because our layover in Salzburg was 20 minutes! We made it to Salzburg and thank God, the next train was also delayed, so we made it! Getting home to Vienna felt so great! I was three hours late and had a very stressful morning but I was so glad to be home!!! For dinner Marisa, Katie, Elizabeth and I went to get sushi and then I just relaxed! Ah! Tomorrow classes start! I only have Art and Architecture at 1:15 but I think I'm going to practice in the morning. Time for bed! What a great week!

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Oh mein Gott! Paris: The city of light!


Marisa really loves travel books, she is definitely the resident Rick Steves
We have a LOT of photos of each other taking photos, Amanda is very excited!
The organ at St. Paul
Our hostel was really close to the Bastille
Sonntag 12 September: Ubahn to the bus station, bus to the Bratislava airport, plane from Bratislava to Paris BVA, bus from BVA into the city, metro to the hostel. Welcome to Paris, the city of light. (haha, or at least that's what the Let's Go Europe book calls it.) The trip to Paris was with Emily, Marisa, Amanda, Jeremy, Evan and Zan is arriving late on Monday. We arrived in Paris and got all checked into our hostel. We stayed at the AIJ Bastille Hostel, which was pretty good and it was really cheap since we got a private room and split it between three of us! We only actually reserved one room in the hostel, we were going to play it by ear and see just how possible it would be to fit more people in a room and split the price. The answer came to us in the form of a very bright pink sign in the lobby stating that if anyone was found in the hostel that wasn't a registered guest they would be turned over to the police... So we booked another room. From there we were all super hungry, so we


















Notre Dame, there's a cafe nearby called Esmerelda's


There was a lot of looking at maps today...
We went across this bridge where couples put locks with their initials on them.
Approaching the Eiffel Tower!
Later, the tower began to sparkle, there was a unison "Aah!"
On the Metro after a long afternoon of walking.
went to a little cafe and got late lunch or early dinner, whatever you want to call it. I had tomatoes and mozzarella, which was super tasty! After that we decided to walk around the city with the ultimate destination of the Eiffel Tower. We went into St. Paul cathedral first. Every time I go into any church in Europe I'm just really blown away that people were able to create something so detailed and amazing! After that we continued walking down the Seine until we got to Notre Dame. We went in, but they were having mass, and I always feel weird being a tourist when people are trying to worship, so I decided to go outside and take pictures and we all decided to go back tomorrow. After that we kept walking and as the sun set we made it to the Eiffel Tower! It was so exciting to see! To be honest, I got really teary eyed and overwhelmed. It just seems like this fairy tale that you grow up with and then when you are walking up to it, you realize that it's real, and that you are so lucky to have the opportunity to be there and see it for yourself! That's kind of just how I felt this entire trip. Like I was living a fairy tale, realizing it was real and how lucky I am to be able to experience it all! We ate crepes and french fries under the Eiffel Tower, I got a chestnut crepe, which was really weird... It kind of tasted like apple cinnamon, but also kind of like gravy... which just sounds nasty, but I liked it and was weirded out by the fact that I liked it. After that we went back to the hostel and called it a night.

