Sunday, July 28, 2013

Amsterdam in Pictures

Partly because I'm lazy and partly because I don't think you can really understand this city without seeing it, I've decided to show you my weekend in Amsterdam through pictures.

The most surprising thing about Amsterdam: 

Amsterdam is not so much of a city in the bustling metropolis sort of way, but more in the everyone is relaxed, friendly and takes afternoon rides through canals sort of way. The entire city looks like the poshest neighborhood in any big city, where every single building is beautiful. There wasn't any "bad part" of the city (Yes, even the red light district looked nice despite all the naked... everythings.). It was the most gorgeous, quaint, little city I've ever been to.

The most "Amsterdam-y" picture:


We took a canal tour on our second day. As I was trying to take yet another picture of the cute stacked houses along the canals, this boat snuck into the frame. The only thing that could make this picture more "Amsterdam-y" (a word I proudly just made up) would be if the driver of the boat was drinking a Heineken.

My least favorite thing about Amsterdam: 

This picture doesn't quite capture how horrifyingly steep the steps are in all of Amsterdam. I don't know if they historically had shorter feet or just a knack for acrobatics, but I swear I experienced vertigo on these things. I had a little shoulder bag for the weekend, but I couldn't imagine carrying up a suitcase for a weeklong stay. They actually have these large hooks at the top of buildings that they use to make a pulley in order to lift mattresses and couches up and through windows, because you can't take them up the stairs. How about just make less diabolical stairs?!... but I digress. 

My favorite thing I did in Amsterdam:



Canal tours are nice and I'm sure the Van Gogh Museum is excellent, but my main reason for going to Amsterdam was to see the Anne Frank house. We waited for just over an hour to tour the house, but it was so worth it to me. I don't really know how I can correctly or adequately put into words what going through the house where Anne Frank and her family hid for two years was like. First, it's incredibly eerie. There isn't much in the annex, because almost everything was removed after her family was discovered. Otto Frank, Anne Frank's father, asked that the rooms remained empty in order for visitors to remember all that was lost during that time. However, the original bookshelf that hid the entrance to the annex and Anne's original diary remain in the house. Both are rather simple looking, but both gave me chills when I saw them. I could go on for several more paragraphs about the house, but in the interest of everyone's tear ducts I'll move on. 

The most difficult thing to take a picture of ever in the history of tourism: 






I love the "I Amsterdam" sign. In fact, I love it so much that I wanted to take a nice picture of it. Sadly that is impossible. I don't mind all the people climbing all over it that's part of the fun, but the sign is so long and there is a large fountain directly in front of it that you can't get back far enough to take a picture, hence my strange side angle shot.  It's not like I could even go to the end of the fountain to take the picture because there are these large abstract sculptures in the middle of the water!!! I know, first-world-picture-obsessed-tourist problems. This picture isn't so bad though. Maybe I'll invest in photoshop and erase some of the randos in front of the "I am" part. 

Although its stairs are insane and its fountains are poorly placed, Amsterdam was a beautiful, strange, crazy city, and I'm very grateful that I got to explore it.

Monday, July 22, 2013

London Three Ways

Although I went to Amsterdam this weekend and there is Royal Baby about to be born a mere 60 miles away, I realized that I have a bit of catching up to do. I've been to London three times already and haven't mentioned it once. It's time to correct that.

I imagined my first visit to London to be an extravagant experience filled with royalty, tea and small sandwiches. In reality, it started with me taking a large swig of a luke warm banana smoothie (I like bananas almost as much as Joan Rivers likes aging naturally). It was not a good time. 

I was in London for the first excursion of my Grady Seminar. We went to the offices of the Guardian newspaper, and got to talk to one of the global development reporters. I had never been inside of an actual news room, and it was incredible that I got to make my debut at such an accredited publication. I learned a lot on the excursion, but didn't see much of London. My only cue that I was actually in the city was the signs for the Underground. I made sure to do it up right nice on my next visit. 

I was the biggest tourist on my second trip, but I feel like when you are unfamiliar with a city it's best to start with the basics. The bus from Oxford dropped us off behind Buckingham Palace, naturally that was out first stop. 
Everyone and their mother camped out
for the changing of the guard

It was insane. People where crammed up against the gate, police on horseback were managing traffic and the crowd and every step of the Victoria Memorial was filled with people fixed on the palace. At first, I thought the Royal Baby had been born on the ride over, but then I saw a man in a tall black fuzzy hat. Every other day in the summer at 10:30 a.m. the changing of the guard takes place at Buckingham Palace. We happened to hit it at the height of the tourist induced pandemonium. 


