Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Where did you learn your Manners?? Oxford.

This past weekend I had the pride and joy of visiting Oxford and London in the UK. It was one of the best weekends I've had and hey, I might have found my calling, maybe teaching in London someday? Seriously, the first place in Europe I've wanted to live. Okay, enough rambling, here's the PICS!
Part of an Oxford Library. This library must have ANY book that was ever published in the UK.
The place where JK Rowling and JRR Tolkien supposedly got some inspiration.
Bridge connecting books to...more books
Turf Tavern where Bill Clinton got high....yup
Christ Church College - one of the if not thee most prestigious colleges in the world
Amazing Chalk pictures in London (40+ hours spent so far) Obama, Malcom X, JFK & MLKJ
The London Eye
Parliament and Big Ben
Parliament
Westminster Abbey
"Yes mom, I really am coming home in a week. But I want to teach in London...."
The Millennium Bridge
The London Bridge (faux because the real one's in Arizona? yes)
The Tower of London. They might fill the mote for the 2012 Olympics
Hyde Park
Supposedly Elvis Day 5/9/09? Truth or not, there were about 20 of these guys. Awesome
My amazing tour guide Rob getting upset at me because I kept sneaking pictures of him. This was pre-strangling...
Buckingham Palace
China Town

Saturday, May 2, 2009

5 Cities, 5 Hours

Disclaimer: I would like to say before I add any pictures that I officially despise trains, and train stations, and train conductors.

Yesterday Gina and I went to Cinque Terre. There was a late start to the morning so we were half-running/half-mom walking to the train station. When we got there we discovered that all of the automated machines that take credit cards were "not working". Thank you Florence's Labor Day, thank you. I was lucky enough to have cash and get two tickets to Riomaggiore for the two of us, instead of waiting in the 40-some-person line. It would have been nice to have a direct train there but no, no luck yesterday. We got into Pisa and then waited an hour and a half for the train to La Spezia (still not to Riomaggiore). We got into La Spezia and had no idea where to go from there. An old man took refuge on us and tried to help us, we ended up ditching him, finding where we had to go and then got on the next train to Riomaggiore.

Finally, we have some luck, our confidence was boosted when we found the trails, because we're thinking "Yeah, we know what we're doing, yeah, we rock" (This is where guys would chest bump, but we didn't do that). We walked ALL five cities: Riomaggiore, Manarola, Corniglia, Vernazza, and Monterosso. Let me say, starting at Riomaggiore was easy but when we got to Vernazza we were dripping sweat. The trails were pretty narrow, I felt like I needed some carabiners with me to scale the cliffs we were climbing, or at least some of those poker sticks the professional hikers use (just kidding). Needless to say, we made it to Monterosso and conquered all five cities in under five hours.

Now here's more fun transportation stuff. We were supposed to leave Monterosso and get back into La Spezia. We ended up getting on a train going in the opposite direction of where we wanted to go. We apparently looked at the arrival monitor instead of the departure monitor, doh... We arrived back into Monterosso, an hour later, now an hour set back from getting home. We got into La Spezia and realized we just missed the direct train to Florence. So, we bought tickets to Florence. The tickets we bought weren't direct trips to Florence, because we were supposed to get off and take several connecting trains, which is what the conductor angrily told us when he came by, quarreled with us in Italian, and then punched our tickets. Don't worry, we made them direct trips to Florence, where we got off and waited for another train when we got to Pisa. We figured if worse comes to worse, we'd just hide in the bathrooms until we got into Pisa. We made it back to Florence, just before midnight, and decided to forget Venice Saturday, we'll do it Sunday. 

The pictures though were well worth all of the transportation messes and catastrophes, enjoy, I know I did!
Riomaggiore to Manarola (the first trail)
Via della Amore (the walk of love) This was the only paved part of the path. The walkway itself was awesome because the walls were full of different paintings symbolizing  "love"
At the top of Manarola, the city was pretty small and we didn't end up getting a shot of the coast of Manarola.
Corniglia - the houses/apartments were painted each a different color. It was absolutely beautiful.
Coming up to Vernazza
Vernazza, my favorite city. We soaked our feet in the beach water for a few minutes and then kept on treking.
Part of the trail - an arch over a river/waterfall.
One the hike to Monterosso. This hike was the longest, just under two hours but the most scenic.
Monterosso, one of the best sights of the day, also because then we were almost done.
Kentucky waterfall in Europe.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Pompei, What Happened? Oh Yeah, Vesuvius

At the end of the Amalfi Coast adventure, we went to Pompeii, which was destroyed by Mount Vesuvius in 79AD. In the 1700's it was accidentally discovered and now serves as a historical site.

Gina and I in Pompeii.
This is a plaster mold of what an actual person looked like. When the ruins were being discovered, because people were covered with feet of ash, the molds of bodies were still in tact. They took plaster, filled the molds and now have plaster molds on site depicting what people looked like in the final moments before they died, due to the lava and weight of ash/pumice.
The postcard picture of Pompeii. It may be hard to see but after the third column from the left there is a small white head, which is the head of Jupiter.

Standing in an old cathedral/basilica. Because the amount of ash was so extreme, all of the roofs in ancient Pompeii collapsed and now, if roofs exist, they are only to mirror what roofs would have looked like before 79AD.
Yes, this is probably what you think it is. There were 31 brothels in Pompeii and these images were on the walls, as a display of what the woman had to "offer". 

More Capri

The famous limoncello, which uses the lemons grown in Capri.
A residential side of Capri, most others are cliffs and uninhabited. 
A statue symbolizing the watchmen of Capri in earlier times during war. Now it is looked at as welcoming.
Another residential side of Capri, away from the tourist attractions.
Leaving Capri and heading back to Maiori.

Don't Drink the Water, it's Salty

Capri
The White Grotto
The Green Gratto
The postcard picture of Capri
Sittin' On the Dock of the Bay

I'm on a Boat, to Capri

Last weekend I went to the Amalfi Coast and it was the most relaxing trip I've had so far. We started in Naples (Napoli), went to Capri for a day, and then Pompeii the next. The weather was perfect, the food was delicious, and the sights, well, I'll let you decide on them.

Waiting in Naples to leave to go to Maiori, the coastal city we stayed before going to Capri.
Leaving Maiori for Capri.
Going to Capri at 8 in the morning.
On the way to Capri
Mount Vesuvius - in 79 AD it erupted and destroyed the entire city of Pompeii. The cities surrounding the mountain have rebuilt themselves, but because the mountain is still active, the cities suffer the risk of being completely demolished again. 

Do you know, the Duomo?

The Spaniards came April 17-19th and we went up to the Duomo in the center of Florence. It is one the most (if not the most) attractive and historical buildings in Florence. Inside the cathedral itself there is a moral in the dome depicting the levels from hell to heaven. I'll let the pictures do the talking. 
The depiction of hell within the dome.
Vasari's finished fresco with the three main levels: hell, life on earth, and heaven.
The view after climbing up 463 stairs, and no there is not an elevator.
View from the top of the Duomo.
Climbing up the stairs. Luckily the woman behind me survived. I haven't heard someone breathe that hard in a long time.