Friday, July 28, 2006

24...

It's amazing what can happen in a day and a night. 24 little hours, strung one after the other, sometimes slowly, sometimes fast, sometimes so filled with beauty you could burst... or cry.

I had tears in my eyes multiple times yesterday. From the breathtaking (and dangerous) cliffside hike from Doolin to the Cliffs of Moher, where cows looked out at me from soft, sleepy eyes and horses followed my solitary lead... from chance encounters with a fellow hosteller along the 'unofficial' path through farmyards and over electric fences, jumping barbed wire together to get the visitors center at the end of a wild trek...

To evening musical bliss, a concert of three, harp and fiddle mingling with guitar and it's lispy voiced and passionate singer... all those Scottish tunes I once thought were irish, Shetland variations that run shivers up and down my spine, aires that bring tears bubbling to my closed eyes as I feel the familiarity of home and beauty, tangled up in one another, washing over me and into my pores... giddy flirtations with the swiss counter man after the show, a genuinely sweet smile and one of the only french accents (when speaking english) to tickle that can't-help-but-smile spot... talking to the harper while getting a signature one of three new (and expensive...) cds that I couldn't help but get (it's forever ringing in my ears: support local artists! even if it means another ham and cheese sandwich for dinner...)... getting motivated to try my own hand at the harp, if only to play a single aire...

To walking back to the hostel, past midnight, alone, on dark and foggy streets, as soft mist tickles my face and leads me on, past the door, along a dark side road, where all I can here is distant giggles from a camp ground... water, dripping hesitantly from a forgotten hose at a nearby construction site... the sound of my feet, echoing against the pebbled path... and the silence and weight of the air in between. Tears again. The fog wrapped around me like a comforting blanket, and standing silently facing the Atlantic, I was overjoyed to find myself happily alone.

Home again home again... to find an irish eccentric and his french ex-girlfriend sitting at tables and sipping tea in the hostel's common room... 'it's cozy in here!' i say, and am invited to join them... there's still hot water in the kettle... and we talk, about france, about america, about ireland... about people and nuances and differences... about sex and lovers and sudoku... and it's 4 am and my mind is wondering how the day, the night, have continued to be ever more amazing...

The night continues. I went to bed at perhaps 7, and slept very little. But I am up and overwhelmed by yesterday, by last night, by the unexpected, the encounters, the serendipidy upon which I let myself soar.

I have the invitation to go back to Galway tomorrow, with a free place to stay and a promised 'insider's' introduction to the city and all the fringe events going on as part of the arts week. I have someone who is now rather jealous that i have a new 'friend' coming today... and am myself wondering how this is going to work, who this guy is, how it will be...and I'm due in at the coffee shop today to browse through more cds, refrain from buying them, and practice my french while trying not to add a third peg to the messily wonderful adventure that has been this last week.

Doolin has seen me emerge from a chrysalis, for better... and maybe verging on dangerous. I have talked with many people from many places and had a nearly constant smile dancing upon my lips since I arrived.

I will never forget the time spent here.

And I will be home in less than a week...

Life. Fascinates me.

If i said i met a sort of buddha last night that offered me a path to a certain strand of enlightenment, would that sound strange?

All I know is that I don't want to crawl back into the chrysalis.

The time for life is now...

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Doodleooodleooodleoodle Doolin!

So. Drumshanbo got me all depresso about small towns/villages. Doolin is lifting my head high again! The traditional music hotspot of the west coast, it's cheerful, got cute Swiss French guys working at the counter of the local music coffee shop that use their charm to get you spending more than you were planning to (okay, so there was only one of him, but man! What a cutie! And now I am the proud owner of Salsa Celtica, a crazy mix of salsa and celtic music that I never thought possible but LOVE! And I'll be heading to a concert tomorrow night featuring the fiddler from the group, plus an amazing harpest! Sweet!)

