Thursday, July 31, 2008
The Ferry
Sunday, July 27, 2008
If you are what you eat...
- I found another bike rental place in park near Rome. I only rented it for an hour because it was 5€. I explored the city mostly on foot and by rail.
Here's my out of focus self portrait close up to prove that I was actually inside this establishment. BTW, the reason Rome is full of holes is because the Romans figured out how to recycle - they used pieces of the Colleseum and other obselete structures to build newer establishments... Go figure, the same people who figured out flushing toilets centuries before we did also knew how to recycle. That's why so much of the Colleseum is "ruined" so to speak.
Here's another self portrait from the Davinci Museum. It's in an octagonal room full of mirrors. I snuck this picture before getting in trouble for taking pictures, which the museum didn't allow. Bummer!
Another picture from the park. I guess this horse really had to go. I don't understand fountains. Do they try to be suggestive, or just end up that way?
Thursday, July 24, 2008
The Hole-y Roman Empire
OK, I haven't seen that much of Rome in a day. These are pictures from my walk through the Palitino Ruins, which is basically what I wandered into today. I was looking for the Coliseum, which I did find, but there was a huge line for the bigliettos (tickets) and it was late in the day. I discovered I could get a ticket that was good for 24 hours that included an entrance into the Coliseum, so I get to go in the short line tomorrow.
Even though I've actually met quite a few nice Americans and others at this hostel who are sharing a room with me tonight, this particular leg of my trip is destined to be pretty solitary. I think deep down, I wanted it that way, however now I don't have much of a choice. As much as I love the UK, it is cold and wet, which I didn't expect. I've spent a lot of time having fun and travelling in public places, and even though I was good about my vitamin C, I've come down with a mild throat bug... The throat bug isn't draining any of my energy and I'm still having fun running around, but I have no voice. It's actually kind of ironic. I have 3 books pocket books with me for learning Italian, Greek and Thai. I've been so excited to try to speak Italian that I haven't even picked up the other books. Now I find myself saying the same things over and over again "Mi dispiace, no voce. No parlo italiano. Parla inglese?" which means "I'm sorry, no voice, I don't speak Italian. Do you speak English?" Usually I stop after"no voce". Ok, that may be a little exageration. I do find it funny though, that my voice completely went today when it could have gone on any other day because these bugs are pretty random. I love exploring on my own and it's a very different experience being in the shoes of a mute foriegner.
Speaking of being in people's shoes, check out these shoes! They're pretty massive compared to my foot. I have more toes though.
The weather's quite differt here than in the UK. I don't think it's rained for a while and it's pretty dusty. The high temperature was probably about 80F and it's not that humid. Good conditions for dirt to stick to feet in sandles. I took a good long shower after walking around.
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Watlington
Both Laura and Stevie have a disease that is becoming more and more prevalent in today's society. They are both autistic. I learned a lot about autism in the 2 days that I spent with the Banister family. Autism is a sensory perception disorder that affects all senses. Sight, sound, smell, touch and taste all get jumbled in the brain. This makes it very hard for the children to learn how to communicate with other people and for people to communicate with them. This means that the house has to be extraordinarily child proof because the kids might not understand the phrase "Don't put that in your mouth".
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Biking on the Left
At the Boston Museum of Science, we have a model T rex with skin, and he's even dressed with a scarf for winter. In Oxford, they have real T rex bones.
Plenty of people in Oxford bike... and in fact there were bikes everywhere. I found a bike shop in town, but when I asked to hire a bike they said that they didn't do that. There was nowhere in London to hire a bike either. I was beginning to get frustrated.
I finally found a place that would hire me a bike in Liverpool. My cousin Derek has 15 bikes in his garage and offered me a bike for free. Can't beat that price. Derek and I have gone on a couple of bike rides around the Liverpool countryside. It was refreshing. There's something about biking in beautiful places that's quite peaceful.
So I went to the World Museum and the Walker Art Gallery. At the art gallery, there was a Superlamb Banana, which happen to be appearing all over town for charity.
At the World museum I found a BIG piece of my favorite rock - Hematite, which is basically iron ore. It differs from rust by 1 oxygen molecule (per molecular unit). Anyway it's cool stuff and this is the biggest hunk of it I've ever seen.
Next I went up to Edinburgh for a couple of days. I got off the train in Edinburgh, and started to make my way towards the Hostel, and for the 2nd time in a brand new city, I encountered US culture before local culture. I ran into a street show being performed by Arizona Jones, a pretty cute guy from the US being Indiana circus style. He juggled flaming batons from 16 feet in the air, and extinguished a flaming bullwhip from up there for his grand finale.
After visiting with Hamish, we went past Fort Williams, Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in Scotland (Ben mean mountain in Gaelic, and I think Nevis means steep, but I'm not sure. The driver was trying to teach us Gaelic, but not too much of it stuck with me.)
