Sunday, April 1, 2007
oh, work ethic, where have you gone?
i'm far too lazy to do an actual update about my trip to italy, so i'm just going to direct you to my webshots page to see my pictures. i think they speak for themselves, for the most part: http://travel.webshots.com/album/558336588LIHxUC
Saturday, March 3, 2007
germany and back in twelve hours or less
Saturday, February 24, 2007
memo to self: remember to update blog!
i went to vienna last weekend for my birthday with whitney and rachel. the experience as a whole was infinitely better than budapest, reason being that we were traveling with 14 fewer people. who could have predicted that? pictures can be found below.
this weekend is my first full one in prague in a month. a month! all this traveling has caught up to me big-time, and i really needed this weekend to rest up and actually enjoy this city. pretty much my entire dorm is gone (including the 4 other girls in my suite) this weekend, so it is blissfully quiet here. two of my friends have people visiting this weekend, so today i got to see some touristy things i haven't had the opportunity to really appreciate yet; we walked across the charles bridge, stumbled upon a street fair, and saw the castle (again). i'm sure that when mollie/jerry and mom/dad come to visit i'll do even more touristy crap; i'm not complaining, though! it's nice to play the tourist card every once in a while.
our spring break is in three weeks, and earlier this week, i bought a plane ticket to rome! we're planning on spending a couple days in rome, taking the train down to naples, and seeing vesuvius/pompeii/capri before going back up to rome and flying home. i'm really excited; i've always wanted to go to italy, and when else will i have the opportunity to bum around my motherland for a week? some people are planning on using spring break as a chance to sit on a beach and get a tan, but you can do that anywhere! i don't need to go to egypt or croatia (true story, some kids are planning on going to both those places just for the beaches! bizarre) to sit on a beach. that's what summer is for back home. if i'm going to go on a spring break trip, i'm going to do what i've always wanted to do - and that's see italy.
also - instead of posting all my pictures here all the time, i created a webshots account for my semester here. i'll continue to post a couple with each update, but if you want to see the rest of my pictures, go here:
http://community.webshots.com/user/emilymarie217
Sunday, February 11, 2007
pest > buda
Tuesday, February 6, 2007
exchange rate = love
i love it.
Monday, February 5, 2007
facism & frostbite (again!)
these are some ruins of some castle somewhere between prague and karlovy vary (aka carlsbad, aka a ritzy-titzy spa town that we went to). sorry for the vague-ness about the location, but i honestly cannot remember where the heck this was. these ruins were probably the highlight of the trip.
the river that runs through karlovy vary. honestly, this town is really pretty, and i can definitely see its appeal (gorgeous buildings, hot mineral springs, the hotel/casino from the latest james bond movie), but we were there in the middle of the off season, so things were kind of dead.
the beginning of the now-infamous 8km "short walk." our guide tricked us into believing that we were going on a short walk to a nearby town, and forced us to hike through the czech woods along some no-name river on a dirt road. two hours and twenty-five unhappy kids later, we trudged into the quaint town of loket.
this is the view from loket castle. this town looks like pretty much every other czech town. bright buildings, cobblestone streets, an ancient castle overlooking the whole thing. if you've seen one, you've pretty much seen them all (not that i'm jaded, or anything...).
and this, this is the tour guide from hell, the anti-christ, the facist. if he paused to take one more picture of a moss-covered tree, i was going to launch him like a javelin into the next stream. fo' serious.
moral of the story: don't let tour guides take advantage of you. stage a mutiny, or, at the very least, refuse to leave the bus.
Sunday, January 28, 2007
kutna hora: churches, bones & frostbite
i'm not sure what church that is in the background, but i think this picture gives an accurate portrayal of the town; the skyline is dominated by church spires.
ok, now for the infamous bone church. the land this church was built on was deemed a holy site, so thousands of people wanted to be buried there. not surprisingly, they ran out of room in the cemetary. so, they dug up the remains of thousands of people to make room, and used the bones to decorate the entire inside of the church. all in all, there are the bones of forty thousand people in this church. try to forget that all these bones once belonged to actual people; it makes looking at (and being in the presence of) this much, much easier. behind that coat of arms in a giant pile of skulls and other assorted human remains. there were four such piles in the church, containing the bones of god-knows how many people.
this chandellier includes every bone in the human body - even toes and the tiny bones of the inner ear. macabre? perhaps. really, really cool? most definitely.
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
this is where i live
the kitchen. it's pretty big, and has a dishwasher! (i'm obviously a little more excited about that than i should be, haha)
me and whitney's room. as you can see, we've got bunk beds which is lame. i have the privilege of having the top bunk. and by "privilege", i mean it sucks - but i'll get used to it. hopefully.
whitney's armoire and my desk. my armoire is next to the bunk beds. we don't get dressers here, so all my crap is precariously perching on shelves in the armoire. it has the potential to get very messy very fast.
Sunday, January 21, 2007
travelling
next friday we'll be going to kutna hora, a town in the czech republic, where there is a church furnished entirely out of human bones. we are only spending one day there, but i'm really psyched about it. i've heard crazy things about this church. but more on that when i get back - with the requisite gruesome pictures.
the following weekend i'll be travelling to western bohemia (sidenote: the czech republic is separated into two region, bohemia and moravia. they used to be two separate kingdoms before they were united into "the czech lands) for three days. i believe the place we're going is a spa town where the rich and famous go to rejuvinate. should be a blast.
at the end of march the plan is to go to cesky krumlov, another czech city. i haven't heard that much about the area, but i'm excited nonetheless.
we're also going to terezin, a former nazi transit camp an hour or so outside prague. despite the fact that it's going to be a sobering experience, i am still looking forward to seeing a part that history. when i was younger i had a bizarre holocaust/ww ii fascination, so trips like these are right up my alley (so to speak).
all these trips are nyu-sponsored, but we're also planning on travelling on our own. our first trip is currently in the works: budapest on february 9-11. right now we're figuring out who exactly is interested (it looks like it's going to be a pretty big group, which could either be really fun or really miserable. we'll see) and trying to find a cheap-yet-classy hostel. and by "classy" i mean "not sketchy."
i'm also thinking about planning a trip to vienna for my birthday weekend. we'll see how that goes.
