Friday, November 24, 2006

Needles

I've been injected with so many diseases this past year, I can't even count them anymore.

Had a flu shot a couple days ago. It was the first time I'd ever gotten a flu shot. It gave me the flu. I won't be getting anymore flu shots.

Getting the first of three rabies shots this morning. Apparently they hurt...

Friday, October 20, 2006

And.... Central America

Who knew I'd be using this site again so soon?? Off to Central America for 6 weeks in February/March. Just booked the tickets!

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

And.... Yellowknife

I took off from my hostel in London, got to the airport three hours early, made it through the rigorous but surprisingly quick (One hour. It's relative to my expectations.) security checks, sat down for some fish and chips (last meal in London, could I really have anything else?), perused the abundant and over-priced duty free shops and got on my plane. After some barely made connections and misdirections from well meaning but hardly competent airport staff, I got back to Yellowknife.

It's raining. And it's cold.

1 summer. 92 days. 17 countries. 35 cities. 1207 pictures. Hundreds upon hundreds of new people. Thousands of conversations.

Man....

London

I only spent one night in London. Having been there on multiple occassions before, I felt no real need to see the sites (again). After a brief visit to the National Portrait Museum (going through the last day of my trip and not seeing at least one museum would have been just wrong somehow) I spent the rest of the afternoon in London shopping and then decided to see a movie.

And then the least likely thing to ever happen, happened.

I bought my ticket to A Scanner Darkly (if you like Philip K. Dick, then go see it, or if you just do a lot of drugs, go see it, or if you just really enjoy high concept cartoons, go see it) and walked into the lobby. I walked past someone who looked vaguely familiar, but seeing as how I have met hundreds, upon HUNDREDS of people this trip I am very used to seeing familiar people around, so I ignored it.

I sat down in the exact center of the theatre, as I could determine it, for the best audio quality (simulating audio accurately is very difficult, and impossible with multiple listeners, so theatres calibrate their audio according to one point in the theatre, typically the very centre of the theatre seating. Movie geek aside - Done). After a few minutes the familiar looking man walks in and sits a few rows in front of me.

"Huh" I think.

"That guy looks like Barry.", Barry being my old roommate from Yellowknfe.

"Actually, that guy looks A LOT like Barry."

"...."

I get up, walk down a few rows and look over to the man. He looks back. We just stand there for a few minutes. Slowly a look of complete and total disbelief takes over both of our faces.

IT IS BARRY!

Barry had just finished working the summer in Gambia, Africa as a biomedical technician and was spending sometime in London before heading to Edmonton and then back up to Yellowknife.

So after randomly wandering London (Pop. 7.5 million), and picking any old movie theatre to go into, I run into my roommate from halfway across the world.

And that was London.

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Rotterdam/Brugge/Ghent/Brussels

Alright, long time no update...

Rotterdam

Boring, but met some cool people, rained the whole time. The hostel staff was very friendly and helpful. Got taught a new drinking game by some Dutch girls.

Brugge

I had been saying that Cesky Krumlov was the most beautiful town in Europe.... nope, it's Brugge. Absolutely stunning town. I have TONNES of pictures from there because everything is photo-worthy. I am glad I had three days there, even though it is a small place and you could do it in one or two days.

I stayed in a hostel (supposedly the best in town) for one night and then a cheap hotel the next two nights (a room to my self... such luxury to a backpacker), but went back to the hostel bar every night. Hung out with Belgian girls who I think were mocking me the entire time the first night, but as the Belgians speak English, German, French and Dutch I could never keep up to make sure. I went to bed early the second night. The third night I hung out with some really cool Aussies and Kiwis who were on a busabout tour, and had a chat about first impressions with a property analyst. Tried a couple dozen different kinds of beers. Paid for it the next mornings.... But developed a good rapport with the bartender.

They really like spareribs there.

I kissed a vial of Jesus Christ's blood.

Top notch street musicians.

I think that's it...

Ghent

On my way from Brugge to Brussels I stopped in Ghent, since it is almost exactly half way. It was also a very pretty town, I just wandered around it for five hours. But don't trust the tourist info lady, she has no idea where internet cafes are.

Brussels

Kinda dull.... definetly second-rate compared to Brugge and Ghent. However I have met some fun people. Spent last night with some English people who are travelling around for a week. "I fucking love this shit" "... and this is the Brussels of church." Mixed with late night street calamari, it was Good Times. Today I walked around town. Met up with some Canadian girls who were going to the train station, so ended up walking all the way across all of central Brussels chatting with them about the nature of backpacking. Other than that... checked out ANOTHER cathedral, saw the Grand Place.... not very interesting stuff, really.

Tomorrow I am off to London for a night, and then home! CRAZY. It's going to be strange making the switch from a backpacking lifestyle to being in the same place for more than three days... I am looking forward to it and also not.... My own room and space will be nice, and I am pretty tired, but not being able to pack up and go to another country whenever I feel like it.... it will be different, that's for sure.

PS - oh, I never blogged about Munich, did I? Lots of beer gardens, hungout with some cool Jews.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Amsterdam

  • I went to a coffeeshop. I had a latte, it was nice. I don't get what the big deal is.
  • Free tour guides are awesome.
  • I stayed in the most ghetto, sketchy hostel. It was appropriate for Amsterdam.
  • A two person outing can quickly become a dozen person adventure.
  • Germans continue their streak of being friendly in a really, really weird way.
  • Heinekein Experience well worth experiencing.
  • Elementary school teachers do coke? I feel my innocence draining away...
  • I hate my hair SO, SO MUCH. Semi-fro = not cool.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Dresden and Berlin

Dresden

Didn't do much. A lot of sleeping. Wandering around old buildings, that weren't actually old since they all had to be reconstructed after the firebombing.

Berlin

Great, great city. Very funky architecture, lots of history. Did a walking tour one day and say the place where they had the book burnings and the Riechstag and the Bradenburg Gate and stood on top of Hitler's bunker. The Memorial to the Murdered Jews in really something. It's made of uneven solid black columns, approximately 12 feet in height and in a depression. You wander between the tightly packed columns, never knowing if someone is around the corner... the designers point was to simulate the paranoia and fear that the Jews in Germany felt... I'd say it works.

I now have some very excellent photos.

Went on a pub crawl that night too, and I must say Berlin has some very interesting clubs... one was underneath train tracks and the entire place rumbled and shook with every train that passed. It was a 'authentic' East German bar. I suppose it might have been authentic 18 years ago, but now the tourist shtick on the wall kinda ruins the ambience. Other than that, lots of bars within bars and wonderfully sarcastic Yale English lit majors...

The next day I just wandered around Berlin, through this huge outdoor festival of bad DJ music, bratwurst and beer, in through the Sony Centre which is supposed to be a glass and metal Mount Fuji.

Munich

Berlin made me really, really tired. 4am bedtime the first night, 5am the next, took it easy with just a 2:30am night the next. Plus hours and hours of walking, so I haven't done a lot in Munich yet, except of course visit a beer hall last night. So I just booked another day, because today I have just laid around and read. Those days are nice too sometimes.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Berlin

During Drinking Poker last night in the hostel bar, amidst the standard misbegotten collection of travellers you get in such places, it occured to me to write a breakdown of the different types of backpackers:

Australians: Laid back, friendly, loud, they will claim that they feel they are most like Canadians even though they are perhaps more like Americans, but you forgive them for that fault because, well, they're not Americans.