The Louvre
We had way too much fun imitating sculptures...
I loved all the Egyptian beads and jewelry!
The Louvre itself is a piece of art, the ceilings, the floors, it's all so beautiful!
The Winged Victory of Samothrace, hands down my favorite Masterpiece
The inside of Notre Dame
The view from the top of Notre Dame
Half way to the top of Notre Dame.
Montag 13 September: We all woke up bright and early today grabbed breakfast at the hostel and were off to the Louvre. We planned it just right, we got there twenty minutes before it opened and right after we got in line, all these people showed up and the line got so long. After getting into the Louvre we went to buy tickets and thanks to Amanda asking we all got in free with our visas since we are students studying in the EU! That was pretty great. The Louvre was absolutely amazing! It was overwhelming how much there is to see there! We all started out together but all went our separate ways and decided on a meeting place at lunch time. I started on the ground floor and saw amazing French sculptures, I think this was one of my favorite sections. I saw the Mesopotamia, Iran, Egypt, Greek, Italian and Northern European sculptures sections. Another part that I really liked was all of the Egyptian jewelry. It was so amazing all of the details on these tiny beads. There was this other awesome exhibit in the thematic circuit that was this collection of these stamps that were used on clay pots. They were like a bead that was rolled onto the clay making a continuous design! They were so cool! I saw the Code of Hammurabi and the Venus de Milo. After the ground floor I went downstairs and saw more sculptures including St. Mary Magdalene and the Medieval Moat exhibit. After that I went through the Spanish and Italian paintings and saw The Mona Lisa (which is very small), The Consecration of the Emperor Napoeon I (which Evan called "The Consummation of the Emperor Napoleon I", not quite the same thing, haha) and The Wedding Feast at Cana. It's amazing seeing the Mona Lisa in person, even though it's a lot smaller than you might imagine it's still amazing of what a crowd it draws and it's interesting to try to figure out what is so special about it. Rooms with masterpieces are also strange because all the other artwork in that room is fairly ignored since everyone is so drawn to the masterpieces, it's just interesting to try to understand hype I guess. The Louvre itself is a piece of art, each room has an amazing ceiling with paintings and carvings and even the floor is beautiful and people just walk on it while observing what's on the walls. After we met for lunch we decided to stay for another three hours. I went and saw The Winged Victory of Samothrace, which was definitely my favorite of the masterpieces of the Louvre. I don't really know why, but it really stood out to me. I walked through more Greek and Egyptian exhibits and saw the Seated Scribe. I skipped over the Renaissance, Middle Ages and Restoration Sections and went straight to the Napoleon III Apartments, which were really gaudy and cool. After that I went to the second floor and saw the paintings from the Netherlands, Germany and France. These were all really beautiful, but by this point I was so tired and we had been at the Louvre for five hours, so things started kind of looking the same to me and I got really turned around and lost, finally when it was about time to go I just followed all the exit signs and made it downstairs. The whole Louvre experience was just incredible! After the Louvre, we went to Notre Dame again and went inside now that they weren't having service. Then we climbed to the top of Notre Dame. To get to the top it takes over 400 steps. There was an amazing view of Paris from the top. Notre Dame took 200 years to build, but looking at it I'm amazed that's all it took, there is so much detail, it's just insane! After Notre Dame we went to find some of us another hostel to stay in, since the original one was full and we didn't make enough reservations. Then we went to meet Zan and we all got dinner. Paris is very expensive! I think I did a pretty good job regulating costs, but everything is just so much more than it is in Vienna. Before we all went to our respective hostels we all decided on what to do on Tuesday because we were going to all split up. My choice was between going to the Catacombs or Versailles in the morning. I couldn't decide so I decided to make a decision in the morning. I took off my shoes to find my right foot severely blistered from a day of walking. Ouch.




















The carpet in a room in Versailles, believe it.
You've got to love the juxtaposition here


