Monday, May 25, 2009

London with a side of Paris

London has been great, it has been very relaxing staying in one place for so long. We've been here for 4 nights, and out of all that time here, we've only spent 1 full day in London town proper. We are staying in a town called Acton, which is a bit west of London, but still pretty easily accessible on the tube (what the subway is called). It's a suburb, and it has turned out to be a pretty interesting place unto itself.

Acton looks like the street Harry Potter's evil god parents, the Dursley's, live on. It's a bit more urbanesque than the city in Hot Fuzz. There's an interesting ethnic mix here, with a prominent Polish community and also a growing Armenian, Somali, and Iraqi population as well. The pub that we stayed at (they have a “hostel” in the upper floors) seemed to be a Polish meeting place for the citizens of Acton, so that made things a different than expected. I was anticipating speaking and hearing 100% English while we were here, but we've heard more Polish than English in our pub. It has made for a bit of a different stay, haha.

The pub itself has it's own history which I thought was pretty interesting. It was built in 1899 as an inn to shelter travelers coming to and from Oxford and London, and I do believe it has been family owned and run since. The place is very old and the rooms in the hostel show it, but the actual pub portion of it is very cool.

London was fun, we went on a free walking tour and got to see a lot of royal places. Buckingham Palace was infinitely more expansive than I pictured it being, and we got to see the changing of the guard. I took a short video of the intro to it, check it out. All in all, London was a great place to relax and recuperate, and I'm glad we came.

The side of Paris is underneath the London pics, fyi.



From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


Big Ben and Bigger Heidi
From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


From London


Somehow Abe made it to London
From London


Concerning Paris: we were only there for a little under 13 hours, so it was more of a layover on the way to London than a stop on our journey. From what we saw of it, though, neither of us wanted to stay. With half an hour of taking to the streets, we had been hustled by 2 or 3 drunken vagabonds, and that was before 10am. They seemed especially attracted to travelers, which is understandable, but it was disgusting and annoying. The city seemed very dirty, and my pickpocket paranoia was much higher there and anywhere else. I was scared that I was going to look down at any given moment and my pants were going to be magically pickpocketed away. We did get to see the Eiffel Tower, though, so that was neat. We were happy to leave by the end of the day, as we were very exhausted from traveling and exploring Paris all day.

From Paris


From Paris


We're leaving to go to Amsterdam today, which is exciting. It's weird to think that the trip is winding down; it feels like we got here yesterday, though I do miss the comforts of home.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Update on our situation

We had no idea some of the trains that required reservations would be so hard to reserve, so we've had to change up our plans a bit because of it. We're currently in London, and instead of staying here 3 nights, we're now here for 4. We'll be leaving on the 25th on a train to Brussels, but we won't be staying there. We arrive at 7pm ish, and we'll immediately be hopping on a train to Amsterdam. A minor inconvenience, but we were scared that there wouldn't be any trains at all out of London; when speaking to the Eurostar reservation agent, we had to go through 3 different days just to find a single train that wasn't completely booked. Thankfully, that stressful bit of planning is out of the way, and we'll now have a restful couple of days to hang out in London. Too bad the dollar is weak to the pound at the moment :/

Hope everyone back home is doing well!

Venice

Venice is not exactly what I thought it would be. The city was very dirty, had quite a stench, and really was not very nice. The fact that the people there weren't too kind really struck me; you would think that the people in a city which has a tourism based economy would be nice to outsiders, but this generally wasn't so. They weren't outwardly mean, per se, but they were not very helpful, and I felt like they were trying to rip us off every chance there was. Here's an example. Not too far where we were staying was a large open air fruit and vegetable market. Everything there looked quite delicious, so we decided to buy some peaches and strawberries. As we were inspecting the peaches, trying to find the ones we liked best, the owner of the stand walked up and, after a moment of staring, angrily demanded that there was no touching. Who has ever heard of a fruit stand were you can't choose what you want?! After we apologized and told him we wanted two peaches, he hastily grabbed a couple out of the bunch and shoved them in the bag for us. Upon inspection, as was doomed to happen, one was bruised and cut (it was still very tasty). Luckily the man in charge of our section of the bed and breakfast, Ali, was a very cheery, albeit somewhat scatter brained, dude who turned out to be kind and helpful. The rest of Venice could take a lesson from him.

