Giving Aix-en-Provence a Big Hug

simply put, my adventures: good, bad, new, french, exciting, terrifying, enlightening... whatever they may be
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New York, and currently France
I'm a junior and a music major at Barnard College spending the Spring 2010 semester abroad in Aix-en-Provence at the AUCP (American University Center of Provence). I can't wait to share everything that I experience! However, regular updating is contingent on my internet availability...

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

SPRING BREAK...

... WAS SO LONG!! Especially thanks to the volcanos. Basically, we got stranded in Brussels, but ended up in Paris before going back to Aix which ended up being quite lovely.

Anyway, Spring Break was a whirlwind. Just like I did with Spain, I'll write the top ten things in no order about each country we visited:

Brussels
1. Belgian Waffles
2. Unlimited Chocolate Samples
3. Museum of Musical Instruments and the Comics Museum
4. Fries with unlimited sauces
5. The big grand place/square filled with lovely buildings and many outdoor cafe's. We had a happy hour there, and it was our first drink to kick off the break
6. The Delirium Cafe - over 2000 beers with tons of flavors like COOKIE

7. Finding Kebab Street
8. The underwhelming peeing statue which mirrors how underwhelming Brussels is as a city
9. The fact that Brussels looks like the Bronx
10. I can't even think of 10 ugh Brussels

Prague!!! By far my favorite.
1. Seeing Obama - we went a beer garden and the street was closed off so we couldn't cross it. All of a sudden millions of motorcycles -- really, millions!! -- rolled by and police cars and then a limo with Obama in it! He was in Prague signing some treaty or doing some President stuff.
2. The walking tour/learning history and wishing
I paid more attention in high school. Particularly the Jewish history. The jewish quarter in Prague was named that by Hitler. Hitler thought that after WWII all of the Jews would be exterminated, and the Jewish quarter of Prague would be like a museum. It was so disturbing and it gave us all the chills.
3. The PUB CRAWLS were so fun (meeting people, getting a good old taste of Prague night life)
4. All of the architecture
5. The exchange rate - about 25 crowns to 1 euro. Going shopping and seeing 1100 crowns pop up after a purchase is a funny moment
6. The things you can eat and drink on the street like the famous Prague pastry and mojitos
7. I got to see Allie again! She ended up being in our room in the hostel!!
8. Taking Wizzair from Brussels to Prague. Wizzair is a pink plane. It was terrifying and dangerous and wikipedia says it should go out of business rather soon. Feeling good to have survived it.


9. All of the tourists that randomly jumped into a picture with us, and now we have a series of nine photos.

10. Because we can't understand Czech, we accidentally bought raw turkey instead of raw chicken at the supermarket. A man on the line behind us kindly informed us. We also met characters all over the supermarket, including an old man who pulled Caroline aside to practice English.

Amsterdam
1. It is just so lovely with all of the canals and rather short buildings
2. The walking tour, the history, etc. I became a history nerd this vacation
3. Anne Frank House was so unbelievably touching
4. Going to the Keukenhof, the worlds largest/most photographed tulip garden. We then biked around the garden fields and some more of the Netherlands. It was like being in Narnia which has been a lifelong dream. There was also an amazing zip line!!

5. Bacon pancakes and Banana pancakes... Amsterdam is known for pancakes which were so delicious
6. Seeing the canals of Amsterdam at night
7. The homeless man that served us breakfast at our "hotel," but it was really a hostel
8. First hearing about the volcano and not thinking that it was an actual reality
9. Taking pictures in the I Am Amsterdam sign... not because it was particularly cool, but so touristy, and everyone does it, so why not us?
10. Being unbelievably disturbed by the women galavanting in windows in the Red Light District

Other fun facts:
We were scheduled to leave back for Aix on a Saturday morning, but we got to the airport and every sign said "cancelled" like Home Alone.

We went back and forth from train stations and airports to get refunds and new tickets. The train station was insane. The guy who sold tickets said for three people the cost of a train to Marseille, a town close by, would be 444 euros (about 650 dollars). We literally were so delirious and overwhelmed that we laughed in his face and couldn't stop laughing either. It was one of our better moments. Then he said the train was leaving from Paris in a half hour and we couldn't make it anyway. We took a train to Paris anyway to deal with it there. We just needed to get out of Brussels, by any means necessary.

Eventually we got to Paris, and after waiting on another long line, we we informed that we couldn't get a train back to Aix monday night. This whole process has so far taken 12 hours. Luckily Caroline's friend had space in her apartment in Paris, the weather in Paris was incredible, and I got to have a lovely dinner with Becca!