The hostel I'm in is fantastic, even though I've only been within its door for a total of about an hour... it's right on a little river, very rustic and homey, with an australian (?) owner who's smiling and helpful. Plus, it's over-run with french folks... so I got to flex the french windpipes both in the coffee shop and in the hostel room! (Seriously, I hear the familiar sounds and I'm drawn like a fly to fire...). I talked with a friendly German from frankfurt for a while in the hostel room, and a girl from Wisconsin. Somehow, my social juices have found an outlet with the omnipresent question 'where ya from?' and I need to figure out how to tweak it to stay social once I return to the states. But I can say that I'm super glad i picked small hostels for my alone-travels. They create the perfect crucible of conversation, if only you have the courage to light the first match...

okay, 20 minute limit here, so I'm off...

Live music in all the pubs tonight... the swiss coffee shop guy said we'd probably bump into each other later... which I kind of want... but Andrew, my irish contact, is coming in on friday, and I simply need to put a halt on my sometime unintentional flirting. What's become of me? (it's the accents...)

ciao!

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Galway...

... I could see myself here.

off to King Ubu in the beautiful drizzle! (reminds me of dear ol' p-town...)

Bursting with smiles!!

Whew! How much things can change in a matter of days... A mere five days ago I was sick with home-thoughts and eager to hop the plane back... now I'm giddy-sick with smiles, wondering about the coincidences and serendipidies life can bring.

Galway has been good to me. I hesitate to say 'I love this city!' because frankly, though I arrived on sunday afternoon, I haven't seen much of the city in the daylight hours. But nonetheless... the vibe here has me riding high! The difference between village-Drumshanbo and one-track minded musicians to a hodge-podge of small-city coastal folk from around the world, congregating and smiling and out for a good time... I'd forgotten how much I like intimate cities. It reminds me of home here. A good place to be for a homesick heart...

Travelling alone, I often have the fear of clamming up, turning in on myself, closing off and enjoying alone-time in the risk of cutting off potential connections with others. So far, that hasn't happened here, though today I'm looking forward to a bit of city-exploration with my own curious mind to keep me company. But ever since arriving it's been a nearly go-go-go with conversations and late nights and new people and familiar accents (oh america... never appreciated you so much until i went away...).

When I first arrived in Galway, I knew I was in a good place as I walked out of the bus station, an hour or two to kill before meeting up with my couchsurfing/hospitality club contact, and there, gleaming in the sunlight (!) before me was an inviting sprawl of grass, littered with frisbee players, jugglers, readers, writers, eaters, thinkers, and nappers... exhausted from a last late night of pubs and music in Drumshanbo, I decided to join up with the latter group and snuggled up next to my backpack for a sun-infused doze. When I awoke, my morale was restored, my spirits were high, and I sat smiling to myself, watching those around me weave a familiar story of college-town culture.

Soon enough Kris, my couchsurfing contact, showed up with a friend of his, both of them Polish transfers, and we walked back to his place where I was introduced to a party-ready group of Aussies with whom I was invited to pub-crawl that night. What the hell, my nap-resorted brain said, and after a quick shower on my part, we were off... for a night that didn't quite fit into my favorite-night-life culture, but wasn't bad either. They were quite the drinkers, passed around a joint in a lax hippy bar, and went through at least three pubs, the last of which had a live cover band that my traditional-music-ridden ears appreciated immensely. They were a nice bunch, and I heard some pretty top-notch stories about run-ins with girlfriends' fathers in compromising situations (like being found in a closet, etc.) as well as all the various things one of them had managed to throw up at the end of a heavy night of getting 'legless' (an entirely entact leaf, the outside plastic wrapping of a cigarette container... good lord!). But all in all, it wasn't my scene, and while I was invited by both Richi, the roommate, and Kris himself (who I really enjoyed talking with during the short conversation we had the next morning) to stay for the rest of my Galway days (they do a one-night policy to screen surfers and then invite them on if they pass the chill-person test), I'd already booked two nights in a central hostel and was feeling the need to run my own schedule and pick my own nightly activities.