New Zealanders (Kiwis): Almost EXACTLY like Canadians, if a bit quieter.

Americans: Fall into either the category of "Offensively obnoxious" or "Polite Darlings", with no variations in between. Most likely to be the ones the rest of the group is embarassed by around 3am in the bar.

Mexicans: Continually smiling and cheerful, most likely because they are thinking "Oh, thank God I am not in Mexico".

English Boys: Quiet and reserved until you get a few drinks into them, and then.... well, they're still quiet and reserved, but at least then they're a bit racist too, which is entertaining.

English Girls: See "English Boys", but add "sluts".

Scots: They hold this silent intensity about them (that only maginfies after a few drinks). Their accent ranges from "muttering and incomprehensible" to "primal grunts and moans".

Irish Guys: I've been told that Irishmen are allowed to take a break from drinking whiskey and sheep farming to travel, but I've never seen any evidence to the fact. I also haven't been looking very hard, because who cares when you have....

Irish Girls: Charming, winsome and as lovely as a group of unbelievable drunks can be.

Spaniards: They will smile, nod and laugh for a good 30 minutes while you're talking to them before you realize they don't speak a word of English. Prone to forming impromptu dance parties to whatever music happens to be playing at the time.

Italians: Really not as degenerate as everyone would have me believe.

Germans: Friendly in a very weird, weird, sort of way. Never trust the ones who look normal, the punks are the much more endearing of the species.

Canadians: Conceintous, friendly and beloved the world over. Except for French Canadians. No one likes French Canadians.

Japanese and Argentinians: Miserable bastards who will wake you up early in the morning (11:15) with their inconsiderately loud packing after a night of Drinking Poker, right when you're hangover is gaining steam, but past when all the tours you were thinking of doing have already gone past, forcing you to waste time writing up cultural stereotypes on your blog.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Dresden

The guy at the front desk looks like David Bowie! Phew, man, I have been trying to figure that out for days.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Prague (cont.)

Alright, so more on Prague.

I left Cesky Krumlov with reluctance, since I had met some really fun people there the night before I left. And I still HAVE NOT gone rafting, and they were going the day I left. I am going to stop talking about it because it makes me sad.

I made my way to my hostel, The Boathouse. Turns out it is way out there. It took half an hour to get there from the train station, and for a European city that is a lot. It was an odd kind of place... First of all, it was in the middle of a golf course. We constantly had golfers walking in front of the hostel. The building itself seemed like an old club house, or a yacht club that was no longer being used. The old lady who ran it, Vera, was really nice and fun. I got in during the late afternoon and hoped to meet up with some cool people and go czech out the Prague club scene ('Czech'? Get it?! Man, I am SO funny). Unfortunately all I could find were Americans. Oh well. We went out anyway.

We started at this little bar with numerous shots of absinthe which is DISGUSTING. Then we tried to get to the famous five level club in Prague but the line was an entire block long, so instead this guy took us to a club where the locals go. Which is cool because you can meet the locals, but not so cool when they (for the most part) do not speak English.

After a while I got bored and wandered off (as I do) in search of a kebab. And I swear, THERE ARE NO KEBABS IN PRAGUE. I spent over an hour wandering around looking for one. It was ridiculous, at this point I began to seriously question what kind of backwards society I found myself in.

The next day I went to Prague castle for the day. It was alright. The cathedral there was filled to the brim with art, which was interesting. The 'castle' itself is actually more like a small village. It is a massive complex. I probably would have been more impressed with it a couple months ago, when I started this trip. I am just too worldly now for my own good.

That night everyone in my room was leaving and looking to get rid of all our change. Beers were really cheap (20 crowns for a half liter, which is about one Canadian dollar) so we each bought a half dozen or so and just hung out with some Irish girls.

Today I caught a train with two of the guys from my room who are on their way to Berlin. Now I am in Dresden, hanging out in the lounge, looking to meet people for the five millionth time this trip. I hate socializing...

PS - It is STILL raining..... Been going solid for a week now....

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Prague

It's alright. I shot a crossbow.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Cesky Krumlov

I only have a little over three weeks left!! AHH!!

Cesky Krumlov is supposed to be one of the most beautiful towns in Europe. I would say that is accurate. It tiptoes dangerously close to be cheesy, since it is very touristed and pretty, but manages to walk that razors edge. Next year it will probably be crap.

It would be even better if it would STOP RAINING. I have been blessed with fantastic (if overly hot) weather this entire trip, with next to no reason to use my rainjacket or sweater, and I was beginning to resent carrying them around for two months, but huzzah, at last, in one town, I have had occassion to use both! I was actually rather happy to use them for the first time (s?), because I'm a dork, but now the novelty has worn off and I have been informed by Australians that the 'Roots' that is emblazoned on my sweater means 'sex' in Australia, so I may be advertising the wrong (right?) message.

And the penultimate reason I would really like it to stop raining is because in Cesky Krumlov (pop. 15,800), after you've spent half a day seeing the castle, there are only two things to do. Dance to Gypsy music at night, and float down the river during the day. However, when it is cold and drizzling (not even real rain, DRIZZLE. I hate weather that can't make up its mind) getting together a group of people to spend the day on the water, under the water, is difficult.

But the wandering of the town and the reading I have accomplished has been nice and mild. I just finished off Salman Rushdie's 'The Satanic Verses' and feel very close to figuring out what it was about any moment now.

Next on the list is the Prague of No Expectations and then Dresden, and then the oft recommended Berlin. There is so much left and so little time!

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

The Internet Lies

So I am in Prague right now... even though I should be in Cesky Krumlov. The internet lied to me, and told me that there were buses out of Prague to Cesky Krumlov after 6pm. Apparently this is not the case.

So after finding this out I tried to wander through Pragues streets, looking for a hostel my guide book recommended that is right by the bus station. Prague has the most complicated road system EVER. It is horrible, I think it was designed by Escher. So after wandering around the same 5 block area for an hour I just went inside a building with a huge HOSTEL sign outside (never a good sign, by the way) and got a room for a night. This is one of the worst hostels I have stayed in so far, which actually still is not that bad. And I have a ticket for 9 am tomorrow to get to Cesky Krumlov. I might even run into MEgan and Chrissy, who are also going to Cesky Krumlov, but opted for the night train rather than the day one. Smart girls....

I am not impressed with what I have seen of Prague. I just got back from wandering around for a while, and it all seems to be casinos and neon lights... not so charming. Coming back from Cesky Krumlov I will stay give it a couple days before heading to Germany, but I will not be expecting much.

Monday, July 31, 2006

Krakow

Bratislava was great, for the short time I was there. The Communist influence in the city was so palpable. And yet they were also so proud... a very interesting mix of people. A little dirty, a little run down, but all part of the charm.

