- Riding a bicycle 30km through the French countryside from Bayeux to the American Cemetary at Omaha beach with Erin, Tim, Matt, and Joe because it was Easter Monday and no public transportation was running.
- Getting stuck in an elevator for 20 minutes between the 55th and 56th floors of Tour Montparnasse (the tallest sky-scraper in Paris).
- Watching the sunset from Piazzale Michelangelo in Florence with Erin, Morgan, Joe, Paige, Matt, and Tim (and the walk back to the hostel :P)
- The Colosseum Pub Crawl. Ask me about the details; this is a story that needs to be told in person.
- Hanging out with ENSEA folk. The parties, the bus rides to the parties, the BBQ/pool party at Adrien's, etc, etc.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
The End (for now)
Friday, May 21, 2010
Krista in Paris
Monday, May 10, 2010
What "luxury" can not describe
Saturday, April 24, 2010
When in Rome...
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Normandy
5 April, 2010
I’ve spent the weekend in Normandy. Saturday in La Havre, Thibault’s home town. His family (parents, one younger brother my age, and a 17-yr-old sister) had us to their country home for lunch. I like French dining – began with Muscat for an aperitif alongside mini-sausages and baguette and cheeto type snacks. This was followed by a carrot, cucumber, tomato, and olive salad. Then the main course was duck with green beans, accompanied by a glass of Bordeaux (currently my favorite red wine). After that was baguette et fromage and then a delicious apple tart for dessert with café (French coffee >> American coffee). It was so good, and I was so full. Oh, and they also had us try Calvados (a very strong apple-based liquor that Normandy is famous for). Never again. Never again. I just had a sugar cube soaked in it (sugar cubes in France are made with real unprocessed, brown sugar, by the way). It tastes so bad -_- Thibault’s mother joked that once when Thibault and his friends were getting too loud having a bon fire party, she brought them out some calvados so they’d just pass out, and thus quiet down. Oh, Europe.
Then Thibault and his dad took us to Etretat, a famous beach on the Atlantic. Here we finally (and inevitably) met fellow Buffalonians! Two high school students, one from West Seneca and one from the West Side, were on a 3-week exchange program to France. The beach was very beautiful, check Facebook for pics. That night we got some Chinese for dinner and hung at a pub, drank some cidre (which was surprisingly hard to find to buy in stores, which made me sad because I love it) and played billiards.
On Sunday we took the train to Caen, then a train+bus to Mont Saint Michel. Unfortunately, we just missed being able to tour the abbey, but we got to walk around the picturesque medieval village. It was like Disney World – but real! :P And of course, there was ice cream in a waffle cone to be had (vanille being the equivalent of French Vanilla dans les Etas-Unis).
Then today we (Tim, Erin, Joe, Matt, and me, Taylor went back to Cergy last night cause he’d already been to the D-Day area) wanted to go see a D-Day beach. We found a train to get us as close as we could, but it was still 17km to Omaha and the American Cemetery, AND the bus wasn’t running because it’s a national school holiday. Our first reaction was “MERDE!” but then we found a bike rental shop, rented the bikes, 15 Euro for the day, and made our great trek. I’m really glad we did this. Now I can tell my kids that I rode a bike through the French countryside to go see the American Cemetery on Omaha beach. It took about 1.5 hrs to get there, we were there for probably as long, and then made it back with slightly better time. The visitor center at the cemetery was very well done – a miniature museum. They even highlighted a soldier from Buffalo (Buffalo pride!) After seeing the cemetery we walked down onto the beach itself. It was so serene that it’s hard to imagine that 2,000+ people died there in a day. After walking the beach we climbed the hill back to our bikes, stopping in some old German bunkers on the way. Once back to town it was time for a jambon et beurre baguette avec Orangina (like orange juice, but in pop form – it even has a little bit of pulp) avec un boule de glaces Nutella pour dessert (nutella ice cream – c’est bon!!, and it was in a waffle cone for no extra charge, God I love this country) In the end, it was definitely a day I will never forget.
