Tag Archives: beautiful

Kaikoura on a whim

It was a Tuesday like any other, except that it was a field trip day and that no one has any classes on Wednesday. Thus, a particular group of people, 5 to be exact, decided at dinner (at 6:30 pm) that they were going to take a spontaneous trip. So by 7:30 pm we loaded up the car and headed off to Kaikoura a mere 2 hours away.

Being well aware that the best part of heading to Kaikoura was the drive to the town, so we thought it best stop and camp somewhere outside of the area so we could get the full experience in the sunlight. Our token kiwi Claire, our RA, knew just the place. That happened to be Gore Bay, some 30 minutes outside of Kaikoura. With a little difficulty we managed to find a legal spot to camp on a bluff above the beach. It was less then fun pitching the tent in the rain and cold, it was surprisingly comfortable to pile into a 3 person tent. We spent the night talking and eating snacks until we fall fell asleep…

And woke up to this lovely sight first thing in the morning.

562021_10151196037688787_512193786_9743031_527214000_n.jpg

525553_10151196037813787_512193786_9743032_2111235391_n.jpg

578376_10151196038438787_512193786_9743041_1140004772_n.jpg

It was completely breath taking and we were lucky to find such a great place to watch the sun rise. We hung out for a while on the sands of Gore Bay while the outside of our tent dried. We found a crab which we dubbed Mr. Krabs (from Spongbob) and drew him a house in the sand.

551939_10151196038623787_512193786_9743043_1729994829_n.jpg

We also took some token jumping pictures and lazed in the sun until we decided to head the rest of the way to Kaikoura.

389646_10151196038873787_512193786_9743045_70286017_n.jpg

The drive was just as beautiful as we had hoped. On one side of the road are hills but to the other is nothing but the purest blue water.

Once in town we filled out bellies with breakfast and ducked into a few shops for fun we headed down to the water. It was a little rockier and less sand so we spelled things with the white rocks we found and watched the tide come in.

398342_10151196039143787_512193786_9743048_856595234_n.jpg

536159_10151196039463787_512193786_9743051_744246340_n.jpg

One of the coolest parts had to be on our way home. We wanted to stop and take pictures of the view from the road and maybe find some seals. Of course we were lucky enough to do just that. We found several seals lounging about on rocks sunning themselves and got some pretty nice shots of them. They were rather interested in us as well. 

582565_10150777085594454_619244453_9220602_878563598_n.jpg

294944_10151196039768787_512193786_9743056_604629170_n.jpg

522131_10151196039873787_512193786_9743057_1747250040_n.jpg

Despite the chilly air it was such a good time. In order to have the most fun sometimes you just have to go with the moment.

Until next time, cheers. 


Location: Kaikoura, New Zealand

London/Ring of Kerry/Sweden/21st Birthday

I have been hardcore slacking on the blog train lately.  Sorry about that!  

