Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Post 7- London BDAY weekend! PART 1

Tue Feb 17

 

I’ve been delaying writing this, because it just takes so much effort, but I guess I should start.

 

I decided I should split up the weekend in half because there is just too many days to write about. So this is PART 1.

 

This blog is about Thursday and Friday, Feb 12th and 13th.

 

Thursday Morning.

I wake up for London. Yay! No snow this time!!

We took the train and got into London before noon. We dropped off our stuff at a very nice hotel. Actually, the hotel looked ok from the outside and in the lobby and corridor, but the room was very nice.

 

Making tea in the hotel:

 

Our first stop was the London Museum. This is me blowing my nose while we are waiting to go inside J

(again, please click on the pictures to see them bigger, they do more justice that way)

 

And then checking out the picture of me blowing my nose.

 

 

I know it was only morning, but for some reason, I was really tired already and my legs hurt. I also was just not in a museum mood. So when we went inside, Angela and I walked around for a bit, until we got bored very quickly. We found these refrigerator magnets for kids to play with. This was the part of the museum where it told of the great London fire. So all the magnets had to do with the fire. We decided to arrange them. This took us like a half hour:

 

 

            I know.. it’s terrible.. but we did it for a good laugh.

            Also, we took pictures in a hut, that people would have lived in a long time ago, sweeping, cooking and (holding baskets?):

 

 

After the Museum, 8 of us pretty much ran through the tube and the streets to the Absolut Ice Bar. Our reservation was at 5:45 and we didn’t think we were going to make it. The Ice Bar is something Megan Homestead (for those who don’t know her, she is a friend of mine who did a semester in London last semester) told me about. We had tried to go last weekend, but it was full, so this time I booked it online ahead of time for the 8 of us.

The Ice Bar is exactly what it sounds like. It is a bar made entirely out of ICE. The bar counter is ice, the big blocks that serve as tables, the chairs, the chandelier, and most importantly, the glasses you drink out of are pure ice. They give you these coats to wear. They are huge and you wear them over everything you’re wearing, including backpack. And they had gloves attached! Which came super handy when drinking out of an ice glass!

Here’s the pictures:

 

     

 

Sitting in my ice chair and licking my ice glass

   At the ICE BAR in London, licking my ICE GLASSDont worry, I didnt get stuck

 

Ice chandelier and Ice table

  

 

Lauren, Angela and I

 

            I also took some handstand pictures in there, which look funny because I was not allowed to take off the giant blue coat, so it covers my upper body when I am upside down. I’m sure those pictures are great .. but sadly they were not taken with my camera, and I haven’t been able to find on who’s camera they are yet! I’ll put them in here as soon as I remember.

 

So, I do not drink that often, and when I do, I pretty rarely get really drunk.. so I have to warn you right now, this is the day that I probably drank the most in one day, ever. I started my night with 3 drinks at the Ice Bar. (All with Absolut Vodka, since they are the sponsor who made this bar) Then we went to this buffet. I thought I wasn’t even hungry, but I ate a lot (surprise surprise). It was so good. I had half a glass of wine with this dinner.

Then, again, we were running late to our next destination. The next thing we did was very cool. We went on a “Jack the Ripper” tour. One of our professors, Andy, is actually the one who let everyone know about it, saying that whoever wants to come is welcome, and I think everyone came. Andy knew about this tour because back when he was an undergrad and studied abroad, they were doing this same tour and he took it.

After doing it, we came to find out that it was not done the same way Andy remembered it. Andy’s was a pub-crawl, where they went pub to pub, grabbing a pint while listening to the tour about Jack the Ripper.

Ours was not at all a pub-crawl. Our guide took us from place to place telling of the stories of Jack’s victims. If you do not know anything about this guy, he was a murderer in London in 1888. All his victims were women prostitutes. He mutilated most of them. He would cut their throats from one side to another (although speculated by the police of the time that he strangled them first to actually kill them, from the lack of squirted blood everywhere), and then cut their bellies open and took the guts out. Anyway, now that you know this happy history, our tour guide walked us through the streets where this all happened and at each stop would tell us of, “This is where this victim lived..” “This is the spot where her body was found” and also told us of the poor people’s living situations of the time. Which was actually very interesting. Up until the age of 2, my family (only 4 at the time, no Vallie yet) lived in Russia sharing an apartment with other families. Each family had ONE ROOM. Many people I know think that’s crazy when I tell them that. But this guy told us that poor people in London lived with multiple families to a room. (Along with chickens and any other live food they had.) They had ropes on the wall for people who didn’t have a home, and would come and STAND against the wall, tightened with a rope, to sleep. It would have been way too dangerous to sleep outside, so standing up is better.