This Thursday will be my first night a Paris night club. A club at Monteparnasse is free for foreigners every Thursday night, which is awesome because Paris night clubs usually cost 20+ Euro – trop cher! I have class in the morning, but I’d like to go to Paris for the afternoon-evening before the dancing begins.
Last Thursday I went to a night club near Cergy for a party hosted by ENSEA, EISTI (the computer science school that Sylvain and Lala and Antoine go to), and then the Bio Engineering school. It was a really big club. And unlike what I would ever see in America, there were times when the heightened dancing podiums were occupied only by boys. In the US they’re usually only filled with the slutiest girls in the club. It was a really fun night. There’s supposed to be an even bigger party there in two weeks, when they’ll open up the second floor (it was closed for this last party). Seriously, French student parties >> American student parties.
And then this weekend, I don’t think we have plans for it yet. But we bought tix for a UK trip in June. We have a 5 day weekend for Scottland and England. I’m hoping for a weekend trip to Dublin, and definitely to Bordeaux and Lyon or Toulouse.
Ahhh, all of our butts hurt from the biking L There was a full chorus of ow’s when we remounted the bikes at the cemetery for the ride back home. At least the train’s seats are soft this time.
And with that, I bid you adieu.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Just a pleasant evening
- UB's internet
- The Hub
- Wegman's
- Chicken Wings
- Tim Horton's
- Mighty Taco
- Ovens
- Walking
- The weather
- The food
- The friendly people
- The buildings
- The sights
- The reduced drinking - I'm actually an equal adult here!
Vienna and Budapest
Monday, March 1, 2010
Prague
1 March 2010
Just got to Wien. Praha was BEAUTIFUL. One of the most beautiful cities I have seen yet, second only to Paris. The food was good too. There were food vendors in a town square and I got potatoes mixed with cheese and ham and a big sausage in a baguette and a frieddough/soft pretzel thing that looked like a big bracelet with cinnamon sugar coating it. I also got fresh hot candied almonds. Very good.
The buildings in Praha are just so beautiful, and they all have yellow lights at night and gold accents that make it all the more wonderful.
And the weather was good. The weather keeps getting progressively better with each city.
Saturday night we went to an awesome night club – Golden Tree I think is the English translation of the name. There were about 5 levels underground and a whole bunch of different rooms and bars, plus one room with the dance floor and lasers and smoke machine and European techno. Needless to say, it was a fun place.
My 3 Favorite Cities thus Far:
1. Paris
2. Toronto
3. Praha
Berlin
23 February 2010
In Berlin today. German food is AWESOME. So good! So hearty, so filling. I had a “meatball” with potatoes that were just too good. All this with a beer, because it’s cheaper than water. Haha, I’m getting in touch with my heritage! I should learn some German recipes, ‘cause god the food was tres enorme.
And as for French, I can kind of read, forget about reading German. Luckily, a bunch of places have English menus. And I already have my eye on some apple strudel and a doughy sugary chocolately almondy pretzel thing that I am eating before I leave here.
Tomorrow we’re going to hit up museums. There’s so much to see here, Taylor and I wish we spent one less day in Amsterdam and came here instead.
26 February 2010
Berlin was a really good experience. Yes, the food, and the museums. There is just so much history there. On Wednesday I went to the Pergamom, saw Nefertiti, Berlin City Hall, the Brandenberg Gate, the Bundestag, and the Berlin Synagogue. The Bundestag is an awesome capitol building. It is a shining example of a beautiful hybrid of classical and modern architecture, not to been green building.
Yesterday I went to the Holocaust memorial. There is an entire museum underneath it. Both memorial and museum were beautiful in how moving they were.
I also went to Checkpoint Charlie, where they had walls with historical information. At this wall a Scottish tourist, who turned 70 that day, told us about his experience during WWII. He was still a kid at the time but remembered how scarce everything was in Britain because of the U Boat blockade. And he remembers listening to Churchill’s Iron Curtain Speech on the radio and his dad telling him that it was going to be a very important speech. His older brother was 17 when he fought in the Battle of the Bulge. He survived the war physically, but drank a lot because of it. It was amazing to hear a firsthand account from some who lived through the time in Europe, and I am grateful he shared his story with us.