We finally got to Loch Ness at about 2:30PM, and we stopped at some Urquhart Castle Ruins over looking over Loch Ness. Then I got on a boat to try and spot the monster... No luck of course, but the day was pristine and I got to hear all the monster stories. They even referred to the spot as a "real life X-file" and references to Scully and Mulder.
Did you know that Macdonald's serves high tea? This is the little town of Pitlochry, in Scotland. There are no national food chains here... That's so refreshing. I've hated MacDonalds almost all my life - mostly because when I was young and liked hamburgers they put those little chopped up onions on every burger that are impossible to remove, and if you ask for no onions it takes forever to get your burger. Now I'm older and don't like hamburgers all that much. I like high tea, so I might actually like this Macdonalds of Pitlochry. I'll try it if I come back someday.
We ended up getting back to Edinburgh at 8:30PM, a 12.5 hour tour. Most of the people on the bus were sleeping the majority of the way back, but we all had our shot at spotting the Loch Ness monster, so we were happy. Not as happy as we would have been had we actually seen it, but the tour guide pointed out a broken figure of Nessie at a gas station outside the city of Inverness and told us that we'd all now had our chance at spotting Nessie.
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Exact Change
Friday, July 11, 2008
My World Keeps Shrinking
I spent the past couple of days in northern Virgina, where I grew up. I have to include the word "northern" because northern Virginians often don't want to be associated with their southern neighbors. It's a really different culture up north. While I was there, I visited with 3 different friends I've known since elementary school. They're all in very different parts of their lives. My friend Vered is married and has a 2 year old son, Joseph Ari or Joe Safari, or just Ari. He just discovered the word "no" and that's all he says. I stopped by right around nap time and Vered (mommy) was excited to see me, but Joseph just kept saying "No! Go Away!" He finally decided it was ok for me to stay after he saw my fake dragon tatoo.
Next, I saw my lawyer friend Dori and her husband Dave. Dori and Dave are excellent cooks and they made me this wonderful crispy tofu and homemade egg drop soup. Their collaboration was amazingly well orchestrated, and it was fun to watch them cook so harmoniously together. Dori and Dave met in law school at William and Mary. They both work for the federal government instead of a law firm and quite prefer that life style because they actually get to HAVE a life as government employes.
Next, I saw Stephanie, a single (very available, very nice, very pretty, very successful, very smart) dentist (yes, Stephanie, I'm trying to help you out here!) Stephanie is an unusual person because she always wanted to be a dentist (well, an orthodontis, but that morphed in general dentist, which isn't too different), AND she did it. She brought me some old high school prom pictures, which she just dug up a couple of weeks ago. Check it out:
After my time in VA, it was time to head up to NY for 2 reasons. (1) It's Nicky's birthday! Happy birthday Nicky (July 10), and (2) I have to catch a plane to London. I ditched a lot of my "world" or stuff with my parents in VA, and then came up here with my backpack.
We're really celebrating Nicky's birthday tonight because it's Friday night, but his birthday was really yesterday. Nicky and I had a quiet celebration. I was able to flirt with a couple of bar tenders and get us a free taramisu martini. Nicky thought that the bar tender that looked like Orlando Blume was flirting with me and tried to get me to leave my email address on the bill. Even though it was Nick's birthday I didn't humor him that much. Orlando's pick-up line was "I'm not using this as a pick up line, but I've always love Massachusetts because of the descriptions from my favorite poet, Robert Frost." This gave me some evidence that Orlando wasn't trying to pick me up. Nicky and I ended up sharing 3 stiff drinks and some chicken wings.
We also spent time enjoying the blue-ness of the sky and waterfront near Nicky's new apartment in Long Island City (one of the few places down town with really nice fresh air).
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
You Know You're in the South When...
This farm stand was in DELAWARE. Yes, I am now convinced that Delaware is part of the south. They may have sided with the union, but they are NOT a mid Atlantic state. It is SO true what they say about Delaware - "there's nothing in Delaware". Well, that's not entirely true, I drove the whole length of Delaware on my way to Virginia's Eastern Shore. As far as I can tell, Delaware has toll roads and farms. I hear the beaches are nice, but I didn't make it to the shore. The peaches were wonderfully tasty. I thought I had the right idea about how to eat those peaches by biting right into one in the parking lot, but my Grandma Peggy had a much more creative way of eating the peaching. My Sunday morning breakfast at my grandparents' house consisted of a home made Belgian Waffle topped with peaches, strawberries, syrup and whipped cream. A meal fit for a traveling granddaughter. Grandmas can't let grandkids travel hungry.
This is Grandma and Grandpa's house in Portsmouth, VA (that's right next to Norfolk and Virginia Beach). It's been their house since 1951, that's 57 years!
