Sunday, October 25, 2009

On our Way

9cities, 7 countries, 10 days.


Lisa from Kansas came over last night. We finally planned our european takeover! This is the third attempt of working out the details of our excursion. It just never seemed to work out before, mainly frustration from plane and train schedules. But now we have it! Her and I, Starting November 14th, will conquer 7countries and 9 cities in 10 days! 


Starting in Riga, Latvia (basically as a flight hub) we will spend one day in this small old town. Then its off to Frankfurt, Germany for the day then train down to Heidelberg to see Dom and Vanessa. 
I was afraid that after everything thats happened between vincent and i, that i would never have been able to meet this Vanessa that i've heard so much about..guess i was wrong!


Leaving the next morning for Paris, France. 


Paris, France. {sigh}

I will bend the contract of 'no sweets' and happily take in anything this country of pastries has to offer. Its almost a cirme to go to France and not indulge in the cafes and patisseries. Needless to say, i'm looking forward to it! :)  
Spending only but two days in most cities, we've given the most time to Paris, spending three days there.
After Paris, we will train to Brussels, Belgium and experience the heaven of a Belgian waffle. A day and a half spent in Brussels, we will then train to the Netherlands!


I will finally get to meet family that i would never have been able to otherwise. Family that i've only seen pictures of and heard stories of. Aunts, uncles and cousins from my dad's side, my grandfathers family. 
This was my reason for studying abroad! 
Visiting the small town of North Brabant Uden, Netherlands.
Seeing the neighborhood my grandfather once walked in 
Finding the church he went to as a child and teenager, Sint Petrus..Saint Peter


again {sigh}


After the Holland, we will somehow make it up to Copenhagen, Denmark.This is one detail we haven't worked out yet. either fly or train..train or fly..who knows yet! I think we will find the answer later. Were handing the burden off to future heather and future lisa to worry about.


After copenhagen, then we will again, somehow make it to Stockholm. We will spend a couple days, then catch a ferry back to Turku, Finland...


9 cities, 7 countries, 10 days...boy were gonna be tired! 
But depriving our bodies from the luxury of sleep to see these beautiful cities is well worth it. We think its possible because as Lisa puts it, were both "speed walkers." Both our natural paces are quite fast. I've never met anyone that could keep up with my fast feet, i'm always the one to slow down to another's level. Lisa does surprisingly well considering her short height. 
 I remember my sister complaining once in the mall of how fast i was walking, shes my exception for slowing down :) "shopping is supposed to be slow and relaxing," she'd say.."pick up the pace," i'd then tell her. haha. poor girl.


This trip is a bit of a grand finale because when we return to finland, we will only have a month left.
 Lets not think about it now..leave this thought for future heather. 




Next week, a group of us are heading to Gdansk,Poland for three days. We hear from our native polish kids that there's cheap food and shopping! 

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Gray Stockholm

Lovely. That's all. Lovely








Dont tempt me. That might have been the one bad thing about Stockholm, too much temptation! Chocolate shops and cafes on every corner! Did I mention, that in fear of buying new pants while abroad, I have given up sweets. At first the goal was for a week, but i think we might have to extend the time frame...for how long? I don't know, however long it takes for me to stop craving the sweet temptation of depressive desserts. Its a sad truth, I know...




 Look at this church! I mean really! if you didn't know that fall was here, well heres proof my friend. Every shade of fall on one place.


Sunday, October 18, 2009

Stockholm...{the first morning}

Friday.

We intended to start our day at 6:15am on the ferry, Andrezas alarm goes off and we get ready. Moving about the small cabin, the four of us quietly and slowly get dressed. With four bunk bed style beds jammed into this tiny tiny room smaller than my once loved for its size dorm room, there was only so much you get done without someone running into the bathroom to free up space. 

I sit on my bed to check the days program and i realize one small, overlooked detail. My program describes a different meeting time then the other girls, different than we had originally thought. We thought 6:45, but my program says its 6:20! So we double check our bags, wrap our scarfs around our heads and head out the door. 
Our room was on the second floor of this massive ship and our meeting point is (assumed) to be in front of the information desk, on the 7th floor...we take the stairs.

A few flights of steps later, we make it to the info desk and by this time its 6:35 and to our surprise, no one is there! Not one ESN student! I quickly run to the woman behind the counter and promptly ask her is she has seen a large group of students, "No," she replied. 

So, naturally, we begin to assume that our previous assumptive meeting place is not where we had assumed it to be. So we think of alternatives. " Maybe down by the main door!" cassie suggests. Oh of course! that makes sense..right?? well, really, at this point what do we have to lose.so.. 