After checkpoint Charlie we went to a technology museum. It had so many train engines!!! And they’re so huge!
But in the farthest part of the train section there was a boxcar that carried deported Jews. That was…haunting. I was almost surprised to not sense the scent of death from it. Right near the museum was a park with the remains of the train station that first deported Jews from Berlin. We stood on one of the old platforms.
We then went to the Jewish museum. It was huge, and in a very modern and architecturally significant building. It was a very well put together museum.
This morning we walked down to the Victory Tower on Unter den Liden before heading to the train station. Now I’m on my way to Prague
Amsterdam
21 February 2010
Why does Europe fail at public Wifi?!?!
So I’m in Amsterdam right now. No internet…I was really looking forward to having some internet…but no, I am denied.
Anyways.
So we arrived in Amsterdam yesterday afternoon. It was very odd weather – not quite hail yet not quite snow. It was like Dip-in-Dots Ice Cream, or bits of packaging foam, except it hurt when it hit your face.
We walked around a bunch. Had dinner at an Indian Restaurant – the food was tres bon. At night we walked around the Red Light district, then stopped for ice cream/waffles with chocolate syrup at a place called Australia before heading back to the hotel for bed.
Today we went to the Van Gogh Museum and the Nemo science museum. At the Nemo museum Erin and I played DanceStage (aka DDR). They also had a exhibits on puberty and sex, in a children’s museum – only in Europe. We learned some very interesting facts.
The Van Gogh museum was alright. I found out I didn’t like his art until he went to Paris – it was very dark and devoid of color before then.
Then it started to rain. And it was very cold. So, cold and wet, we walked around. Ate at a restaurant where I had Sate – a traditional dutch dish of chicken in peanut sauce – similar to the Thai dish, except not deep fried. It was really good and the bread we got had really good garlic butter spread. Oh, and I had a bagel for lunch today! (Haven’t found a bagel in France yet)
After dinner we walked around the red light district a little more and went to the sex museum.
Hahaha, Taylor is making the argument that the Netherlands and France should give us free wifi because we liberated them in WWII. It’s the least they could do.
Tomorrow we’re going to the Anne Frank House, the Reijjsomething museum, the Resistance museum, and maybe the Heineken Plant tour. Then we head on out to Berlin Tuesday morning.
I hope there’s better weather tomorrow. And maybe free wifi in my future…
And Amsterdam is kind of cool because most everyone speaks English. So it makes things easy to get around. There are also a ton of Americans here. A lot of them sound/look like Long Island girls *shiver*
It’s also neat here because so many people ride bikes instead of cars. There are bikes EVERYWHERE. Bikes, bikes, and more bikes.
So, Amsterdam is good enough, but Paris is still my favorite city by far. Followed in second by Toronto.
22 February 2010
Still in Amsterdam. Today we went to the Rijk Museum, the Dutch Resistance Museum, and the Anne Frank House.
It has been pouring rain for the better part of the day, so I gave in and bought an umbrella at an outdoor market (I forgot mine in Cergy).
The Rijk Museum was pretty cool. They had a bunch of Dutch paintings and artifacts from the 17th/18th centuries.
The Resistance Museum was really put together well. It was actually interesting to read all of the little plaques.
The Anne Frank House was not worth the 8.50 Euros. Granted, I have never read the book, maybe if I had it would have been cooler, but it was pretty much just a bunch of empty rooms with quotes from her diary splashed on the walls every now and then.
Haha, I sort of miss France :P
Berlin tomorrow. Hopefully the weather will be better, and free wifi will be more available. And they will serve tap water and won’t charge extra for ketchup.
Monday, February 15, 2010
Angry Angry Hippos
Friday, February 5, 2010
New Friends
Sylvain, I met at O’Sullivan’s Put on International Night. He is French and studying Computer Science. Erin and I hung out with him and his roommates Lala and Antoine Wednesday night. We played cards (a game that Zac taught me how to play!) and they made us crepes – even teaching us how to flip them in the air. I kept overflipping mine so that it landed on the same side it was on originally. Sylvain has been helpful by speaking to me in French on Facebook. I use Google Translate to have our conversations. He is looking for an internship in the U.S. for this spring/summer.