Big Ben in all its golden glory 




We ducked out early as not to get stuck in another mob and headed toward Big Ben. It's always a strange experience seeing a building or landmark that you've only ever seen in pictures. Big Ben was smaller than I expected, but I couldn't stop staring at it. I can never get my head around the history that a building like that has stood through. It was built 20 years into Queen Victoria's reign, it's seen three London Olympics, and it survived the bombings during WWII. After all that I, a nobody, get to stand in front of it. Being able to touch and see history of that magnitude is one of the most rewarding parts of traveling to me. 



The view from the top



We rode the Eye next. I love ferris wheels, and I think after riding the London Eye I have reached the pinnacle of all other ferris wheel rides. At 443 feet in the air, the only sight that surrounds you is London. The city seemed to stretch out forever. 

The rest of the day consisted of walking around, touring churches and scoping out locations that were used in Harry Potter. Needless to say, it was a vast improvement from my first trip. 


Looking back on my third visit seems like a Devi Wears Prada induced fever dream. We toured the Hearst Magazine office with Terry Mansfield. If you're unfamiliar with either may I suggest clicking here and here. Our tour began with Elle. More specifically our tour began with meeting the editor in chief of Elle magazine. Our tour ended just as grand as it began, as we went on to meet the editor in chief of Cosmopolitan. I even got to ask them a few question, causing the magazine fan girl inside of me to die of happiness. 

I kept scanning the office to try to find the fashion closet, but unfortunately my hope of a makeover montage went unfulfilled. All the searching made me realize that 90 percent of the women in the office had their hair in a top knot. Is this a weird form of fashion magazine uniform? Is it a job requirement? What if your hair is too short? I have now made perfecting my own top knot a priority in my life. 

In all seriousness, what struck me most was how unglamorous the office actually is. They both produce a large glossy fashion-filled magazine, but its done in a small area where everyone's desk, beside the editor and publisher, touch. At Elle, the walls were packed with past covers of the magazine. At Cosmo, the beauty editors desks were piled with empty beauty product bags that they were testing.  It was much more chaotic than I anticipated, but the excitement in urgency made me like it even more. 

London hasn't disappointed, but I'm planning on going back one more time before I leave. I didn't get to tour the Tower or have high tea. However the obvious and most important reason to go back one more time is to buy a commemorative something of the Royal Baby's birth. Until then, happy Royal Baby watch. 








Tuesday, July 16, 2013

The Longest Weekend That Ever Was


Over the past three days, I have traveled from Oxford to Tintern Abbey in Wales, up to Grasmere in northern England, then down to Oxford, over to London and finally back to Oxford. It was a weekend that I could have never planned and will never experience again. My body is exhausted, but my heart is happy.

Saturday was the longest and most dramatic day of my weekend. I woke up in a quaint little cottage in Grasmere, England. Breakfast was all homemade by the inn keeper, Kate. Since I was in the English country side I opted for the "full english breakfast" option. It included ham (yum), sausage (yum), a poached egg (yum), tomatoes (yum) and mushrooms (yum) and baked beans (unexpected but also yum). Of course, it was all washed down with a cup of English Breakfast tea.

The precious inn we stayed at in Grasmere. 
After breakfast, we headed to Dove Cottage. My trip to Grasmere was apart of the excursion for my Romantic Literature class. The romantic poet, William Wordsworth, lived in Grasmere and wrote most of his important works there, specifically in Dove Cottage. The house was cute and old and full of history, but it was a typical historic museum house.

Following Dove Cottage we went to Wordsworth's manuscript museum. Museum is too harsh a word for this place. I think of museums as sterile places where you aren't allowed to touch anything. There is a glass wall between you and the history you came to see. At the Wordsworth Trust, Jeff, the curator, showed us one of Wordsworth's small writing books. This tattered blue book that had more creases from being bent open for writing than actual pages was incredible. The book was this nugget of history.  Inside, there was the handwriting of Wordsworth, his wife and his sister. There was line after line of Wordsworth attempting to translate the genius within his mind into poetry on paper. I eventually closed my jaw and suppressed my nerdy excitement, but it only got better.  

