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28 April 2011

Spring Break

Spring Break was great! This will be a super quickie rundown of all 11 days.

Thursday (april 14)
6pm. Bus to San Sebastian! In one station where we stopped I was going to use the bathroom and I put in my 20 cents to open the door and…it was jammed. So I was out 20 cents and I had to get back on the bus. :\

Friday
6:40am. Emily picked me up at the Sanse bus station and we walked along the river back to her apartment to take a nap before beginning our festivities. San Sebastian was a lot of pretty views from hilltops and beautiful blue ocean and sitting in nature-y places to chat. San Sebastian is a lot calmer than Granada, just less people out and about. It was nice. I liked it a lot. :)

Saturday
11:55pm. We got on a bus to Barcelona, and were told the rules of the bus ride: Basically you can do whatever you want, get up and move, eat, go to sleep, etc., except smoke or take off your shoes. What? The Spanish have a really weird not-okay-ness with barefootedness. One teensy aspect of Spain I will not particularly miss…

Sunday
Palm Sunday! Also, day one of Barcelona! We made friends with the metro and then saw lots of pretty things, including a park with a hedge labyrinth in it (fun!), the Sagrada Familia, Park Guell, and the Mediterranean Sea (although only from afar today). We went out for dinner to the Travel Bar (suggested by our hostel) and ordered the “cheapies” meal—buy a drink and get chili con carne for free! It was still more expensive than granadino free tapas everywhere with every drink anyway, but it was decent, and we had a funny conversation with our obviously English waitress to explain to her what tinto de verano is. Then we went home and turned in for the night pretty soon after a little game of hearts with Hannah and her friend Rebecca…yep we were in the same hostel…not a coincidence but still fun :)

Monday
More famous sights (a castle and an olympic stadium for example, nbd) and actually being by the sea in Barcelona. We saw the cruise ship port which made me think of my parents’ obsession…everyone else feel free to give them a hard time about leaving on a cruise less than a week after I get home ;) Anyway, we made ourselves grilled cheese sandwiches for dinner with the cheap bread we’d bought in San Sebastian and the cheese we’d bought today at the market and the olive oil in the hostel’s kitchen as a butter substitute.
And then we used our last metro pass to go to the bus station for a very uncomfortable overnight bus to Alicante…

Tuesday
4:30am. We got in to the Alicante bus station where our wonderful friend Jordan was waiting for us to lead us to some couches where we could crash for a few more hours before our much-looked-forward-to Beach Day. Unfortunately, when we woke up again, it was cloudy, and stayed that way all day…but we were determined to enjoy a day next to the ocean, and somehow I got sunburned even though I didn’t actually see the sun for hardly more than an hour all day. There was also a castle to see in Alicante, so we did that between beach-bumming sessions.
After a bit of turrón (a very alicantino almond-and-honey dessert) and a bit of a really weird sci-fi movie, Emily and I were headed back to the bus station for another overnight to Granada. We had a lovely 23 hours in Alicante. :)

Wednesday
My hometown! There’s a bunch of funny stories that go with this day that are better told in person I think, so ask me when I get home! By the end of the day though, we were e.x.h.a.u.s.t.e.d. So we slept for 13 hours.

Thursday
We had chocolate at every meal today, from the breakfast pastries (at 1pm) to the mid-afternoon ice cream, to the crepes for dinner, and the daily dose of Mr. Choc (tasty off-brand Twix from the Sanse grocery store) when we got back to our sleeping quarters. Of perhaps more importance, we went to the Alhambra and the Carmen de los Martires and had lots of nice plaza-sitting. I have decided after this week of spanish travel that Granada has the best plazas (and so many!)

Friday
Slept in a little then got croissants for breakfast then hopped on a bus to Sevilla! Sadness=rain in the south of spain during spring break. Oh well……
Once in Sevilla we got a vegetable sandwich for lunch (haha) and then had some nice damp wanderings with Jordan to the cathedral, the Maria Luisa Park, and the Plaza de España—that last one was (is) one of my favorite things I’ve been to yet in Spain.
When Ali and Merijke got in, we went for some super-yum meat-free tapas! I guess the weather maybe was just trying to remind us that it was Good Friday…not really a sunshiney kind of day, you know?

Saturday
We went to a grocery store to gather supplies for dinner tonight for roughly 80 cents apiece: scrambled eggs with onions and red pepper and cheese, and bread, and wine. …and Mr. Choc for dessert :)
We did some more wandering and playing on playgrounds until the free walking tour of the city which was full of fun little stories and rain. Also we caught a glimpse of the only Semana Santa procession that hadn’t been cancelled since we’d been there, so that was nifty. (The procession floats are so old and ornate that if it even looks like it’s going to rain they pretty much just go ahead and cancel the procession.)
We chilled on the [covered] terrace awhile after dinner till it got dark and then we went to bed! My last hostel night for…a little bit. (I’m going to Madrid and Toledo this upcoming weekend!)

