Tag Archives: Catalonia

Hola de Barcelona!

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Hola! My experience in Barcelona so far has been crazy since I got here!

 

After my first ever flight to Europe, I arrived in Barcelona on September first to the welcoming, smiling faces of the IES staff and my fellow study abroad students. After a quick meeting telling me where I was staying, I jumped in a taxi with my newest friend at the time and we were on our way to our dorm, Col.legi Major Sant Jordi. Our RA Tatiana was waiting at the front door to greet us and bring us up to our rooms, and what did you know, my new friend and I were neighbors!

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I quickly became acquainted with my fabulous roommate and the rest of the IES students that live in our dorm, and I am happy to say that I love every single one of them! We all get along really well, so it’s been awesome going out together.

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My first weekend here, my friends and I decided to be as touristy as possible and go on a bus tour. We went all over the city, seeing amazing sights such as artist Antoni Gaudi’s Parc G�ell (an amazing park) and Sagrada Fam�lia (a church still being built even after his death), the Barcelona futb�l stadium, Palau Reial (the Royal Palace), among may other amazing sights.

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On the first day of class, I did not have all of my normal classes. We started the first Monday of classes with only our Spanish language class, and that lasted through Wednesday. Our area studies classes then started on Thursday, and this week is the first full week of all of our classes. So far, I am really enjoying all of mine. I am taking two Psychology classes, a class on the history of Barcelona in which I will have the opportunity to travel around the city and explore with my class, and a class about the food and culture of Spain, all along with my Spanish class.

 

The nightlife is absolutely insane. Club promoters are constantly sending out emails trying to get you to come out with them every night, but it was easy to quickly learn how to balance the nightlife and my daily class life, just like it was easy to learn at Penn State.

 

So far, I have been to two of the beaches that are here. During my first week I went to Barceloneta after my class, the coastal area of Barcelona. The beach was beautiful, with crystal clear blue water and a long, beautiful beach. The only downside was that it was extremely crowded so it was difficult to find a decent size spot for the group of seven of us. The second beach was Sitges, a town only about a 45-minute train ride from Barcelona. This was probably the most beautiful beach I have ever been to, with perfect water, perfect sand, perfect space, perfect everything!

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Also located in Sitges is the Church of Sant Bartolomeu i Santa Tecla, a gorgeous 17th century Gothic church located right on the beach.

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On Sunday night, I went to the Festival for Catalan Independence at the Arc de Triomf, located near the Born District barrio in the city. This celebration recognizes the battle that Catalan fought against Spain to become an independent state. Although the Catalans lost the battle, this festival recognizes their fight to separate themselves in the past and their efforts to continue to do so in a non-violent way.

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I have only been here for eleven days, so I am excited for what is still to come!



Location: Barcelona, Spain

Barcelona

Ciao Tutti,

A week or so ago, my ISC (Italian Student Companion), Silvio, had about ten of his friends over for dinner.  I am happy to report that I was actually able to carry a conversation with them and understand the general ideas of what they were talking to each other about.  We even played the Italian version of the game, Mafia.  This was quite a challenge, but a great and fun experience!

Changing topics completely, last weekend I went to Barcelona.  I arrived late on a Thursday night and took a train from the airport into the city center.  By the time I got into the city center, the metro had stopped running (after midnight) so I had to take a taxi to my hostel.  My hostel had a 91% review on HostelWorld.com, but I was immensely disappointed.  I did not realize that the hostel only had a common bathroom in the hallway of every floor.  I am so used to staying in hostels that have a bathroom in each room that this took a bit of getting used to.

On Friday, I took a free walking tour to see the architecture of one of Barcelona’s most famous architects – Gaudi.  His buildings made me feel like I was in Whoville and a world of Dr. Seuss, but they were really cool from the outside.  It cost upwards of 18 euros to go in, so I decided that the views from the outside were good enough for me.  We also saw a church that he designed over around 85 years ago that is still being built.  It is a very complex church and they say it will not be done for at least another 25-30 years!  That one complex building!

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One of the houses Gaudi desgined

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Another one of the houses Gaudi desgined

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One of the three facades of Gaudi’s church – the Sagrada Famiglia.  Only two are finished.  This is the Nativity Facade.