The best decision. And really, an awesome hostel I've got going. Small, friendly, and filled with connections... I've found the courage to be friendly and chatty, and it's amazing how the key-question 'where ya from?' can open up someone who seems initially shy or closed off. And I managed to over-hear some key conversations within my first hour here, such that I learned that indeed, I am here during one of Galway's biggest festivals - Art's Week - and that there's countless theater, music, parades, and art showings going on every day, including the highly-acclaimed 'My Name is Rachel Corrie', the one-woman show about the 23-year old Olympia Washington girl who was bulldozed while trying to save a Palastinian home from being demolished by israeli troops. On a whim, I decided I'd spend my money here where it's worth it, and I went out and got myself a ticket for that night, as well as another for 'King Ubu' for tonight, a world-premier dark comedy that's supposed to be one of the best plays around and was nearly sold out when I went in.

On my way to Rachel Corrie, the connections began to flood in. On the corner, holding my 'Galway Arts Week' brochure, a friendly face with an American accent asked me if I was heading to the black box theater as well. 'Yes, but i can't say I know exactly where I'm going' 'No worries, two heads better than one right?' Turns out we were just minutes away and nearly the first ones there (irish time IS a bit slower...), so we had ample opportunity to chat. Turns out she's flagstaff, arizona born and raised, but has been living in San Diego up until she decided to travel Europe for six months. However, she's called the Aran islands home for the last two months after -- synchronicities begin -- she'd stayed at the Claddagh hostel, the very one I'm in, and was invited by the boss to work at his other hostel out on the Aran islands. Yesterday was her first time off the island in two months, and she was over specifically for the play.

So here I am with a fellow californian (for the most part) who can tell me anything I want to know about the island I'll be visiting at the end of this week, and who's about to see an American-based play that would affect us in quite a different way than the two other friends of hers who joined us later, one kiwi, the other english(?).

The play painted the picture of a life I knew all too well... a young independent minded dreamer and activist from the northwest, trying to do her part to get involved after living in the same town all her life and feeling like there was more in the world to see and do. It was a life I hadn't seen up close in the past seven months of europe culture, and it was both warming and ripping to be reminded of home, reminded of the life I would return to, and then watch this life develop into death at the age of 23. By the end of the play Dee (the arizona californian) and I were tear-streaked while those around us were walking out with raised eyebrows, critiquing the play, complimenting the actress, talking distantly about the conflict. It really reminded me then how life experience can play into how one is affected by a piece of literature, a show, etc. A old-aged irish man could never feel the same as I did watching that play, just like I could never muster up as much empathy watching a show on the potato famine, simply due to connection with the characters.

In any case, post-play Dee and I walked back the hostel (she was staying there while over in the city) and I invited her to partake in my to-be-created stirfry (finally, a public kitchen! And spotless to boot!) before we would head out to a BBQ of some friends of hers from the hostel working days. Even though I'd promised myself a mellow night, the vibe felt right and I was excited to give galway's night scene another chance with a new group of people. Another wise choice.

Instead of being surrounded by a bunch of heavy drinkers keen on talking about all the past drinking memories while creating new ones, I found myself in another american-heavy international bunch with people who, while also gulping back beers, were interesting to talk to and humourous in a way I could get into. I spent a good while joking around with Dee and a guy from Kentucky, who's Road-island suppressed southern accent (due to school) had me thinking he was irish for the first 5 minutes of conversation (you can tell I've not been used to american accents in a while...). Somehow the conversation, while getting a little more drunken, also turned a bit more philosophical...

we got on the subject of religion, and I ended up talking with a fairly liqoured-up new yorker about her catholic upbringing and the faith she's created for herself from that, and believing in jesus versus god, and the good and bad behind organized religion. Then the focus switched to a relatively sober australian who'd been raised Mormon but left the church around 16, followed soon after by his parents... we had a very interesting talk about all that, and I found myself pouring out philosophizings that have been shut up in the back of my mind for weeks, thanks to language barriers limiting the amount of deep conversation that can take place.