Crazy huh?

The tour was great. The guy was a GREAT storyteller. He could have made the whole thing up and I would have believed him. (He didn’t..)  Here’s a picture of him talking to us.

 

 

I do have to tell you something about pub-crawls in England though. I have learned about this tradition here recently and it is pretty awesome, I might say. I’m sure you picked up that a pub-crawl is kind of like, bar-hopping in the US. You go from pub to pub, having one pint in each. The tradition here though is, when you do a pub-crawl, you DRESS UP. When I say dress up, I don’t mean put on a devil-horn headband, and say “I’m a devil!” I mean these guys REALLY dress us. A friend we made here named Miles told us that he went and did a pub-crawl in drag once. I thought his story was funny, because I didn’t realize how normal this was. Then, only an hour after Miles tells me that, a group of like 8 guys walk in, CRAZY dressed up! One is a Telletubby. Full-on big green suit; One is Moses; One has a “Super Lover” costume. Anyway, thought I’d share this awesome tradition. I guess Halloween is not enough for them here.

 

            Anyway. Our tour ended in front of a pub. He told us that he’s done, but we are welcome to enjoy this pub (that existed in Jack’s time? I think?) We each had a drink there (me a cider), but it was way to crowded. We headed somewhere else. We found an empty bar, which soon wasn’t empty when 20 of us came in! The bartender was this older man who was sooo nice! He refused to take our tips and he gave us more than we asked for. (When I explained a car bomb as “half-shot Bailey’s, half-shot Jameson” he gave me a double shot glass with a shot of each in there. As if a car bomb’s not killer enough already!) Anyway, first I had a White Russian (because.. I am one.. and its my favorite drink). They don’t have those there either, I had to tell him what to put in. Then someone threw out the idea of Car Bombs. (Parentals, a car bomb is a drink that is a half a Guinness, and you drop a shot into it and drink it fast, you’ll see in the pictures) Anyway, I was the one to order them. I after telling the bartender what it was, I asked for about 5. Then people kept adding in, so I was like, “No, 6”. “No, 7”. “No, make 8” .. and he just kept making more. Finally, there were 10 of us, including one of our professors!!

 

           

 

I’m telling a story about pirates? I dunno..

 

And then, another White Russian

 

 

            After that it was time to head back to the hotel. (I don’t really remember that adventure.) Some people decided to keep partying in someone’s room, but I PASSED OUT as soon as I got to my bed. (Next day we found out that our group got into big trouble with the hotel for that party upstairs. They were way too loud, and they broke a bed. We almost got kicked out of the hotel. Good thing I fell asleep so fast, so I wasn’t there!)

 

            Anyway, in the morning, Friday the 13th of February, we had a great breakfast. The Traditional English breakfast: eggs, ham, sausage, fried tomato, beans (none for me) and toast. Quite delicious, (except the ham was weird.)

           

            Our trip today was to Westminster. On our way, some great photos were taken:

 

           

 

Of course, me and jumping pictures.. love ‘em

 

 

In the TUBE

 

Westminster is the parliament building of the UK. This is it from the outside and a pic of the whole group waiting to get in.

     

 

            When we got in through security and were waiting for our guide to go in, I saw this shoe print on the ground. Look! It says VAL!! You like that, little one?

 

 

We got a guided tour through the building, which was pretty cool. They took us through the great halls and living rooms where lords, even from hundred years ago would have their tea while they read and answered their mail. We walked through the actual parliament rooms where the Prime Minister speaks. We learned where the phrase “Keep your toe in line” came from. In this room are two sides of bleacher seats (soft cushiony bleacher seats) where opposing sides would sit. There is a red line on the floor in front of each side and we were told the lines are two sword lengths apart. This is because in the old days, when people carried swords, they would stay on their side of the court room, not allowed to cross the line and if both reached out their swords, they would just *clink* their tips, and would not be able to hurt each other. FUN FACT!!