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The Passion Facade.  The Glory Facade just started construction.

After my walking tour, I took a hop on-hop off bus tour to see all of Barcelona.  Barcelona is such a spread out city that the bus company had two different lines.  It took me 6 hours to complete both lines, but I was happy I did it.

On Saturday, it poured the whole day.  By this point, I had become a pro on navigating Barcelona’s metro and decided to go to the Picasso Museum.  The Picasso Museum was a homage to Picasso’s older, lesser known works.  All I knew about Picasso before this was that he painted “Scream,” but was very intrigued by his life story.  He moved around a lot and changed his artistic style about once or twice a year. 

After the Picasso Museum, I decided to go to a restaurant to have typical Catalonian food – tapas.  They are basically a bunch of small samples, so you order two or three and try a bit of everything.  I had ham & cheese croquets and something very similar to sesame chicken.  It was really, really good.

Then, even though it was raining, I embarked on my voyage to find Barceloneta Beach.  By this point my map was useless because it was raining so hard, so I decided to follow the signs to the beach – big mistake.  I wound up 3 kilometers out of my way and had to backtrack to see it.  I was happy when I finally got there, though.  It looked like a scene out of 2012, the waves were about four feet high (pretty high for the Mediterranean Sea and I saw the cliché surfboarder walking away from the sea.  It was a beautiful beach, though. 

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The Beach

After this, I decided to walk and catch a metro back to my hostel.  After an hour rest, I went to the only bar in Barcelona that was showing the Penn State v. Michigan State game for the Big Ten Semifinals.  I think I managed to find the only empty bar in Barcelona, but a combination of a Penn State win and some nostalgic food like quesadillas and chicken tenders was enough to make my day.

 

Sunday was an absolutely gorgeous day.  I loved it!  I woke up early in the morning to walk the “La Rambla”, a very famous tourist promenade where artists and cafes line the streets.  I decided to grab a seat and order “Churros and Chocolate” and people watch.  They were so good.

 


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La Rambla

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Chocolate & Churros

After that, I took another walking tour of Barcelona.  This one was a tour of Barcelona’s historical center.  It was beautiful and reminded me a lot of Rome.  I gained some insight into the history of Barcelona that was absolutely fascinating like the fact that Barcelona used to be occupied by the Romans when it was a walled city (hence why it reminded me of historical Rome).  Also, I learned that the people of Barcelona actually consider themselves to be Catalonian, not Spanish.  They speak Catalonian and Spanish and are constantly protesting the Spanish government for their independence.  I also got to see where the King of Catalonia greeted Christopher Columbus after discovering the New World.  The final piece of trivia I learned was that Barcelona could have built the Eifel Tower instead of Paris, but the government thought it was too weird looking and built an arch instead – big mistake!

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The steps that Christopher Columbus was welcomed back on

After the walking tour, I took the metro to Park Gϋell – another one of Gaudi’s projects.  It was declared a World Heritage Site a few years ago, so I figured a trip to Barcelona would not be complete without seeing it.  Getting there was a difficult task.  After taking the metro, it was a kilometer walk to a series of eight escalators to take you to the top of a mountain.  At the top of this mountain, you had to walk down hill about a half of a kilometer to get to the park.  By this point, I was exhausted.  It was so worth it, though.  I saw the longest bench I have ever seen and a bunch of other cool looking houses, sculptures, and architecture! 

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View from the Park

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I think Dr. Seuss used to live here…..

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An overhang at the park.

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The other park entrance.

On my way back to the hostel to grab my bag, I found a Dunkin Coffee (they don’t call them Dunkin Donuts over there) and splurged on the biggest ice coffee I have ever had.  In Italy, I can only get an espresso – they really do not have American coffee.  It was probably the best cup of coffee I’ve ever had (probably because I haven’t had one in so long).  I topped it off with a ham & cheese panini and a chocolate frosted donut with sprinkles – the icing on the cake.

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After grabbing my bag at my hostel, I went to the airport and came back to Rome.  In my next blog post (very soon, probably later today), I’ll bring you up to date with everything I did this week and weekend, post a few pictures from the past month, and post the bucket list I made of things I need to do while I’m in Rome.

Ciao,

Mike


Location: Barcelona, Spain