Quick captions:
LONDON
london1.jpg
^Our hostel was based out of a bar…aka reception was at the bar…which I had never seen before.  Thus, making this 11am drink well worth it.  Cool place.
london2.jpg
^The London Eye!
london3.jpg
^Outside of the Buckingham Palace
london4.jpg
^Just found this wandering around. Thought it was neat :]
london5.jpg
^Harry Potter tour = awesome. Ended at Platform 9 3/4 (though the real one is under construction, so we had to deal with the makeshift one. Sigh).
london6.jpg
^The shop was CLOSED or I would have def bought the HP money set. haha
london7.jpg
^DUCK TOUR DUCK TOUR DUCK TOUR! (Seriously, though. Coolest thing ever.)
london8.jpg
^Finishing with the generic Big Ben pic!
ON TO RING OF KERRY!
(The reason I am studying in Ireland, of all these beautiful places in Europe.)
rok.jpg
^Hello ocean. Hello beautiful blue sky. Hello Ireland :]
rok2.jpg
^Again, Ireland is just gorgeous.
rok3.jpg
^My friend, Danielle, checkin’ out the view.
rok4.jpg
^Meagan making her way down to the beach.
rok5.jpg
^Beach!
rok6.jpg
^Looks like a fairy tale.
rok8.jpg
^YES! Baby lambbb!
rok9.jpg
^Not sure who this chick is. But I liked the photo!
OFF TO SWEDEN!
Went to visit one of my best friends, Claire, in Sweden.  She moved there last year and is living in Uppsala.  All I wanted to do was spend time with her and see the ice bar in Stockholm.  Mission accomplished.
sweden1.jpg
^Ice bar in Stockholm! Me + jellyfish ice sculpture + drink = wonderful.
sweden2.jpg
^Friends :]
BIRTHDAY BIRTHDAY BIRTHDAY!
Both Erin and my birthday was over our Spring break, so we decided to celebrate beforehand, while everyone was still around.  We were VIP at the one club here, Angel Lane, which landed us free champagne and the club to ourselves for the first two hours.  What a wonderful night with wonderful people! :]

bday2.jpg
^Erin and myself! The birthday girls! Woohoo!
bday1.jpg
^The ladies at the club :]
So there is that mad update.  Sincerely sorry I haven’t written in ages, but with essays and finals all around me, other things have trumped blogging.
I spent the past 10 days in Italy for spring break…and that calls for a blog of its own (hopefully it will go up within the next two days).
That is all for now!
Cheers,
Melanie

Location: Stockholm, Sweden

CARNAVAL

I finally realized why many people unfamiliar with Brazil think of it as a country of nothing but tiny bikinis, sex, alcohol and parties. This past week was the famous Carnaval. Carnaval is a week’s worth of celebrations before Ash Wednesday and the time of fasting for Catholics. During this week there are parties of all types on the streets, in clubs, at beaches, in houses during the day and night. The main event is the samba parade which consists of Samba schools showcasing their talent. These samba schools have hundreds of people dancing for them, all trying to win the coveted winner spot as the best samba school of their city. The largest Carnaval celebrations and samba schools are in Rio de Janeiro and Salvador. The rest of the country have samba parades and celebrations all week long, but not as intricate, costly, and over the top as in these two cities.

I traveled to Florianopolis. It is a beautiful island south of S�o Paulo filled with beaches and lagoons and a lot of sun. To put it simply, I had a blast. My first day and night was spent going to street carnavals in which people drink, eat and dance until hours past midnight as well as enjoying the beautiful beaches the island had to offer. The day street carnaval on the second day had a theme in which all of the guys dressed as girls. I have never seen so many ugly girls in my life as I saw during that particular day. At night there were always parties in clubs (although they were a bit expensive). I went to a club with a live samba rock band, a Mexican bar where the bar tender enjoyed pouring tequila shots down every ones throats, and a very posh looking beach party with multiple pools and Jacuzzis with one of the most famous DJs in Brazil. I also got to FINALLY paraglide. I can now cross that of my bucket list!

Needless to say, it was sad to leave the island. To top of the week, this past Friday I attended the parade of the samba school winners in S�o Paulo. The parades were the schools that won and began at 10pm and ended at about 7:30 in the morning. Yes, I stayed during the ENTIRE procession. It was a one of a kind experience. The floats and music and dancing surpasses any parade in the United States that I have ever seen. Keep in mind that this parade of winners is supposed to be OK, but not as great as the samba schools of Rio and Salvador. This parade was the perfect way to end my Carnaval experience.

Pictures say what a thousand words cannot so enjoy the pictures.paragliding

 

Lagoa

guys as girlsone of the floats 


Location: Florianopolis, Brazil

Le Scale! Le Scale! (The Stairs! The Stairs!)

I’ve been around exploring Perugia for the past few days, and there are so many things to see that are hidden down narrow streets of side alleys.  Up some side steps on the way to school is a beautiful view of Perugia.  Through another alley near the apartment is a park that I had no idea was there until yesterday.  If you leave any small area unexplored you could really be missing something.