Now I am in Krakow, Poland (I know, I don't know how I ended up here either!). It is giving a good fight for one of, if not the, favouritist (making up words is fun!) city in Europe. It is a lovely city, with lovely people, all so dramatic, loving, sad. The past two days I have spent seeing Wawel castle and cathedral (I LOVE tombs. Is that strange? I find them cozy...) with MEgan and Chrissy (Aussie girls... naturally) and wandering around the town square (which is all of - literally - 15 seconds away from my hostel) and watching live Polish music and dance and visiting the Jewish quarter.

Today I finally worked up the never to go to Auschwitz. I really can't even describe what it is like. There is so much horror and sadness in the place. Even sixty years later it saps every last piece of you. I went on a three hour tour. Most everyone in my tour group was under 25. By the end, no one was talking, no one was touching, holding hands, kissing. We plodded forward, dragging one foot in front of the other, heads down, hearts heavy.

I have seen displays showing tonnes and tonnes of human hair that was cut off of women after they were murdered in the gas chamber and then sold to make blankets. I have stood in a room, not an arm span across, where they would cram 4, 5, 6 people for days as punishment, no light, barely any air, pissing, sleeping, shitting, standing breast to breast. I have looked at the certificates that were paid for by Jews for homes and land in Poland after their Nazi "relocation". I have touched the furnaces where hundreds, thousands of bodies were burnt after dying from the gas chamber. I have a pebble in my pocket from beside the Killing Wall where anyone who opposed the Nazis was executed.

I would go again, without hestitation.

So..... next is Czechy Krumlov! It is a little town in the south of the Czech Republic. It is supposed to be beautiful and fun and relaxing. I need it....

Friday, July 28, 2006

Bratislava

So turns out that Venice is way, way, WAY out of the way of where I was. Oh well. And it also turns out that ticket people should not be trusted. After not getting the ticket I wanted to Venice and showing up there a day night and having to take a night train, I decided to be smart and get my ticket to Bratislava as soon as I got into Venice.

"A ticket to Bratislava on the 27th please."

Confused look on ticket lady's face.
Uh oh.

"Bratislava. 27th. Vingt-sept?"

I trace 27 on the window of the ticket counter.

"Oh, okay."

She checks the computer.

"Umm... no trains to Bratislava on 27. Vienna?"

Vienna has a train every 20 minutes to Bratislava, so I say okay.

I get my ticket, hang out in Venice with LCD, walk across the entire city twice, go to the beach, heart-wrenchingly buy a mask and hope it won't get broken during the next month in my bag, go back to the station to get on my train.

I used my Eurail pass to get the train reservation, so I take it out to write down the date for this day of travel. I look at the date on the ticket, and write down 25/07 on my ticket. Oh, wait..... Turns out she gave me a reservation on the day I bought the ticket, not on the day I had requested. I have half an hour left before the train leaves. I go and stand in the ticket line for what seems and eternity and finally get to the ticket office.

"Hello. English?"

"No."

Crap.

I struggle through it and manage to communicate that I was given a reservation for the wrong day, and he gestures that I have to go to the Railiway Information desk to get it resolved. So I do. 15 minutes left. I stand in line for the Information desk and he tells me I have to go to the Ticket desk. 10 minutes left. I cut through the line and he again tells me to go to the Information desk. (I told this story to Josh, an Italian student I met on the train and at this point he laughs and says "That is SO Italian!"). So this time a young guy who speaks some English goes with me and has a long conversation with the Information desk guy, and I can tell from the conversation that this still isn't going to help me at all. So I turn to the young guy and he says "Ummm... Just get on the train."

So I do. Apparently it wasn't an issue that I had no reservation. Just being told that would have been very useful.

So now I am in Bratislava. It is dirty, poor, cheap, proud and I love it.

More later!

Thursday, July 27, 2006

Budapest, Venice

Internet in Venice is tres expensive, so this will be a short one.

Budapest

Funky, beautiful, cheap, Terry is a maniac. Definetly a place to go back to at some point.

Venice

THRONGED with tourists. I cannot take it. The canals are kinda cool, and I may have got a picture of the library from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and even if it is not it I am just going to say it is. Oh, and I hung out a bit with those Vancouver people, whatever their names were :P.

Next

Train to Vienna at 3pm, getting into Vienna around 9;30pm, trying to make it Bratislava, Slovakia that night. I better, I have no where to stay in Vienna that night!

Friday, July 21, 2006

Vienna

It just took me a couple minutes to remember what city I was in. Travelling does that....

So I am in Vienna (duh), about to leave for Budapest in a couple hours. Vienna is a massive, MASSIVE city, it sprawls more than any other city I've been in. It also has an incredible amount of tourist attractions and historic sites. So many in fact that I couldn't decide which to go to, so went to almost none of them.

My first night I met up with some Aussie girls, Emma and Cass, and we went to a film festival that was playing outside the city hall, in a huge square with tonnes and tonnes of booths and people. They were playing a recording of a jazz concert with Harry Connick Jr. We sat in the front and chilled.

The next day we went to the amusement park! Much fun was had. Then we got a load of food from the supermarket and had a three hour picnic in a park. We talked, bonded, etc. They are currently living in London, and offered me a place to stay should I have a couple days in London to kill at the end of my trip. About half an hour before we parted ways I turned to Cass and said "Do you know my name?". She didn't. Heh. That also happens when you travel.

The past couple nights have been long and fuzzy. I switched hostels and in the hostel bar met some working class Brits (James and John) and some people I had met in Madrid (Jerry and Jane) and we hooked up with some more people and all went down to the riverside with the assistance of our appointed Austrian tour guide, Chrissy. We found an outdoor bar and hung out there till about 4am. After fending off attacks of a sleazy German (30) who tried to bring Chrissy (17) back to his place and declining an invitation from some Nigerians to go back to some place that they wouldn't specify, we hopped into a cab and crashed.

The next day I slept through a date to go touring Vienna made the night before and ambled around Vienna before running into the working class Brits and we checked out Parliament and some more parks. Then we met up with the people from the night before and we went to a free open air Sean Paul concert. Sean Paul is insanely irritating. So we go back to the hostel bar and some people go to bed and others hang out and I meet some recently gradded engineers from Queens and they destroy me and a English girl at fooseball.

Now I am killing time till my train leaves for Budapest where good times will be had with Mr. Terry, and then after that Venice with LCD (Lauren, Caroline, Danielle).

And what I REALLY want to do right now is sleep. Stupid 10am checkout time....

Monday, July 17, 2006

Pictures!


I found an internet cafe that has a card reader! Which means I can try to post some of my 500-of the past month and a half! Huzzah!

Drinking and looking generally disreputable with Lauren, Caroline, Terry, Myself and Danielle in London, England.

Temple Bar District in Dublin, Ireland. Yeah, that is what I remember it looking like.

The Cliffs of Moher on the west coast of Ireland.

A crazy person singing, dancing, and selling doughnuts from a board that he balanced on top of his head on the beach in Barcelona, Spain.


Dancing in Granada, Spain. On the right is Melissa and Terry and I cannot remember the names of the two girls on the left, but I dearly, dearly wish I did just for the sake of that facial expression.

The hostel kitchen in Seville Spain, Paget, and the beginning of a nights good work.

My old dormmate Fiona and I, late one night in Lisbon, Portugal.

Port tasting at the Sandeman in Porto, Portugal.


