8 days, 5 cities, and crazy times!
I don't even know where to begin to describe this amazing experience; words will never fully describe it in all its justice, but here goes! Shout out to my mamcita and Jim who are currently trekking through New Zealand in celebration of their wedding anniversary and mama's birthday! Thank you for always keeping me grounded, but letting me spread my wings and fly!
I basically lost a day of my life because well...I never slept to end Friday and I never woke up to a Saturday. Our flight via Ryanair left at 6:35am on Saturday morning, the tube closes at 12am and opens again at 6am, therefore the best and only real way to get there was my bus, walking, and then coach. We left the flat at 2am and made our way over to Stanstead Airport. It's roundabout travels and inconvenient times like these that allow students with small budgets to travel far and wide. On the positive side, it makes for some pretty good laughs. The night buses in London are notorious for drunks because they run all night, so there we were - at least eight girls and one very tall boy with all our luggage amongst the drunks and the annoyed bus driver. It also doesn't help that the buses are usually late because most of the drivers figure that its late, they're picking up the pissed (drunk in London lingo!) who don't really have a sense of time anyway!
* the over 40 crowd (umm...hi gross dude, do you realize you could be my dad?!?!)
* creepy, self absorbed weirdos (hi, could you BE anymore into yourself?)
so please imagine how I felt when a 40+ year old Indian bus driver handed me his number on my out....he had the broken, just from India, English accent and everything! On the plus side...if the GBP decides to gives the USD a run for its money overnight by the end of my stay here in London (knock on wood!), I might give him a call just for the free meal...JUST KIDDING!
* travel over to the leaning Tower with all your luggage, it's what all the cool people are doing
* take a normal picture for Mom with the tower behind you
* take a pushing/kicking/leaning picture with the tower. I wish I had taken a picture of all the people doing this, because literally EVERYONE in Pisa is either taking a picture, having their picture taken, or trying to sell you something.

Firenze is one of the most walkable cities in the entire world. We were able to get around so easily on foot - it was wonderful! No car, no parking, no worries! Unfortunately we weren't able to see a lot of the famous pieces of art because a lot of the museums are closed on Mondays, but that didn't rain on our parade! We visited The Dome, shopped at the San Lorenzo Market, ate gelato, GIANT calzones, and by night fall; half of us headed to Rome while the others headed to Milan.
So basically the next two days completely fused together because well we didn't sleep very much! Why? Because there was just TOO much to see and NOT enough time to see it all. The hostel
situation was kind of interesting...7 people in one room, one bathroom which was split up into a shower stall (which we thought was the closet) and then the shower/sink area. The hostel provided us a map and the four of us literally walked from West to East the first day from the Vatican City and then North to South the second day. Roma with all its history is a truly great city. Beautiful? Not so much. Lots of graffiti and its been overly commercialized with its McDonald's (right across from the Pantheon!) but luckily no Starbucks (can't stand a chance from the Italia Cappucino!).
In the 72 hours that we were there, we probably only slept 12 of them and were most likely walking the remaining 60 of them, if not eating AND walking. Spanish steps are gorgeous at night. Italian men are quite the gentlemen! I love that they were usually all in suits, at least the ones in Rome. It wasn't an uncommon sight to see a huge crowd of them all dressed. Sometimes old. Sometimes young. Sometimes in between. Downside of Rome: Camera was acting up and being high maintenance, so sadly, I don't have any pictures after the Vatican city to the Colosseum...but I'm working on it!
My favorite part of Rome would have to be....the Trevi Fountain. We saw it at sunset. They were doing some minor repairs to the Fountain so everyone was standing patiently in anticipation. I don't know if it was because of this arrangement or if it was the time of day, but their was something about that fountain that is so beautiful and amazing. I definitely felt a sense of "Italian-ness" as ironic as the sounds given that the crowd was probably 85% tourists and 15% Italian merchants. Nonetheless, I threw two coins in so I'm coming back to Italy someday and finding love in Italy as well!
Thursday-Sunday, 10.23-26.08 - Destination: Madrid, Spain

My favorite part of this trip had to be...the CHOCOLATE CON CHURROs (extremely SINFUL! but OH SO good!!!) and rowing boats in the middle of Park Retiro. For about 4.5 Euro for a boat fitting up to 4 people, you had a little piece of heaven for about 45mins to an hour. It was fabulous. Don't mess with the Spanish with living the good life!
We were back to FREEZING London by 930pm on Sunday! It was freezing. It's cloudy with patches of sunshine and the daytime high is at 30 degrees F. Oh and btw, it snowed last night! Not enough to stick, but it was the first time it had snowed in London in October for 70 years! It was truly amazing, magical, and giddy! I'm finally living in the winter wonderland of boots, coats, and public transportation...plus the funny accent.
One of my flatmates is SUPER into Halloween. So yesterday, in the joy of Halloween, Gillian and I carved pumpkins for our flat. Unfortunately, Halloween isn't as hyped up over here as it is in the United States, which is a bit of bummer, but here were our masterpieces!
2 comments:
Wow, I feel like a stalker because you literally JUST wrote this, but in my defense I added your blog to my reader, and yeah I get posts immediately... :) Anyway, I'm so glad you enjoyed Spain and that my recommendations helped. Ah, I'm so jealous, but I'm so glad you had a good time!
Kimmie-chan! I was eating a delicious cupcake the other day and thought of you :-). Can I just say that your blog posts, though very engaging, are much too long? I feel like I have to brew a cup of tea, get into my comfy pj's and dedicate some time to settle down on the couch with my laptop to find out what you're up to. Maybe you should try twittering??
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