Tag Archives: Europe

J’amie France, I like France

First I want to apologize for not posting in two weeks but I did not have access to psu sites because of the hack on the college of engineering. I did keep a small journal to track my day to day activities but even that was hard to maintain because we did so many things, that I had little to no free time.

Meeting my host family:

I was nervous about meeting my host family and had no idea what they looked like. They said they would pick me up from the train station so when I got there I saw them holding up a sign with my name on it. They were really nice and spoke english which was a relief. My french isn’t the most understandable…

Its so hard to decide what to write and what to leave out because so much has happened in these two weeks.

Let me start by get accustomed to life in Nantes. What surprised me the most was that we got two hours for lunch. So we had plenty of time to eat our meals slowly and still have time to talk afterwards.

Luckily, each of us got paired up with a student from Ecole Centrale so that they could show us how students live in Nantes. The students became some of our best friends by the end of the two weeks. We did everything with them.

The students gave us a tour of Nantes, we took a french cooking class, we ate lunch in a park and we lived traditional french lives for two weeks.

IMG_7569

It is very hard for me to put into words the impact studying abroad has left on me. It has changed my view of the world and widen my view on different cultures. The friends I have made and the experiences that came from this trip, makes me want to keep exploring and learn by travelling.

Nantes is definitely a place I will visit again.IMG_7545-1

Dr. Seuss puts it best…”Don’t cry because its over, smile because it happened”.

PRE-Europe

I just finished speaking to my parents on FaceTime and they seem to be more confident than I am about me leaving for study abroad. I’m nervous-excited for the next three weeks, I cannot wait to experience what it’ll be like to live with a french family and interact with a language barrier.

I’ve been outside the country before but never to Europe. All those those french classes I took in high school and college will hopefully have paid off. I do expect quite a few blank stares from people trying to figure out my broken french. I exchanged my Dollars for Euros today. This is one of the best times to travel to Europe because the Euro is almost on par with the dollar. In my mind all that means is more croissants and macarons to devour.

I’m almost all packed and ready to head out the door. I have the feeling that I’ve overpacked, you can never be too cautious about this stuff. The next couple days will be hoping on and off cabs, planes and trains.

Bon Voyage!

The Cliffs of Moher

One of the most famous landmarks in Ireland, as many will know, would be The Cliffs of Moher located in Counties Clare and Galway.  I was fortunate enough to be able to visit them with my friend Mary when two of her friends from home, Claire and Erin, came to visit over their spring break.

The four girls standing with the cliffs in the background.

Mary, Claire, Erin, and me at the Cliffs of Moher!

Our tour started off with several stops as we made our way through Galway  down into Clare.  We visited Dunguaire Castle in Kinvara, The Burren, Corcomroe Abbey, Ballyalban Ring Fort, and Poulnabrone.  Each one is pictured below!

Dunguaire Castle in Kinvara

Dunguaire Castle in Kinvara

Corcomroe Abbey

Corcomroe Abbey

Ballyalban Ring Fort

Ballyalban Ring Fort

Poulnabrone Burial Tomb

Poulnabrone Burial Tomb

We stopped for lunch in Doolin, County Clare, and then continued on towards the cliffs.  It was a chilly day, and when we arrived, a wind and rain storm overtook the entire area.  We all piled from the bus into the tourism center, taking time to learn about the cliffs while the storm passed.  Within about fifteen minutes the storm had passed and the sun came out – in Ireland, weather patterns hit and subside frequently… we could have rain, sun, snow, hail, wind, etc. within the span of an hour.  Mary, Erin, Claire, and I all bravely ventured out of the tourist center and were greeted by some incredible views.

WP_20150302_193WP_20150302_157

After visiting the Cliffs of Moher, we stopped at the “Mini Cliffs” which were also incredibly beautiful.  We had fun jumping from rock to rock to get nearer to the water.

Mary trying not to get blown away by the wind at the Mini Cliffs!

Mary trying not to get blown away by the wind at the Mini Cliffs!

