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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Paris


there it is- I hope! I don´t currently have the photos since I am on the library computer at school, but Paris was beautiful, like most places in Europe. Although I must say, Paris is SUPER beautiful.

note: there will probably be some weird looking punctuation and accent marks due to this hard core keyboard.
note also: this is the first post that has not been written between 2-5 AM, I believe. It feels quite nice.

Anyway, so yeah, Paris is beautiful. Everything is insanely ornate and large, and there is SO MUCH to see. Paris is, however, quite spread out. I couldn´t study abroad there. If you had a car, I suppose it would be easier, but it is very spread out, and the metro is older and, thus, less comfortable than in Madrid.

Javi and I took the night train to Paris. It left at 6 on Thursday and arrived at 9 AM Friday. We slept hard since we went out to Gabana the night before. The typical Wednesday is this: intercambio, 100 Montaditos (euro montaditos and jarras of beer on Wednesdays) then Gabana, which is a club sponsored by Belvedere, and on Wednesdays, it has free drinks from 12-1:30 AM. Say you know Omar (the club owner), and you get in free.

Anyway, so the train was so nice- especially the return trip because Javi and I had our own luxurious room, and the train has a cafeteria and a nice restaurant, so it´s very nice and fun!

Back to Paris:
We stayed in Hotel Queen´s, which is super nice and cute, and it´s located in a VERY non-touristy area. It was recommended by Nancy´s brother, Mike, who has an apartment in Paris. OH YEAH! My mom and her close friend, Nancy, arrived last week on Tuesday! Forgot to mention that; it´s one of the reasons I haven´t posted in a LONG time besides the fact that you never have time for sleep here.

Back to Paris Back to Paris: Javi and I ate delicious food upon arrival: Croque Madame with a side salad and mushroom omelette. In France, you eat EVERYTHING or it´s considered a waste. I learned that the hard way, and I wished I had been hungrier before sitting down to eat. Also, at many places, you have to pay to use the restroom, so keep that in mind when you travel to France.

Javi and I wondered around, and we ended up taking a train to Versailles, which is kind of on the edge of town (the metro doesn´t go there). It was so amazing. We walked around the gardens and passed out on the lake´s edge until the madres arrived around 3. We all met up and ate dinner at this delicious Italian restaurant that Mike took us to with his wife and son.

That night, we walked under the Eiffle Tower and bought tickets for a cruise on the river for the next night. Mike showed us around Paris and took us down the streets with bars and lots of people. I can´t remember many names, especially since I´m not even half-decent with French. Paris at night is so awesome, but it´s very difficult to do things alone when you don´t speak ANY French.

The next day, we took a bus tour, which takes you to all the major spots in Paris, and you can get off and on whenever. We went through the Louvre Museum, and everywhere else you can imagine. We ate crepes and such for lunch, and we had dinner on the river cruise, which is a MUST DO in Paris.

The soccer game against Spain was that night. It was crazy! Spain won, and the people were, rightfully, not happy, but many were very destructive about it. Riot squads were standing aside ready for anything, and people were getting rowdy and aggressive. A wine bottle barely missed Javi´s head. We bolted and chilled at a bar until the people had dispersed and left the large area where they watch the game (like Madrid´s Bernabeu Stadium)

There´s so much to say about Paris and our experience, but nonetheless, I was very relieved to return to Madrid and to a place where I could communicate with the people. Unfortunately a heat wave hit this week, and it has been sooooooooo hot!!!!!!

This weekend we go to VALENCIA!! I actually go tonight, and I´m so excited!
MORE TO COME! EEEK!

Monday, June 18, 2012

Barcelona


Barcelona this past weekend was amazing. It is very different from Madrid, but you need more than 3 days for sure.

It is more spread out than Madrid, so the metro is INSANE. So many people are squished in it, and you have to travel quite awhile to get anywhere.

It was hot, and the people were crazy fun; bearing in mind that the people we met were mostly tourists due to the Sonar music festival, but we met SO many people from different places whether just for a 10 minute convo walking to the beach and back or drinking sangria before the club crawl at the hostel.

There is so much night life in Barcelona! We went to Shoko, Cat Walk, and the beach til the morning time both nights. Others went to Opium as well.

Everyone was there to have a good time:


We walked around las Ramblas, and we ate lunch there. It was very beautiful and difficult to describe. It's a street of shops and different architectural buildings. We went to the famous Market de San Joseph/La Boqueria, and it was INCREDIBLE: 10 times bigger than San Miguel's in Madrid. 

The beach was great, the water was cold, and the entertainment grand. 
The metro is open 24 hours on Saturdays - I WISH MADRID'S DID THE SAME!!!!

Barcelona has many stories, and we definitely made a ton! I have to return. 





Photos thanks to Jason Krusie & Vaness Charis



Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Mallorca! +

NEW VIDEO! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xN7gFYyPY9c

It's so hectic! You never have time to stop, eat, or sleep!
It's been super fun & classes are great. So much happens that it's hard to write a detailed post reflecting on the week, so I'm going to try to post more often; I've just REALLY been taking advantage of this siesta thing when I can since you don't really sleep at night. I guess that's what happens in a culture that you eat lunch at 2 and dinner at 10/11 PM.