I spoke french for a brief bit with a heavily-accented Provence fellow, and then chatted with the BBQs host, a big, smiling New Zealand kiwi who joked about my light-weight status and the fact that I was talkative and feeling the alcohol's affect after a mere two ciders. He was in no way annoying about it, however, like the night before's group who targetted me - in a joking matter - as a weak american, ordering half pints of cider each time instead of full pints of double-alcohol beer.

Eventually, the Australian, who currently works at Claddagh hostel, was getting ready to leave and accompany the stumbling new yorker home, and I decided to join up for the walk, seeing as how Dee and Kentucky were having some 'deep conversation' in the backyard... before I left her, though, she said I should feel free to cancel my hostel booking for the Aran islands and come out and stay with her, as she'll be moving into her own place come tomorrow.

Sweet!

And so, galway's been treating me quite well, bringing out a happy social side of me, eager for friendly conversation at a deeper level than I've been getting. And today I get to explore the town with arts festival brochure in hand, hitting up gallerys, exhibits, and potentially free concerts all over the easily walkable town!

And what's in store next? Well... for fear of getting into another long-winded story... I'll be heading to Doolin tomorrow afternoon as a base for exploring the cliffs of moher and other picturesque areas in the stark limestone landscape of ireland's western Burren, just an hour or so south of here. And then... an irish fellow by the name of Andrew just might be joining up with me for the aran islands trip...

So... who's this Andrew fellow? Frankly, I can't tell you much... I met him my last night in Drumshanbo, after an entire week of commisserating with Sara over the lack of musicians and such in our age bracket. Skipping out on the last Ceiligh to give my tired legs a rest, and excited for a night devoted to music sessions, I joined Sara on a pub crawl and we managed to find a session with a good deal of 20/30-somethings playing, two of which seemed torn between their instruments and coming over to talk with us... however, another smiling type walked in and posted up next to us, and somehow he and Sara began to talk. He was friendly, in Drumshanbo just for the weekend to catch some sessions and work his vocal muscles -- he sings traditional Sean Nos style irish tunes and ballads. After talking for some time, he headed off to a boat BBQ with some friends, which we were sadly invited to AFTER we'd filled up on lukewarm veggie soup at a near-by pub (Sara and I had been skeeming all week to get ourselves invited out to hot meal... so we were kicking ourselves when we finally got the invite our last night there but were too full of bad food to even think about joining up). Andrew gave us his cell number, though, and told us to text if we found a good session, promising to do likewise.

An hour down the line, sara and I stumbled into a brilliant singing session, with probably one of the most gorgeous irish woman -- voice and all -- I'd ever seen/heard in my time here singing some traditional slow ballads with the accompaniment of a guitar and bazooki (like a large mandolin, no idea how to actually spell the word). After reels and jigs all week, the familiar sound of one of my favorite instruments (guitar), melded with this seemless, soulful voice nearly brought tears to my eyes and smiles bubbling up from my core. I texted our newly-met singer to let him know we found him a venue, and 15 minutes down the line he came running in, still chewing the last of his BBQ, but ready to bust out a song. He did a wee bit too much busting, however, and kind of over-powered the session... i'd like to think it was because he enjoys singing so much and not that he's the cocky type, but Sara and I were kind of exchanging glances.

The session dwindled down, however, and Andrew and I began to talk. He told me he's in a masters program for rural planning and development, he leads kids on nature hikes, and he's a photographer by hobby... *bing!* and right there, he found common interests and we began to talk away, no longer skimming the surface of 'where ya from?'s and 'why're you here?'s. Somehow, we got into his love of history, and, seeing as I'd just read up about irish history for 30 short pages in Sara's lonely planet: Ireland book that afternoon, I asked him to fill me in. The history lesson turned to mythology, and I sat, listening intently, as he wove the tale of the mythical irish warrior who's stories paint their own version of irish ancient history. By this time Sara had wandered off to another bar, and I was intent to drain Andrew's brain, trying to soak up his history lessons and also steer him away from domineering the singing scene.