On the way home, our bus driver, Gary, made some of the passengers sing to us.  Why?  Well, Gary instituted a rule at the beginning of our trip: if you were late back to the bus at any point during the journey, you’d have to sing and/or dance on the bus back home to Galway.  Mary and I were going to ask if he’d take volunteers, but we thought better of it!  (And no, we were never late back to the bus, if you were wondering!)

By the time we were back in Galway, Gary told us that he would show us how he could make a dog dance.  I was fortunate enough to capture it on video – every time I re-watch it, I laugh hysterically.  See if you can keep a straight face!

I hope you enjoyed it!  As you can hear from my laughter in the video, I certainly did!

Until my next post,

Maddison


Location: Cliffs of Moher, County Clare, Ireland

Cheetah Girl, Cheetah Sista

Cheetah Girl, Cheetah Sista

Barcelona beach

Barcelona, Spain (Disney’s Cheetah Girls Movie Location)

Over the past 9 days I was on spring break, and it was an amazing experience being able to travel through 3 countries during that time. The next several blog posts of mine will consist of each country from that trip.

We started with Barcelona leaving Rome on Friday morning. And with that this is where my spring break begins!

We landed in Barcelona Friday evening around 5 pm and the first thing we saw in the airport after unloading the plane was a Burger King; which made us laugh pretty hard because it was the first one we had seen in the past 2 months. We were given directions to the airBnB location where we were staying by the owner, and followed them via a bus of the city transportation system. We were in Barcelona for 3 full days and 4 nights, and not once used a taxi. I was so impressed with our navigation skills – Ayanna, my friend that I traveled with, has an international phone plan and therefore data coverage outside of wifi areas that helped tremendously.

The metro and buses of the city each cost 2.15€ each way per person which is a pretty good deal. But to maximize the transportation services even further, we purchased 3 day passes. These are called Hola BCN! Which you can buy at the airport or any metro station. These passed can be purchased at a discounted rate for any number of days – our 3 day pass with unlimited use of the metro and buses during that time was 20.95€. It came out to be a pretty good deal because we used the buses and metros several times daily and had to change buses and trains en route to city destinations, so in one day I think we used a bus or train 8 times which would have been 17.20€ in one day and would have cost almost the same as the three day pass if we had not purchased it and paid 2.15€ per person every single time. So when visiting Barcelona, I HIGHLY recommend purchasing one of these passes for each person in your party if it makes sense logistically.

