Monday, October 26, 2009

Mulled Wine, Cold Nights, and Art Nuvo- Must Be Praha!

Prague, Czech Republic. 
City of a hundred spires. Stretching across the Vltava River. Home to such great artists as Alphonse Mucha and Franz Kafka. A mix of old and new buildings, ideas, and cultures. Prague has a different feeling to it than anywhere else I've been in europe. It has a distinct feeling of its eastern-european influences, what with the fur hats on sale in the gift shops and the scent of hot mulled wine floating down the street. It was the seat for the Holy Roman Emperors, one of which was Charles V who is quite famous for his improvements to the city and his relations with europe at large. It is definitely the most romantic city that I have been to so far! It even topped the Spaniards with its number of PDAs per square hundred meters. I heard many many languages being spoken, though english seemed to be the accepted form of universal communication (thank goodness!) I also heard a lot of Spanish, Italian, French and German being spoken around me. It was a fantastic feeling of international exchange and cultural mixture.


We arrived in Prague on friday afternoon and found that our hostel was advantageously located just around a few small corners from the old town square or "Saroměstske náměstí"- we decided that all Czech words are long and full of weird accents and stuff, thank you is "kuji" pronounced DYEH-koo-yih, pretty complicated, eh? But apparently I have a good accent because when I said it to the cabdriver he asked me if I spoke Czech, to which I had to blush and say no, not at all.- My roommate Katie and I checked into the Hostel and then went exploring in the old town. We discovered the Tynska church which was right on our doorstep and walked around the square to see the famous astronomical clock (which is completely unreadable to any normal human, but luckily has three or four regular clocks within eyeshot), and the Church of Saint Nicholas ("Kostel de Sv. Mikulás") which was beautifully decorated in baroque fashion. We also walked down the King's Walk (no longer as impressive as it sounds) to the Charles bridge, which is a famous landmark notable for its lines of statues as it crosses the Vltava. We poked our noses into the Jewish Neighborhood, or "Josefov" which was closing shop for the night and would be closed for the sabbath the next day,  it had this lovely old feeling about it like you could feel the history there, I really wish we could have seen more. Friday night we decided to try one of the many cafes that offered a patio that was pretty open-air but filled with tall space heaters and blankets on the back of all the chairs. The Czech people are apparently obsessed with Pizzerias there were a million of them, only topped by the number of places offering take away of mulled wine and hot chocolate. But we had a very nice Italian dinner and went to bed at 11ish so as to get up early the next day. 


These are the Astronomical clock, St. Nicholas', and Tynska respectively.

 

Saturday we got up and out on time, but misplaced the starting point for our free tour and so ended up wandering, but that was good anyway. We had some really great pancakes that were like crepe-thin pastries with dollops of maple syrup the texture of caramel on it, SOOO good. We got to see the St. Wenceslas's square in front of the national museum, and also the Municipal house with interior design by Alphonse Mucha, one of my favorite artists. We then walked all the way across the old town, crossed the river and went up the hill to the Prague Castle, the seat of the Czech government and the ancient governing center of the Holy Roman Empire. There, we got audio guides and passes to the various sights and therefore saw the beautiful St. Vitus's Cathedral (which was naturally refrigerated- remind me never to go there in winter!), Parts of the former royal palace and states rooms- one of which was the cite of a defenestration where one political party threw another's representatives out a window, the St. George's basilica which was the older of the churches and the cite of the burial of many Bohemian Kings and their relatives, and also the Golden walk which is a tiny row of houses that was once home to Franz Kafka for a year. 

St. Vitus's and one of its interior windows by Mucha!

We then walked all the way back across the city at my insistence to see the Mucha Museum. It was totally worth it! I loved learning more about the history of his work and how he became famous. I think that his works are just the most beautiful things. Art Nuvo is really just so amazingly detailed and lovely. I spent a few hours there, and then Katie, Me, and a Brazilian woman named Maria Fernanda who we met in our hostel room all went out for dinner together. They ordered the famous Czech beer, and I had a mulled wine just for the experience of it! It was very strong with cloves, but the cinnamon and lemon they added to the red wine were really good. I could see really enjoying it if I ever had to live up there in the cold. I also had a really great Czech desert which was called Medovník, or honey cake- I usually don't like cake so the fact that I devoured this means that it was really really good. I mean this stuff was amazing! I've got to find a recipe. Anyway, we had a very early flight in the morning (the only cheap thing we could find unfortunately) and so we turned down the pretty czech boys trying to convince us to go on the a pub crawl they were advertising and called it a night.

