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| Marisa really loves travel books, she is definitely the resident Rick Steves |
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| We have a LOT of photos of each other taking photos, Amanda is very | excited! |
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| The organ at St. Paul |
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| 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
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| Notre Dame, there's a cafe nearby called Esmerelda's |
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| There was a lot of looking at maps today... |
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| We went across this bridge where couples put locks with their initials on them. |
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| Approaching the Eiffel Tower! |
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| Later, the tower began to sparkle, there was a unison "Aah!" |
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| 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.
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| The Louvre |
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| We had way too much fun imitating sculptures... |
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| I loved all the Egyptian beads and jewelry! |
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| The Louvre itself is a piece of art, the ceilings, the floors, it's all so beautiful! |
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| The Winged Victory of Samothrace, hands down my favorite Masterpiece |
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| The inside of Notre Dame |
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| The view from the top of Notre Dame |
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| 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.
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| The carpet in a room in Versailles, believe it. |
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| You've got to love the juxtaposition here |
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| The Enceladus Grove. I can read you the story from my guide book. |
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| The Orangery. This also has a cool story that goes with it. |
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| We were pretty tired. |
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| Oscar Wilde's grave. |
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| The top of Gertrude Stein's grave, I left the yellow colored rock. |
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| The cheese we got smelled so bad. We didn't eat from this one. |
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| 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.
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| 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.