The fact that we are back in Aix seems like a dream. I actually woke up in the middle of the night, terrified, because I had no idea where I was. Luckily the weather in Aix is currently unbelievable and warm and I love it.

Actually though, I come home in a month IF I can get home. The volcano stuff is evidently getting worse, and the volcanic ash can melt the engines of the plane which would just make the plane FALL from the sky. If we have to take a boat home, I plan on redoing all of Titanic minus the sinking part.

Monday, April 5, 2010

I. LOVE. PARIS.



Basically, this was one of the best weekends ever. Lisa and I did so much in a short period of time, and we essentially felt like we were on our honeymoon.

Thursday night, we thought the TGV would be a "nightclub," since we got in at 11 pm. American and French friends alike told us this, and everyone lied. We took naps and ate snacks and listened
to Justin Bieber. When we arrived, and throughout the rest of the trip, we successfully navigated the French metro! I forgot how much I missed a good subway to get you around. Lisa's friend Nikki was awesome and let us stay with her in her apartment in the Latin Quartier, which is amazing. We didn't realize that we had passed the Sorbonne and the Jardin de Luxumberg until daylight was upon us Friday.

Friday we woke up early and metro-ed over to the Eiffel Tower. We had thought we had taken the wrong subway stop because we made a 300 degree turn instead of a 360 turn off the subway. Once again, accidentally, we found the Eiffel Tower. We meandered over like little children, and then we climbed to the second "observation deck." Climbing it was not only good exercise, but just incredible on
the whole. The Eiffel Tower really is more beautiful in person than in pictures. That picture is us on the Eiffel Tower, Tom Cruise proposing to Katie Holmes style.

After, we walked over to the Arc de Triomph, walked down the Champs Elysée, walked to Les Invalides, Le Petit Palais, Place de la Concorde, got caught in a terrible rainstorm, went to Le Louvre, the Jardin de Tuileries, and we saw the Pont Neuf (the bridge). At Le Louvre, we saw the Mona Lisa, the Aphrodite sculpture, Milo et Venus sculpture, the Sphinx, Hammurabi's Code, and a bunch of other amazing things. We posed like the sculptures for pictures, and that's how we made friends. After this adventurous day, we stumbled into Chatelet Les Halles where shopping really called us.

Saturday, again waking up early, we took the metro to Le Sacre Coeur which is fantastic. Especially climbing up the tower... by the way, so much climbing in Paris. So. Much. Climbing. Afterwards, we walked around Montmartre, saw the I Love You in many languages wall, did more shopping, went to the Cemetery and saw many a cool graves like Degas, Emile Zola, and Hector Berlioz, walked by the ever so anti-climactic Moulin Rouge, felt uncomfortable by Pigalle, searched the Jewish quarter for falafel, and had Chinese food which was delish. Luckily it rained during lunch, so by the time we walked over to the Opera House the rain had stopped. After that fun-filled group of activities, we went to this huuuuuuge department store called Lafayette and went to the top floor, in which one can get an amazing view of Paris. Everytime we climbed a significant amount of stairs, 30 pictures followed. Talk about classical conditioning.


Saturday we just decided to walk all the way back to the Latin Quarter. We decided we must have walked 7 miles that day, or something that impressive.

Sunday, our last day of romance, we went to the Notre Dame bright and early. We were soooo confused as to why it was more crowded than usual, and we realized it was Easter Sunday. How we ACCIDENTALLY went to the most famous church in all of Paris on Easter Sunday is just something we would do. After walking through the service, we waited online for about an hour to climb more stairs to the top, but it was beyond worth it. For one, the people in front of us kept going to the souvenir shops to buy things to keep them warm. Their total list included: three new pairs of gloves, 1 large cup of coffee, a beret, a scarf, and a pair of socks. This was really a sight for cold eyes. Then we saw the Jardin de Luxumberg which reminded us of the scene with "16 going on 17" in The Sound of Music. Actually, Lisa and I must have sang it for about 10 minutes.




After more walking around and unfortunately heading home, we had decided that it was a fantastic weekend. For one, we've been learning about all of these things in Paris since we were in 6th grade, and to see them as a reality was just... unreal? Also Paris has got to be my favorite city I have traveled to thus far. Copenhagen is a close second, but Paris is well... Paris. Not to mention, Aix is a dreamworld. Ahhh I hate superlatives.

The weather was more fickle than a girl picking her outfit for a first date. Rain, shine, overcast, mildly cloudy, and as we got on our train home it started to HAIL.

Anyway, tomorrow, we leave for Prague, Brussels, and Amsterdam with our third partner in crime, Caroline, who we missed very much.