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prague, or not, or maybe

16-Jun-06

An ongoing bit of drama has been the issue of our daytrip to Prague. Things keep working and then not working, and the same for their alternatives. The current plan is to wake up in time for a 6h15 departure on a 26€ all-in semi-guided-bus-tour tomorrow. We will see.

Pilnitz was nice but not a must-see. Woke up on the wrong side of the bed today, so that might have been a factor. Lunch was most excellent–Saurbraten, some very tender meat served with red cabbage and a sour sauce, with a Weissbier to wash it down… both extremely German I am told.

Before, stopped by the train station and reserved seats on an EC train around 10h Sunday to Berlin’s shiny new Hbh.

It should be interesting to be in Prague on game day but I think we will be out of town before the 18h kickoff v. Ghana. We should also be back in time to watch the US play (I hope they play) Italy at 21h.

The GEO grant check partially reimbursing me for the Hong Kong flight has thankfully landed in checking back home, so that will not hurt at all.

Better get a shower for the early wake up tomorrow.

dresden part 2

16-Jun-06

Yesterday was a day of fairly standard sightseeing… the Church of Our Lady, the cathedral, the Saxon jewelry vault and painting collections, and the various sights of the Altstadt. Also saw the hosts’ son’s school, in GDR concrete glory. The streetcar system is nice and fairly foolproof.

Last night, after stuffing ourselves at a late lunch with food from the Müller butcher shop/deli operation across the street, we went out with Maria and Stefan to the Neustadt (more dirty and free-spirited and fun) for… Mexican food. Well, not food, because I barely dented an appetizer plate of potato wedges. It is interesting and tasty to discover that the caipirinha has made it (with real cachaca, no less) big in Germany… the place we went to had a whole page of caipi drinks on the list.

After dinner, we walked back along the tram route (quite a long haul) thanks to Alana’s navigation skills developed the last time she was here. It was nice and breezy and offered the chance to sneak onto the grounds of some grand building and catch a nice view of the city… very pleasant walk, easily the trip’s highlight for me so far.

Today we are headed for Pilnitz castle and Meissen, I believe, before another heart attack off the grill in the evening.

Ecuador is playing a heck of a world cup if you haven’t been watching. ECU/GER should be a blast.

eastbound transatlantic

15-Jun-06

Clever fellow that I am, I didn’t find my notebook before I left, so I will need to pick up one of those some time. We had a stunningly uneventful trip, starting at the stunningly uneventful airport in Huntington (HTS) where the check-in agents run back to do security screening (one flight at a time) and gate agent duty. All flights were on time to slightly early, despite menacing-looking weather in Charlotte.

In Charlotte Alana spotted a Lufthansa plane with the nose painted as a soccer ball… cute. We heard that Brazil had gone up 1-0 in its game and from what I’ve heard that was the only action to be had in that match.

The flight to Frankfurt was long and sleepless as usual for me. An old couple behind us kept their reading lights on for the duration, providing relief from the stereotype of screaming kids keeping me up during the flight. I had an aggressive recliner in front of me, of course.

Frankfurt brought the dreaded bus treatment on arrival. It was a kneeling bus so when it got up after we boarded it was a bit of a dizzying shock for most people.

Passport control was perfunctory and Customs a walk-through (and a quick one without checked baggage for us). Happily, the immigration officer added to my stamp collection with a faint standard Schengen entry.

After a long but quickly moving line in the airport’s train station to validate our Eurail passes, we made it to the Frankfurt Hbh (central train station) pretty easily by S-bahn. We also reserved seats from Frankfurt to Dresden on the ICE (Intercity Express highspeed) at 1009, a few hours later, which would turn out to be a couple Euro well spent.

Frankfurt was in World Cup fever and I was in (very tired) heaven as we wandered through and around the Hbh. Lots of uniforms, flags, and decked out fans were on display. Indeed, when we finally got on the train, it was choked with fans headed to Leipzig for the Spain-Ukraine match at 1500 (Spain crushed Ukraine 4-nil–we saw some of it at the house here).