We moved on to a new pub, and ancient sort, filled with musicians who were still at it at 1 am, despite many of them's being up till seven the night before, riding the wave of a crescendoing session past curfew and a rule-inforcing robocop trying to send all the musicians home. We sat next to a special little man, with approximately three teeth, a thick accent, and a great reperatoire of songs with enough passion behind them to disguise his wavering voice. Andrew egged him on and we had a time of it, though some of the musicians were miffed that there was singing cutting in on their reels and jigs.

Anyhoo (god, I really do always end up with a long story, don't I?), Andrew ended up offering me a ride back to the hostel, which my tired eyes accepted before my brain even considered the potential implications of such an offer. We got down to the hostel, still talking about singing, his family background (4th in the line of up nine kids, 8 of which are brothers... whew!!!), irish history, etc. The car was parked. And then came that awkward time of, do I hop out and say goodnight and call it at that, or did we somehow make a connection tonight of a flirtatious sort, and is this goodbye going to be slightly more involved?

He gave me a hug goodbye, said he really enjoyed our conversations, and then said c'mere, give me a kiss. I leaned in, gave him a quick peck on the mouth and pulled away. We somehow talked a bit more and then I leaned in to give him another quick kiss goodbye... and WHOW THERE... suddenly I was involved in a deep-sea emergency rescue, involving emergency CPR administered by a gulping fish...

Indeed. It was that bad. And yet, then, he pulls me close, i tell him to sing, and he comes out with this deep ballad, which I can here both in his chest and as it winds its way out his lips (which, if they kissed like they sang, would be simply amazing!). We talked some more, he said he'd love to see the islands and me again, I said I needed to get to bed, but maybe he could join up...

I'm game for a travel partner, someone how know's how to lead a nature hike, a fellow photographer, and a myth-teller. But I also realize he may have been wanting to come with other intentions. So the next day I mustered my courage to be blunt (something I rarely do...) and sent him a text along the lines of 'If you're interested in beautiful scenery, photography, more myth-tellings, and potential more snuggly singing sessions, feel free to join up. But... don't expect much more. I don't want you driving three hours out west just to be disappointed'. He wrote back saying he'd look forward to the islands and maybe some snuggles, and it seemed like he got the point that it wouldn't be anything more. So... who knows. Call me crazy (i mean, monsieur french-vosges-mountain-man has still been on my mind, and made more of an impact than this guy), but travelling opens you up to possibilities and such that you might never agree to otherwise. Some may call it weird that I'd be cool having this guy come out, but you get a sense, and you feel like it'll be alright, and you know you'll work it out and make sure you're safe, and if things are weird, you'll get out of the situation. In any case, we'll either be in hostels or staying with Dee on the island anyway, so I'm not too worried. He was a nice guy with lots of stories to tell, and, bad kissing aside, he doesn't seem full of sketchy intentions.

We shall see, we shall see.

As it is, I've written for much too long, there are a couple of french guys waiting for a computer, and I need to head out on my gallery tour.

Spirits are high though, and I think i'll live through the week just fine, though I'm still stoked to be going home soon...

signing off...

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Ready to Dance out of Drumshanbo

Saturday afternoon. It is confirmed that Anya will not be joining me for the second leg of my Ireland voyages (*tear*), but I think I'm just going to be happy to get into what I hear is a great city, surrounded by things other than irish jigs. Give me a few weeks, and I'll probably have the craving to start jigging again (and my introductory lesson to old-style 'Sean Nos' step dancing yesterday DID spark new interest - and frusteration - in my tired feet), but as it is, I'm ready to broaden the horizon beyond village life and insulated irish music.