I didn’t originally think that my apartment would be big enough to have people over for dinner, but we had our first dinner and it was so successful! We might have had to pull my desk out from the room to have enough seats for everyone, but we made it work! We went to a friend’s apartment and made Tiramisu for the first time, and it came out great, everyone loved it (we were a little nervous for it while we were making it to be honest).

We bought all of the ingredients for it at this little store next to the school that we call Ciao Ciao since that’s how they greet you when you walk in (don’t ask me what the real name is cause I have no idea).  The owner Adelmo, or Ciao Ciao Man, is so nice and super helpful.  He gave us so many tips on how to make the Tiramisu, like what coffee is the best, which pans to make it in etc.

IMG_1117.JPG

I went to a local market to buy some food for one of our dinners and saw an umbrella for 3 euro. I thought I’d lucked out, that’s the cheapest umbrella you could ever find. Unfortunately, the whole “you get what you pay for” rule applies here in Italy too. I went to check out and the man decided to take it out of the little bag to make sure that it worked right.  He literally ripped it in half.  I was so shocked I literally just stood there, desperately trying not to laugh.  Male fortuna!   

It gets better. Roughly twenty minutes ago we got someone trying to buzz into our apartment but we weren’t expecting anyone.  I looked out the peephole and there was a little old lady standing out on the landing. I thought to myself, “ohh she looks so nice let’s see what she wants,” so of course, I open the door. Bad move. True this lady was old, but she was not nice.

She started saying something about stairs and cleaning and she was talking so fast none of us could even understand the full sentences.  When she told us we needed to pay 10 Euro to clean the stairs we tried to tell her that we were never told by our landlord that we would have to do that.  She was clearly getting mad because a) we don’t speak Italian all that well, and b) we wouldn’t hand over the cash.  Then she asked us if we used the stairs to get to our 4th floor apartment.   Since there is no elevator and unfortunately I cannot scale the outside of a building or levitate I told her that yes, in fact we did use the stairs. Then she says that everyone pays 10 Euro to clean the stairs, which is strange because she never rang our neighbor Babbo Natale’s doorbell. 

Basically I just kept saying, “Mi dispiace, non so [I’m sorry, I don’t know],” over and over until she went away.  All together this exchange probably took around 10 minutes.  And then laughing about it took another 5.  We’re going to have to ask the staff about this one tomorrow morning.

This morning was the last part of the Arcadia orientation.  We went to this farm called Azienda Agraria Orsini about 30 minutes outside of Perugia.  It is a family owned farm and about 60 acres large, which is very big compared to the average Italian farms which are only five acres.  They produce a lot of things including olive oil and wine.  The owner took us into his house, which was a lot smaller than we had thought and told us that it was built in the 17th Century. Amazing.  He took us into one of the back rooms where there were two little old ladies (the nice kind) who taught us how to make pasta. I never knew it was so easy, just mix one egg to every 100 grams of flour you use and roll it out, cut it up, and then cook it within 24 hrs.  I’m definitely going to be trying to make it on my own.

IMG_1202.JPG

They were machines at rolling out the dough. Rolling circles around everyone who tried to help out.  It was interesting to see a more rural and smaller side of Italy.  Everyone who took us around were volunteers, and you could tell that they loved sharing their culture with other people.  I bought a bottle of olive oil, because its phenomenal, so much better than the mass produced stuff.

I’m starting to really become comfortable in Perugia.  Learning the lay of the land and being able to get myself around pretty easily.  I must look like I know what I’m doing too because an Italian couple asked me for directions the other day.  I didn’t know where it was which was kind of a setback, but at least they thought I knew what I was doing!

I love the slow pace of everything; they don’t seem to stress about anything and just roll with the punches.  I could really get used to this.


Location: Perugia, Italy