These are a few manuscripts copies that we worked with. 
Jeff asked us if we'd be interested in seeing a manuscript they had gotten in on Wednesday. Besides the employees and interns at the museum, we were the first to see it. The manuscript was a letter written by Dorothy Wordsworth, William's sister, to her doctor. Jeff then gave us a long white sheet of paper and had us decipher the handwriting from the original. I found out that 1) I can never be a school teacher, because I am terrible at making out handwriting and 2) there is so much more to these handwritten letters than the finite words on the page. We then discussed the letter and its place within the museum's collection. It was a once in a life time experience and something I'll never forget.

Once our session at the museum was over, our professor said we were going to take a little walk. At first I thought it would be a casual stroll around Grasmere or a maybe an easy trek around one of the lakes. I have never been so wrong.

Our little walk was actually a hike up a mountain. Also, we didn't know the hike would be so extensive or that it was going to be on year's the hottest day in England. So there I am in my trusty leopard print ballet flats, skinny jeans, and white blouse – not ideal hiking gear. It took about an hour and half of rocky paths and steep inclines to get up the mountain, but I have to say that the view from the top was well worth it.

The view from the top. 
At the top of the mountain, we walked over to a valley that inspired one of Wordsworth's poems. Our professor read the poem aloud and let us take in the scenery. It was absolutely beautiful. The color of the rolling hills in northern England redefines the color green. We slowly made our way down the mountain in an hour or so with no broken legs or sprained ankles – a success in my book.

The day should have been over after the hike. We were headed to the bus to drive the six hours back to Oxford, which we would happened if everything didn't go so terribly wrong.

About ten minutes into the bus ride, one of the graduate assistants on the trip got sick. Not the end of the world. We stopped, got her some water and let her do her thing. I was hopeful that she was just dehydrated and overly exhausted from the hike and just needed to, how do I put this delicately, "restart her systems." After our impromptu break, I put in my headphones and immediately fell asleep, because I am a champion road trip sleeper.

I wake up an hour later completely oblivious to the world, and we're at a rest stop. The poor girl who was sick before was still sick and had been for the entire ride. We took a break for her and a restroom break for everyone else. We all head to the Starbucks at the rest stop for some snacks. Then our driver sheepishly gets my professor's attention and pulls her aside to talk. After a long chat, she comes back to tell us this thrilling news:

There is a leak in the gas tank. The leak is so large that it is pouring gasoline onto the engine, which is overheating, and if we were to continue our trip with that bus, there would a risk of explosion. The driver called for another bus which would be there in at least three hours. Thus began our camp out at the Starbucks in the middle of no where England.

It really wasn't that bad. Especially when you consider the alternatives were getting stranded on the side of the road or spontaneously exploding. The rest stop had a Starbucks and free wifi. What more could ten American gals ask for?  The workers at the Starbucks even took pity on us and gave us free muffins. English hospitality is no joke.

The bus eventually came three hours later. The remaining five hours of our bus ride went by seamlessly, and we were back in Oxford at 1:30 a.m. It wasn't the 9:00 p.m. arrival time we expected, but we were all safe and now have a fantastic story to tell everyone at home.

I got back to my room, jumped into bed, slept for about five hours and then groggily got up to go to London for the day. I'm already a third of the way into my stay here. I wasn't about to let a near bus explosion and insufficient sleep to hold me back!

Monday, July 8, 2013

Have I been here for a week already?

I've been in Oxford for eight days already. In those eights days, I've celebrated Independence Day with the very people we claimed independence from, I've visited a palace, and I've had class in what looks like a castle. Here's a quick recap on it all.

You might ask, "But Sara, wasn't it weird being among those retched Red Coats on the fourth of July?!" To which I'd respond, "Nope, it was awesome." 

Since America declared its independence 237 years ago, Britain's managed to get over the whole thing. Like all my interactions thus far with the English, they were incredibly polite and thoughtful the whole day. The porters at Trinity College wished us a happy fourth of July on the chalk board at the entrance of Trinity. I really can't imagine UGA wishing the French foreign exchange students "Happy Bastille Day." 

Polite British manners at its finest. 

That night, I went out with some of the other UGA at Oxford students. The city was taken over by Americans. Besides the workers at the pubs, I don't think I talked to a non-American the whole night. From a distance, it could have looked like we were in the U.S. Most people were dressed in red, white, and blue. I even saw the ever so classy "Back to back world champions" t-shirt. 

My fourth of July in Oxford didn't include fireworks or a BBQ, and even though I'm so far away from home, the day somehow felt rather homey. Leave it to the British to make me feel at home on the fourth of July. 

