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Europe 2006 outline

10-May-06

A little on the Europe plans for this summer:

On the way back home from Spring Break, Alana (generously giving me a ride) suggested a trip to Spain.

Before we came back to Morgantown we’d booked a flight.

Maybe it was a little hasty, but I think this should work out pretty well.

We fly from Huntington, which was bizarrely cheaper than even Pittsburgh, to Frankfurt via Charlotte. Then we make our way to Dresden, and stay with the family of a girl who exchanged at Alana’s house in high school. After leaving the free sleeping zone, we move on to (deep breath):

Prague, Berlin, Amsterdam, Luxembourg, Bruges, Brussels, Madrid, Sevilla, Córdoba, Granada, Barcelona, Paris, and Dublin

with nothing but the clothes and packs on our backs (and probably whatever fits in my pockets). It should be a heck of a time.

I’ll be celebrating my 21st birthday (which won’t matter in any of the countries we’re in, and barely matters to me anyway) in Granada and on a night train to Barcelona. Actually, I’ll probably “observe” it in Barcelona, which sounds more fun.

On Brazil

10-May-06

I’ve been going to Brazil since I was six months old–a fact to which my January 1986 Brazilian passport picture testified, through a couple renewals, until 1998. Though I was born (weeks before my time) in Lubbock, Texas, my mother was (and is) Brazilian. Through the magic of jus sanguinis, I too am Brazilian.

This would come in handy–right now, actually, as Brazil and the States engage in reciprocal hissy-fits over the prices of visas and biometric data gathering from visitors. The only reason I maintain my Brazilian citizenship is to avoid forking over $100 or more every time I visit family.

Anyway, I did visit family plenty–I used to go at least every year in the summer. My living grandparents, great-aunt, godparents, and many other significant relatives live in Rio de Janeiro. To gloss over the details, my mother and sister more or less moved back to Rio in the late 1990s. The top relatives all live in the Tijuca district. I acquired Portuguese as a first language, although my lack of schooling and mostly native accent peg me as a very tall kindergartener.

“Portunhol” is a big problem for me: Portuguese made it very easy to pick up Spanish, since a lot of the roots and basic grammar are from Latin or common Iberian influences, but the realities of the world have me speaking much more Spanish than Portuguese.

I haven’t been since the fall of 2002, because I’ve developed things to do in the summer as high school turned into college.

I’ve seen all the sights in Rio, though I may not remember all of them. Sugar Loaf, the Christ on Corcovado, the various beaches, the Opera, the Botanical Gardens, etc etc etc. I’ve traveled a little inside the state of Rio, to Niteroi and Petropolis… I’ve also dipped into the state of Minas Gerais, at towns like São Lourenço.

I’m well acquainted with the international airports of Rio and São Paulo, and hazily remember a bit of Brasilia’s. I’ve never been out in those other cities, though.

It’s unlikely that this upcoming visit will bring anything exciting and new, but if there’s anything I’ll be sure to post about it. I might complain about the travel too, if I run out of other things to do. Hopefully I’ll be concentrating on studying for the LSAT and not have time to complain.

This Summer’s Travel

10-May-06

In my introduction I neglected to mention the reason I started poking around with my old travelogues: I’m going to be writing a couple new ones. This summer from May 18 to June 2 I’ll be in on the way to, in, or coming back from Brazil. I’ll be visiting family, as I have many times in the past but not so many times recently. There may not be anything blog-worthy on the whole trip, but I’ll write a little about Brazil for good luck in a bit here.

After taking the LSAT (unless I chicken out) on June 12, I’m taking off for Europe with Alana from Huntington on the next day. That should be a fun ~3 weeks. Afterward I’m working as a summer program RA in Morgantown for three weeks and cooling my jets (and earning a little to pay the bill for running them all over in the first place).

The big question is where I’ll be going in the fall, and I’m hoping it’s not Morgantown. Nothing–well, not much–against Morgantown, but I’ve been there long enough. I am set to exchange for a full year with Lingnan University, but early this morning found out that my application had been held up for various reasons. Now, assuming my fax went through last night (nobody’s telling me either way unless I call again, I’m sure), the visa process can start, taking 4-6 weeks and generally leaving me in limbo while airfare goes up and all the other exchangers get their letters of acceptance.

Introduction

09-May-06

This blog is part of a long-dormant effort to chronicle my travels. One day, in fantasyland, this will be updated with my travelogue from Spain in 2004 and at least a cursory overview of my adult traveling life (that’s Ottawa, Canada in May 2003; Spain, Portugal, and a dash of Paris in June 2004; and Paris with a pinch of Dublin and London over Winter 2005-2006).

I’m experimenting with a variation of the backpacker tradition of sewing flags on to backpacks. Since I can’t sew, I’m just adding the flags to my blog. Wave of the future, or careless disregard of tradition?

Look on my posts, ye mighty, and despair!

Winter 2005-2006

06-May-06

This winter break I spent a little time between Christmas and the start of the new semester in Europe. I flew to Dublin and back with my friend Ryan, although we may not be friends after that much time together in US‘s aluminum cans.