We also saw where the Queen sits when she joins this parliament. There is a huge gold structure that goes around and an overhand over the chair. A LOT of gold in one place. We were not allowed to take pictures anywhere in there.

 

After Westminster, Angela, Lauren, Henry and I had lunch at a pub. It was quite delicious!

 

 

            After lunch, we were not done with historical stuff. Next was the Imperial War Museum.

Me doing a Straddle Press in front of it:

 

 

            This was my favorite museum by far. I was actually really tired that day from the long day already (and too much drinking the night before), that when we got to the museum, Lauren, Angela and I could not stand another minute without coffee. So I sat down in the museum cafĂ© for about 30 minutes. When I started walking around the museum, I immediately regretted my 30-minute delay. As a result, I only saw 2 exhibits, and now really hope I go back again to see more.

First, I walked through “The Children’s War”. This was an exhibit showing what it was like for British children during WWII. It was so sad. There was so much detail and information I probably spent an entire hour making my way just through this exhibit. There were letters and pictures of children from the war. One quote that really struck me was someone looking back, and saying how some children understood that this was a hard reality, but many children thought it was a “great adventure”. That quote made me think of the movie, Life is Beautiful where the father and young boy are in a Nazi Camp, and the dad pretends for the boy that they are in a fun, magical place so that the boy doesn’t know they are in a terrible place. (My eyes are totally tearing up right now, thinking about that movie.) The exhibit told of how kids were sent all over the world, like Australia, to be away from combat, and therefore away from their parents. With the war lasting 4 years, many young children could not even remember their parents after 4 years. There was a quote from a girl that said that upon returning home, and waiting at the train station to find her parents, she stood for quite some time because she could not recognize them, and they could not recognize her.

They had a lot of pictures of kids on swings and happy in “the country” and away from the war, and letters to their parents about what it is like there. One was that really cute and funny said something like, “Mum, they have something here, they call it Spring. They have it every year!” .. Because.. haha.. England is always cold, the kids don’t know what warm weather and a sunny sky is!

It was also interesting to see propaganda from the war. They had to posters right next to each other, one saying, “Mothers! Send your kids to the country where they are safe!” and others saying things like, “Keep your kids at home!”  Another, I forget what it was talking about, but it said something like, “Don’t do (this), it’s what Hitler would want you to do!” And has a picture of Hitler whispering into a mother’s ear.

The youngest boy to die in combat was 14, which is crazy to think that boys that young would be let into the army, but I guess desperate times call for desperate measures. The youngest person to die in the war was a baby 11 hours old. I could not even imagine what it would be like to have a baby growing inside you for 9 months, go through labor, have a healthy baby come out, only to be bombed – or whatever happened – and have that baby killed 11 hours later.

The other exhibit I walked through was the WWI. That exhibit did not hit me so hard because I honestly could not remember the details of that war. WWII hit close to home for me, remembering the reasons for war, where it was fought, and knowing people who were there. But WWI did not. The only part that really stuck out to me from the WWI exhibit was the real-like trench. I walked through what an actual trench would have looked like in WWI. It was like a cave, because the ceiling was black, with no lights; the lights only coming from the soldiers’ stations – very life-like – and the noises they had in the trench felt like it was very real. I was honestly scared walking through there. The statue figures were life-sized and looked real, they were even “talking” to each other, and one was talking into his radio. I didn’t think to get a picture of it, I am really bad at that, but here’s a pic Bailee took. The flash does not do the trench justice by lighting it up too much and making the figure look fake, but you get the idea,

 

 

Also, this pic shows a part with the trench walls on one side and a fence to open space on the other. Most of the trench was walls on both sides with only about 2 or 3 feet of room between. .. Man! I should have gotten a picture!!

 

What I did not get to see in this museum was exhibits on other wars, as well as more exhibits about WWII, like the holocaust exhibits. I will make sure I go back there during another free weekend, because like I said, this museum was amazing. I loved it. And I didn’t even get to see half of it.