I found Venice to be interesting mainly because it seemed to lack everything that a normal, functioning city would need to have. There weren't any office buildings to be found, and in two days of wandering the city by foot, we only found one supermarket. And at that, after working in supermarkets for what seemed like forever, I noticed nothing “super” about it. It consisted of three and a half aisles, and for all the crap they tried to stuff on the shelves, there wasn't much variety at all. We didn't see a single hospital, and we covered about 2/3 of the main island over the course of our 3 days. There is no structure or organization in navigating the canals and sidewalks that make up the main pedestrian thoroughfares. The travel book I bought said that you're better off just heading in the direction of what you want to find than trying to follow the sometimes marked names of canals and “calles”, the sidewalks along the canals. This fact alone blew our minds when we first arrived, causing us to take almost two hours to walk to our hostel after we got off the train. The “getting lost and wandering to find your destination” method of navigation works, though; it took no longer than thirty minutes to reach the train station from our bed and breakfast when we left, and we didn't go the same way we came.

Everything in Venice was super expensive. Example: Heidi bought a pair of nail clippers, the cheapest brand we had seen in Germany, and paid 3.50EUR. That's a little under five dollars for a single pair of stainless steel nail clippers. I have no idea how Venetians can afford to live there, since their main source of income seems to be hyperexpensive, meaningless baubles sold to tourists and incredibly expensive gondola rides (30 minutes could cost you more than 50EUR!). It was ridiculous. For our Europe-on-a-budget trip it was highway robbery.

To make things worse, we thought we had to switch around our trip itinerary a bit to find train reservations from Venice to Paris, but we found out differently in a very stressful way. When we were in Munich making our reservations, the guy (technically a travel agent, I guess) at the Eurostar Reiseburo helping us did not speak very good English. Our original plan was to leave Venice on the 19th, and when we asked him for reservations, he said it was not possible, and showed us the screen saying that there were no reservations left. This wasn't too big of a hassle, as we were able to reserve the next day (the 20th) and call the hostel in Paris to push our arrival back a day and it was no big deal. Fast forward to boarding the train from Venice to Paris, and we find out that the reservations the agent had printed for us had expired the day before; even though he said that there were no reservations available for the 19th, we somehow ended up with one. Since he had made it very clear that our reservations were for the 20th, we thought nothing of it and didn't double check the ticket stub. So as it turned out, we had to shell out another 50EUR reservation fee to ride the train we had boarded. Both of us thought for a moment that we were going to be stranded in Venice, because if the train didn't have an open cabin, then were going to be screwed. Thankfully, we were able to secure two bunks, but it was stressful nonetheless. I learned two lessons today: 1) Make sure your travel agent has a fully functioning grasp of English, and 2) DOUBLE CHECK YOUR TICKET! - no matter what your agent says.

I'm currently writing this on the train out of Venice, and I'm sure I can speak for both of us in saying that I'm very glad we're leaving. Here's to Paris being a lot cooler, and hopefully cheaper too!

** I apologize for the tome I just wrote, I'm kinda bored on the train and writing provided a great way to kill the time. Hope this wasn't TL;DR (too long; didn't read) for some :D

From Venice


From Venice


From Venice


From Venice


From Venice


From Venice


From Venice


From Venice


From Venice


From Venice


Lol to standing between an ancient statue of the Ave Maria and a "Fuck [the] system" graffiti
From Venice