I’m editing this from one long itinerary post, so bear with any relics of the original form.

Dublin airport, points east, and points west

06-Jan-06

FR 1125 LGW-DUB 4 Jan 2035-2150

Although the UK immigration authorities had grilled me twice (and laid down two separate “leave to enter for six months” stamps within a page of each other), Ireland’s tired soul looked at the previous stamp and mumbled a bit. On this exit from Customs in Ireland I was not as delirious as originally, but I also didn’t get any hospitality: as a matter of fact, I slept in the airport. Sure, I could have booked a hostel, but they aren’t cheap and I only had around eight hours between flights.

It wasn’t very fun. It could have been much, much, worse, and I’ll do it again, but…

LG 4982 DUB-MAN 5 Jan 0910-1000

Manchester was a friendly little place and brought an interesting twist into my travel plans. Going through transit to avoid a third grilling from the Home Office, Ryan and I were told that our seats would be assigned at the gate. This was interesting since we had reserved seats all the way.

On finally making it to the gate, I was given some seats… with us about 40 rows apart and with me in a middle seat. I objected a bit but I was tired, so I retreated, returning in a minute when I noticed the middle seat. That wasn’t going to fly, or I wasn’t. To US’s credit the gate agent was already working on it, and for a second time her thick Sharpie struck my boarding pass as she asked me to get my “lady friend’s” so she could change it too.

On my pass, she wrote “4C.”

I mumbled my thanks and shut up, boarding a few minutes later for the first non-Economy flight in my life.

We were in the center pair of seats in the 2-2-2 “BusinessElite” cabin in a halfway house between First and Business, where service was (to this coach-accustomed commoner) miraculous. Champagne was offered (and sadly declined, since I wasn’t of the appropriate vintage) every time I looked up, dinner started with smoked salmon and ended with a cheese plate, and most importantly I could not physically reach the seat in front of me.

I slept (with the complimentary eyeshade, nice blanket, and earplugs). That’s not something I normally do on trans-atlantic flights, but it was very nice. Although I have to say, thanks to the new planes on the route (Airbus 330) Economy was pleasant if not spacious: the personal screens and audio/video on demand provided plenty of options. A marked improvement over the old AA Boeing 767s I flew on the 2004 trip.

US 197 MAN-PHL 1100-1400
US 288 PHL-PIT 1600-1717

Arriving in Philadelphia semi-refreshed, we made it off the plane quickly and waited a couple days for our backs. We got through Customs and Immigration relatively quickly and were unceremoniously (and frustratingly) dumped landside where the Shoe Carnival at security took us another while. The rest is fairly blurry, except that US managed to lose my bag between PHL and PIT while keeping track of it from DUB to MAN to PHL.

London

04-Jan-06

Thanks to the automatic five trillion percent London markup, airfare from Paris to London proved to be no cheaper than taking a high speed train underwater. That almost makes sense coming from the domestic air market in the States, but looks odd in Europe. So I took the

eurostar 9025 Paris Nord–London Waterloo 3 Jan 1143-1325

The journey was a typical high-speed one, with immigration pre-clearance in Gare du Nord and with me conked out for all of the in-tunnel segment. Oops.

I stayed one night at the Astor Museum Inn–not for as long as I liked, but long enough for that place. I guess it wasn’t bad–fairly clean, right near the British Museum–but not having hot water is no fun.

In retrospect I should have dropped London entirely or booked tickets out of London for the return journey, but I figured this gave me at least as long as I spent in Paris in 2004.

As part of a process of gentle encouragement for Londoners to switch from their paper Tube tickets to the Oyster contactless smart card, a single paper return fare on the Tube cost more than a paper day-pass. I jumped on the false economy enthusiastically and made good use of two passes.

I started making use of my night-seeing technique, reserving extensive and free sight-seeing for the night when attractions were closed and attractions were lighted. In this way I saw all the stereotypical central London sights. During the daytime, I explored the excellent (and free) Tate Modern and the excellent, free, and ginourmous British Museum. That’s about all I’d time for then but since I didn’t get close to finishing one section of the British Museum I don’t feel I wasted much time.

Everything was ridiculously expensive. I don’t remember how many pounds I took out on arrival at Waterloo station, but I had only a couple coins left by the time I paid for my transport, night of hostel, and key deposit.

On my way out, in Victoria Station, I was pleased to find the first automatic ticketing machine in Europe to take a chipless credit card from me. Shunning the “Gatwick Express” I caught a Southern train for a slightly lower price and fiddled around.

An interesting thing about Gatwick is that the passenger waiting area on airside is consolidated: that is, everyone waits in a massive central mall area and the gate is announced 10 or 20 minutes prior to boarding. The departure lounges at the gates, as a result, are much smaller affairs and all the shopping and services are in the central chaos. I’m not sure if I like the idea or not, but it looks efficient.