 

The last thing of this lovely Friday the 13th, was going back to the hotel to get ready for the play. It was my first time wearing a skirt in England!! We went to a theatre to see a Shakespeare play. I’ve never seen one before. We saw Taming of the Shrew. I had no idea before hand what Taming of the Shrew is about, so I asked Angela and she said that the story from the movie “10 Things I Hate About You” is based on that play. I’m glad she told me that, because that is THE ONLY reason I had any idea what was going on! And since the movie is only based on the play, and is really quite different, I still had no idea most of the time. This is partly because I was super tired (it was a long day! Look at how much you’ve read!!). And also probably because we were so far from the stage. (They were good seats, but were really high up.) So, sad to say, I found it boring, because I really did not understand it L

 

I went to bed Friday night peacefully. Because of last night’s trouble with the hotel, our group had made a pact that in order to get on good terms with the hotel tonight, no one was allowed to drink. Which was just fine with me. There was no way I would have drank anyway. That was the first thing I said when I woke up in the morning. I don’t understand how people could have a hangover, and WANT to drink to get rid of it. Drinking is the LAST thing I want to do after a wild night. So to end this longggg blog, I have to tell you that Friday night was very relaxing, Lauren, Angela, (my hotel roomies), and I, just watched TV. It was the British version of SNL. Lily Allen was the guest star. It was hilarious.

 

Now aren’t you glad I split up the blog? This is just HALF!!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Post 6- First time in LONDON!

It is 4 days away from my birthday!

WOO!!

 

Anyway, last weekend was my first time in LONDON!

 

Thursday night, I packed. I decided to use my small suitcase (which is actually pretty big) because I stuck my sleeping bag in there and it took up a lot of room. Friday morning, the plan was to meet at the train station at 9 and take the first train to London. My host family wakes me at 7 to tell me that there’s a lot of snow so there are “limited” busses today.

 

I’m thinking.. limited busses means less of each bus? So a carry my ginormous, heavy suitcase to the bus stop, at 8:15. Waiting… waiting.. no busses going either way. Apparently, limited busses means none at all of my bus. I call a taxi.. the first one tells me they don’t go up to where I live at all. The second tells me that they don’t have anything available until 10:15 ..

 

I call the group .. its 8:45 by now. Most of them are already at the train station. This is when I came to the realization that I have to walk. I haven’t walked before. I have only taken the bus into town before this time. I also knew it would be impossible to walk through snow and sludge with a rolling suitcase. So, knowing that most people are already waiting for me at the destination, I walked back home.. repacked into a backpack, (holding my sleeping bag in my hands this time) and started walking.

 

I walked 2.5 miles through sludge with a full-to-the-brim backpack, my purse in one hand, and sleeping bag in the other. I was also in my Adidas running shoes, which are GREAT running shoes, but are terrible for snow because their breathable toes, very soon became wet and cold toes.

 

The only good thing to made me smile on my hour long walk was this guy, (click on the pic to see it bigger)

 

awesome snowman

 

So at 10 am, I finally arrived at the train station, last one to arrive.

 

The 9 of us waited for our train for a bit, and got on, ready for LONDON!

 

We arrived in London at around noon.

 

This is the first pic I took of myself, right outside the tube station:

 

 

We saw a McDonalds and stopped in there to look at our maps and figure things out. Have you ever seen a Chandelier in a McDonalds?

 

Chandelier in McDonalds?

 

Or a grand piano?

 

and a Grand Piano?

 

We went to unload into our hostel. It was a really nice place! It was a room of 4 triple bunkbeds. We had the whole room, and our own bathroom to ourselves.

 

bunk buddies!

 

After dropping off our stuff, it was time to see London.

 

We went to the Kensington Gardens. It was a nice park.

 

 

We walked through where all the embassies were. And important buildings.

 

 

Of course, I HAD to take a phone booth picture

 

 

Everyone was hungry, so we walked around deciding what to eat. Most were impatient, so they went to McDonalds. Henry and I decided we wanted something else. Chris, another in our group who had just eaten an hour or so before, suggested we go to this Lebanese place he just went to. I had no idea what to expect and went to check it out. I got a chicken “sandwich” that wasn’t really a sandwich, but a bunch of roasted chicken, pickles, tomatoes, and a delicious yogurt sauce in a Pita bread. Oh man. It was SOOO GOOOD, messy, but GOOOD. I ate there probably 3 times during the weekend.