I said good-bye to my 18-year old (i think) Hungarian dance partner today, Aladar. It was quite cute... as we finished the last set of the lesson and were walking over to collect our belongings, he said 'Well, I think i will give you my email address...' We exchanged info, walked out, and after wishing him well on his flight back to hungary, he said 'Maybe... I will give you two kisses.' Meaning the double-cheek kiss, also done in Hungary among friends. But he planted them quite firmly and then hurridly waved goodbye and I think I may just have blushed a bit... We'd spent the entire week dancing together, which can create some flirtatious tension, and it was amusing to try and joke across a bit of a language barrier (he speaks english well, but with a bit of dublin accent, and, as always, some expressions just don't translate, going in both directions). He told me a lot about Hungary I wish I'd known before/when I was there, and all in all, it was quite a fun pairing, though I could feel the age difference, and it made for occasional awkward silences.

Sara, the 27 year old kindergarten teacher, also offered her email so that we could exchange irish music cds... it's fun to build up connections across the world, especially as all of us are meeting up in lands not our own. Funny how I lived in france for six months and came out with a german friend, a lebanese friend, canadian contacts... I spend a week in ireland and come out with hungarian and swiss mates... i think i need to work on trying to make contacts FROM the countries I'm visiting, but in reality, it all makes sense... travellers are out to make new connections, locals are well installed with friends of their own.

All in all, I think I've gotten an ample introduction to some irish dancing and can now feel comfortable stumbling my way through a Ceiligh back in the states, if I want. And perhaps I'd be interested in quickening my foot tapping with more Sean Nos steps... but frankly, I'm pining for my Strasbourg Modern Jazz dance class (to date, the most enjoyable dance class I've ever had) and for Portland salsa dancing... And I am determined to get myself, finally, a good pair of dancing shoes to make my life a whole lot easier... my entire week was spent dancing in flat-soled tennis shoes with daily comments about how much easier it would be if I had leather soles. Don't I know it. But even if I'd wanted to splurge and buy them, Drumshanbo is normally a village of 750 inhabitants. Specialty dance shoe stores are not exactly part of their daily commerce.

In other random notes...

- Irish grandmothers(at least the one's I've seen here) get the prize for nicest legs in their age bracket, thanks to the work out they get doing the set dancing! Compared to italy's collection of grotesque, hobbled feet from having spent too many days trying to squeeze into unhealthy stilettos, ireland is providing the healthy opposite.

- Leprauchans DO exist. I know. I've seen two. Okay, okay, they weren't wearing green suits and skipping around the base of a rainbow, but they were there. At the ceilighs, dancing away the night. The first guy has been in the classes in the morning, and struck me from first glance as a picture perfect leprauchan candiate. Small and sprightly, he danced light as a feather and his slightly pointed ears, minute potbelly, fluffy hair, and cunning smile made me easily imagine him prancing around a shining pot o' gold. The other was a fidgety, nervous, somewhat crazy (actually so, though not sure what exactly he was aflicted with) man with tap shoes and the inability to sit still. He got the prize for the leprauchan's slightly loopy younger brother...

- In a pub, a couple from new york (of irish origin) asked if I was from italy after talking to me for a few sentences. Ummm... right. I think I've been afflicted, as of late, with the over-pronounced syndrome typical of those used to talking with those lacking perfect english. Hence, my California accent is down-played, the ends of my words come out too crisp, and nothing about it seems natural. When I finally met another american -- a californian fiddler, no less -- I think I let it all out, spilling a stream of californianisms (didn't say 'hella' though...) within a single breath, as I was suddenly not straining to be understood. Boy, will it be good to get home...

- I've spent the last two months really enjoying exploring other cultures, talking with others about their lives, their customs, their cultures... but I'm ready to get back to having my own life. With my own routines, customs, interests, etc. I realize, in conversations, that I'm a lack of subjects to talk about myself... I'm mostly interested in hearing what other's have to say. I think this might be because I feel like I haven't been living my own life these past few months, but rather nibbling at the lives of others.

home again home again... soon!

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Aie!!

