Thursday, June 30, 2011

Italy Part 1

I made it home! I flew home from London on Saturday and it has been great to be back with the family in beautiful wonderful good old Summerland, CA.

The last few weeks in Europe were quite an adventure. I spent my last week of school in London cramming in fun activities and somehow fitting homework in. My dear friend Jess who I have known and loved since middle school flew to London on Sunday so she could travel through Italy with me the second I finished my finals. I took my finals on Monday. My history final was…well not the greatest. And my art final was spent in the Saatchi art gallery, which is full of the weirdest things I have ever seen. Horses taxidermed into strange positions, objects made out of blood and hair, a real human brain particle stuck onto a statue, two cars crashed around poles, neon lights, styrofoam bodies covered in paint and tar, the list goes on. I loved the Tate Modern compared to the way I felt about this museum, but it was a different experience, which is always good.

Ok so maybe I did like some things at the Saatchi gallery. Actually just these giant hiker men. I thought it was really fun. It made me giggle every time I saw it. Not sure why, I guess just because they made me feel so little!

I stayed up all night packing and saying goodbyes. Two hours of sleep later, Jess, Tara (a wonderful girl from the London program), and I were off to catch a train to Paris! Paris was not very fun. Jess and I were tired, Tara was sick (she threw up twice. Once in a trash can in the middle of a bustling sidewalk, and once in the most lavish bathroom I have ever seen in a bakery called Laduree.) It was quite hysterical…and sad. Poor Tara. The day had high points though. We loved Notre Dame and staring at the Eiffel tower. That evening, we hopped on a night train to Verona, Italy!

What a weird thing, a night bus. They pack 6 people into a tiny compartment with two stacks of 3 beds. We shared a compartment with a young Italian couple and a weird Italian man. I opted to immediately fall asleep on the top bunk. It was a good decision. I was out for most of the ride. Apparently the Italians never slept.

Verona is my favorite city in Italy! It was so romantic and cute. Our hotel was right in Piazza Bra, the center of town, where the ancient Roman Arena stands. It was being prepared for the Opera festival. It was fun to see the old amphitheater being filled with giant roses and Egyptian decorations. We also visited the house of Juliet of course. It’s kind of ridiculous how a fictional story becomes so real that people even choose a place that the pretend story occurred. This is the balcony! But wait, no it’s not. It just looks like something that could have worked! Just a made up tourist attraction if you ask me. But it was still fun to pretend! And there was the statue of Juliet, that for some reason brings good luck if you touch her left breast… Another weird made up tourist attraction. Made up by some pervert no doubt…

We wandered the city, crossed the bridge, took pictures at the river. The bridges had locks locked up on every place it was possible to lock something. Just huge bunches of locks. It is a tradition for lovers to place a lock on the bridge and toss the key into the river as a sign that their love will last forever. How romantic! On the other side of the bridge were theater ruins and a castle on top of a hill. We climbed to the top where we found an incredible view of the red tiled roofs and greenery of the city.

Lovely Verona

The next morning we caught a train to Florence, another beautiful city. We spent the morning at the Duomo and an art museum that claimed to have Michelangelo’s Pieta. (We thought it was in Rome? And we were correct.) We paid to go in the stupid museum only to see that it had a different Pieta by Michelangelo, but not THE Pieta! At least it was a nice break from the blistering heat outside. The best museum was of course the one with Michelangelo’s David. What an amazing piece of art, and so huge too! I could stare at that forever. And no, not because I fancy naked men, but because of the incredible precision and perfection Mikey (as Jess and I nick-named him) was able to display. The museum had a lot of unfinished statues of Mikey’s too. It was fascinating to see his works in progress, to see a giant marble slab being transformed into a human form.

Florence became really magical the second we got away from all the tall buildings and were able to see Ponte Vecchio, a medieval bridge over the Arno River. There was live music everywhere and people just sitting with their gelato, enjoying the sunset. We decided to join in and we thought, THIS is Italy. We love this! What a beautiful, beautiful city.