The shortest way to get from Philadelphia to Portsmouth is through southeastern Pennsylvania, straight through Delaware, through a short stretch of Maryland, then into Virginia's eastern shore using US 13. Even though New Jersey is a little uglier than Pennsylvania (sorry NJ loving people), it's worth a trip into NJ for the frugal traveler because gas prices are really that much better in New Jersey than in Pennsylvania. Gas average about $4.14/gallon in Philadelphia, PA and about $3.98 across the Delaware river in Camden, NJ. I found a gas station outside of Camden that cost $3.86/gallon. Unfortunately for Philadelphia residents, there is a $3 toll across the bridges on the way back to Philadelphia. If you do the math (using the average gas prices), Philadelphia residents wouldn't save on gas unless they are buying about 19 gallons at a time. You'd have to have pretty big tank. If you can find the $3.86/gallon station, you start saving at 11 gallons. But if your not going back to PA, it costs nothing to cross into Camden on the Ben Franklin Bridge, so you might as well get your cheap gas in Jersey.
Before my trip, I did plan out which states I was going to buy gas in. There's a really cool website (gasbuddy.com), which you can interface with google maps and map out the least expensive gas stations along your planned routes. I drover through MA, RI, CT, NY, NJ, PA, MD, DE, VA and NC. Along that route, the least expensive places to gas up are MA, NJ, and VA. DON'T get gas within 5 miles of a major interstate; you'll save a good 10 cents per gallon.
OK... enough about gas. Bact to the vacation.
Back to where I was - Philly is awesome, gas in NJ, there's nothing in Delaware (and it's part of the south), next is Maryland. They have Chesapeake bay crabs... didn't get any this time through, but I know they're oooh so good. About 10 years ago I went to a MD crab house. They gave me a bib, a bucket of crabs and a little wooden hammer. It's a lot of work for a little food, but it's so much fun. Then, VA's eastern shore. Growing up, I read all about the wild horses on the eastern shore (Misty of Chincoteague by Marguirite Henry), but I didn't see any wild horses. All I saw were chicken factories. I passed Perdue, then 10 miles later, I passed Tyson. It was still a really pretty drive even without the horses, and it brought me straight to one the Engineering Wonders of the World - The Chesapeake Bay Bridge, which connects Virginia's eastern shore to Virginia Beach. This bridge is 17.6 miles long and contains 2 tunnels. It's one thing to pass through Delaware and see nothing but land ahead, but it's really something to be in your car (or on a motorcycle - oh how I wished I had one at this point) seeing nothing but water for miles around you.
This is a picture of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge where the bridge goes under water for it's second tunnel (coming from the north). When you pop out of the second tunnel, there's the Bay Bridge rest stop. The rest stop has a fishing peer:
After the Bay Bridge, it was off to visit with my grandparents. We took a walk through the Portsmouth City Park. I went here so many times growing up, swinging on the swings, meeting up for family reunions, feeding the ducks and geese, riding on the park train, called the Smoky Pokie. And of course I know my dad has many more memories from this park than I do. Here are some of my favorite places in the park
On this day in the park, Grandma and I talked to a turtle for a little bit. We named it "Speedy Junior", after a turtle that used to hang out in Grandma's garden, Speedy. According to Grandma, Speedy either was injured by a car or something one day or it was a female having it's period. Not too long after seeing Speedy bleeding, Speedy stopped moving. We think Speedy Junior might just be a relative of Speedy the garden turtle, and therefore, Speedy lives on. Speedy Junior wasn't really all that speedy, I gave him/her an hour to move somewhere, and he/she only moved about half a foot. We also got chased by a heard of geese. These geese are way to used to be fed by people and think everyone wants to give them something. Here's a picture of Grandma chasing them back (she's so cute!)
After that, it was off to Hogwarts, I mean Duke University. My friend, Kim, played soccer with me up in Boston for a couple of years and then went back to school to study (magic) biology. And get her PhD. It was great seeing her again. She's a really neat person and shares my love of soccer. Aparently, one of the cool things in Durham, NC, is a popsicle shop called Locopops. You can get all sorts of weird popsicle flavors. I got a mojito, and Kim got a watermelon-cucumber popsicle.
And, then it was off to Kim's house... YES, I said KIM"S HOUSE, as in she owns it. She just bought it. You know you're in the south when students can afford to buy 3 bedroom, 3 bathroom houses on a student stipend.
Kim and I had a great night, we barbecued some dinner, shared a bottle of CT Chardonnay, and ate the desert her parents provided us with, then gave me a couple of temporary tattoos, so I could show up at my parents place and freak them out. Then I was back off to VA, to wind down and get ready to wind up for the next part of my trip to Europe. So I'll sign out for now. I'll post more (approximately) when I get to England.