Less than ten miles up the road is Blenheim Palace. It has been the home of the dukes of Marlborough for the past 300 years and was the birth place of Winston Churchill  On Friday, I convinced everyone to go to the palace with me, because princesses.

The garden view of the Blenheim Palace.
 It was overwhelmingly grand and beautiful. The state rooms were covered in large portraits (everything was framed in gold) and extravagant furniture (yet nothing looked like it had ever been sat in).  Amazingly, the 11th Duke of Marlborough still lives at the palace but only for part of the year. I can't imagine what his secondary residence looks like. 

Earlier today, I went to my first class with my Oxford professor. At first, I was nervous I would be intimidated by my professor's lectures, but once I got to class, I was just intimidated by the building class was held in.

It looks better than Cinderella's Castle, doesn't it??? Yep, that's where I had class. It was actually a great hour of lecture over Pre-romantic literature and what we thought of it. Tutorials at Oxford are the professor, two other students, and yourself. My professor was the sort of person that was so intelligent on the subject that it terrified you but in a good way.

When we first entered her office she said she left her window open, and that's why an ivy started to grow within her office. Instead of being upset or pestering with the plant, she quoted Coleridge. What?! Then about twenty minutes later she referenced Twilight to make a point about pathetic fallacy. It was quite a class. Her knowledge about the subject of Romantic Literature just made me more conscious of my thorough  knowledge of absolutely nothing. 

The last week in Oxford has been amazing, but it has made me feel a bit inferior. I hope I'm able to take  full advantage of this place and grow over the next six weeks. Who knows? Maybe I'll be quoting Coleridge by the beginning of August... Probably not, but a girl can dream. 


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

High Table Dinner Monday: Week One


There are moments when you find yourself somewhere that you obviously don't belong, but by some turn of fate or small miracle you are. That was last night. 

Every Monday evening we'll be treated to a guest speaker and a high table dinner. Last night, our guests were the Oxford professors who will teach our courses over the next six weeks. We met with our professors briefly and then headed toward the Trinity College gardens. 

Fun fact about about Oxford: it's really uppity about its grass. The back gardens of Trinity are a perfectly manicured lawn cut in the middle by a neat gravel path and surrounded by floral bushes and tall green trees. Its pristine appearance isn't an accident though. Trinity maintains a quirky set of rules to keep the gardens looking perfect. 

Blankets are not allowed on the lawn as it might kill the grass. Red wine is also prohibited on the lawn, because its dark color could stain the grass if it's spilled. Finally, frisbee and football (both kinds) are forbidden. Croquet, however, is perfectly acceptable. You know, because it's England.

The gated entrance to the back gardens of Trinity College.  

Now enough about gardens rules, back to dinner.

We all walked out onto the lawn dressed for the night's formal dinner and were greeted by a table of champagne, which happens to be my favorite kind of welcoming. While standing in the gardens with a glass of champagne in hand and looking back at the beautiful Trinity housing, it hit me. This is the classiest thing I've ever done. Then, the night got even more swanky. 

After champagne on the lawn, we all streamed into the dining hall for a four course meal. Dinner started and ended with a grace said in Latin, the silverware was hundreds of years old, and the hall was lit by a decadent chandelier and several candelabras.

Once dinner was over, we were invited to the beer cellar that is directly underneath the dining hall. This cellar alone is reason enough for me that Oxford is one of the finest institutions in the world.

The night was incredibly grand and made me very appreciative of this opportunity I've been given. Most people don't get to learn from an Oxford professor. Most people don't get to drink champagne in the Oxford gardens. Most people don't get to enjoy an elaborate meal in a 17th century dining hall.

I'm definitely not use to all the pomp that Oxford has to offer. Until last night, the only association I had with candelabras was Lumiere from Beauty and the Beast, and I use the word "swanky" for goodness sakes. I am a far cry from a posh Brit, but these Monday night high table dinners are definitely something I can get use to.






Sunday, June 30, 2013

To Oxford I Go

So, I'm in my seat.

My phone is off. My magazines and chocolate are within reach. I've already looked up the in flight movies and am debating between When Harry Met Sally and Breakfast at Tiffany's.

Then it finally sinks in. I'm going to England.

I whip out paper and pen. The endless rambling in my head likes to breathe in ink every once in a while. I start writing out goals for the trip. You know, because I watched too much Oprah as a kid.