Next morning: train to Siena. Going to Siena was Tara’s idea. She wanted to see Piazza del Campo, where they have had horse races since medieval times. We all loved it there! We enjoyed a delicious Italian dinner there. It took us a while to find a place to eat though. There were three middle aged men, all thin and being followed by teeny fluffy white dogs. We decided to let them do the deciding for us. They would look at a menu and we would look at it the other one on the other side of the restaurant front. If they moved on, we moved on. I don’t know why we decided to trust these definitely northern European, plaid-on-plaid wearing men and their little rat dogs, but we did. We decided if it’s not good enough for the dogs, it’s not good enough for us . So when they settled on this restaurant, we sat down at a table too. Hopefully they didn’t notice us creepily following them! They made a good choice. The food was delicious. We had the BEST bruschetta I have ever tasted in my life. And I’m not much of a meat eater, but I decided to try an Italian specialty, which I had never heard of before, Prosciutto E Melone. It’s prosciutto served with cantaloupe. Weird, but delicious. But also, not something I would get all the time. When I got home and went to my favorite place, Trader Joe’s, they were giving samples of prosciutto e melone with a little piece of mint on top! It was very yummy.

Before our dinner experience, we spent the day riding bikes around Siena. We rented them from a crazy lady who could not speak English very well. The bikes were pretty awful. I mean really uncomfortable to sit on. I mean it was like sitting on a bar. BUT we did get to see some beautiful countryside in Siena and it was worth it. The roads, however, were not biker friendly. So it was a bit scary sometimes biking right up against a stone wall with cars speeding on your right. Dad, I hope you’re not reading this…

The Duomo in Florence

Riding our bikes through Siena! (We had been wanting to rent bikes in every city we went to. So we finally did it in Siena and it turned out to be the hilliest, stoniest, least biker-friendly city we could have picked! But we still had a blast. And got a bit of a work out!)

We saw Jersey Shore being filmed in Florence! Lucky us. (I personally think this show is a horrible waste of time. But Jess was set on seeing these weird people. And we didn't even have to go find them. All of the sudden, there they were getting a tour of the Duomo!)

Our trip continued on to Rome, where Tara left us and flew home to work, Venice, and back to my lovely London. But I have a plane to catch! (Yes, I am leaving again!) I’m off to Utah to visit Ben and his family and to have a truly patriotic Independence Day at the good ol’ Oakley Rodeo! Yee HAW! So consider this post “to be continued…” (and I apologize for being an awful blogger, as in, I don’t get around to it very often…)

Thursday, June 9, 2011

The Three Faves

Millennium Bridge leading across the River Thames to St. Paul's Cathedral (View from the top floor of the Tate Gallery of Modern Art)


Of the ten assigned walks, my three favorite were:
1. Regents Park. I loved this one because we got to walk through one of the most beautiful parks in London on one of the sunniest days we’ve had. This is the park that the dogs of 101 Dalmations like to go walking. It was full of families and friends playing football, having picnics, and just walking around. It was a lovely day. Without the assignment to walk here, I doubt I ever would have ventured through Regents Park. And I never would have found my favorite mermaid fountain! (Which would have been tragic.)
2. Fleet Street and St. Paul’s. This walk was packed with fun sights. I saw my favorite church, St. Paul’s Cathedral, Millenium Bridge, (the one in Harry Potter 6), Daniel Radcliffe’s Alma Mater, Samuel Johnson’s former home, and another beautiful church, St. Bride’s, where we got to hear some beautiful live piano music and a pretty awesome crypt. It was also fun to see all the business men in their fancy suits hurrying back to work after their lunch breaks.
3. Lambeth and the Southbank. This walk had many beautiful sights. My favorite part was seeing Big Ben and Parliament from across the Thames. That building never ceases to amaze me. It is lovely and massive, and I can’t wait to tour it on Saturday. The walk had both very touristy areas and some very quiet places too. It was fun to walk along the river and do some people watching. (There are funny people all over this city.) It was a beautiful sunny day and a fun way to spend the afternoon.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