Saturday, January 20, 2007
old town, prague castle, czech hockey, etc.
yesterday we went on a guided tour of prague castle and the surrounding neighborhood. despite the record-breaking winds, the tour was beautiful. prague castle is the largest castle in all of europe, and it is breathtaking. the cathedral's spires are visible from most parts of greater prague, and the hill it is perched atop affords a spectacular view of the entire city. i will most definitely be returning on a warmer day when i can appreciate the view without being distracted by my numb toes.these last two pictures might seem a little random, but they are from one of the streets surrounding the castle. the houses were built when people were shorter, so whitney got excited when she found a her-sized house!
Friday, January 19, 2007
in all seriousness, though, walking home with groceries hastily packed in those thin produce bags (you know the ones i'm talking about) is no fun. all i'm asking for is a bag that's sturdy! no more, no less.
Thursday, January 18, 2007
my mouth can't form these sounds!
after class 25 of us went on a guided tour of the jewish quarter of prague, josefov. i went because i had heard great things about the guide, and that one of the sites is the old jewish cemetery. this graveyard is like nothing i've ever seen; it contains approximately 14,000 bodies (yes, i said fourteen thousand bodies - they are buried in eleven or 12 layers that go down 10 meters deep) that were first interred there in the 14th or 15th century. it's really hard to believe that there are layers upon layers of people buried there:
tomorrow and friday we are going on two more tours - one of the old town (where the nyu center is) and prague castle. i'm really excited for both; i've seen snippets of old town just by virtue of going to class each day, and prague castle is supposedly gorgeous. i'll post pictures of those tours this weekend.
na shledanou a mejte se hezky! (czech for "bye, and have a good one!" my repetoire of this language is rather limited, haha)
Sunday, January 14, 2007
anyway.
today whitney, our friend rachel, and i had an adventure going grocery shopping. let me tell you, trying to figure out which czech-labelled product is shampoo and which is conditioner is an experience. we realized how little of this language we know when whitney was reading the label of some noodles and we didn't know the word for water. hopefully one of the first things we learn in our intensive czech classes is food words (after manners, of course. not knowing how to say "excuse me" and "thank you" is surprisingly frustrating. i pretty much panic whenever someone says anything to me in czech because all i can do is stand there with a dumb smile on my face in response.).
we also had a little mishap when we got on the tram to get home - we boarded the correct tram, just in the wrong direction. we were crossing the vltava river when we realized that, oh shit, we're going the wrong way - machova is on the same side of the river as tesco, the grocery/department store, so there should not have been any crossing of the vltava involved. whoops. we just got off at the next stop and got on the next train going in the opposite direction.
like i've been saying, the only way we're going to learn our way around this city is to get lost a few times - whether it's getting lost in conversation with a czech or lost on public transportation, it's the only way to really orient yourself with a new place.
Saturday, January 13, 2007
praha welcomes you... with jet lag.
we arrived in the czech republic on an airfrance flight, ready to get off the plane, move into our new digs, and, most importantly, take a nap. i've been jetlagged before - on my trips to australia/new zealand and greece - so i knew what i was up against. but, since my version of jet lag usually involves a loss of short-term memory, i had forgotten how miserable it actually is. i emerged from that airfrance plane on two hours of sleep, and knew it was going to be a long, long day.
the bus ride from the airport to our residence at machova 12 (the numbers come after the street names here) was relatively painless, and we got to see bits and pieces of the city. not unremarkably, maybe five minutes after leaving the airport, we see a mcdonald's. seems like we can't get away from american consumerism even in a place like prague. the coach dropped us off down the block from our building, which blends in nicely with the rest of the street. it's impossible to tell from first glance that this building is home to several dozen american students (this is a nice perk - we want to blend in with the locals as much as possible).
machova resident hall is set up in suites of four-to-eight people, with two suites per floor. each suite has several bedrooms, a bathroom, and kitchen. whitney and i are living together again in a double. our suite is on the top floor of the building, with stairs up to the study lounge in the attic. the study lounge has several computers, a printer, and some couches. it also has a balcony that overlooks the city with a fantastic view (especially at night).
i have been surprised at the number of students who are studying here but are not from NYU; we've met kids from tufts, amherst, south carolina, hamilton, and a bunch of other schools. now the requisite first conversation has morphed from "so, what school are you in (meaning which NYU school)?" to "are you with NYU? where are you from? what year are you? what's your major?" it's an interesting twist to the traditional initial conversation. it's a nice change to have students from schools other than NYU; being all NYU all the time can get pretty exhausting, so i'm definitely welcoming meeting kids from other places.
we were taken on a walk around the neighborhood by one of the resident assistants; she showed us all the important local spots - the 24-hour grocery store, the pharmacies, the metro station, the bars. our neighborhood is very cute; the buildings are all really beautiful, and the streets are cobblestone. the only downside, i think, is the dog poop. apparently czechs don't have to clean up after their dogs.
on the agenda tonight is dinner at some pizza place on NYU's tab. like most NYU students, i'm all about the free food.