The Enceladus Grove. I can read you the story from my guide book.
The Orangery. This also has a cool story that goes with it.
We were pretty tired.
Oscar Wilde's grave.
The top of Gertrude Stein's grave, I left the yellow colored rock.
The cheese we got smelled so bad. We didn't eat from this one.
Au Revoire Paris, it's been fun.
Dienstag 14 September: So I decided to go to Versailles. The travel book told us that a roundtrip train ticket to Versailles cost 6 Euros and then admission was 8. Not so bad. Well, don't always trust the book. We bought the train ticket, then we got there and admission to the palace was 15 Euros, but we were there so we all bought a ticket. Amanda bought a guide book for the palace and I bought a guide book for the gardens (which is what I wanted to see most anyway) We went through the palace and Amanda read to me about each room. It was really interesting because the artist Takashi Murakami had his art on display in all the rooms. I really liked it all in the palace because it created this really dramatic juxtaposition. It's also cool, because they exhibit artwork in Versailles to continue a tradition that Louis XIV started. Murakami's work is very poppy, Japanese and manga oriented, so I'm sure you can imagine how strange it was in the gaudy Baroque palace! I think that was part of what justified the price to me though... I really loved it all! After going through the palace, we decided to go to the gardens. One problem, to go to the gardens, you have to pay another 7 Euros... ugh. Thanks a lot deceiving travel book. We decided we were at Versailles, so we should see Versailles, plus I already bought the guide book, so we all bought tickets to the gardens. We walked around for a few hours and I read about each fountain and grove that we walked through. I'm really glad we had the guides, it made everything a lot more significant than if I was just looking at it. Marisa wanted to go to Marie Antoinette's estate, but guess what? That cost more money too! So we decided to draw the line and stop throwing money at Versailles. I didn't eat lunch though, so I didn't feel too terrible about buying the garden ticket. After Versailles, we met up with everyone else that went to the Catacombs. We all laid in the grass for about an hour pretty exhausted. When we all managed to sit up we decided to go to the Le Père Lachaise Cemetery. The cemetery is over 105 acres and the largest cemetery in Paris. It was so cool, it was like a little town with streets and blocks. We saw Chopin, Gertrude Stein, Oscar Wilde, Bizet, Poulenc, Lalo and Jim Morrisons' graves. I was so happy to see Gertrude Stein's grave. I picked a rock and said a prayer for myself and Allison, thanking her for what she's given to our friendship and left it on her grave. Oscar Wilde's grave was covered in kisses and lipstick, I researched the significance of that, but as far as I can tell it's just from admirers who view Wilde as a martyr for love. Zan was really mad about the vandalism. I don't really know how I feel about it. I think it would be really amazing to make such an impact in peoples' lives that they want to leave their mark on you somehow, but I think if people only did it for nostalgia reasons, I would be upset, if I were Oscar Wilde that is. Jim Morrison's grave is near a tree where people have written notes to him and Doors lyrics. While walking through the cemetery we saw a black cat, so that was a little weird and foreboding... After the cemetery I'm pretty sure we all felt like we were going to die from walking so much. We went to a grocery store and got picnic stuff for dinner and headed to the Eiffel Tower for our last night. We had a picnic and of course ate baguettes with cheese and wine under the Eiffel Tower. Then something weird happened and police started clearing out this huge area around the Eiffel Tower and we found out later there was a bomb threat, but it was really strange, because no one actually left. We all went our separate ways since everyone else was going to Barcelona in the morning.

Sigh of relief, we made it to Bratislava and we're almost home!
Mittwoch 15 September: We have to catch a bus from Paris to the BVA airport, they recommend that you catch the bus three and a half hours before your flight, so we're all meeting at the bus stop at 11. Marisa went to church (which she actually missed because the travel book listed incorrect service times) Emily and I went shopping and Zan went to the bus stop early. I bought Little Prince pajama shorts! That's where the fun of this morning ended. So it was around 10:30 and we were only a few stops away from the bus stop on the metro, so Emily and I were headed that way. She wanted to mail some postcards and I figured it couldn't take that long. Well it did. We were at the post office until 11... we ran to the Metro and made a train, but then it was delayed for 20 minutes! (We still don't understand why) In the meantime I'm hoping that Marisa and Zan get on the bus for the airport. We finally make it to the bus station, the only problem, we're on the wrong side of the road and have to back track to get to a crosswalk. The time is now 11:45 and we have finally made it to the bus stop. It takes an hour to get to BVA. The next bus comes at 1:10. As soon as the bus guy said that, I thought I was going to throw up. I felt so sick and worried for about thirty seconds, then we pulled it together and flagged down a taxi. We had to take an hour long taxi ride to the airport, but we made it in time. Yikes, that was so scary. Then I was terrified to go through security, I didn't mention earlier, but I really could have packed better for this trip. Since we had just taken a trip by train, I didn't really think about carry on restrictions and I packed a full tube of toothpaste, a giant bottle of lotion, a bottle of face lotion and then a large bottle of face wash, plus tweezers and nail clippers. All of these are not supposed to go through in a carry on, but somehow I made it through with them all on the way into Paris and I wasn't about to just throw them away and give up. Well guess what? I made it through security with everything! That's reassuring huh? Emily made it through with a corkscrew, but they did manage to take her toothpaste... We made it to Bratislava without any hitches and then the bus ride to Vienna went well too. It's good to be home.