We then continued walking. We walked somewhat close by the Eye and Big Ben. Got some good pics of Big Ben.

 

 

 

 

 

Then I parted ways with the group. Most of them were off to see a Mozart Concert, and I had plans to meet my cousin, Ales. All I knew about him was that he is somehow related to me from my mom’s side. His family: his brother, parents and he, came to visit us in the US maybe 5 years ago? I did not remember him at all. I also knew that while his family lives in the Czech Republic, he now lives with his wife and almost 1-year-old son in London.

I met Ales (pronounced ah-lesh) at the Barbican tube station, and we walked to his apartment. It was a cute little family. Ales and I decided to figure out how we are related, so he called his grandma, and I guess our great grandparents were brother and sister. So we are actually (distantly) related by blood, not just marriage. Christina and Ales were both very talkative. They told me about how it’s like for them to live there, and about their son Maxim. Maxim is to be 1 at the end of February. I took some pictures with the guy

 

 

Man, Ales speaks English, Czech and Russian, and Christina speaks English, Hungarian and Slovakian(?). The kid hears all those languages spoken to him everyday!! Then they had to put him to bed, and Ales and I went to join Megan and Lindsey, the other two who did not go to the Mozart thing.

We walked the whole way instead of taking the tube. Ales walks fast, and I kept up with him. It was really fun to walk, because he explained a bunch of the city to me as he pointed stuff out, for example this tower,

 

 

Ales said that no one knows whether its myth or true, but the story goes that this tower is where the tradition came from of making wedding cakes with smaller and smaller layers going up. I think that’s pretty cool. It’s an OLD building.

 

Walking though China town was fun because it was just Chinese New Year recently, and it was still decorated from it.

 

 

Ales and I got to the pub where Megan and Lindsey were after a 45 min walk or so. The four of us hung out and talked for probably about an hour. Ales bought me 2 ciders. The hospitality of people outside the US is really funny,

“No, I really, honestly, don’t want a second one, I’m not done with this one yet and I’m full”

“OK, I’ll get you another one.”

“Oh.. um.. ok..thanks..”

 

At 10, Ales left and we met up with everyone else. This was when we had to split into the people who decided to end their night, and those of us who wanted to go out.

Megan, Lindsey, Sarah C, Angela, and I decided to go to Koko’s, a club Megan found out about ahead of time. The club was off of Camden Street. This is a place I’ve heard about that in the daytime, it great shopping and a really good time. At night, though, it did not feel so safe!! We were all walking, thinking, “Megan, where are you taking us!”

When we got there, we knew she found the perfect place. This club was sooo fun! There were many stories, with balconies so you can see the stage from any floor. We went to the ground floor and danced while a DJ played music and there was a giant screen on with random images flashing really fast. After some time of this, that screen went up, and a band that was behind it started playing. It was a band called MILKE and they were SOO GOOD LIVE! I loved them so much, I found their site on myspace and added their song, “Maybe I’m Crazy” to my profile. Go to my page to listen to it!

Myspace.com/stupidrussian

Then when they were done, the screen went back up and it was a DJ again while the next band was setting up. The cool thing about that was that when its DJ music, everyone is in circles dancing with their friends, then when the bands play, everyone faces forward and rocks out to the live show. So it was like being at a club, then at a concert, then club, then concert. I got my fill of 2 of the best kinds of nights in one night!!

Here’s some pics of us in Koko’s

 

That’s Milke

 

In the natural progression, after Friday, came Saturday.

In the morning I got up at 8, and had a typical English breakfast at the hostel. Most of that included what we have, eggs, sausage, but also a normal thing to have with your eggs here is fried tomato. When I saw that, a lyric from “The Streets” (a British rap group) came into mind and it made sense,

Girl brings 2 plates of full English over with plenty of scrambled eggs and plenty of fried tomato”

(A in tomato being, not like A in “age” but like A in “mama”)

Anyway, after breakfast, we went shopping in London. On my way, I had to take this picture:

 

Apparently, one dog had use it..

 

Anyway, for some reason I was not in a shopping mood at all, so I had no interest in looking at clothes. I went into Urban Outfitters (a store I know dearly from home :) and read their books. (They have the best books!)