All in all, I really loved Prague. The weather was brisk and fall like with trees changing colors and everything. It was a big city but felt very small and beautiful. I loved the art and the architecture and had a lot of fun exploring and trying new things! It was a great trip and I'm really glad we went to the trouble of planning it! If you want to see all the pictures they are finally uploaded on Facebook after much struggle with the idiotic server.

I love you all, and please let me know how you are by responding to the post below this one!
A

Katie and I at the top of the Astronomical Clock Tower, looking out on Tynska!

Thursday, October 22, 2009

How About a Check In?

Hello Friends and Family!

I'm off to Prague bright and early tomorrow morning, but I just thought I'd post something before I go.
I haven't heard much from a lot of people since leaving, only a few of you have turned up on skype and whatnot.
So, If you read this, time to do something about it!
I'd really love it if you leave me a little paragraph or so about how you are and what you are up to, in the comments for this post. That way I can feel like I know a little something about what's going on in the outside world! - don't forget to leave your name at the end if you don't have a profile to identify yourself! So please please please let me know how you are, doesn't matter if you think I I'm talking to you or not- Just do it! Please!

Love to everyone! I'll post about prague in a few days!

A

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Everything's Clearer at Six-Thousand Feet

On my trip to the Sierra Madrid with the school I saw a lovely pair of rounded, green mountains with huge open spaces and rocky bluffs toping the peaks. Yesterday I found a train that would take me back to the little hiking outpost so that I could see if I could get to the top of those same mountains.

I was able to find a path up to the top of the breathtaking mountains! It was  a long and steep climb, but totally worth it! I made it all the way to the summit of the taller of the two mountains, and ate my lunch there. I was feeling tired and sitting in a sheltered rock outcropping away from the brisk wind, so I just curled up against my backpack and closed my eyes for a little while! Most EPIC NAP ever! Opening your eyes to see green mountains and clear sky is just about the coolest thing ever.

I really enjoyed being out there by myself, with some time to think and relax. Hiking helps me to stop feeling pressured and just deal with whatever is going on from a more removed, rational place. Somehow the combination of the exercise, the outdoors, and the general quiet is the perfect catharsis for me.



It was a pretty awesome day! More photos are on Facebook!

Love,
A

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Writing- Some things from here in Spain




Sunflowers
Thousands of dead sunflowers line the road on which I travel. They all bow their heads in the same direction as if, in the same moment, on the same day, they all turned their faces into the sun, said goodbye, and gave up their hold on this earth. And yet though their souls, if they ever had any, seem to have departed, their tall dried bodies still fill the fields. Brown dried out sentinels still all facing the same direction. As though they were waiting for something to appear but simply got old and tired when, after so long, nothing came. They look like their hopes have all been dashed; as though they have realized that sunflowers cannot have dreams, cannot see miracles, and the realization crushed their very hearts.

Once, they stood straight and beautiful, hearts full to the brim of summers and sunshine. They spent their days watching the sun cross the sky and believing that happiness would never end… But now it is autumn and the human beings are falling in love, the season to find someone to keep you warm for the winter. But for the flowers… they have found their hopes misplaced. Discovering that the sun moves farther and farther away, that the rains stop coming and the ground dries up. And no matter how much they wish to keep their stalks green and petals in the sun, one by one they must give up; turn brown, brittle, and dry. Their faces bowed to the ground, their leaves hanging stiffly by their sides.

And yet, somehow, they still stand. Inevitably, one day they must lie down, mustn’t they? Their dead roots cannot hold against the winds forever… Though all their hopes have fled, though they are shells and crumpled corpses of what their glory was before, though the eternal summer they awaited will never ever come, somehow they still stand. I watch them as I go by, and I wonder… I wonder against all my reason and all my knowledge. I wonder if their patience is in fact in vein. A part of me wants to believe that their broken hollowed out bodies will stand tall and green, whole again, and that their supreme faith will be rewarded… someday. Part of me wants to believe.

Madrugada

Cuando camines en la sombra
Te quedes sin ni siquiera una vela
Pasas por el silencio
Hacia… no sabes que
Pie adelante pie
Pasando con el ritmo del corazón
Tan despacio la sangre
Enfriándose dentro de las venas
Buscas el sol
Paso a paso
Cuando ves las montañas
Y se parecen a tu hogar
Parecen como tu casa
Pero están tan lejos
Pie adelante pie
Y respires como el aire está saliendo
Esta ciudad ya vacía
Y las hojas del verano
Pasan tu camino
Susurrando con voces secos
Contándote de los días que han ido
Paso a paso
Pie adelante pie
Buscando el sol
No puedes parar
No puedes regresar
Cuando sientes que el mundo es tan redondo
Y gira debajo de tu cuerpo
Casi te calles
Pie adelante pie
La música no siempre será triste
Claro, el noche sí es oscuro
Dura a través del milenio
Pero esperanza viene con la madrugada
Solo tienes que seguir-
Lo más duro de la vida
Paso a paso
Pie adelante pie
Esperando el sol

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

The Wheels On The Bus... Yeah...