Last week we did a bunch. Notably, we went to intercambio again and brought a large group of people to 100 Montaditos - I very much recommend! It's very cheap and DELICIOUS. On Wednesdays, una jarra de cerveza is only 1 euro and all the montaditos likewise are a euro, so it's a great deal. Montaditos are small bocadillos, which are sandwiches and are basically the food of choice here. Everything has an unbelievable amount of carbs here. We try to balance it with protein, but it can be quite tough!

Thursday we went to the famous Madrid club - Kapital - ^
It was UNreal. So much fun! We literally didn't get home til the sun was rising, which is actually more common than you think in Spain. 

I went to the famous Museo Del Prado on Friday. There's SO MUCH ART there & botanical gardens. El Greco, Velasquez, and the likes have many a painting there.

Javi and I went to Mallorca this last weekend as well! We left on train to Valencia for ~1:30, then took a ferry that stopped at Ibiza on the way to Mallorca - it was 10 hours long! Baeleria was the cruise name & yes, it was a cruise it turned out more than a ferry! And the Friday we went, they had bands playing on the terrace of the ship, so there was basically a party until arrival at 8 AM in Mallorca. Javi and I slept through most of this party after our crazy Kapital Thursday!

We then took an old style train to a tram to Puerto de Soller. It was nice because it is basically a tourist attraction and a cheap way to get around Mallorca. Mallorca is a MAJOR tourist attraction for, randomly, Germans. The people who work there speak Spanish, German & English at most places. 
Where we stayed was unbelievably beautiful. A video will be up soon. 



We PASSED OUT on the beach for ~4 hours, and I ended up with half of my body and face sunburnt since I slept on my side! Then we put the vibrams on and walked along a cliff trail to what ended up being the spot for local youth. They were sitting in circles on the cliff and jumping in the water and swimming with their pups. Javi and I sat out there for an hour or so, and when a group left, we jumped in the water from where they'd been sitting. It's quite cold there! 

We went to a delicious restaurant for dinner, and enjoyed sangria during the Germany game. 
The next morning we went back on our way to Madrid. 


Some lessons learned this week

  • If it feels right, say you're from the UK because in some situations, it may work to your advantage in case a person doesn't like Americans much -- example: taxi drivers, club promoters
  • Speaking of club promoters! To drink for free and have a fun bar hopping experience. Walk around Madrid just about any time after 9, although 11-1 are prime times. Club promoters are EVERYWHERE with get free entrance and free drinks/shots at that time. Walk in, have a drink, enjoy the atmosphere, leave, go with the next club promoter with a flier that says free drinks. (SOME don't have free drinks, but most do)
  • 100 montaditos is the BOMB
  • When you go to El Tigre and get Sangria, ask for it WITHOUT sugar. 
  • When in the metro, and on all escalators, stand on the right side, walk down on the left. DO NOT STAND ON THE LEFT SIDE. 
  • Don't call people señor or señora & don't use "usted" in Spain unless the person is very old or unless you want there to be a distance (like sometimes waiters and such) 
  • People stare A LOT and it's normal- especially on the metro
  • Get a piccell phone if you can

That's all I can think of at the moment! So EEEEE

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Sevilla and Such

Sooo this past weekend, we ended up in Sevilla!
Javi and I went by train (utilizing our Eurail pass), and it was one gato loco  [Lolololol]
We got a sweet hostel for the price called Hostel Urbany. I stayed there in a room with 8 bunk beds with Javi's group. There were 2 rooms of that & my API group stayed at Oasis because the hostel was already booked that we were at. The Oasis was a bit more expensive, but it had a pool that overlooked the plaza, and was reallllly sweet.

Sevilla is beautiful. There's a lot to see, and there was a cute festival while we were there that Javi and I watched from a coffee shop. We ate at the delicious & cheap tapas place called Levie's & I very much recommend it if you're ever in Sevilla.

It's pretty much been going steady on the insane level. We did a pub crawl (the API group, Javi & I did it both nights, and Javi's group went as well on Saturday).
It was awesome. It's 10 or 16 euros depending on your plan of consumption and such, and it includes 3 bars (the last one is a sweet disco tech), 3 shots, and 3 mixed drinks over like 8 hours. One guy gets 3 hostels, and another guy gets another 3, and before you know it there are 10-12 hostels worth of participants at the first bar, which had a flamenco show before the drinking commenced. We met people from Germany, Scotland, Canada, Spain, etc. It was super fun. We went to the next outdoor bar then eventually to the disco tech, which was amazing. It was callllled Alfonso, and it was amazing. We stayed til 5:30 both nights, and there is a stand outside with hot dogs, hamburgers, sandwiches, etc. We visited it both nights. 


The train is a great experience. It's quite luxurious, and Javi and I were passed out and almost missed our stop in Atocha. Someone woke us up... DONT EVER DO THIS. Not smart on our part. 


Madrid/Segovia/Sevilla Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rs8Fg7-U2M&feature=youtu.be

I have more to say, but it's been cray & I gotta go on an activity thing with API 


I willlll add stuff laterrr!


Pictures taken by me & EUSA peeps 
I planned on putting the names, but I forgot them because I saved the pics awhile back. Message me & I'll put your name down.