There was also a Whole Foods in this part of London. The place was amazing! It was 3 stories. The first floor was produce and had a room dedicated to Cheese! Cheese is the only thing to get its own special room.

 

 

Then we hopped in the tube,

(Henry on the tube):

 

And went to the British National Museum

Unlike the US, it is believed that everyone should have access to culture and history, so the major museums are free here.

 

 

High Five!

 

 

This is a chair made out of guns

 

 

And THE Rosetta Stone

 

 

If you don’t know the history of the Rosetta Stone, it was a stone from 196 BC that was found in 1799. A British scientist used it to translate Hieroglyphics for the first time in 1822. Its very famous and I’ve learned about it before but never thought it is so big! I assumed for some reason that it is the size of a notebook or so, but you can see in that pic, its quite large, although not as large as it looks comparing to Henry because he is a few feet behind it. It’s 3.75 feet in height.

 

When we got sick of being in a museum for hours, we went to find a place to eat. We finally chose a place in china town that was a mixed Asian restaurant. It had Chinese, Japanese, and Thai food. Angela and I decided to share, so we got 3 orders of different plates of Dim Sum and 2 orders of Sushi. And I got a Pearl drink. LOVE THOSE!! (I miss Café Tapioca in Dublin!!). My dinner was Delicious. If I have to say what my favorite food is, its nothing in particular.. any Asian food, Chinese, Japanese, any Asian, I love it. So a Dim Sum and Sushi dinner was perfect for me!!

 

Then, we walked around downtown all night. We didn’t go anywhere in particular, but just walked around. The city is ON all night. Things don’t slow down. We went into a Sex Shop, just for fun (It was interesting.. never been in one before..) Then kept walking and looking around for a while. We then got on the tube and went back to where our hostel was. We just hung out in a pub called Churchill Arms close to the hostel until we decided to go to bed. I was getting sick and didn’t feel good, so I just kinda napped in the pub. I just found a little note Angela wrote in my mini notebook while I was sleeping.

 

 

Sunday morning, there were only 5 of us. (4 had gone back home to Bath on Sat)

We went to another museum. I really did not want to go to another museum from being sick of yesterday’s long museum time, but when I got there, I was actually really bummed we only had an hour there. This time we went to the Natural History Museum, as it says on this sign:

 

 

I find natural history very interesting. I loved the dinosaur bones put together to show the massiveness of those dinosaurs, I liked the beginning of the earth exhibit, and the figures of different animals. With only an hour, we didn’t get to see too much.

This is me doing handstands in front of the big Darwin statue:

 

 

This is me going into the giant earth orb

 

 

I make a good ape

 

 

And lastly, of course, a pic of me doing handstands outside, in front of the museum.

 

 

Aren’t all the buildings overwhelming here? They are so big and historic.

 

After a nice lunch of the Lebanese sandwich again J we got on the tube, then the train, and were home in Bath.

 

The weekend was a great success. After London, Bath seems slow and quiet now. I am so happy to be going to London again tomorrow! The weather was even great for us there. When we got there on Friday, it was freezing, and a little rainy, but Saturday and Sunday were great. It never rained, and it was much warmer. (Still cold by my standards, but fine.)

 

That is all for today. Hope you had fun reading about my weekend; I had fun being in it!

 

-Aleks

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Post 5 - Snow Day

Hey guys,

Sorry I haven't written in a while. This past week, nothing's happened, really. 

I've had so much homework, I've been mostly reading every night and not going out. I was excited for today because its a Thursday and I have my excursions on Thursdays. Today was our Bristol day, which would have been so cool. But my host mom woke me up at 7 am and said that the city's snowed in. The busses were not running. I then get a call from one of my professors, saying that the Bristol trip is cancelled because of the snow. BOOOOO. (It really sucks, because apparently it almost never snows in Bath.)

So I got together with my friends here and we planned our weekend trips, which was productive. 
We planned a lot. I am going to see so much of Europe!

Well tomorrow I am going to London. (As well as next weekend.) I am not bringing my laptop, so I'll be back on here to write about it when I get back.

I will leave you with some snow pictures (you have to click them to see the full pic)

My house under snow
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My footsteps 
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And this one just for fun, I couldn't resist taking a picture of this sign:
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