So, the class trip to Huesca area in the north of Spain was cool. We spent over five hours on the bus every day, so that was... great. But the north of Spain is absolutely beautiful. I would love to live up there someday.
The first place we visited was the medieval castle Loarre that was part of the Christian north's defense of their border with the muslim territories in the south. It was the base camp of the King of Aragon's conquest of the surrounding muslim cities so that he could create the larger more powerful Kingdom of Aragon from which came Katharine of Aragon who married Henry VIII. Pretty cool stuff. The castle itself is perched just on the edge of one of the outlying ranges of the Pyrenees and overlooks hundreds of miles of Spanish countryside. Seriously, I don't think I've ever been able to see so far in my life! I absolutely loved it there. I wanted to stay forever. The weather was beautiful too, briskly autumn with breeze and sun, but not too cold! Here's a picture:


We stayed the night in a town called Jaca, about 2 hours from Loarre and 30km from the border with France. It was pretty, but sorta far from everything. The next day we saw two Romanesque cathedrals, one in the smallest town in Spain to have a cathedral, called Roda de Isabenda. This town only has 30 families inhabiting it, that has to be only about 200 people in total. The cathedral had an open crypt- like it was just there, no stairway or basement or anything. That was pretty unique. We had two hours journey on the bus both ways- to Roda and then out to Huesca.  The next church, which was the cathedral of Huesca, was an interesting mix of Romaneque base and a gothic arched top, because the original roof was wood and had been destroyed by fire. This cathedral had a weird little chapel devoted to two child saints who were martyred, it was wierd because they really hadn't done anything to get sainted besides having been killed by having thier throats slit (there was a lovely painting of that, but aparently their relics had performed miracles and so they became famous and the patrons of lots of places in Spain.... Don't ask me...

In general, I really liked getting to be in the North. It's just so beautiful, I want to live there someday. But being on the bus for soooooo long was just really not so fun. I realized that you can't work on a bus, no matter how hard you try, you just fall asleep. Oh well, they celebrate Columbus Day here so I had off school and did all my work today.


If you want full picture album check my facebook, they are very pretty landscapes mostly. Well, next up is Prague!!! I can't wait. My life is getting interesting here, contact me for details. :)

Otherwise, everyone take care and I'll talk to you later!

Much love to all,
A

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

The New (and maybe final) Itinerary!

Hello all!

Last night I booked the last of my trips that I am officially planning to take! It's gonna start rolling here this weekend with about 2 trips a month and not stop until I get home. I thought I'd post up my schedule so that you all can keep track of me, and pray for safety on my trips if you feel so compelled. (I will be doing the last three alone, as of now. And I am very excited, yet very scared about that- It should be the experience of a lifetime.) So, here it goes:

This weekend (Oct. 9-11)
I will be in the nothern Spain Roman city of Huesca.
I will be going with my Spanish 418 Culture and Civilization class, and we should be staying in a hotel (*gasp* such swank!).


October  23-25
My roommate Katie and I are going to Prague!
We'll be staying right smack in the middle of the old town area, and trying not to spend too many Kroner...

November 6-9
I will be spending in the lovely Paris!
I've never been to france, and I am so excited for the Louvre and the Eiffel tower and all the beautiful autumn ambiance. (the picture is of Notre Dame in the fall).

November 19-21 
(this is the maybe/ unbooked one)
IF it's as cheap as they say it is I may go to Granada with my friends this weekend.

November 27-29
I will be in Belgium visiting the medieval city Bruges.
This is sort of a whim trip, I want to see some of Belgium and this seems to be the best place (or so say the books, movies, and other media i've seen).

December 4-8
This will be my biggest and most exciting adventure: an Italian tour flying me into Rome, taking the train to Florence, Venice, maybe Verona, and Milan flying back from there.
I am über excited for this!!! It will be amazing, and difficult and awesome. I'm getting a eurorail Italy pass for it! Here's the map:


From there, My parents and brother arrive December 19th I think to spend Christmas on a tour of southern Spain with me! It should be fun!

If anyone has gone to these places, or has any advice- feel free to let me know! (Anyone should be able to comment now- just leave me your name so I know who to thank!)

Love to Everyone,
A