After four hours or so we made it to Dresden, within five minutes of the schedule or so. Maria, who had exchanged in Alana’s house, picked us up at Dresden Hbh and drove us to her parent’s house, which has been remodeled a bit and is very nice. We were very well stuffed with grilled meats and tomato salad last night before settling down to watch Germany play Poland in Dortmund. Unfortunately the trip was hitting me hard after dinner, and I went to sleep at half time. After a false start, waking up at 0030, I managed to sleep until just before 0730. Our hosts are off to school and work and I’m getting ready for a long-anticipated shower and switch to the correct time zone in my head (CEST is plus two hours, EDT is minus 4, so I’m lagged by six).

Weather is gorgeous and downright toasty–about 90 yesterday afternoon, very Spanish-feeling.

The free Internet will soon come to an end when we leave Dresden in a few days, so don’t expect posts of this length all time time. I will try, though, and after I get a notebook there will at least be a record to update when we return Stateside.

this is harder with a German kezboard

14-Jun-06

…but I’m safe in Dresden. More if there’s time, or maybe just a string of still here posts.

It’s everywhere you want to be

05-Jun-06

Good news: my visa for Hong Kong is supposedly in Lingnan’s hands. I’m sure I’ll be in Europe before it gets here, but I can wait.

better Brazil blogging

04-Jun-06

For those of you interested in pictures and actual insight into Rio, unfiltered by years of family visits and LSAT panic, Niki is doing a ridiculously good job (until her camera gets stolen). The linked post includes pictures of the same restaurant in the Northeast Fair as I lunched at, and she’s got some nice touristy postcard shots too.

return from Brazil

02-Jun-06

After a fairly boring trip, I’m back stateside.

Got to the airport in Rio more quickly than I expected (with an excellent burned soundtrack provided by the cabbie), and got airside without any problem, which itself led to a problem: there’s nothing to do airside in Rio, unless you’re in to severely overpriced duty-free shopping.

Thanks to cunning use of the seat selection map a few hours before getting to the airport, I had two seats to myself on each flight. I might have managed two and a half hours sleeping on the GIG-ATL leg, which is nothing short of incredible for me.

Atlanta was pretty typical, with no notable nightmares. The ATL-CRW leg did change gates three times within ten minutes, though, with the last change to a different concourse: fortunately, it was well before the flight and I didn’t repeat plane-chasing experiences from the past. My bags somehow made it all the way with me, and here I am.

If I can stay awake, tonight I need to start the typhoid vaccine and take an LSAT practice. Should be fun.

more food

31-May-06

My trial by excess of fattening food continues. Yesterday I ate at the Fluminense football (ok… soccer) club’s dinky little kilo restaurant with my soccer-obsessed great-aunt, saw the field, visited the shop, etc. In the evening I headed back out that way (near Lgo. do Machado) for a restaurant whose name I don’t precisely remember (something about Majorca, maybe?). And the food just keeps coming.

I think I’m pretty much done with massive food intake. Tonight there’s a wine-and-cheese send-off for the local US cultural attaché, which could be very boring or interesting. And tomorrow I’m out of here.

what kept me up last night

29-May-06

This kept me up last night.

For those of you not strong of Babelfish, there was a very, very loud shootout in the hills nearby about 1:30 this morning.

Anyway…

Lunch at a churrascaria rodizio (look it up and drool–it’s pretty much an all-you-can-eat meat pit) in Centro today with my godfather. Unsurprisingly, it was good.

Art and Shakes

28-May-06

Saw a couple bits of art today, one neat and the other not. The neat one was an exhibition of Cuban art, and the not-so-neat was an exploration of light and shadow in Italian art with focus mainly on the more mediocre shadowy works.

After that went through Copacabana to Ipanema after dark, catching some nice harbor views in the process, for a “lanche” at Chaika.

In other news, the word from an employee of the Federal Police is that my valid passport should be enough to get me out of Brazil. Hope she’s right.