Paul doing his best pirate impression on a beach outside of Nice, with Laura laughing in the background. Hey Paul, your nipples are on the internet!


Me, Ethan and Paul trying to look all tough and manly on the Nice beach. Well, I was anyway.

Waterfront in Geneva, Switzerland at night.


Wandering Liechtenstien at night, trying to score some dental products.


Today! I took a day trip around Salzburg with Aryanne (pictured, but very, very smally) and one of the stops was at this luge thing down a hill that you took a little cable sled to get to the top of.

And I finally bought new shoes!

Yep, definetly moving to Austria when I am rich and powerful.

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Liechtenstien

It is true my friends, I am in Liechenstien! It is as entirely delightful as I had hoped. The idea that some people travel to Europe and do not visit Liechenstien saddens my heart. It puts me in mind of a country-themed amusement park, on a massive and grand scale. It is the distilled and condensed essence of an entire nation, squeezed into a scant 160 square kilometers.

Today I walked between the most populous city in Liechtenstien (Schaan) and the capital city (Vaduz). It took 20 minutes! My original hope of walking across the entire country, widthwise, has been unfortunately dashed, due to a rather sizable and inconsiderate mountain bisecting my supposed path. I did attempt to walk up to Vaduz Castle, home of the Prince of Liechtenstien and his family, but after 30 minutes of fruitless searching for a path not marked "private" I gave up. Considering that you cannot go into the castle (Could you imagine tourists wandering through your home!) I decided that I could see it well enough from where I was.

My only regret is that I have not found anyone to share my rapture of this fairytale place with. Throughout my time in Switzerland I had been taking a break from talking with people, having gotten quite sick of the same repetive conversations that occur between backpackers (Where are you from, where have you been, where are you going, oh, was it pretty?, repeat ad naseum) and it was a glorious time to be solely in the company of my own meandering thoughs but now I again feel up to setting upon myself the great burden of conversation. Unfortunately, the other guests of my hostel are:
  • Three Koreans who share my room and speak very little English. One makes loud smacking noises with his mouth for no reason, I may have to smother him in his sleep.
  • A gang of middle-aged German bikers, who despite their hardened appearances are actually very polite. But again, speak no English.
  • An American family with a slow-witted patriarch and two young daughters.
  • A German-Swiss family

Friday, July 14, 2006

Zurich today, Liechtenstien tomorrow!

I have some internet time left at this cafe, so might as well expound on my trip.

Nice

Hung out with a this soon-to-be Masters of Computer Engineering dude, Paul, a lot. He looks kinda like Jon Heder. Oh, and where is he going to get his masters? UBC of course! I have met so many UBC students this trip, it is surreal....

I switched rooms a lot in Nice, since I kept on adding how much time I wanted to stay there. For my last night I was in the "dungeon", a huge dorm room underneath the hostel bar filled with passed out revellers and building supplies. Two nights before a rager had destroyed a good number of the beds. But thankfully the had been replaced by the time I got there and slept in moderate comfort. Oh Terry, I ran into a poli sci grad from McGill who said she knew you from French class. Her and her friend were kinda annoying though, so I did not spend too much time with them.

Geneva

Definetly international. And definetly beautiful. A good place for sweethearts, but even by myself I enjoyed walking along the waterfront. I never did do the boat trip, but I did watch Superman Returns. Bryan Singer, you have done it again. And I think my guide book writer girl is crazy. She said that there is very little English spoken in Switzerland, but I have yet to meet one person who did at least not know passable English. And the hostel she recommended in Geneva did not love up to my expectations. I was in a 6 bed dorm room that was very spartan and dungeonesque. I have stayed in worse, but it was not as "cozy" as she described. I think she just reviewed the female accomodations and not the male. From what I saw, it is a great place to stay if you are a woman. I am pretty sure I was the only guy there (the yonly have the one male dorm room and I was the only occupant).

Zurich

I like Zurich better when it rains. It is just one of those cities that looks good in the rain. It suits it.

Future Plans

I have my ticket to Liechtenstien!!! I am ridiculously pumped to see this tiny, tiny country. I have to send people postcards from there and buy some dental products. I was hoping to run across the entire country (it is only 6 km wide), but I am still a bit sick, so my have to statisfy myself with merely walking across it.

Terry, I am booked in the Prima Hostel in Budapest (on Laurens suggestion... I will be seeing her shortly after Budapest so she better hope it is all she promised! :P) for the nights of the 21, 22 and 23. If you have some place else you want to stay or have booked somewhere else, let me know.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Zurich

Zurich is uninteresting. You are not missing much Terry. Okay, only 5 minutes left! Here is the intenerary...

Tomorrow in Zurich
Next day in Liechtenstein (the 15)
16 - Salzburg
17 - Salzburg
18 - Vienna
19 - Vienna
20 - Vienna
21 - Budapest
22 - Budapest
23 - Budapest
24 - Bratislava
25 - Bratislava
26 - Bratislava
27 - Venice (??)

Man, I hate having a set schedule... none of that past the 15th is actually booked, Terry, so if you have any preferences, let me know and it can be moved around!

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Geneva

So had a good time in Nice, met up with some quality folks, tried to ignore most of the 18/19 year olds (apologies to the 18/19 year olds who may be reading this) who thought I was in my 30s. Visited Monaco, the cleanest city I have ever seen, spent a day on the beach, tried to even out the disparity in colour between my arms and face and everywhere else, and just generally chilled out in the villa.

I'm in Geneva, Switzerland now. And sick again.... it's not a debilitating sickness, I refuse to give in and just stay in my hostel bed (like I probably should). I'm booked now to go to Zurich tomorrow, and then Liechenstein after that. Still trying to get a bed in Liechtenstien, they are not very conscientous about answering the phone. After that, the wind will most likely carry me to Salzburg, Austria and then Vienna, followed by Budapest, Hungary and Bratislava, Slovakia with a perhaps a brief sojourn to meet up with the lovely(-ies) Miss Lauren, Caroline and Danielle in Venice. The only reason I really want to go to Venice is because a number of scenes from "Indiana Jones: The Last Crusade" took place there. Rather like how I want to go to Vienna because that is where "Before Sunrise" took place. I should just have modelled this entire trip based on movie shooting locations.

So so far... I arrived in Geneva from Nice late yesterday afternoon. Took out some Swiss Francs from a bank machine and because I was lazy decided to take a cab. After walking from my hostel to the train station today, I can say the cabbie definetly took the "scenic route". By which I mean he ripped me off horribly. I kinda suspected, since we were at the main train station, my hostel is right beside the main tourist cathedral (which rings very loud bells far too early in the morning), there is no way that many side streets should have been involved. Ah well. Last night I wandered the waterfront of Lake Geneva, and had a lovely dinner at a place that only makes three chicken dishes, it was a very refreshing meal, if a tad expensive (22 francs for a single dish and two iced teas! one france roughly equals one Canadian dollar. I think that three weeks in Spain and Portugal may have spoiled me).

Geneva is the French part of Switzerland. There is also a Italian part and a German part (which is where Zurich is). My guide book said that not many people in Switzerland speak English compared to the rest of Europe, but so far I've heard more English than any other place I've been and have had no problems. This could be due in large part to having a hostel located in Tourist Ground Zero.