Well, with six minutes of internet time left, there's no way I'm going to have the time to type up the 10 pages of long hand I wrote out yesterday night with plans of catching the world up on my latest adventures and such. Perhaps when I've moved on to galway and can pay for however long i want as opposed to signing up for one hour every few days at the local village library here in Drumshanbo, a village of normally 750 that has swelled to over 1400 with the music festival.

In short...

- I've been devoting 4-6 hours to Set Dancing every day this week... I'm exhausted, my calves are in awesome shape, and I'm getting just a bit sick of hearing irish jigs and reels 24-7...

- I'm starting to get really homesick, with the thought of being home in two weeks... and I'm getting tired of the 'fleeting friends' phenomenon that comes with travelling, though I'm very thankful for 27 year old Sara in my hostel room, with whom I've been sharing meals and pints, and 18 year old Aladar, my set dancing partner from Hungary, who is educating me as to what soviet communism was like from a second hand account... and showing me traditional hungarian dancing, which he's done since age six.

- Anya just wrote and said she MIGHT be able to come join me in western ireland for some travels come next week... I'm crossing my fingers, as being homesick and alone is not a good combination...

- one minute left = i need to post and get off. Tonight = concert of all the teachers at the music school, so it should be good (even if i've been escaping with my iPod into other genres of music these past couple afternoons... I'm just not a one-track minded kind of girl...)

Hopefully I'll have more time to update later!!

Love to everyone! Home in two weeks exactly!!

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Finally! A moment of calm...

Whew. How does one start a blog entry when two weeks of drastically varied experiences are swimming around in my head, trying to organize themselves into some sort of logical, condensed order? To say the least, a lot has happened, and with various characters I was totally not expecting. For one, it's been like a high school reunion here, what with meeting up with Alex and Kate, two of early high school's best friends... or middle school even, as my jewish possee of guy friends from seventh grade happened to be in Barcelona and Madrid the same time, two of whom were going to be going on to Brussels with Alex after Spain.

It's funny how you fall out of contact with people in high school and suddenly, *poof*, you're together in a random european city and hanging out and catching up like you never did in four years of high school... travelling has a way of bringing people together, whether for momentary conversations in hostel kitchens {just finished talking with some uber-chill Standford grads just now before they left to catch a train to southern spain}, three day travel stints {like with Kate's old roomie from london who was with us in barcelona}, or reconnecting with old contacts. I feel like Europe has been the melting pot for all of these relationships and people, mixing from every period of my life, back even into infancy, what with parent's friends I'd never met before welcoming me into their home. And interesting experience for sure, and one that has totally loosened me up in terms of getting to know people. I just worry that now I'm so used to meeting cool folks, talking, and then saying bye, fleeting from one connection to the next, one experience to the next, that my notion of enduring friendships might have some cracks in it... but making the connections are better than not, so so be it.

To sum up the last two weeks, I'm going to resort to the bulleted paragraphs, to dissuade my tendancy to embellish and tangentilize to the point of exhaustion. So bear with me...

- Siena... Gretch and I did end up splurging for the Tuscan cooking class, and went on a round a bout ride in an unmarked car by the guy sent -40 minutes late- to gather us from our meeting point and take us to the cooking class. Turns out it was a mere four blocks from our hotel, but since the city is pedestrian-only, our sunglassed italian chauffeur had to drive completely around the entired walled city only to enter it from the otherside. Felt a bit sketchy and gretch and i were currently wondering if our money had found its way into some mafia racket {and us into their car...}... but we finally arrived and were greeted by an enthusiastic italian woman in full kitchen attire, handing us a stapled packet of the night's menu, handing us aprons, and ordering us to wash our hands. The english translator was a good hour late, so we had a fun time figuring out what all we had to do via broken english instructions mixed with hand-motioned italian that did a surprisingly good job of getting the point across. There were about 8 of us in the class, all working on bits and pieces of the five or so different recipes, representing various countries, and a having a fun time of the cooking... ended up with delicious orange-caramel glazed pork, true gnocci with a special sauce, and a creme caramel for desert. A splurge, but our stomachs were happily pleased by the end! And now we can bring the recipes home...