London Walks #10: Central Parks

I am finally getting around to blogging about my FINAL walk! Kristin, Sam, Anna, and I did this walk two Saturdays ago. We walked half of it, then just outside of Hyde Park, we rented the Barclays bikes and rode the rest of the walk on our bikes through Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens. It was a lovely morning with beautiful sights and it was fun to be on a bike again. It had been a while! And I wondered why we don't rent the bikes more. What an awesome idea! To have bikes all over the city for people to use as transportation or recreation. You can pick them up anywhere and return them anywhere at only a pound per hour!

This walk took us through St. James Park and past Buckingham Palace, where we saw guards closing off The Mall for the Trooping of the Colors rehearsal. That is the parade that celebrates the Queen’s birthday. The actual parade takes place this coming Saturday. Then, we walked through the beautiful Green Park, which is right next to the palace. We saw some lovely views on this walk. My favorite was standing on the bridge over St. James’s Park Lake, where on one side, you have a beautiful view of Buckingham Palace and the Victoria Memorial in front of it. On the other side, you can see an unreal view of London’s many churches and buildings and the London Eye. They look like there are all squished so close together from the bridge.


Anna, Kristen, and me in front of St. James’s Park Lake

View of London from St. James’s Park Lake

Today was another wonderful day in London. We started out with a morning tour of Westminster Abbey. I got to see Poet’s Corner and walk on Dickens, Handel, and Chaucer, just like Lionel in The King’s Speech. If only I got to sit on the Coronation Chair like Lionel did! It was out being repaired, but they did have a window into the repair room where we could see the chair and the lady carefully painting it. I saw the tombs of many royalties, like Queen Elizabeth I and Queen Mary I. The Abbey itself is incredibly beautiful and ornate, as I’m sure many of you saw as you watched Kate and William marry there in April. I wonder what it is like to be invited to the Royal Wedding, and to be knighted and to sit in the knight’s chairs in the quire. Oh to be royal.

Next, the entire class dressed in our Sunday dress and walked down a few blocks from our flat to Kensington Palace where we had “tea.” I found out this was on the schedule back in the prep course last semester and I have been looking forward to it ever since. I just love that we got to pretend we are rich and proper and go have tea like the high class English people do. I felt so posh and British. I loved it! We were treated wonderfully there. We sat in groups of four at cute little tables and were each offered a variety of herbal teas to choose from. I chose lemon ginger and it was delightful. Then our servers brought us each brought three plates layered nicely on little wire holders. On the bottom layer were cute little cucumber sandwhiches cut in perfect vertical strips. The next layer held a raisin scone which was delicious with cream and jam on top. The top layer (the best layer) was home to a tiny Barbie sized chocolate cake with cream and a raspberry on top, and a little lemon tart. Everything was delicious and gorgeous and I loved every part of “tea.”

My afternoon tea delights!

One of the perfect gardens at Kensington Palace

We strolled through the beautiful gardens on our way home to change into excersize-ish clothes to play…Cricket in the park! Our professor tried to learn how so he could teach us. We are attending a cricket match tomorrow, so he thought it would be nice if we knew somewhat what is going on. That was fun. I actually hit the ball! Not far or anything. It was much like how I used to hit when I played t-ball, but hey, at least I hit it! I'm going to be honest though...I don't know how much of an actual cricket game I'd be interested in watching. It sounds like it may get old really fast. But I'm open to try it! So we'll see. Who knows. I may just fall in love with it. Maybe Cricket will be the first sport I will thoroughly enjoy watching on tv! (I highly doubt it.)