After dropping off our stuff at the airBnB, we went out into the city to explore and find a sport for dinner. We came across Tapa Tapa, which is probably a more touristy place but all the food was great. I found it to be a great transition into Spanish food because it is all Spanish tapas (little plates) all around 5€ each. So you can share or have to yourself for dinner or probably lunch too. I had great fresh squid and the best calamari I have ever eaten.
squid
 We then accidentally came across the miraculous fountain show infront of the National Catalan Museum. It was a gorgeous view overlooking the city at the top of the hill, with the colorful fountain show that played Spanish music synchronized with the water show.
barca3
barca4
Saturday
1. Sagrada Familia – 11:15 am
2. Chill bar – MUST GO FOR LUNCH
3. Gaudí House/ Park Guell – 17:00 pm
Saturday morning we took the metro to La Sagrada Familia which is an extremely famous cathedral in Barcelona. I can say, hands down that it is my favorite church I have ever been to. I have been to Notre Dame in Paris and several churches in Italy but this topped them all. My pictures will definitely not do it justice. It’s really hard to explain what it’s like at La Sagrada Familia because it is nothing I have ever seen before. The best way I can explain it is as something that belongs in It’s a Bug’s Life. The interior of the church is made of these columns of marble but look like they belong underground kind of like a cave. They also have a nice little spot in the back that plays a short documentary about the church in Spanish and in English that was very informative. It is very hard to get into, and I HIGHLY suggest booking tickets several days in advance for this. My friend and I booked La Sagrada Familia and Park Guell as one package and saved money that way – total price for 2 places per person was 17.50 euros.
La Sagrada Familia
We read restaurant reviews on TripAdvisor and found this fun place called Chill Bar a block or two away from La Sagrada Familia. I highly suggest going there. It’s this hidden away restaurant that has this cool eclectic feel. It’s like a lounge inside where the tables have either couches or cool comfy seats to sit in. They had amazing sangria and some of the best nachos I have ever had. When you go, get the nachos machos or something that’s 8€ and the option with carne chili, you won’t regret it.
barca5
Park Guell has the famous mosaic animals and structures as well as the house, now a museum, of the architect of La Sagrada Familia, Antoni Gaudi. It is a pretty cool place that is free to enter but tickets are required for the museum of his house if you are interested in that. I found it interesting, but his house is really small so you could go through the whole thing and watch their documentary there in under half an hour. So not a big deal if you aren’t able to do it in my opinion.
Park Guell
The place we went for dinner was on the beach and made both my friend and myself sick after, so I will not give you the name of that as a recommendation.
Sunday
1. Museu Picasso – 11:15 am
2. Beach day
3. Seafood paella
4. Antilla Dance Club
For breakfast we tried this place called El Taller de Supan, a block away from La Sagrada Familia. It is a café that has every baked good you could want. I was quite pleased with their quiche and coffee, they also  sandwiches. If in the nieghborhood, I recommend going there for breakfast.
taller
The Picasso museum was nothing like I had expected. This single man, Picasso, produced over 4,000 works of art in his life time, and seeing his large variety was incredible. From drawings of farm life and country side, bronze casting of statue heads, paintings water colors and oil pantings of Madrid and Barcelona in they early 1900s, portraits of his family friends, and himself, and probably the most famous abstract art.
It was in the high 50s and a really beautiful sunny day. So after the Picasso Museum, my friend and I walked to the beach that is close by. On the way there, we stopped in a chocolate shop and I got this lemon cake dipped in chocolate fudge icing that was amazing. And then we grabbed BLT sandwiches to go , not very Spanish I am aware, and hit the beach. We sat on the beach eating french fries, BLTs, lemon chocolate cake, and drinking Coke. It was one of the best feelings. Italy is alot coolder than I had anticipated before coming here, and going to a beach with somewhat warm weather was exactly what I needed 2 months into winter.
barca8
For dinner we met up with other girls in our study abroad program that were also traveling in Barcelona that day. They took us to this tiny and from what I understood, authentic Spanish restaurant. It was a pretty generic place from what I could see. I ordered seafood paella which is this famous Spanish dish of rice and lots of seafood all cooked together. It’s very common to find in Barcelona and I’m sure there are a hundred other restaurants there just like it. There was nothing that really stood out at this place, so I wouldn’t really recommend it.
barca9
That night we went salsa dancing at this Latin Dance Club called Antilla. They have salsa dancing lessons during the day and only Latin music club at night on Sundays (other days too, check per season). It was really fun and I would recommend going with a large group of friends or significant other if you plan on trying it out without previous Latin dance experience. I felt out of place and had lots of people help and teach me some moves, but I would recommend doing some lessons before your trip to Spain if going out dancing is something that you would enjoy.
Monday
1. Las rambas street – boqueria market
*get a bag of fruit to munch on for the rest of your day’s or week’s adventures with a refreshing snack
 2. Bus tour – blue turistica don’t recommend
We went to La Boqueria Market on La Ramba Street on Monday morning and it was my favorite place in Barcelona other than La Sagrada Familia. It has every type of food you could ask for: a butcher shop, a fish stand, lots and lots of fruit stands, lots of smoothie and fresh fruit juice stands, chocolate stands, candy stands that are separate from chocolate stands, and so much more. I got a strawberry and banana smoothie which was amazing. At a fruit stand I got a cup of strawberries that was the most freshing thing I have had in awhile. In Italy they eat very few fruits and vegetables – salads are unheard of and never seen here. So I am definitely deprived of fiber and lots of other nutrients due to my constant pizza/pasta and gelato only consumption. I also had a banana and avocado the next day for breakfast from one of these stands and they were the best pieces of fruit I have ever had. My two cents:
 Do not get churros or eat at a restaurant that has a list of and pictures of their plates advertised outside.
barca10barca11
Barcelona was very touristy and not nearly as Spanish in style as I had expected. Only when I was in alleys and hidden away side streets did I feel like I was actually in Spain. The main city centers looked like places in Philly and D.C I have been to which was actually disappointing, looking for something new across the ocean. I would like to go back with a significant other and possibly my own family. It is pretty kid friendly but a great deal of references to marijuana and the largest distribution of condoms sold at little souvenir shops that I have ever seen. I was also not too pleased about the amount of extremely R or plus rated postcards that I didn’t find amusing at all – wanted to hide from little eyes.
Barcelona was a nice city, but definitely did not top Paris as my favorite place in Europe so far.
Onto my next post about London!