Today is more wandering. I may take a boat tour of the lake. I may also go watch Superman Returns, which is playing in a local theatre by my hostel. My movie obsession knows no bounds.

Friday, July 07, 2006

Madrid/Barcelona/Nice

It has been three night trains since I last posted... But now I am clean and clothed, in a honest to God villa (it has it's own chapel! Which is now the hostel lounge/bar...) in Nice. So...

Madrid

Night trained it from Porto to Madrid, ran into a Vancouver girl named Laura and we talked and talked in the bar car before crashing into horribly uncomfortable 2nd class seats.

Madrid was an alright time. I spent two days there, checked out the Prada and Sofia art galleries, wandered around Michelle's aptly named "gaybourhood". Bested a load of Americans at their own drinking games. Did anyone else know that Asshole can be a drinking game? I had no idea.

Barcelona

Night trained it from Madrid to Barcelona. This time in 1st class seats. Which are NOT worth the money. They reminded me of Air Canada seats, with the awful headrest that jutts out and forces your chin firmly into your chest. Who ever designed those seats should be flogged. I managed about 3 hours of sleep.

Go to Barcelona and I went to book my Nice train and found out that Eurail trains schedules lie. There is no morning train from Barcelona to Nice. So instead I booked my third night train in five days to get me to Nice, this time in a second class sleeping car. I went to find an internet kiosk so that I could email my hostel that I would not be able to make that night, and ran into Laura. Turns out we were on the same night train from Madrid and didn't know it. Laura and I seem to have a string of weird coincidences that I won't bother going into.

I spent the day wandering Barcelona with Laura and Gordon, a guy she had met in Madrid. Say some Gaudi architecture, and the big Sagrada Familia (most visited construction site in the world), a massive cathedral designed by Gaudi in the late 1800s and is due to be completed in 2020. It is unlike any cathedral I have seen before. It has to be seen, I don't think my poor descriptions would do it justice.

Laura and Gordon caught the night train to Paris, with Laura saying she'll try to meet up with me when I head to Budapest. I got on the train, and the 15 extra euros for the sleeper car was definetly worth it. I slept some of the best sleep I've had in a while.

Nice

I got to Nice, ran into some Irish girls (yay Irish!) who work at the hostel I'm staying at, and they guided me here. It looks like a nice place in Nice (badoom-ching), and I talked to a guy Paul this morning who said it has a great atmosphere. Nice is my break town from the constant travelling and site seeing, I have five days here to just relax and do as little as possible. Paul said that this is definetly a good place for that.

Future Plans

Due to all the time spent of trains in the past week, I've had some down time to consider what my next steps will be. Places that I want to go, but not nessecarily in this order:
  • Florence, Italy for two days
  • Rome, Italy for three days
  • Somewhere in Sicily is a volcanic area that sounded really cool, but I can't remember the name of it just yet. Two days.
  • Budapest, Hungary for 3 or 4 days
  • Bratislava, Slovakia for 2 days (might try to find the Voytilla name's home, Provac, Slovakia while I'm at it)
  • Trencin, Slovakia for a day
  • Vienna, Austria for 3 days
  • Salzburg, Austria for 2 days
  • Prague, Czech Republic for 3 days
  • Brno, Czech Republic for 2 days
  • Krackow, Poland for 2 days
  • Dresden, Germany
  • Berlin, Germany
  • Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • Brussels, Belgium

And now that I've made the schedule, I can throw it out the window and tell you that I probably won't be doing anything much like what I've just written. In fact, right at this second I am thinking about throwing out Italy all together (it just doesn't interest me, even though I know so many people who love it) and passing through Switzerland to go to Vaduz, Liechtenstein just for the pure freaking novelty of it. In that case, I'd go to Salzburg, Austria and then head east, then north, then west.

But who knows?

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Porto

Porto is a fantastic, fantastic city (you missed out Terry....). I was a little worried about it, since I ran into a Brit girl in Lisbon who said that Porto was a hellhole and she hated it. Once again demonstrating that the English cannot be trusted. I mean sure, it´s dirty and smells bad.... but c´mon, it´s Portugal, OF COURSE it´s dirty and smells bad. But it is also friendly, beautiful, vibrant place.

My first day I ran into a Canadian named Dave, who of course went to UBC and graduated the same year, same faculty as I did. We went out to dinner at a little cafe and had some meat on a hook. Portugese food by the way is also fantastic. Very.... hardy. Then we stopped by a grocery store and picked up 2 one liter bottles of beer and a bottle of wine each. Grand total..... 3 euros.

We then went back to the hostel and sat down in the courtyard and I brought out a pack of cards and we started playing. Within two hours we had about half the people in our hostel sitting with us, playing cards (it is not a big hostel, 30 people at most I think). After a few hours of that we decided to see if the nightlife in Porto is as nonexistant as we had heard. It is pretty dead, but we managed to find a place.

The next day I started some more random wandering. Porto is a great city to wander by the way. Tonnes of cool little alley ways and really breathtaking views of the entire city as it slopes down to the river bed. I then went to one of the more famous port distilleries, Sandeman. While there I ran into Tex, Edmonton and Melbourne from the night before (Isiah, Christine and Liz, respectively. Oh, and here is an odd YK connection.... Christine used to date Chris Mercredi´s brother Paul). So we all went on the Sandeman tour, learned about how port is made and did some tasting. Then we went to another tasting place and after tasting about my seventh port I decided to buy a half bottle of one I liked. It is a 1998 vintage, and should be left to age for another 4 years or so. And I have to carry it in my backpack for two more months. It seemed like a good idea at the time.

After the tasting we found a cafe to watch the Portugal-England football game. Porto LOVES its football. They have big screens set up all around the city centre, showing the football game to the public with hundreds (if not thousands) of people crowded around. But we wanted to eat, so we after some extensive searching we found one with a free table and a TV. AND.... PORTUGAL WON!!! The whole city went NUTS! The energy on the street after that blew me away.... And Tex walked along the top of a bridge walkway, teetering on the railing, ready to fall 100 feet into the river below and freaked me and Christine out.

That night was me, Christine and Dave celebrating Canada day, and handing out Canada pins and naming all who were willing honourary Canucks for the day. Good times were had. I ended the night chilling in the courtyard with some Aussies. Ainsley, Jimmy, John and Matt. They´re doing almost EXACTLY the same route I am, so I will probably run into them another half dozen times over the next two months.

In three hours I am off on the night train to Madrid. YeeHA.

------------------------------------------------------------

So here is the schedule:
  1. Madrid tomorrow, for two days
  2. Barcelona for one day
  3. Nice for two days, three if I can find some more accomodation
  4. Florence
  5. Rome
Ever been to Florence Terry?

Friday, June 30, 2006

Porto

In Porto now. Spent the bus trip here beside a Spanish teenager who spent the trip farting, picking his nose and popping his zits.

Sick sick sick sick.

Off to explore!

Thursday, June 29, 2006

It is a small world, Charlie Brown

Weirdest event of my trip yesterday.... I have mentioned all the random re-meetings of travellers before (oh, and Awful Casey was in Lisbon too, we went shopping together for touristy junk) but this one takes the cake....