Tonight, we all saw the longest running play in London, The Mousetrap. It is an Agatha Christie murder mystery that was superb! Remember when I was in that murder mystery in 10th grade? I played that old Scottish lady, Janet McKenzie. It was so embarrassing because it was a great story, with an awesome ending. But you had to be patient and watch the entire long, extremely boring play before you got to the only exciting part, the last ten minutes of the play. (Aside from listening to me speak in an awesome Scottish accent if I do say so myself…haha) Well, this murder mystery wasn’t like that at all. The entire play was captivating and fun to watch! I loved it! I was always on the edge of my seat. I gasped several times, and the ending was crazy! (But they said I’m not allowed to tell it, so don’t even ask!) It was so much fun and it was in a really cool old theater and I highly recommend this play to anyone who comes to London! If it’s the longest running play in London, I can’t be the only one who likes it…(They have a counter of how many times the play has been performed in London and it is well over 20,000!)

Monday, June 6, 2011

London Walk #9: Bankside and Southwark

On Sunday, it rained all day, and I haven’t really had a rainy day in London yet. I was feeling like having some me time, so I decided to get my umbrella out of the bottom of my drawer and take a walk through my favorite nearby place, Kensington Gardens. It was very peaceful and beautiful. The sky was gray and my leggings were getting soaked, but I was so happy to be out walking in the rain. On my way back, I ran into a few friends who were on their way to take on of the assigned walks, one I hadn’t done. So I decided to join. A little more walking in the rain sounded great. I was only heading home because I felt guilty about not doing homework.

Lorraine, Cara, Alexa, and I hopped on our tube to the start of our walk. We walked past some pretty awesome things including Shakespeare’s Globe Theater, which I have been to numerous times now (two plays and a guided tour), the Tate Gallery of Modern Art (which I went to today and pretty much hated), the Tower of London (which we are FINALLY touring this week!!! J), and Tower Bridge (which looks to me like it belongs in Disneyland). I was amazed at how dark London was on Sunday. It doesn’t start getting dark until very late here (around 10 maybe?). But just because the sky was so gray, the whole city became pretty gloomy. I actually really liked it.

Cara, Lorraine, Me, and Alexa in front of Tower Bridge

PARIS


I just returned from the most amazing city of Paris! I spent three days walking, exploring, sight-seeing, walking, museum going, walking, eating, laughing, walking….It was a wonderful experience. But do you get the point? I have never done so much walking in my life! So here is the story of my weekend. It is long. And there are no more pictures. I just thought I'd warn you in advance...(If you want to see pictures, go to my Facebook page. Blogger has issues uploading here...)

We left London on Wednesday evening. There were fourteen of us who were headed to Paris, but we all had different hotels and agendas. We were greeted on the train intercom by Jean-Paul and I have no idea how to spell it, but it sounds like “Onwee.” How French! Ooh la la. It was a little scary finding our hotel that night. We had heard the train station was a little sketchy. We started out by witnessing this tiny lady (and she wasn’t like a midget, she was proportionally small. Like a little doll.) walk past just screaming words for no apparent reason. Straight faced and walking forward. Then on our first metro train, this old man came and sat by us. He smiled at Taylor so creepily that the rest of us (andrea, Kristen, and I) just started busting up laughing. Then he looked at us. We would not wipe his ridiculous grin off his face. It looked as if someone had draw a perfect half circle with sharpie on his face. That is how weird this guy looked. Then he tried speaking French to us and I said, “I don’t speak French.” (one of the very few French phrases I learned). But he just went on and on and on, and we were just laughing our heads off. How American of us. Our hotel was about a 15 minute walk from the metro stop. Walking into our Marriot room was like walking into heaven.

Day 1:

We were to meet some of the other girls at 9 am at the Louvre. But of course, we were all so very excited for our first French meal, the breakfast at the hotel! So we happily rode the elevator down, only to find out that breakfast was not included and the cheapest breakfast option cost 17 euros! Wow. No thanks. So we got stupid mcdonald’s smoothies right outside the Louvre. The Louvre was pretty overwhelming. I loved the outside of it. The architecture of the building and the glass pyramids were beautiful. And the day was beautiful with not a single cloud in the sky. It was a bit unreal. I also loved the inside of course…who wouldn’t? But there was just so much to see! Too much! And after week after week of going to art museums in London, sketching pieces and writing papers about it, a lot of the art starts to look the same. BUT don’t get me wrong, I love art more than I ever though I did. I didn’t get to see all of the Louvre, and I am perfectly okay with that. We headed over to Musée d’Orsay, which has mostly French Impressionism and Post-Impressionism, my absolute favorite kind of art. On our way there, we grabbed sandwiches at the first bakery we saw. And lucky us, it turned out to be the best food we had all weekend. My Aunt Mary said they always had baguettes and cheese when they went to Paris. Ever since she told me that, I just pictured myself happy as can be with a baguette in one hand and cheese in the other. That is what I was craving for lunch, and guess what kind of sandwich they had: sesame seed baguette with lettuce and brie. That’s it. Sounds kind of weird, but it was incredible.

We all went to Notre Dame next. Everyone else went inside, butsince I will be back in Paris in a week and a half and will go to Notre Dame then, I met my dear friend Maddi instead. She is studying abroad in Paris right now and we decided to get together. It was so much fun. Right away, she took me to her favorite crepe place in the Latin Quarter. I had one with nutella and coconut. It was very delicious of course. Then, she took me to Sacre Coeur, a beautiful church on top of a hill, where you can see a beautiful view of Paris. There were some funny things going on outside the church, like someone singing to weird music, and a puppet show that looked like maybe it was about Adam and Eve? Maddi says its kind of a sketchy part of town. But I loved the view and the church, both inside and out!

Next, we walked through the Tuilleries Jardin and down Champs Élysées, the posh shopping street. This is what Paris looked like in my head, high fashion stores, crowds in the sunny street, bakeries, and at the end of the street, the breath-taking Arc de Triomphe. We stopped at a grocery store where Maddi introduced me to her favorite candy…darn her, it was all delicious. The best was this stuff called Speculoos. She said you can only get it in France and Belgium. It has the consistency of Peanut Butter or Nutella and it tastes like Biscotti cookies, like the ones they give you on Delta Airlines. YUM! It is supposed to be for toast, but I am picturing it on apples, and it looks divine.

We climbed the Arc and saw another beautiful view of the city. This time we could see Sacre Couer on the hill. It is so high above everything else. I never knew, but Paris is surrounded by hills outside the city. It is beautiful.

We grabbed some quick, but delicious salads on our way to our next destination: the Eiffel Tower! We met up with some of her friends from her study abroad program and just sat on the grass, people watching, eating candy, talking, laughing. None of them had climbed the Eiffel tower yet, but tonight was the night! We stood in line forever, and finally were admitted to climb the stairs. Apparrently, there are NUMBER steps, but we made it in an astonishing 8 minutes! Good for us, we felt good about that. We then had to wait inline AGAIN at the half way point to ride the elevator the rest of the way up. We met a lot of funny people in that line. At 10 and 11 pm, the tower sparkles for about ten minutes. It lights up with blinking lights and looks like a Christmas tree. I had no idea about this! So at ten, I got to see it from right next to the tower, and at eleven, it sparkled when I was on the tower. The crowd went wild when it sparkled. In line, we were right in the middle of a huge group of Belgian teenage boys. They started chanting in Dutch to each other when the lights went off. When we asked what they were saying, they blushed a little and told us it was, “Where is the party at? Here is the party at!” They were hilarious kids. They love the show Jersey Shore. How embarrassing that they think that is what Americans are generally like! We set them straight and told them that show is garbage. It was incredible to be over 1,000 feet high in Paris! The view was breath taking and it had an unreal feeling. It was super windy up there, so we didn’t spend too much time. We took in the gorgeous view and made our way back down. It was getting late, so we had to sprint down the stairs to try and make it to the metro in time. That was kind of scary. The stairs are steep!