Paris

02-Jan-06

FR 22 DUB-BVA 30 Dec 0700-0925

I was greeted in the cornfields of Beauvais with the beginnings of a French blizzard–an unusual event which made the long line for coach tickets feel just a bit less friendly. I’m glad I brought gloves, coat, and ear protection. When I got to the stop in Paris the snow was whipping around for real, and it lent a different sort of glow than one would expect from Paris. Until it melted into a miserable gray-black sludgy muck in a couple hours and everything was back to normal.

In Paris, I stayed with Alison from Baton Rouge, whom I hadn’t quite met… but we fixed that. I met her visiting brother Matt, roommate Elaine, and also a few (mostly temporary) locals at a rocking New Year’s house party, to be mentioned soon.

Alison’s apartment was fabulously located, maybe 30 steps or so from a Métro stop (Rambuteau), practically on top of the Centre Pompidou, and a very short walk from the Hôtel de Ville (city hall, where a pretty sweet-looking temporary skating rink tempted daily) and Nôtre Dame. It also had the requisite character for the location–the gigantic porthole in the shower, the peeling ceiling, and a wonderful clothes-drying radiator that made sleeping in the hallway even warmer than a walk in the park.

Said New Year’s party took us from good cajun seasoning, King Cake, and a fabulously-stocked selection of champagne and other things classily arranged in the window gutter to the infinite subterranean labyrinths of Châtelet-Les Halles to the Champs-Elysées where Frenchmen indulged a freelance fireworks fetish and the rest of us ducked.

Ran into a mini-riot with bottle-throwing and riot police which got me a little hopped up on adrenaline and moody for the rest of the evening, but that’s part of the experience, isn’t it?

Of course the New Year wasn’t all: I got to see Paris more properly than the last time I was there (a couple days or so at the end of my Spain jaunt in 2004). My French has improved dramatically since then (which is to say that I can tell people I can’t speak French quite snappily) and I got pretty good at navigating the RATP. Matt and I visited Alison and her English students at one of the Louvre‘s free youth Fridays, and I got good mileage out of my traditional avenue-walking. Notable sights seen include the Jardins of Tuileries and Luxembourg, the Sorbonne, the Musée nationale du Moyen Age, night walking along the Seine and a couple of its bridges, and of course all of the lovely arches and pointy things on the Champs.

The four of us living in the apartment for the week also went up to Sacré-CÅ“ur on Montmartre and stumbled into a Mass. Thanks to hearing in tongues years of indoctrination, I understood the priest perfectly although I’m not an expert in French ecclesiastical terminology. There were lots of fun markets (and many more fun stairs) on the hill. We later made the pilgrimage to Jim Morrison’s tomb (and looked for our last names—I wasn’t too lucky) at the Cimetière du Père Lachaise.

That’s all out of order but it captures most of the important parts of my stay.

Learning about lemon and sugar crèpes was an important part too.

Eastbound and Dublin I

30-Dec-05

US 828 PIT-PHL 28 Dec 1800-1910
US 98 PHL-LGW 2020-0825*
BA 8082 LGW-DUB 29 Dec 1015-1140

In Dublin, I (almost accidentally) stayed with Ryan’s ridiculously hospitable friend Karen and family for the day (and night). They kept me primed with food and drink even when I was falling asleep on them. It was humbling.

Europe 2004

22-May-05

The following is the first entry in my diary of my Summer 2004 Spanish Backpacking Shindig. The complete log is quite extensive and typed already in one big text file: I just need to find either time or tools to convert it into multiple posts of bloggy goodness.

I am away from my continent right now.

Well, not yet.

But this Wednesday, I set off for Paris (via Pittsburgh and Chicago,
because direct routes are not my strength) on American Airlines
with only carefully-concealed items on my person, one barely carry-on
size backpack, and one “personal item” size mini-backpack (and their
meager contents) to my name.

I’m gonna be so broke.

I’m also going to be spending precious little time in France (if
everything works out), fleeing instead to the Iberian Peninsula—home
of people who speak Basque (and some terrorists who love them),
Galician, Catalan, and millions [give or take] of different
languages… oh yeah, and Spanish and Portuguese. THAT’s why I’m
going there.

An itinerary of dubious quality, made up on the spot too recently,
is at http://worksforfood.com/travel/itinerary.html .

http://worksforfood.com/travel/ doesn’t have much of interest to
you other than that, but soon it will be of even less interest as
I add a journal, updated as often as I can motivate myself to at
the same time as I scam cheap internet access.

I was going to say something about time zones here, but that would
be silly—it’s unlikely I’ll be reachable by the postal service,
much less by a telephone number. Ever. That should be interesting.

I will be using a top-secret yahoo mail account I normally ignore
(so don’t try to send mail to me there while I’m in the States) in
case I can’t reach my normal set of accounts. It is ask_dh@yahoo.com… I think. I’ve never actually sent mail to it.

If you want a postcard—and I want you to want a postcard, because
I’m going to be bored senseless on trains and buses for many, many
hours—you’d best be sending your postal address for the month of
June to me by e-mail (so it’s harder to lose).