Lessons Learned From This Trip:
1. Don't pack things in your bag that are not carry on appropriate.
2. Research things from travel books on the internet ahead of time, secondary sources are good.
3. Book the hostel for everyone, it's cheap anyway.
4. Allow extra time, just in case you get held up at the post office or in a freak metro stall.
5. Wear comfy shoes and bring bandaids if you know you will be walking a lot. Alternating shoes each day works well too.
6. It's cheaper to buy beverages of any kind at the grocery store than at a restaurant or at a vending machine.
7. Always ask if there's some kind of student discount.
8. Sometimes being cheap is not always best.
9. When in crisis: Keep calm and carry on.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Tour of Dürergasse 1812, Sick Days, First Lesson, German Finals, Staying Full in Hungary and That Money We Hate...

So once again, it's been a while since I updated. This last week was the last week of German intensive, so it was very busy! But here we go! This post covers a tour of my apartment (finally), my first lesson, German finals and our trip to Budapest, Hungary!

Eine Melange bitte!
Sonntag 5 September: This morning I went to church. I got all dressed up and headed to St. Augustin with Marisa and Meg. We ran into Zan on the way there so we all sat together. The church was so amazing, I didn't bring my camera, because who brings their camera to church? Apparently everyone. There were people just walking around during the mass taking pictures all over the place, tourist groups were walking by, it was very strange. I always feel pretty out of place when I go to Catholic churches, I guess just because I don't really know what to do and when to do it, but I felt really out of place when I didn't really know what to do since everything was in German. There was a lot of sitting and standing. Sometimes you would stand up and they would say one word and you would sit down. It was very interesting. It was super cool though because there is an orchestra and choir and the music was really amazing! After that, Marisa and I went to McDonalds. (We figure it's a pretty big part of the culture here so we should explore it and it's different here) I got a cheeseburger (my first McDondalds cheese burger in probably six years!) with fries and a coke. It tasted really different than in the states. Very real. The fries tasted like potatoes. Marisa got these things called potato rounds that were really good! They're kind of like flattened curly fries and you dip them in sour cream. After lunch we decided to find a cafe to do homework at. We found a place near our house called "Phil". It's a cafe and book store and seeing how I had over three hours of homework, it was perfect. I ordered a melange, (half coffee, half steamed milk). It's gotten to be my coffee drink of choice here. Coffee is just so amazing in Vienna. Anywhere you go, it's incredible! So the rest of the day was pretty much devoted to homework. Oh ya, I also made sushi today. Which despite not having everything like it is at home, turned out pretty good!
The triple. This is where Katie, Marisa and Elizabeth live.

Montag 6 September: Today I woke up so sick, but came home right after class and slept for a long time. The maid came today. We were all kind of confused about what day and when she comes. Turns out it's every other Monday in the morning. Now that the apartment is clean, I thought it would be a good time to take pictures, since I still haven't done that. So here is the virtual tour of Dürergasse 18, number 12:
This is my and Meg's room, mine is the right side.
Here's the living room, as you can see we've got a puzzle going.
Our kitchen, with Elizabeth and Lauren making lunch.
This is our bathroom, with our cute little cubbies!
This is Emily and Lauren's room.
My favorite part of the kitchen, the Obama magnet on the fridge! (It came that way :) )
Dienstag 7 September: Today I woke up and couldn't talk or move, so I stayed home. I slept until 3:00 and Ben brought me my homework. I left the house to register for classes and buy more orange juice (I drank 3 L of Orange juice today) and then I did my homework and went back to bed. That was about it for today.