Location: Barcelona, Spain

“O Romeo, Romeo, Wherefore art thou Romeo?”

The sweet surprise of the semester was Verona, Italy. This little town just an hour outside of Milan gave me one of the best experiences of my life, and it was so unexpected. My roommate Lynnsey and I decided to travel to Verona on somewhat of a whim for a weekend. All of our previous knowledge of the small city revolved merely around Shakespeare’s story of Romeo and Juliet, but instead of a tragedy (slight Shakespeare humor) we ended up having an amazing time.

First and foremost, Lynnsey and I are not on the planning committee. The planning committee consists of my other roommate and two of our friends. Their job is to book a place to stay, decide on train tickets, and plan particular activities to do. It worked well in Florence and Pisa, but this time Lynnsey and I were without them. Needless to say, I was quite worried. After only getting an hour of sleep, we finally ventured on our own to Verona early on a Saturday morning at 6:00 a.m. Once our quick layover in Bologna (a place I must come back to!) ended, we were off to Verona traveling through some of the most beautiful landscape I have ever seen. When we arrived, we quickly walked straight to the arena, which looks like a miniature Colosseum. Although I didn’t get my gladiator on, it still felt incredible to be there. It was crazy to see how this structure was still standing even after being built nearly 2,000 years ago.

IMG_2750

After the arena, we ended up at the most notorious spot in Verona: Juliet’s balcony. Lovers, hopeless romantics, and people from all over the world overran the patio below. To get to the balcony you first have to walk through a tunnel of love notes. People stick these notes all over the walls in hopes of finding true love. Of course Lynnsey just wrote “#SingleAsAPringle,” and for me I wrote a heart warming letter to Juliet: “help a sista out!” Once you make it through the tunnel the next step to finding true love is apparently rubbing the statue of Juliet’s right breast. In my opinion that’s more sexually violating than a sign of good luck, but it’s tradition and we participated. The most entertaining part was watching a group of British elementary school boys fight over who would get to touch the breast. One boy in particular, the one who fought the hardest and won, had a wide grin on his face while groping the young Juliet. The adults who were overseeing the boys took their photo while onlookers spent their time pointing and laughing. I must admit it was hilarious, but I’m also slightly concerned for that boy’s future…let us pray.

1653601_10203502278580927_1471832546094637417_n 10407302_10203503443090039_5272904460831990959_n


Location: Verona, Italy

Link

Old McOrsini Had a Farm

10919053_10205761840269973_8590275080333199162_n

lesson on how to make pasta at Lake Trasimeno

Pictured above, I was receiving a lesson on how to make pasta at Agriturismo Orsini on Lake Trasimeno by the Orsini family. They own a farm on the lake and are one of the founders of the slow food movement in which they completely sustain their selves and farm by complete means of only what they produce themselves. Interestingly enough, there has been an olive oil “famine” this year in Italy due to a bacteria, Xylella fastidiosa, that grew on olive trees and wiped out a large majority of one of Italy’s main exports. Because the Orsini family are in complete control of their products, they were able to get their animals to eat the infected olive branches therefore saving their olive oil production this spring. They are one of the only companies in Italy that were able to successfully produce healthy olives this year and therefore their oil is in high demand. Our group was privileged enough to buy their homemade olive oil before it was released to the public which is sure to sell out quick!