Lala, I also met at O’Sullivan’s along with Sylvain. He is studying management/project consulting and is from Toulouse. He wants to be a pilot, but the training is too expensive. He is also looking for an internship in the U.S.
Antoine is studying business intelligence and also from Toulouse. He once spent five months in Miami, so his English is very good and he knows a lot about the U.S. He has Sing Star (Karaoke) for the Wii and has challenged me to a competition. I will win ;)
Antoine, Lala, and Sylvain have a HUGE apartment. They have an entire house-sized living room, and a balcony. They have a nice TV too and invited our group over to watch the Olympics. Everyone is so nice and friendly and hospitable here! France is a very welcoming place.
Last night was an ENSEA student party. At a nightclub. They had a DJ and open bar. I liked the music a lot because it was mostly Techno, which American clubs don’t play. But there were also the usual American songs: Holiday Inn, Tic Tok, and even Heartbreaker by MSTRKRFT which I have never heard out anywhere before! I’m always so happy when I hear a more obscure song that I love. And it made me think of you Jackie!
It was a special party because it was when they announced which group of students would run the next year’s student government, basically like SA (Student Association) at UB, except SA doesn’t throw massive parties at night clubs. Even Sylvain, Lala, and Antoine were there, even though they don’t go to ENSEA. ENSEA is known for throwing some of the best parties in town. Go Electrical Engineers! Thibaut was in one of the two competing groups and they lost. He said it was okay though because he could drink more (the winning group serves the alcohol), and the other group doesn’t have enough people in it for all of the positions so he could still be chosen. Oh, and yeah, French students drink A LOT. It didn’t even phase them that the party was on a school night. I’m really surprised that alcoholism is more common in America than in Europe.
I’m heading out to Tour early tomorrow morning (the place) and will return Monday night (yay three day weekends!). For 40 Euros we get to tour a bunch of castles and have wine tastings from 9am-6pm on Sunday. I will have my camera fully charged this time!
I’m amused; I’m starting to think in a French accent and broken English -_- Sacre Bleu -_- And I’m still getting used to the French greeting customs. My French guy friends (basically all of my friends minus Erin - there aren’t any more female engineers in France than there are back home) lean in to my face and I’m thrown off before remembering: oh yeah, we’re supposed to do the air kiss on the side of the cheeks thing.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
2 February 201
Today I had Microelectronic Circuits II lecture. It was easy. So far everything we covered has pretty much been review, except for a BJT power dissipation equation I don’t recall seeing before. (A BJT is a bipolar junction transistor. Transistors are in pretty much everything electronic. I’ve been instructed in their use as amplifiers thus far– making a signal bigger, smaller, inverted, etc.) I like my professor, she seems very nice.
Today I enjoyed coffee for the first time. After fighting sleep for the first hour and a half of class, I decided to try coffee during our 20 minute break. A girl was already at the machine in front of me. She said something to me in French, to which I replied “Parles vous anglais?” and then in English she asked if I wanted a drink. I said yes and she proceeded to press a special button on the machine with a special key bob and so I got my Café Lait for free :) People here are so friendly, really. The “French people think Americans are assholes” stereotype simply isn’t true. (The staff member in charge of international students has a Barack Obama pen holder on her desk) Most people are happy to get a chance to try their English, just as I want to try French. And the coffee was actually good. Erin tasted it an informed me it was full of sugar, and it had a frothy milk layer, so that’s probably why <_<>
Last night we all went to Auchan (the super walmart type store) again. Erin and I bought groceries and tissues and such and it only cost us 55 Euros for the two of us (we decided to share food and cook together – what fun!); we were pleasantly surprised. For dinner we ate pasta with Bolognaise sauce. The sauce was pretty much like Chef Boyrdee (sp?) sauce. So eh, we’ll try another one next time. And we got a bag of croissants –mmm!!! I’ve eaten so many… - a couple long baguettes, jam (they have the bonne mamon that I like to get at Wegmans from France), cheddar cheese that tastes more like a mix of cheddar and American, a brick of margarine that was the cheapest we could find, green beans, clementines (a deeper orange than the ones we get in the states, these are form Moracco), lettuce, and milk (we were looking for skim but I don’t think it exists here. There were three different types and we chose the one with the least amount of fat and calories, and it still tastes creamier than 2%). I also bought a small bread pan that I can make banana bread with. Oh, and travesty! Bananas cost 1.70 Euros per Kilo! What happened to $0.40 per pound? :( I need to find a new cheap fruit… Hey Central/South America, thank you for being in the same hemisphere as the US and making bananas cheap!