There was a brochure of a rat at the Rathaus... Kind of funny.
Mittwoch 8 September: I still felt pretty bad when I woke up today, but my German class had a field trip to the Rathaus today, so I felt like it was pretty important for me to go. We had a tour and the entire tour was in German... So I didn't really understand most of it. It was really exciting whenever there was something that I understood though! Our final for German is on Friday so I started studying today. Emily made all of the roommates curry chicken today for dinner and that was really good.
One thing I understood is 10 people can fit in this chandelier!
There is a flag for each state, which we now know from our quiz.
The ballroom, for waltzing obviously.
The ceiling of every room was amazing!
Everything here is just so amazing!
Courtyard. It was raining a lot today.

































































Donnerstag 9 September: Today I woke up and felt so much better! Today was such a busy day! I called my teacher last night to see when I should have a lesson, his answer: "Tomorrow!" So today I had my first lesson. It was really good. It was two hours long and we spent one hour on the first line of my sonata alone. He's demanding, but nice about it so I think it will be good. Funny story, so I allowed myself an hour to get to the lesson since I've never been there. It took fifteen minutes. He lives by this huge park, I've never seen so many kids playing at a park before! It was incredible! So I decided to go to Billa (the grocery store) and get an apple and sit in the park and wait for my lesson. Well today at Billa with every purchase, you got a free apple, so I bought an apple, then I got a free apple... It was pretty funny. Then I met my Austrian buddy today also. Her name is Krisztina. She is so cool! I like her so much! We went to a traditional Viennese cafe and had coffee and talked about music and movies and culture for almost three hours! It was so much fun. We mostly spoke in English this time, but next time we're going to try German. I'm so excited to get to know someone who lives here! Then I went home and studied a lot.

Our little hostel room! It was so nice!
The strange but amazing instrument.
Our home made Hungarian dinner.
Literally a hole in the wall.
Freitag 10 September: German finals today. It wasn't so bad. Just very long, but I think I probably did alright. At 1:50 our train to Budapest left. I went with Kristin, Marisa and Emily. Three hours later, we made it to Budapest. (I was really sad because they didn't even check our passports or anything, so according to my passport I've never been to Hungary, but I have!) It was pouring rain when we got there, but luckily we all brought umbrellas. The first thing we did was go to the atm to take out some Hungarian money which is called Forint. (And we hate it) Kristin went first and thought she did the math right, but ended up taking out the equivalent of about 600 US dollars. I ended up taking out about 30 US dollars, which proved not to be enough, but I was able to buy some from Kristin. 1 US dollar = 223.264121 Hungarian Forints. Not the easiest conversion... We went and checked into our hostel. Hostel Adagio! It was so cute. It was an apartment and there were four rooms, one big dorm and then a few private rooms. We got a private room and it was really nice. Marisa has the Let's Go Europe book so we followed that a lot. We found a little hole in the wall place to eat dinner where there is no menu, you just go and this family cooks you a traditional Hungarian home cooked meal. There was also live music! There was this instrument that looked like a piano and harp combined, but the strings are hit with mallets! It sounds so amazing! For dinner we had this pasta with some sort of really good oil and then bits of steak and sausage. It was really really good. And then we each got a beer. It got pretty awkward towards the end though, these two violinists came and tried to sell us their cd. Then when we left they were like "Ciao Baby, ciao, sex" It was just so weird. But everything else was good. When we went back to the hostel there was a cute couple our age from Wales. They asked us if we wanted to go out with them to meet up with some other people staying at the hostel from Belgium. (It was so great because most of the people working at/staying at the hostel spoke English!) So we went with them and we went to this super intense club! It was three floors and huge. You had to pay a few dollars to get in then had to go through this labrynth of coat rooms and bars and other rooms and there were all these rules about where you could and couldn't go if you had a jacket or a bag and it was just so confusing and everything was so expensive and there were so many people there we couldn't really find the Belgians! Sara (the girl from Wales) found one, but he didn't stay long and it was just so crowded! The US Open was playing on a big screen near the dancing room, so I thought that was pretty funny! It's so weird how just a three hour train ride away from Vienna can be so different! Everyone at this club was dressed like they were going out at the Jersey shore, it was so different from what we've become used to in Vienna! Then we left this place to find a backpacker bar that we read about in the travel book. We walked all around and could not find it! We finally ended up at some random bar (which oddly enough was also playing the US Open) and played billiards. We went back to the hostel around 2 and slept like babies!

