Sunday, June 23, 2013

Espana


I'm going to write one final Paris wrap up blog when I'm back in the states.  But i'm waiting for some of the pictures that my friends took to get put up on facebook so I can use them. 

I like Spain.  I would come back here.  It’s hot and colorful. Reds, oranges, yellows, blues, greens.  A rainbow of prints.  

The people are thin and wear sandals and shorts.  Loose tops, dresses with prints, converse, short skirts and linen pants that look like pajamas.  The girls have nice legs.  The shopping is cheap and the food is yummy.  Tapa hopping is popular and paella is delicious with Spanish rice and chicken and peas.  I like the olives and the cheese.  I liked the Prado.  We had a tour with my Dad's cousin John Rosenburg who is the humanities dean at BYU and did study abroad to Spain.  He knows everything about everything.  We were in the Museum for 5 ½ hours. 

I really like the Mercado.  Its this big market building with stands of all sorts of foods inside.  Emanadas, frozen yogurt and helados, chips with eggs on them, fish, meats (curred hams), fancy cheeses, stuffed olives... everything 
this is the mercado at night 
Literally everyone does come out at night too.  Dinner is at 10 and the people roam the streets late into the night.  The sun doesn't go down until about 10 anyway. 
Today we went to see the Spain temple. It was breathtaking 
thats a new spanish dress i bought.. for only 12 euros! 
Anyway, Madrid is beautiful and I love it. Here is a final picture of some of the streets lined with trees and colorful buildings with windows and flowers 




Monday, June 10, 2013

Côte d'Azur

I went on a last minute, spur of the moment, insane trip down to the South of France with my friends Savannah, Megan, Ashley, Sierra, and Rachel this weekend.  I came in from Belgium Thursday night and we spent the night at a hotel called “F1 Roissy PN2” in Paris by the airport so that we could catch our 7:00 am flights.  I’m not kidding about the name.  It was such a funny hotel with the bathrooms down the hall.  The showers turned on for thirty-second intervals and were freezing cold.  I slept for a total of 3 hours before having to figure out how to fly by myself in France.  Everything went without a hitch and I feel so proud to know how to travel in a foreign country alone!
            Our hostel in the South was amazing!  
(beach cover-ups and heels in our hostel with Savannah and Sierra)
It was part of a group of hostel’s called “Hostel International.”  I stayed in a bunk bed dorm with 8 beds for women.  We had us 6 in the same room and then a young Korean girl and an old Australian woman.  She was 56 and she has cancer.  She told us that is why she is traveling all over Europe.  She is a “true hippy” in her words.  She only wears clothes in purple or green. She told us we could borrow her clothes and tried to get us to wear one of her crazy medieval purple lace dresses out on the town.  It was difficult to say no to that….
            Every day she woke up and demanded where she was and almost scratched her hair off. She was a very paranoid sleeper.  She told us stories about her crazy life.  I think she’s lonely to be traveling alone but she is so courageous for living her dreams.  She had a photo album with her and she kept it open on our table in the room to a picture of her dog.  She said he would “watch over the room.”  She would make demands of her picture like “make sure no one gets in today, keep our room safe.”  Or “make sure the men leave these girls alone.”  The Korean girl said like 2 words ever.
            We visited Nice, Cannes, and Villefrance sur-mer.  All we did was go to the beach, which is good because I’m going to Nice for a longer time with Parents when they come down here. It was amazing!  It was like Paris by the ocean with nicer people and Italian influence! The houses were beautiful old buildings in pastel colors.  The water was a beautiful turquoise and the weather was warmer and salty like the beach.  Cannes was overrated.  We went there because we were told that the beaches are sandy but I prefer New Port to Cannes.  Villefrance sur-mer is a small rocky beach with a beautiful port and houses overlooking a cliff.  It was our favorite spot.
Villefranche sur-mer
  Nice has a great night atmosphere too.  Its safe because everyone is walking around all night and the lights make it as bright as day.  All I wanted was to find someone to take us out on their yacht.  No such luck!
Cocoa Beach in Nice, France 
            Being by the beach made me ridiculously homesick.  I kept thinking about Santa Cruz and New Port and how much I miss and love my family.  I really am so blessed to live where I live.  France has just made me want to travel and see everything; but I am lucky to know that the things I have seen in California really are some of the most amazing in the entire world.  Going to the Côte d’Azur has also made me want to go to the warm blue beaches in the Caribbean and Mexico… my next trip will be to Cabo! 