But due to the long waits, we weren’t going to make it home in time for Maddi and her friends to take me to my hotel and make it back to their flat before the Metro closed. And they were not going to let me walk alone at night to my hotel. Thank goodness they were very strict about that. I would have been terrified and probably gotten lost. My friends were already asleep in the hotel and I couldn’t get a hold of them, so I ended up going to Maddi’s apartment and spending the night, and waking up early so I could get back to my hotel and be ready to go to Versailles with my friends. So I got 3 hours of sleep and had to ride a train and two metros back to the hotel. But I got to see Maddi’s flat, which I really wanted. It was adorable. And she was great and wrote me step by step details. And I made it perfectly fine. So don’t freak out, mom and dadJ

Day 2

I have been dreaming of going to Versailles for as long as I knew what it was. I remember one of the first things I looked at on Google Earth were the gardens at Versailles and I though, someday, I’m going there! And there I was on Friday, standing in front of those huge ornate golden gates with the giant palace behind. I have never seen anything so ornate. Every part of the palace was decorated lavishly, from floor to ceiling. The ceilings were all painted, everything was gold plated, the walls were covered in rich fabrics, and the furniture was too beautiful for use. The hall of mirrors was breathtaking. One side of the hall had windows looking over the beautiful gardens and the other side was covered in walls. The ceilings had gold decoration and crystal chandeliers. I loved Marie Antoinette’s bedroom, although I think if I had to live there, I would be afraid to touch anything. I even got to see the small secret door she ran through in attempt to escape the French revolutionists.

My favorite part of Versailles was the Hamlet. Marie Antoinette obviously did not much care for her husband, King Louis XVI, so to keep herself occupied, she spent his money. The Hamlet is a little village that she had built for entertainment. She had real peasants live there (I’m not sure if they were workers who had to dress and act like peasants or actually peasants) and she would visit her little town and “play peasants.” The little houses are thatched roofed with gardens and cute little gates. The whole little village was adorable and so beautifully arranged. Versailles was amazing and beautiful, but also quite sickening that people actually lived this lavishly when their people were starving in the streets. Oh Marie Antoinette, how ignorant you were when you said, “Let them eat cake.”

Worst part about the day: My bag broke. It was heart breaking and quite simply a pain. Lauren saved the day (well she tried) by using her hair tie to connect the broken strap to a strap on the front flap. It helped, but for the rest of the weekend, my bag was horrible to carry around, and I didn’t want to leave it hanging off my shoulder wide open with all the sketchioso people in paris! I held it in my arms most the time. I will be demanding money back from Nordstrom as soon as I am home! Unacceptable, Nords, unacceptable!

That night, we ate dinner at the Latin Quarter. We had K-babs. The Paris study abroad kids and my Aunt Mary told me about these tasty wraps. So we thought we should probably try them. This the type of meal you should only eat once a year or less because of how bad it must be for you. Imagine a greek gyro wrap, except chicken instead of lamb. In a pita is onion, delicious flavorful chicken, lettuce, tomato, tzatziki sauce (yogurt type sauce), and then…it is topped with some good old French fries. Yes, inside of the wrap. Disgusting? Yes, but delicious as well. We were all starving and we all finished our entire wrap!

Then we walked down Champs Élysées to get macaroons at the famous bakery Laduree. Maddi said this place has the macaroons that were Marie Antoinette’s favorite! So obviously we had to try them. These macaroons are not the typical coconut we Americans picture. They are the cute little cookie sandwiches that are cute bright colors. The line was long, but it was worth it. My favorite was coconut! Although they had all kinds of flavors, including minty strawberry, raspberry, chocolate, pistachio, coffee and many more including licorice! (yuck.) At the end of Champs Élysées is the Arc de Triomphe, and we watched the sunset and the Eiffel Tower sparkle from the top of it. That was so much fun. What a gorgeous view. By the time we got home that night, our feet were filthy and aching, and we were dead tired. I took a shower and my legs were shaking the entire time because my feet were so dead.