I am sitting in the lounge of the hostel hanging out, and some people come through and go into the kitchen. Then one girl suddenly jumps back out.

´´EC!!!??!´´
´´FIONA!!??´´

I am not sure how many of you know Fiona, we were friends during my dorm daze at UBC. So random, to run into an old college buddy from Vancouver in Portugal..

She´s travelling with some cool Yank dudes she met during her travels. We all hung out that night, partied Barrio Alto style, and went hopped on the train to go to the beach all of today and had a ridiculously good and filling seafood dinner tonight.

Oh, stopped by Sintra as well. I made the girls I was with do the whole hike up the mountain to the top of the castle. It was very pretty, very fairy tale-esque.

I CANNOT believe Fiona is here! Crazy!

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Acclimatized

22 degrees in Lisbon = FREEZING!

LisboA

In Lisbon now. So to recap since last time...

Sevilla was cool. Not as cool as Granada, but pretty cool. I met some people I really liked there, probably my first real ´friends´ as opposed to people I just meet travelling and go get drunk with. Terry knows Kate and Adam, the Australians with weak stomachs, and plus there was British Paget who I called ´Patrick´ for the first two days I knew him and an American dude Chris, my ´make plans for the next day while drunk and then decide too hungover to go do it the next day´ buddy. It was kinda sad to leave them. Even more sad when the receptionist girl told me at midnight that I hadn´t paid for my room yet when I clearly remember paying for it, but the guy I paid didn´t write it down so they charged me again.... bastards. And then I lost my sleep sack my sister Jen made for me, and had to sleep on a bare matress in Lagos the next night.

So went to Lagos after Sevilla. Lagos - City of Frat Boys. I ran into so many people I already knew in Lagos. Lynn and Eve, two Irish girls from Granada, Antonia and Shannon, two Aussie girls from Sevilla, two of the five Vapid Aussies from Valencia and Awful Casey, another Sevilla Aussie. And about five million frat boys.

I went out my first night in Lagos with Alex, a Bulgarian guy who was in my room to watch the Portugal football (soccer) game. It was alright. Met a ridiculous drunk mid-30s English guy named John who had decided to move to Lagos and was starting a new job at 10am the next day. At 9pm I could see from how drunk he already was, there was no chance he was making it to his new job. Oh well.

Overall I was not impressed with Lagos. It is most definetly a HUGE party town, but has very little actual Portugese feel to it. It´s all over run with Anglo tourists. It seems a good place to go out and party, but I could do that at home.

So the next morning I went to a different hostel to see if I could get a room there and maybe have a better time. Instead I ran into Aussie Vicky (I swear, this entire trip all I meet are Aussie girls. They´re EVERYWHERE), a girl I had met on the bus from Sevilla to Lagos the day before. She tells me she didn´t have fun in Lagos either, even in her hostel. She said everyone is really obnoxious, so she was going to head to Lisbon a day early. I took out a coin, flipped it, and headed to Lisbon with her.

We got to Lisbon without reservations and ended up in this old couple´s pension, which was very quaint and split a room. Now I´m in the hostel I had reserved for my stay in Lisbon, and she´s in hers. We have wandered Lisbon a bit last night and today and are meeting up to see what else there is to see.

Lisbon seems nice and ACTUALLY Portugese, so I look forward to seeing the sites!

(I had a bunch more bullet point observations, but now cannot remember any of them... maybe later)

Saturday, June 24, 2006

Misc.

  1. I've been looking for a Spanish-English dictionary my entire time in Spain. This morning I went to the bus station and bought my ticket for Lagos in Portugal, leaving tomorrow morning. I got lost on the way back to the hostel (something very, VERY easy to do in Sevilla) and passed by three bookstores all with Spanish-English dictionaries. heh.
  2. Road signs are annoying here. They don't have them on poles, they're on sides of buildings. And not at every intersection, just sometimes. And if it's a big street, sometimes not at all.
  3. The face of the bezel on my watch came off. It looks more rugged and backpacker-esque now.
  4. I have 4 nights at this hostel. The staff have switched which room I'm in every night.
  5. Siesta's are essential. It's gotten to 40 degrees the past two afternoons, around 2pm. I've been in Sevilla for a while, but haven't seen that much tourist stuff due to the heat lethargy.
  6. Bottled water is cheap here. 27 (euro) cents for 2 litres.

Next stop is...

Portugal!

The plan is:
  • 2 nights in Lagos, from what I hear a touristy but fun beach town
  • 3 nights in Lisbon, the capital
  • 2 nights in Porto, the home of the drink, you guessed it, port
The 2 nights in Lagos are a little iffy, since the place I want to stay has no availability, but they say they reserve rooms for walk-ins. It seemed to work well enough in Seville, I stayed 4 nights without any reservations at all!

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Sevilla

I am now in Sevilla, I got in last night from Granada. I didn't have a reservation last night so ended up sleeping on the couch in the common room of the hostel. I had to get up early (well, early for a backpacker - 8:30) and reserve a bed for the next two nights.

This blistering heat is really something.... 37 degrees out. Seistas are very much required. I'm slowly climatizing, I can now handle 30 degrees without issues. I got up early one day in Granada and thought how chilly it was... I found a billboard and it was 18 degrees. Reminds me of a dream I had last night. It was September and I was sitting behind my office desk in Yellowknife, it was awful.

Went on a tapas tour last night with the hostelers. Not being free is seriously a drag. The Sevillians really need to change that. Even the fact that by the end it was 10 girls and me didn't help. BUT the awesome (and free!) flamenco at the last bar was great. It was very passionate, and wow can those guys ever play guitar.

Today I went on a wander around the area my hostel is in. Sevilla's streets are even more convulted and confusing than Granada's. Even with my map it was next to impossible to get around. But I eventually meandered my way to the Cathedral and to Alcazar.

The Cathedral is this massive, massive, MASSIVE church. It has 34 chapels inside it.

Alcazar is the royal residence in Sevilla. The palace itself isn't that impressive (especially after Alahambras in Granada) but the gardens are beautiful. I loved just wandering around and getting lost in them. It's a very intimate space, it's easy to lose yourself there.

All for now! The football (soccer) game is on and this keyboard is configured weird!

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Today was Awesome

Granada is a fantastic city. So, SO much better than Valencia. Better architecture, better history and above all, better tapas. For those not in the know, tapas are little snacks that come with your beer. Everywhere else, you order them especially. In Granada, they come with EVERY beer you order. For FREE. And whats more, the longer you stay at one place, the better and better tapas they will bring you. It is simply a amazing system.

I could go on right now about the amazing Moorish achictecture, the overwhelming grandeur of the old Moorish-Catholic palaces, but in truth the whole free food with every meal is the most amazing part of my Granada experience.

Seriously though, everyone must make there way to Granada. I´m not one of those wish-washy travellers who wants to live in every city they visit, but Granada is definetly the exception. I wonder if they need programmers......

Friday, June 16, 2006

Today Sucked

1) I'm still feeling sick.

2) My TX is broken. I don't know how or why... it's been safely in it's case the whole time, in it's own little compartment away from everything else so that it wouldn't get crushed, but this morning I wanted to listen to some music and it just wouldn't turn on. I tried plugging it in, thinking the battery had died even though I just charged it a couple days ago, but nothing.