- The Cinque Terre... took awhile to get to. This marvellous haven of the Italian Riviera was supposed to be a doable 3 hours from Siena. But after leaving at 10, we ran into a broken down train, striking, delays and more that ended us in the Cinque Terre at 6:30 pm, exhausted and without a place to stay. An American couple we'd met on the train - and with whom we'd be delayed - offered us a place in their rented apartment if it turned out to be big enough... but it didn't so we went in search of our own room and managed to haggle down a $60 room to $50, landing ourself a room with ajoined bathroom, living room and kitchen all to ourself, as the other room's occupants hadn't arrived yet. Gretchen and I drooled at the sight of kitchen facilities and took full advantage of our being in the land of home-made pesto {a Cinque Terre speciality}, fresh pasta, and high-quality ham to throw together a meal that lasted us {in classy ziplock bags} for the next four meals. We'd already been for a needed dip in the gorgeousness that is the mediterranean to cool off from our day of traveling, and the devineness of the pesto just made the entire day end on a good note.

The next day we were off on another adventure, having checked out and arrived out the Monterrosso, the last of the Cinque Terre villages, to begin the hike... when we ran into the out-of-date guidebook problem as we were told all the bag checks had been taken out of the smaller italian stations within the last year for security reasons. So, stuck with heavy packs and a dampened moral, we put our heads together to figure out a solution. We were supposed to stay with couchsurfing in Geneva for the evening so didn't want to pay for a new room... but where to leave our bags? Luckily, Italy is filled with people willing to help you {at least as we ran into}, and we found a ramshackle hilltop hostel with an owner willing to store our bags for the day {under our cover story that we were looking for a room, and he was full, but could we maybe leave our bags?}. So two hours after our arrival in Montorroso, we finally headed out on the seven mile, five hour hike linking the five mountain towns. And let me tell you... it really is one of the most beautiful places I've ever seen. The initial hike was steps and more steps, winding us up and down past mountain side vineyards and orchards... even bought home made lemon liquor from a four-fingered jovial man sitting at the edge of the trail, offering us panting hikers lemon slices to ease our thirst. We met up with a Canadian with whom we hiked for the next hour or so, an enthusiastic high school grad from Toronto. All of us picked up lunch at a rick steves'recommended Pirate cafe, serving up some of the most delicious pasteries we'd sunk our teeth into. The flirtatious owner offered Gretchen a marriage proposal and the other two of us his card, saying if we were ever in need of a boyfriend... We took pictures, the three of us laughing, and were on our way...

The hike was spectacular, though we didn't make it to the final town {where we'd stayed the first night} because we figured we should get on a early evening train to Geneva to meet up with our couchsurfing contact. But Italy's trains had different plans for us... for two hours it told us the train was another 5 minutes delayed... so we waiting in the blazing sun, instead of taking advantage of an extra two hours of swimming and village wandering... by the time we got back to Montorrosso, it was nearly 9 pm, and to make things even better, the couchsurfing.com website was down and we had no way of contacting our host. Luckily, we ran into our jovial hostel owner downtown and he told us he'd found us a room! Oh synchronicity... at this point, we were happy for anything. And not only did we get a room, but it's renter owned a local products shop and while discussing payment policies, treated us to a local wine and liquor tasting, accompanied by the most delicious red pesto I've ever tasted...

The next day it was off to the french riviera to meet up with Candace, my mom's old Stanford friend...

BUT, I've gotten carried away, as usual, and there's a line for the internet {staying in a small apartment hostel with only one *free* computer... so i need to be respectful of the rules...}. So... more later?

Tomorrow it's off to visit Mme Selvin, my high school french teacher {who, in her own strict, demanding, and ironic style, made high school worth it} before heading back to Stras for a night to restock, unload purchases {i can't believe i thought i'd be able to refrain from buying things throughout my travels...} and check my semester's grades at the university... then it's off to see Martina in Bavaria!!

More to come!!!