This place sold many different cuts of horse meat :[
From Venice

Another bit from Prague

I forgot to mention a funny fact about our train ride from Prague to Vienna. Twenty feet from where we were sitting there was a group of definitely Czech ladies, and they had obviously killed their time waiting for the train by getting drunk. Once they boarded, they continued with their time killer. After a bit they started singing quite loudly, and it was downhill from there. Imagine a small gang (there were four or five) of older middle aged Russian opera sounding ladies singing their national anthem on repeat over and over. The main voice you hear in the video came from a lady that had three golden teeth. At one point, after a Czech guy walking past had decided to join, a couple started to dance. The singing and sporadic dancing didn't stop until we reached Vienna, which clocks it in at around two and a half to three hours of Czechoslovakian* golden oldies. It was pure torture, but I appreciate it for the funny story they gave us :D



*I should clarify: What was Czechoslovakia (Bohemia, Moravia, and Slovakia) split in 1993 into the Czech Republic, consisting of Bohemia and Moravia, and Slovakia, which became its own state. We went on a free tour of the inner city on our first full day in Prague, and we really learned a ton. I have a couple left over Czech Koruna that were minted in 1993, and when I put two and two together and realized that it was the first year the Czech Republic as we know it today existed, it really blew my mind. I have inaugural Czech currency!

From Prague


From Prague


From Prague

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Prague

Prague has been a truly wonderful, awesome, Bohemian experience. Deciding to come to the Czech Republic on a whim was a great whim to have; we've met some very cool people and had a really great time, and we didn't spend too much in the process.

When we got off the train to Prague the first time (more on that later), I withdrew the equivalent of $100 US out of an ATM in the most Eastern-bloc looking train station I've ever been to. In budgeting for the trip I had accounted for about 100 Euros a day, which is around $130 US. The 2000 Czech Koruna ($100) lasted me three days, and I still have about $25 worth of it left over. We weren't being careful with our money at all – quite the opposite.

The night of our arrival we went to a pizza and pasta place not too far from our hostel to eat. After seeing the prices on the menu and being thoroughly amazed, we ended up eating quite a dinner. We both had huge pasta dishes, Heidi a four-cheese fettuccine and myself a steak, ham, and green bean penne, and we also had a beer a piece. Afterward we had a very attractive, extravagant looking ice cream with hot raspberry syrup and fresh raspberries. For all of this we paid about $25 US. It was amazing; we both felt completely treated and yet the same meal would cost at least $40 in the States. Not everything is quite so money friendly, but the important things are. :D Beer is about $1 for a half liter, and we're not talking about the cheap crap here. Food is also somewhat cheap; a trip to McDonald's cost about $5 a piece for a value meal.

McDonald's turned out to be rather interesting. Heidi got chicken nuggets, and they were pretty much standard fare other than the very strong curry sauce it came with. I on the other hand, decided to get something not offered in the US and went for the “McCountry” meal, which turned out to be a double cheeseburger constructed from spiced sausage patties with a weird yellow sauce that had a bit of a curry twinge and more of a just plain odd taste. It was alright, I guess, but I know now to avoid the McCountry when/if it comes to America.

Prague was a bit of a scare when we got off the train. Our stop coming from Munich was “Praha Hlvani Nadrazi”, and we ended up getting off the train in the completely wrong town first. When we saw “Hlvani Nadrazi” from the train window after waking up from an uncomfortable nap, we immediately exited the train thinking that we were in the right place and the train had arrived a bit early. We were definitely NOT in the right place, and had to wait an extra hour for the next train to Prague. Thankfully the Eurail passes we have make train travel virtually free, so we didn't have to pay anything but it was still freaky getting off the train and having that WTF moment.

We met amazing people in Prague. The young guy that manned the pub in the basement of the hostel was from America, so we got to know him pretty well. His friends came to hang out at the hostel the first night we were there, and they took us under their collective wing and showed us a great night. We ended up meeting a large group of Germans on vacation staying at our hostel, and they all turned out being very cool. I spoke German to a German for the first time and got complemented :D Prague was a great place, I know for sure I'll be going back in the future.

From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague


From Prague