Day 3

Last day in Paris. Sara and I went to Musée L’orangerie. It had Picasso, Cezanne, Monet, and much more. This was my favorite art museum in Paris. I hadn’t realized that this was the museum with Monet’s water lilies. The moment I walked in the huge white oval shaped room with nothing but Monet’s long, paintings in a perfect oval line around the room, I gasped a little bit. Though there were other people there, it was silent and peaceful. I have never seen such beautiful artwork. There were two of these rooms and they were wonderful. I felt like I could sit there and stare all day. Downstairs I saw a lot of fun things like Picasso, a portrait of Madamoiselle Chanel, some interesting still life pictures, and much more. I have decided that Monet is one of my favorite artists. I can't get enough of his art!

Next stop was the Rodin Museum. I didn’t like this one as much as L’orangerie and D’orsay, but it was pretty amazing as well. I liked the set-up of this museum. It was mostly outside and had Rodin’s sculptures throughout a beautiful garden. For a sunny day, it was very peaceful and relaxing to just look at the interesting shapes he had people in and the detailed muscles. This museum is home to the famous sculptures, The Kiss and The Thinker.

We met the rest of the girls at the Eiffel tower. They had just taken the elevator to the top. We grabbed some baguette sandwiches and headed to Saint Chapelle, the beautiful cathedral, made mostly of stained glass windows. I loved it. Like everything else in Paris, it was incredible ornate. Since the sun was so bright, it illuminated the windows and we could see each bright color. We also made a quick stop at the Moulin Rouge. One of the girls loves that movie so of course we had to see the real one. Well, it was a bit disappointing. It looked pretty cheap and ugly to be honest. It was in a horrid part of town, with nothing but topless bars and strip clubs around. AND there was no giant bejeweled elephant outside! I mean come on! Where is the glamour? (I didn’t really think there would be an elephant. But if there was….wow. That would have been fun to see.) There were lots of people taking pictures outside Moulin Rouge, including an old man in a red feather boa, and a younger gentleman, a little on the chubby side who insisted on chimmying his entire body for every picture his girlfriend? took of him. YUCK, but hilarious. We spent our last hour hanging out on Champs Élysées, buying candy, watching the weirdo street dancers, people watching. Then to the hotel to pick up our bags, and to the train station. We had to do A LOT of walking the entire weekend, so trekking all around paris with our luggage was NOT fun. By the time we got to the train station, we were tired and hungry. We all predicted that as soon as we got on the train, everyone would fall right asleep or stare out the window, too tired and grumpy to speak. How wrong we were! I don’t know how or why, but the train ride home was like a slumber party! We were all talking and laughing our heads off the entire ride home. Paris was an incredible experience, but oh how good it felt to be back in my tiny top bunk at home in London. I was a “monkey in the tree tops” again, as my parents used to call me in my bunk bed growing up. And it felt great.

1 more week in London. 6 days until my best friend Jess arrives in London to travel with me after. 19 more days in Europe and I’m home! It’s a bittersweet feeling.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

London Walk #8: Inns of Court

What a beautiful day in London today! I went on the Inns of Court walk today with Scott and Andrea right after breakfast. I had a late night last night figuring out our Paris trip which begins this evening! So as you can imagine, I slept as long as possible until breakfast at 8 and walking directly after. Unfortunately this meant no time to get ready in the morning. So obviously this is not my favorite picture. Plus it was taken with my phone, so not the best. But here we are (Andrea and me) in front of the Royal Courts of Justice.

Beautiful, isn’t it? Today’s walk took us through the many inns that form the legal heart of London. This is the area of town where barristers, or advocates, are trained. I loved today’s walk mostly because it was beautiful, sunny, and not too busy. Also, we found a fruit stand with blackberries and strawberries for a pound per punnet! That was a nice find and made for a lovely lunch later. Blackberries are my absolute favorite. My favorite thing, which I didn’t get a picture of, was Staple Inn because it was one of the few wood-framed buildings to survive the Great Fire of 1666, which I think is pretty amazing. 4/5 of London was destroyed in that fire. I enjoyed today’s walk as I usually enjoy these walks.

I wish I could write more about what’s going on, but alas, I have homework to try and work on in the next hour before I leave. So it will all have to wait.

Well, off to Paris! au revoir!