3) I walked down to the Valencia Centre of Arts and Sciences, this really cool collection of buildings, to find that the art museum was closed for renovations and that the only other thing I wanted to see, the aquarium, cost almost 25 euros to get in. Eep!

4) I tried to deposit some money Robi sent me for May's ultility bills, and was asked a security question. But I must have messed up when I made the question, because the answer I gave I knew was right, but it wasn't the one on the site and now I'm locked out.

I hope tomorrow is better. Blah.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Valencia

Ola!

I can't believe it's been 15 days already. It seems like it's been both shorter and longer than that, if that makes sense. Which it doesn't. Nevermind.

I LOVED Barcelona. I regret only having two days there. It's an amazing, beautiful city. I went to Placa De Espanya and saw their national art museum. It's incredible! If I hadn't known that I was in the middle of Barcelona, I would have thought I had just stumbled upon some jungle fortress in the middle of Peru. They have huge gardens flanking it on either side and it is 251 steps up from street level. I counted 'em! (That's actually a lie. It's 250 steps. I was so pissed off when I got to the top and hit 250, because then it just sounds like I looked at the castle and said "Meh... that's about 250 steps. So how about those escalators?", but NO, I actually did count every last one I walked them all up by my little old self. And adding that one extra step increase my... what was it Terry? "Tough guy, man of the world exterior"? Anyhow.) I also wandered around Las Ramblas, the main shopping/historic/touristy drag. I suppose you could say I ambled around Ramblas. Then I hit the beach for far longer than I intended and now have a slight burn all over. But on a topless beach where guys wander around selling beer as you lay there and women walk around selling massages, how can you not linger?

Both nights in Barcelona I went out with these two Australian girls and three American dudes. They were fun, we enjoyed ourselves. Last night we went out for a light, casual seafood dinner by the beach, a break from our pubcrawling the night before. Of course the night ended up with us wandering the streets with beer in hand, going into a club and not emerging until 7:30 the next morning. I got three hours sleep, and hopped on my train to Valencia.

Now I'm in Valencia. I think Valcenia is to Barcelona as Galway was to Dublin. Less the international city, more actual Spanish. But I can't say I'm really that taken with it right now. It might be because the constant partying is finally taking the toll. I'm super tired, have a sore throat, and spent my first couple hours here playing the UK version of 90's Trivial Pursuit with some stunned British girls.

Me: C'mon, you know this. It was 1994, the fashion trend where you wear clothes that are ragged and disheveled. Just think, big fashion trend, 1994.

Stunned Brit: Well, I don't know! I was only six in 1994!

Me, internal monologue: 6 in 1994? So born 1988, so that makes them.... Oh God, British AND 18?

So we played for a bit, and I got halfway to beating them, despite being tired, braindead and not being from the UK. Then they went off to watch the English football match and I wandered around Valencia's old section. It's... okay. I think I just really need some sleep.

Cheers

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

What a flurry of posts!

Okay, here's my rough plan for Spain:

Barcelona (2 days)
Valencia (2 days)
Granada (1-2 days)
Malaga (2 days)
Cadiz (1 day)
Seville (2 days)
Madrid (3 days)

Then from Madrid to Lisbon. Some of those may get cut out, since that's a lot of time and travelling. I'm already booked up to Granada, and Cadiz may be cut and possibly a day each from Seville and Madrid.

Assesment

Instead of wandering Barcelona, I decided to do a financial assesment of how I was doing so far (ooo, fun!).

I'm a bit below where I wanted to be at this moment, budget-wise. Of course, my budgetting wasn't too strenous, I just took total number of days in Europe and divided by amount in bank account. And I'm hoping that I'm now done with the more expensive parts of the trip (ie Ireland, England and last minute outfitting in Calgary).

So a little advice from the travellers who have come before. I'm sure some (Devon) will laugh at me for even worrying, but as it stands I should aim for 80 euros per day for the remainder of my trip, which might include Spain, Portugal, southern France (Nice, Marseilles), Czech Republic, Slovakia (maybe), Poland, Germany, Belgium (maybe), Amsterdam. Sound doable?

In Barcelona

I get off the train this morning at Barcelona. Ahhhh, a cooling Barcelona breeze! Such a refreshing feeling after the stiffling heat and mug of Britian and Ireland (that doesn't make sense to me either, but it is true nonetheless). I pulled out my scribbled hostel diretions in my ridiculously tiny travel notebook (thanks Renee!) and quickly became aware of the nessecity of a map. So I bought a map from the train station store (5 euros! outrageous!) and then quickly realized that I was in the wrong station for my directions to make any kind of sense. Turns out only MOST trains go to Estacion Sants, some go to the smaller regional station, Franca. Which is where I was.

So I consulted my handy map and made my way to the nearest metro station. I passed by a HUGE line of Spaniards, two blocks in length, and several lines stretching in all directions. I have no idea what they were in line for, but they were holding forms and seemed willing to wait all day, if nessecesary.

I passed them by and after three left turns, found a metro station. I bought a three day metro pass (the Spanish are much more understanding of my broken Spanish than the French were of my broken French, which is nice), and after a few efficient transfers got the the right station, and began to follow my directions. I walked down Melcior de Palau and passed right by my hostel three times before realizing it was on the second floor, above a furniture store.

The hostel Aleberquinn is very clean and very nice. It doesn't seem like a big party hostel, which may be a nice change. I might even be able to get a proper nights sleep in I can't remember how long. I can't check in just yet, since it's only 11am and the rooms have to be cleaned and vacated, which is why I am where I am, which is sitting in the hostel lobby writing to you fine folk.

My impression of Barcelona (gleaned after a whooping two hours in the city) is positive. It's a little dirtier and gritier than London or Ireland, which gives it a sort of organic charm.

Cheers!

Enroute to Barcelona

Ola!

After 16 hours of train travel, I am in Barcelona! I made my way to Waterloo International Station, (despite the Underground's best attempts to confound my plans with train delays) and hopped on the Eurostar to Paris. It was quick and relatively painless, and I arrived in Paris at about 5pm. I waited around in the lobby of the train station with other erstwhile backpackers and hobos such as myself, then hopped (European trains require much hopping. Mind the gap!) onto the night train to Barcelona. After making an inspection of the entire train, I came to the conclusion that I was put into the one compartment without any other english speakers. There were four of us in VERY tight quarters. One was a friendly enough Frenchman and the other two were rather intimidating looking gangstas (a silver gun necklace? Seriously?). After a drawn out uncomfortable silence (Only to be expected since none of them spoke English I didn't feel like shaming myself with my broken French and/or Spanish) I made my way to the diner car and enjoyed some drinks and sandwiches. Then I wandered back to the compartment and collapsed into my bed.

Saturday, June 10, 2006

shitshitshitcrapshit

So this morning I go to the train station to catch the train to Stratford.... to find out there they're having train difficulties..... to the extent that none of their trains are running. So the only recourse is a bus that would put me into Stratford about 45 minutes after the play I was going to see would have ended. So flush that down the toilet, whoosh, goodbye. So I ended up just wandering around London. And today London won a world cup match, so the already stifling Underground was packed with jingoist young English boys waving flags and being even more irritating than normal.