Sunday, June 9, 2013

Waffles & Frites & the (belgium) 15

(sorry for the glare, I guess I forgot to turn off flash!)
I’m going to have to blog twice today because there is no way I can fit the past couple of days into one coherent thought.  I haven’t been in Paris since Wednesday, which is why I’ve been so hard to contact!  It’s been hard not hearing from home, but luckily I really love my friends here and they have become like family to me.  This Wednesday I went to Belgium! And I love it there!  
(this picture is me, loving Belgium)
We visited Bruxelles and Bruges.  Bruxelles is where the EU has its headquarters.  We got a tour of the inside by someone high up (he didn’t exactly tell us but I know he votes on issues and has a really nice office with a view) who is a friend to BYU.  He’s not Mormon though and some of the jokes he made during the presentation were hysterical and slightly inappropriate.  He is the first “tour guide” to treat us like adults and not high schoolers (which is probably all my fault since I’m often mistaken for a 15 year-old).  I would love to work at the EU. It’s big and bright and beautiful with windows everywhere and clean modern lines. BYU has an internship at the EU in Bruxelles that I want to do more research on.  It’s the most diverse place in the world with people from 27 (they just added Croatia I think or another C named country) countries speaking all different, beautiful languages.  It is so inspiring to hear people who can speak 3, 4, even 5 or 6 languages.  They are my role models and some day I know it will be me too.
            Being in Paris and especially Bruxelles has taught me that I love living in the city.  Of course I love the country and that has a totally different vibe, but I can be just as happy walking among skyscrapers and jam-packed building in cities that never sleep.  Rachel and I are talking about studying for a semester in NY.  I’ve heard great things about that city, apparently its pretty famous.

           (those are both pictures of Bruxelles just on the streets. I like how in the second one you can see the skyscrapers in the background contrasting with the old buildings)  
Bruges was completely different than Bruxelles; the contrast is startling.  It’s a small quaint town with beautiful architecture and delicious food.  


They speak Flemish and would prefer that we speak with them in English than French.  Belgium is so politically divided between the French speakers and the Flemish speakers (Dutch).  The political tensions are mind blowing.  It’s the first time I’ve ordered food in English for months and we kept accidently slipping into old habits.
(To me flemish and german look like someone tried to type with their elbows and pushed a whole lot of wrong letters.)
            Belgium has more cobblestone streets than Paris.  It’s more laid back and the people are nicer because the customs are different than the French.  I knew when I was back in Paris because people gave me stony stares and bumped into me on the metro and cut in front of me on the street.
            Other things we did in Belgium include a boat ride down the canal in Bruges and a visit to a Flemish museum in Bruxelles. I loved the museum which also had a surrealism section. I’m happy to say that surrealism is now one of my favorite kinds of art! Unfortunately I couldn’t take any pictures in that section.  The Flemish paintings had weird depictions of Hell and so many bizarre things going on at once.  You could stare at the same painting and see a hundred different things.  My favorite thing was a squirrel on a chain kept as a pet in one of the medieval periods paintings. I’ll get one of those as a pet for my children.


    Of course there were tons of waffles, frites, and chocolate consumed. They’re more known for their filled chocolates than their plain chocolate bars.  I accidentally ordered a champagne flavored one.  It was shaped like a mushroom!

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Dordogne Pèrigod

Before I talk about our weekend trip, I want to say that I went to the most awesome fireside in Paris with Sister Dalton today.  It was directed for the Young Women but it was so amazing and I am a young women still in heart so while some of the stuff for the high schoolers didn't apply to me, so much else did.  I'm making huge decisions, even if they aren't deciding what college i'm going to or what I want to study.  I'm going on a mission and she talked a lot about that too.  I got a picture with her with my group of girls: (the thumbs up thing is from her talk saying that we're taking her challenge and we're 100% doing it.  She said that whenever we see her we have to do this.)

 I also started crying right before she gave me a hug and she told me "us blonds have to stick together because we get emotional." It was so sweet.  My group of 8 was standing behind her while others were getting pictures and shaking her hand and when she turned around she said "I could feel your spirit from behind me.  You all have such a strong spirit about you!"

My study abroad is close to being over.  I'm already feeling sad about coming back home.  It will be a bittersweet parting.  I am excited to see my parents though and show them around a little bit!

Dordogne was beautiful.  It was picture perfect like a postcard or a pinterest picture.  It was the charming, quaint "provincial life" from Beauty and the Beast.  We went to a cave where it was illegal to take pictures (so I secretly snapped a few which all turned out dark and blurry).  It looked just like Indiana Jones so I felt like i'd seen it before.  We then stopped by some castles, a historical pilgrimage sight and then the "most beautiful village in france."  It is literally considered the most beautiful.  Here are some pictures:




We spent two nights in a hotel in Sarlat but we only visite the town one day.  We ate fois gras.. well everyone ate it but I cut mine up in cute shapes and made towers of foie gras and bread and salad for the waiter.  I think he probably appreciated that.  I had a hard time eating the duck too because the meat is SOO dark.  Like practically black.  The people here are crazy about their walnuts too.  Walnut wine (no joke), walnut jam, cakes, chocolates, nougats, ice cream and just about any walnut thing you can think of.  They have laws to verify the validity of the walnuts origin.  If your not a Pèrigod walnut, you have no chance.  Sarlat has a outrageously huge market on Saturdays which is a major reason for our visit there.  The market is preserved as a historical monument and is protected under the law.  Its huge! And so french looking in every way. 
those are the tents from the fair. Every little side street and ally way has more tents.  So big, I could never capture it in one photo. 

those are more pictures of the market with cliché French ideas that hold true.  Lots of cheese, wine and flowers.