Tonight Erin and I had grilled cheese, clementines, and green beans. We realized we need more food. Preferrably something that isn’t a carb… So we have to go back to Auchan again…
One thing I learned: In America, you know how all nutrition labels list things in Calories? Turns out, 1 American Calorie is actually 1,000 Calories. Europe has everything listed in kCal. So a 100Cal snack bar in America is 100kCal in Europe. There’s marketing for ya.
This evening I think I’m going to O’Sullivans, a British pub, for Foreigner Night with the other US students and Thibau, Tim’s French room mate.
Last night we all played cards in my room around my desk – which is big enough to be a dinner table.
More for my list of things different in France:
• They have plain Doritos!!! So they’re basically tortilla chips. Awesome.
Pigeons in Paris are Fat
1 February 2010
Today was my first day of class. I only had one! Granted, it was three hours long. French. It was good. We learned pronunciations and basic introductory phrases.
Yesterday we went to Paris!
When we exited the subway, we found ourselves in the burlesque part of town. There were lots of signs advertising “peep show” and stores, including the “SEXODROME” in neon red. The Moulin Rouge was on this street, but we didn’t go inside.
We saw Sacre Cour in Mont Martre (I’m so out of shape!!! You have to walk up a really big hill to get there. The view Paris from the top is stupendous. Sacre Cour is a famous basilica. It had a beautiful mosaic on the main domed ceiling above the altar.
We also went to the Paris Opera house. It was absolutely BEAUTIFUL. Oh my god. Oh my god. The grand staircase was made of so many different types of marble with bronze statues and chandeliers and carved stone ceilings. The hallway next to the stairwell had a mosaic on the ceiling. We took the self-guided tour, but I overheard a guide explaining that the mosaic was significant because it depicted naked men being held by clothed women, which was the opposite of most art of its day (Chris, it’s like in your English article!) And then, there was a very long room, painted in gold and it was incredible and I can’t describe it justly in words. Sadly, my camera died, but I can link you to pictures that my friends took when they post them on facebook.
After the opera house, we walked around the outside of the Louvre. It’s so freakin’ huge. Unbelievably huge. I can’t believe it used to be the Royal Palace, it probably took its residents at least 30 minutes to walk from one end to the other. We walked through the park to the Egyptian obelisk. Then we took the subway to see the Arch du Triomphe. We didn’t pay to go up to the top of it but we walked around it. Again, beautiful stone carving.
For dinner we at at Pomme de Pain, where I had a ham baguette, pomme de terre (apple of the earth aka potato aka potato wedges), and organgina, a good orange drink that is like something between juice and pop.
So far I’m getting by with the language barrier. A couple of times people have started talking to me in French after I say “Bon jour!” and then I have a blank look on my face and then they speak English to me <_<>
More things that are different in France:
· Women over 30, and yes, even over 40, where skirts that only go to the mid-thigh
· People eat outdoors when its under 30 degrees (Farenheit)
· Pop cans are slightly heavier, so it feels like you still have a little bit of drink left when you don’t
· Pop bottles are upside down in vending machines
Okay, so I’m going to go off again about sustainability. So, it’s less than 30 degrees outside, and most cafes had their doors, or even the entire outer wall, open. So much heat energy is wasted. And, like NYC, there are only public trash bins on the streets, no recycling bins like in Toronto.
I’m sad because my plug adapter can’t handle my laptop L I had it plugged in and the adc on my computer started to buzz and after a while I smelled the smell of a hot glue gun – hot metal and plastic – and found that it was coming from the adapter. I think it still works, just not with my laptop L
Oh and funny thing, there was so much static electricity in my fleece blanket and sheet that it actually sparked.