On a positive note, last night was yet another drink-filled adventure. I was hanging out in the Astor Quest lounge and happened to end up drinking with the hostel manager, Jess. Jess is loud, demanding, hates everyone and I love her to death. We ran into some other hostellers and we all went off to a local bar. Good times were had.

Tomorrow I think I'll just idle away, passing time until I leave Monday. The train faisco has put me off England for a while.

Cheers!

Thursday, June 08, 2006

Last Day in Galway

I've found an internet cafe with proper web browsers! However, it's run by a Chinese guy and everything on this computer is set for the Chinese language, which makes things a little difficult, but I'm managing.

Galway was very nice. It's an exceptionally beautiful, quaint town. It feels very Irish. Dublin felt Irish as well, but also like any other major city in the world. Although the main street that my hostel is on is very, very touristy. But ah well, it has about a dozen pubs within a few blocks!

Yesterday I want on a tour of the Cliffs of Moher with some American girls I had met the previous night. They were very beautiful, and the tour guide was this old Irishman who loved to laugh at his own jokes. I love the old Irishmen here, with there thick muttonchops and pints of Guiness. It almost seems like the pubs must hire these guys to sit outside their establishments and drink, because they are just SO typically Irish.

Last night I ran into some other people that were on the Cliffs of Moher tour, plus some random hostel girls, and we went to the Kings Head pub and enjoyed some blues/covers from the live band. Then we headed off to this club that was having an 80s night. I wish I had my camera, so that I could capture the ridiculous dancing that took place. Everyone there was SO into it, it was great. The place was also a bit of a meat market, probably due to the high number of drunk English boys. Ah well, it was still fun.

Today I'm taking it easy and planning the next stage of my trip. Right now I'm heading back to Dublin tomorrow to hop on a plane for London. On Saturday I'm taking a day trip from London to Stratford to see Romeo and Juliet performed by the Royal Shakespeare Company (woo!), and then Monday I take off from London for Paris, at Paris jump on the night train for Barcelona and arrive in Barcelona on the 13th. I'm not quite sure what I'm doing from there, possibly heading down the coast to Valencia.

Cheers!

PS - I still need people's addresses for post cards....

Kings Head + 80s club nights = awesome. Going to Barcelona on the 12th. If I can get tickets!

Friday, June 02, 2006

Day 2 of London

I really should start using more interesting names for these blogs, but I write them during the breakfast at the hostel, and am generally not the sharpest in the wee morning hours.

Yesterday I spent the morning in the Tower of London, and went through one of the Yeoman tours, which was as entertaining as expected and made up for the 12 pound price of admission. Then I wandered down the Thames, stopping here and there. Spent a few hours in the Tate Modern Art Gallery, which was suprisingly entertaining. I still have it stuck in my head from childhood that art museums are stuffy, dull places and as such haven't been in one for quite some time. But I found the Surrealism section of Tate amazing. I could get completely lost in a piece, and run through a million emotions and affects in minutes.

I have two holes in the crotch of my pants. Aussie Andy in my hostel room (also my bunk mate) remarked "So you're one pair of jeans are crap, and you're at what... day 2 of your 3 month trip?". Yes Aussie Andy, yes.... Shopping my be required.

I met up with Lauren (UBC friend) and Co (Non-UBC friends) last night in the hostel bar and we chatted and planned for today. They've gone off to the Tower of London for the morning today, and I'm being lazy and hanging out at the hostel until they come back. From there we're meeting up with their friend Matty and my friend (drumroll please).... TERRRRY!! I'm pumped to hang out with Terry in London, and even more pumped to head to Ireland for Terry's birthday. I hope to have some very interesting stories in a weeks time, dear readers!

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Day 1 of Touring London

Okay, tehnically my second day in London. But since I spent the first day ferverently trying to stay awake for a continuous 30 hours as opposed to get over my jetlag, I don't think it counts.

And my apologies about the Stella, I was tired and clearly wasn't thinking. I 'll try to do better for my lunch pint.

Cheers

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Cheers from London

So I write this huge post on the airplane and find out that either blogger or my Palm has issues with copying and pasting large amounts of text. So what you see below is an experpt and accounts for about a fifth of the total amount of what I wrote. I might post more of it later, since it was darn funny (at least in my delusional overtired and slightly-tipsy-from-free-airplane-beer state).

Right now I'm in the Dover Castle Bar sipping back a Stella and feeling surprisingly okay, considering on the plane I got maybe 1.5 hours of sleep from my 15 minute power naps. Air Canada has managed to create the least comfortable chairs to sleep in I've ever seen. And you're talking to someone who has fallen asleep during a thunderstorm in the middle of the woods with only a rainjacket and small shrub for cover.

My battery is fading fast, and I need to head off and find sandles for the shower.

Cheers!

Flight from Calgary to London - 10pm

I caught my ride and arrived at the airport and was counselled by the check in clerk to proceed through security as soon as possible as it was very busy, so I did so and found myself through security in 10 minutes, with over 2 hours to idle away until my flight actually left. In the Calgary airport there is a glass divider, dividing the international and US sides of the international post-security terminal. And for some damnable reason, the American side is the one with all the cool stuff. A lounge, a few restaurants, even an inexplicably larger general shop than the International side. Why the Calgary Airport would do this is a mystery, even more so is why they would do it and then have glass dividers showing you what you're missing out on by not travelling to the States. I suspect some international government conspiracy that everyone long ago forgot the point of.

Monday, May 29, 2006

tick tock

just a few hours left... pretty nervous let me tell ya. also,the handwriting recognition software on this PDA kinda blows, so this is all you're getting till i'm in Calgary tomorrow!

Friday, May 26, 2006

Insurance Ignonimy 2006: Breaking News!

"For that matter, what happened to my phone bill? Hey, and my rainjacket?! Didn't I go to my parents and pick up all this stuff and put it in a white plastic bag?"

Looks in corner of apartment and sees white plastic bag.

"Ohhhh....."

Approaching critical....

Dedicated most of tonight to getting my new TX toy working how I want. Took a while, fidgeted with settings, had to go into the file structure itself a bit to fix some problems, learned some handy troubleshooting techniques.... and after two hours I now have a fully functioning chatting, web browsing, music playing machine!

On the downside.... I can't find my insurance forms. I was trying to get all my travel documents together so I can't make copies at work tomorrow, and my insurance is worryingly MIA.... last time I saw it, it was on the coffee table, and it looks distressingly like a random pile of papers, so I'm hoping it didn't get accidentally cleared out.

Four days to go! Eeep!

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

New Toy

Bought a Palm Tungsten TX for my trip. A few problems here and there... like Apple won't let me bring over music from iTunes to the TX. That bites. And it seems I can't view all the websites I'd like... but I am using it to make this post, which is pretty nifty!

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Ups and Downs

Good news: It seems my backpack IS machine washable.

Bad news: After being washed twice, it still smells of campfire.
Ola!

Welcome to my travel blog, my recording of my passage through Europe, this summer of 2006. I'll be periodically updating with pictures and thoughts and observances. At the moment I'm half excited, half panicked that there are a millions things I'm forgetting before I leave in just a week!