Sunday
Happy Easter!! We went to the cathedral where we saw parts of another procession (the sun came out today!) and listened to the Liturgy of the Hours sung in Latin and then attended mass. So pretty and nice. :)
We got some celebratory ice cream (esp because Ali had given it up for Lent) and then went back to the hostel to pack up and head out. My friends off to Italy and me back home to Granada. I finished my Lenten goal of reading the Catechism during the bus ride, after a nice little conversation with the guy next to me who is from the Canary Islands and is hoping to get a teaching job in the States next year.
Getting home, it was nice to know I didn’t have to live out of a backpack anymore. Also, I was really looking forward to comida on Monday after over a week of eating on a college-kid travel-budget.

Now, I’m back into the swing of things. I have started one of my papers that’s due in 2 weeks. What? haha… Just a month or so ish left here. So weird!

Well, it’s my bedtime. Goodnight and thanks for reading!!

14 April 2011

Hello, April! How are you half over already?


It’s finally Spring Break!! I’m about to hop on a bus to San Sebastian for a nice little travel loop vacation with the wonderful Emily Puetz. I get to see her “hometown” and then we’re going to Barcelona, then Alicante to say hello to the Mediterranean and Jordan, then to Granada, then Sevilla for an Easter TU reunion (with Ali and Jordan). We are going to be tired but we’re going to see lots of cool things! Vale la pena, por supuesto.

I most likely won’t have any internet access until I get back home on Easter. Until then, have happy Holy Week!

10 April 2011

The Lateliness

Yesterday I had the pleasure of showing off Granada to Ali and her parents. We had a beautiful (kind of hot) sunny day, and I hope they had fun! I certainly enjoyed taking a day off from being a student here to show them around.
Friday was a weird day and I got sunburned and I wasn’t very hungry all day but then I got to sit in the shade in the grass in the park with some lovely friends for some wonderful conversation, and then I went home to do homework.
Thursday was full of planning Spring Break which I am looking forward to, and getting a milkshake with the choir girls after rehearsal.
Wednesday’s graffiti made me happy: I saw “Sonríe” written on the sidewalk on the way to class, and then class was actually canceled when I got to the door of the room—almost disappointing after the more than a mile uphill walk—but  “Buenos Días :)” was written on a wall on the way back from class, so I got some gelato and went to sit on the terraza at IES and kind of do homework until the sun went down.
Tuesday was nothing special except I got to register for classes for next Fall back at TU.
Monday I had my midterm in econ which I think went fine. Monday is class all day day.
Last Sunday it was rainy and I let my hair dry naturally because I thought I didn’t have to go anywhere besides church and then I remembered I had a show to watch for theater, which I didn’t even like that much after seeing it, maybe just because it caused me to have to walk through the chill and rain for over an hour by the time it was all said and done.
Last Saturday Hannah came over and we made tea plus tostadas with nutella and watched Orgullo y Perjuicio. Fun times.

Just in general, all the plants are visibly alive now and the trees have leaves so the plaza has shade and the flowers are blooming so I’m experiencing a few Spanish alergías but it’s okay because it feels like summertime even though I still have a lot of work to do this week (and the following ones).
So, if anyone feels inclined to pray for me that I may be able to stay focused and do well in all these classes that do transfer back to TU for real major credit, that would probably help me a lot. Thanks :)

02 April 2011

I love vocal thirds


This weekend Pepita went out of town for a spiritual retreat or something, so I have the house to myself. The first thing I’ve done to take advantage of this was to unplug my headphones and turn up country music to sing along with. I haven’t indulged in country music yet this semester, but it felt appropriate yesterday (and today) for some reason. Mostly I hear American pop music in stores and spanish pop music other places. And choral music in choir, of course.

The past week or so I have finally gotten to enjoy better weather than Tulsa. When I see the midwest’s forecast of today: 40, tomorrow: 79, the next day: 53 and rain, I really appreciate the predictability of Spanish weather. We’ve been having high 60s to mid 70s (gradually increasing daily for at least a week now) and mostly sunny or partly cloudly. Perfect weather for getting sunburned on park benches while reading, or getting sunburned because you left the window above the bed open while taking a siesta…that might have happened yesterday…

Remember how I’m reading one book in English and one in Spanish per month here? Well last month I read Oliver Twist and then El barbero de Sevilla. (It’s a play but it still counts.) (Also I highly recommend both of those.) For my April English book I decided to continue the tradition of books-that-Disney-loosely-based-movies-off-of and checked out The Jungle Books. I like it so far, although it’s already very obvious that Disney told his story writers not to read Kipling’s book (which he did, after he vetoed the original story board that was written by someone who had read the books, as I learned from watching the bonus features on the Special Edition DVD last summer, haha).

I’ve been preoccupied with having spring fever and anticipating class registration coming up this week and it’s been difficult to focus on schoolwork lately. But this happens every year. Hopefully I’ll get over it soon so I can buckle down on research papers and creative projects, get them done, and enjoy the end of the semester relatively stress-free.

In cooking class this week we learned how to make buñuelos! They weren’t as good as the ones we had in Valencia but same idea. And much more economical, I’m sure.

From Dwight to Rascs, I am having a great Saturday morning. Happy weekend to you all!