The inside of the antique subway car
The outside of the antique Subway ca
Samstag 11 September:
The location of Hostel Adagio.
Crepe and shake. This milkshake brings all the boys to the yard!
Welcome to the Castle District.
Parlament and the view from the Castles.
Walking around aimlessly. Everything is so beautiful!
Marisa and Kristin walking next to the Danube.
Walking across the bridge over the Danube.
The Danube, separating Buda on the left and Pest on the right.
The triathlon
The hummace bar (pre-hummace)
Are you HUNGARY for Hannah Montana funyons?
We woke up today in our lovely hostel ready to do more in Budapest. We stayed on the Pest side so we decided to go to Buda today. We took the subway which was just crazy! It looked like we were getting into this antique box that went speeding around underground! Once again, just very different from Vienna. We ate at this amazing crepe place we read about. It's open 24 hours a day and was really cheap! I got an apple and poppy crepe and then to drink a cherry and cinnamon milk shake! It was so good! So sososososososo tasty! Needless to say, we were not going hungry in Hungary. We decided to go to the castle district from there. We walked all around just looking at all the buildings and architecture of churches and castles in Buda. It finally stopped raining, which was great. It was very touristy in this area but it was just so incredibly beautiful! We decided to walk back to the hostel so we could walk across the bridge over the Danube. I'm so glad we walked, we got to see so much of the city! We stopped in a second hand store to buy some socks to change into on the train since all of our feet were soaked. The ones I got are grey and say in very colorful letters "OFF RUN". They're awesome! The lady that worked there was super sweet and was so excited to speak English with us. It occurred to me today that this is the first time that I've visited another country where I had literally no clue about the language spoken. I've been to Argentina, Spain and Austria and I've taken Spanish and German in school. But here, I don't know a single word in Hungarian, and even though some people speak English, not everyone does. That was kind of a weird realization. Anyway going back to the bridge. As we neared the bridge it seemed like some sort of event was going on. It was some sort of world wide traithlon! They were on the bike portion. There were so many people there so we waited and watched for a bit. It's just so crazy how there is so much going on in a city that you might not even be aware of. We kept walking on the Pest side for a long time looking at everything and decided for lunch to go to a hummace bar that we read about in the book. (Yes we really used that book!) It was incredible! SO good! (We ate well in Hungary, so well!) I got a falafel pita with hummace. Marisa got lafa bread that tasted like magic so I ate a lot of that too. We walked around a little more, but stores close really early in Budapest on Saturdays and everyone was pretty tired so we decided to head back to Vienna. We went to the train station and got some postcards and I got a scarf. We were going to take the 5:10 train, but we ended up hoping on a 4:10 train that we had to make a transfer on. Literally a minute after we got on the train it took off. I wrote my postcards and slept some. Then we transferred trains and made it back to Vienna! It was interesting coming back to Vienna, it really feels like coming home! We said goodbye to Kristin who will be leaving tomorrow for a week in Poland by herself! I hope she has a good time and is safe! We had a lot of fun on our Budapest adventure. Tomorrow we leave at 7:20 to catch a bus to Bratislava to catch our flight to Paris!