Goals
The obvious:

  • Go to London 
  • Go to Paris 
  • Go to Amsterdam 
  • Befriend Kate Middleton  
The Sara Specific 
  • Eat a crepe under the Eiffel Tower 
  • Don't lose your headphones
  • Don't break your sunglasses
  • Convince yourself to enjoy beer
  • Perfect your already terrific British accent 
The not so obvious
  • Never get bored. You are in Europe for goodness sakes! 
  • Don't let the fact that you're tired be the reason for not doing something.You can sleep when you're in America.* 
  • Don't just be a visitor. Explore everywhere you go.

I've been more than lucky in my life. I've traveled to through Japan and around Europe. Most likely, this is my last time out of the country for a while, and I don't want to miss a thing. 

When I was a senior in high school, I joked with my parents that I was going to go to the University of Oxford after I graduated. It's three years later and that's exactly where I am now. I know I won't be a Oxford grad by any means, but I hope the next six weeks are everything my 17 year old self hoped for and my 20 year old self set goals for. 

Hello from Oxford.



*The exception that proves the rule: anything that is illegal, could endanger your academic standing,  or could result in bodily harm. 

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

To Italy and Back


I’ve been in France for four weeks. While I like to say I have travelled and can adjust to any culture, the French have worn on me. Please don’t mistake me for a weary traveler. I have  traversed the prison like chamber that is the JFK airport with ease and rode in hot underground trains with what seemed like the entire population of Tokyo. France, however; is a different beast. 
One of my first days in Cannes, I ordered a crepe from a street cart. I thought I would try to use some French as not to be that American tourist. I say, “Je voudrais un crepe.” The French woman stares blankly at me. Maybe she’s hard of hearing? I ask again, “Je voudrais un crepe.” Still nothing. Maybe I’m not committing enough, so with my best faux-french accent I say, “Je voudrais un cr(insert stereotypical French phlegm sounds here)epe.” At last, she understands. 
Sure there might be an actual difference between crepe and “crghghghrrepe”. I don’t know, but the difference can’t be so vast that a woman WORKING AT A CREPE STAND wouldn’t understand what I was trying to say. Needless to say, my weekend in Italy was a welcomed change to my stay in France. 
My first attempt at speaking Italian was a complete failure. Delirious from waking up at 4:30, I stumbled into at cafe after getting off my first train in Italy. All I wanted was a cappuccino, but all my brain could muster was a string of strange French phrases. Every “Merci!” was followed by a “Errr, I mean…. Grazie!!! Clearly some language adjustment was needed. 
I was only in Italy for forty eight hours, but I managed to pack in a tour of Lucca and Pisa, a trip to the beach in Viareggio, and a hike up a mountain that made me want to call bullshit on the jaunty ending to The Sound of Music. (Sorry for the two Sound of Music references in two posts, but in my opinion you can never get enough of the Von Trapps.) 
To say I loved Italy would be an understatement. Even on the train ride, I was drooling as I looked out the window onto the ocean and then the country side. Then I got to listen to five old Italian women gossip while I ate my breakfast. It was a perfect introduction to northern Italy.
Lucca was beautiful. Kayla and I got lost in the winding streets. Luckily for us though, the city is surrounded by a medieval wall. When all else fails you just keep going straight and you will eventually hit the stone walls, that or some Italian designer store. I wasn’t complaining. 
Saturday was Pisa. You get off the train, and it just looks like a random Italian city. I don’t know why, but whenever I travel I expect there to be huge signs pointing to all the famous landmarks or the tourist sights will be right next to the train station or airport. With Pisa, you have to walk across the city from the the train station to get to the tower. 
We really had no idea where we were going. We passed a piazza, a bridge, and a street packed with stores and restaurants, but no tower. I started to try to follow all the other people with cameras at the ready, and eventually the street opened up to the Leaning Tower of Pisa. 
I find it hilarious that something is so famous because it’s a screw up. It gives hope to middle children everywhere. In the courtyard with the tower is a beautiful dumo and church, but no one really seems to care about them. Sure you take a picture of them, but not a “Look how strong I am that I can hold up the Leaning Tower of Pisa” picture. I myself opted for the much more realistic “Look at how weak I am as the Leaning Tower of Pisa starts to crush me” picture.  
Sunday was a quick trip to Viareggio. I got to shop and hit the beach for a bit before making the train back to France. It wasn’t a long trip, but the entire time I was there I just kept feeling like I wanted to stay. I was talking to an Italian woman on my train back into France and she asked me if I liked France or Italy better. Without hesitation I said, “Italy. Most definitely Italy.” 

Obligatory lamp post shot.