We ran back down two stories to stand by the door. Again, we see no one.  Not s single person, not even a cleaning lady, its completely deserted! Soon after, i realize the technical difficulty we have placed ourselves in .... time change! Being in St.Petersburg the weekend before, I knew to add an hour to finnish time, well, now time has changed back an hour to swedish time.

We again confide in our trusted Swedish information attendee and she lets us know that indeed we are correct and the hour has changed. Not only did we rush around because we thought we were late, much later than the persistently late French students, mind you, but now we realize that we have woken up one hour earlier than necessary. 

We immediately go for coffee....

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Findings in St.Petersburg

October 8-11 was dedicated to the city of St.Petersburg! we leave our little apartments in Turku at 5am and 


We arrive in front of our hotel at 5pm! Everyone was so tired from the bus ride, just standing quietly outside the door to the hotel, waiting to sleep. But no time for that now, because in 30 minutes, we were leaving for our first scheduled event!!
Swan Lake. My first live ballet! It was marvelous. Sitting in the decorated theatre took me back in time. Listening to the orchestra relaxed my mind and wiped away any feeling of boredom form the ten hour bus ride. Watching the graceful Russian ballerinas reminded me how fragile and delicate people are on the inside, despite their hard exteriors. 


But it had to end, sadly, I could have sat in that theatre for hours, watching and listening. So, our group of about 8 or so people make a plan for dinner..Care to take a guess???
.
sushi! In Russia!?! little sushi restaurants on almost every corner! Everyone enjoyed it. The staff knew very very little English, but it was okay because with an English menu, we kindly pointed to our choices and that was that!



The next day, we got the chance to walk on the top of this church! All the way around to see different points of the city! it was very cold and very windy, but a great photo opportunity.

A couple views from the top of the church, it was fantastic.

Then lunch, in a tiny restaurant with a business lunch special. Salad, Soup and a main course for a good price i thought! :) More interesting, was who i had lunch with! Usually, meals are shared among many different nationalities, but this lunch was made up of one little American (me) and ten Germans!! that was it! i didn't realize it until we were all sitting down at the table and i said " your all from Germany aren't you?" Everyone started laughing and told me "Yes!' They tried to speak English the whole time, but with the size of the table and the amount of one nationality, little German conversations broke out. But, no worries to me, i had fun with it and started to make up stories about what they were talking about!! haha, it was good fun! :)


After lunch, I left the german students to walk 10 minutes to the center of the city to meet two french kids! We walked around the city trying to find a famous cafe that the Russian poet, Alexander Pushkin, had his normal day coffees in. We were not successful. But, we found a shopping center and I found the catholic church...



The inside of the church was painted in pastel colors of green and pink, like a babies room or easter eggs!



I asked them if we could cross the street so i could go inside the church, Benoit, from France, asked me shortly after, "Are you a believer?" I just had to laugh at him and the way he worded it! I've never heard it put that way before. I told him yes, and i told him, " I think you mean to ask,'are you religious?'"

About an hour later, we all met in the hotel lobby and for those students who signed up for it, went on a boat tour of the city! One little put-put boat, bottles of champagne,blankets and chocolate bars started our journey off around the rivers of St.Petersburg. It's a beautiful city by night, unfortunately no pictures. My batteries died at this point in the weekend. ( and then mysteriously started working again the next day,,stange!) 
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More to come later :)



Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Helsinki

we spent the one day in Helsinki, the capital of Finland. One day, just enough time to walk and eat and see everything.


The architecture is what this city was about. Not much else here really. A nice harbor, but other than that. Buildings. Different colors and textures, still buildings.


 The main attraction. The huge white lutheran church sitting atop a billion steps! The dome was being reconstructed, but you can still tell it's magnitude. We walked all around it, each side offering a different view of the city.




 The contemporary art museum. we got in for free! Not because we are thieves, but thanks to the poor outline of the building, we managed to sneak into coat check and away from the registers. We really tried to find the desk to pay! honestly! we never found it! Only later when we were walking out, did we notice the info desk...doubling as a pay center. who knew??


 The Old Market Hall. Two aisles of delis, bakeries, and other little goods shops all built inside and around this old train station. You can tell by the high middled roof that at one time, a train passed through here. just one train...now an inside market square.
  The Sibelius Monument. I don't know who Sibelius is, but apparently he deserved this monument. Hundreds of hollowed out steel tubes, all placed at different levels to create this silver glacialesque structure.






Taken from underneath the monument. It also had this wind chime effect to it. Each tube offered a different sound.




Helsinki, not a whole to see, but, if you look hard enough, you can see the details that make this city beautiful. you'll notice the fine points that make this city the most visited in all of Finland ( and not just because its the capital either) :)
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