As soon as our group, 90 American students studying abroad at the Umbra Institute this semester, arrived at the farm we were immediately welcomed with open arms by this family. They immediately fed us a “peasant’s breakfast”, which I thought was fit for a King! It consisted of their homemade bread with olive oil and then another sweeter bread that they also made there with chocolate chips baked inside. Molto buono! (Very good!) After a meet and greet with the family over some bread and olive oil, we were given a lesson on how to make pasta – start to finish. Starting with eggs and flour, all the way to how to correctly cut the pasta and then let it dry properly before cooking. After eating pasta that we made that day, and several other courses they prepared for us for lunch; they gave each apartment a plate of even more fresh pasta to take back with us and eat for dinner that night. Such sweet and loving people.

Below is the process of how to make pasta taught by the Orsini family:

 

pasta making

step 1: flour and eggs

pasta making

outside class

pasta making

step 3: rolling out pasta

pasta making

step 4: being taught how to cut the pasta properly

pasta making

took off the training wheels

pasta making

ready to be cooked!

pasta making

finished product, lunch!


Location: Lake Trasimeno, Italy

Faire la Grève

When the French say that they like to strike, they mean it. Take notice, they may actually unionize and strike at any moment. I have attached photos of the fire department on strike a few days ago in the center of town. The firemen want an increase in pay? Great! Just make sure your house does not catch fire in the time until their demands are met. Maybe also refrain from using the stove, oven, candles, and fireplace- I know, it’s January, shut up. You probably shouldn’t rub wood together either, just to err on the side of caution. This is *drum roll please*… One of the stupidest things that I have ever seen in my nearly 20 years on this Earth.

photo 1.JPG

photo 2.JPGphoto 3.JPGMa meilleure,

RJB


Location: Montpellier, France

O hai there London!

Hi folks! Welcome to my GeoBlog page 🙂 🙂

Quick facts about myself:
I’m Kasumi, a junior print journalism major/psych & int’l studies minor.
I was born in Japan to Chinese parents and grew up in both China and Japan.
I have been to 10 countries/regions: Japan, China, USA, Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Thailand, Turkey and Egypt.
I speak Japanese, English, Mandarin Chinese and Shanghainese.
I’m a HUUGE fan of raqs sharqi (which is a fancy word for belly dancing) and bhangra music.
I love (window) shopping and museum hopping.

As you can see I’ve been quite a globe-trotting nomad myself so you shouldn’t expect cute-but-naive posts like “oohhhh my word! people in Country X serve and eat a fish WHOLE!!!!!!!!!”
Eating a fish whole (and sometimes live or raw) is a normal part of someone’s life, somewhere on this planet. You just don’t know. Normalcy is such an arbitrary thing once you open your eyes to new cultures.

I will be looking into stuff that’s buried deeper and more interesting, to me personally.
I’m particularly looking forward to discovering how the Londoners/Brits define gender equality, diversity/multiculturalism and globalization.
And also getting a taste of the belly dance/bhangra scene, of course! 

I hope you all can join me in this journey! 😀

P.S. And I wish all of my fellow GeoBloggers, study abroad students and my offline friends & family a happy holiday season! 🙂


Location: Los Angeles, CA

Waiting for 4 years…

Hi! My name is Chris Gutierrez, an architecture student going into my fourth year of study (5 year program), and this August I will be headed to Rome, Italy!!

As part of the architecture program in Penn State, it is mandatory that we go to Rome in our fourth year. This is a fact that I’ve known that fact as soon as I was accepted into the program, and I have been looking forward to it ever since.
I have heard much about the program from many others who have already experienced it and keep hearing it that it is the time of one’s life. I am extremely excited about going to Rome and exploring all the different kinds of architecture there.
I wish to one day have a career in city planning and the experiences of all different types of cities will be invaluable to me.
I can’t wait until I get there to explore and share all of the unseen wonders of Europe!

Location: New York, NY