A Hail Storm in India

My first day in Palampur was incredibly eventful. It started with a bollywood-fueled swaying bus ride and ended with running through hail laughing with some new Indian friends who spoke no english.

 

I was escorted to the bus by the lovely Shankar, and in the process I learned quite a bit about him, which was really nice. The Delhi metro system is its own experience. The sardine can cliche comes to mind, but it’s more intense than that because there is pushing and a real alive intensity. What was incredible is that if there was even a tiny nugget of space in the entire car a no-go semi circle would form around me, as if my foreignness was pushing people away, and people turned towards me to watch as a simply rode the metro. It was an odd experience for sure.

 

The bus station was also its own world, but in a very expected, seemingly very Indian way. Shankar got the bus number from an attendant and made sure I got on the right bus reminding me that Palampur was actually one stop from the end and to pay attention. The bus itself was very comfortable, cushy chairs and AC promised a comfortable journey.

 

Watching the night light skyline of Delhi grow and shrink was beautiful and fascinating, night time is very different from daytime in that city. Night is the time for trucks bulging with sacks of grain and trailers carrying the bodies of international airplanes to take over the road. The whole experience was otherworldly, probably a combination of the constant Bollywood soundtrack music videos playing in the front of the bus and the florescent lights stuck in trees all along the edges of the road.

 

The bus journey was monotonous and full of dozing until the started to rise at about 4:50am, and then it became its own experience and entertainment. The built up dust city had fallen away completely, there were monkeys traveling along the side of the road and buildings built so effermerally out of twigs that they made you doubt the occupants attachment to this world. That drive up crazy winding roads going too fast in a bus that was too big gave me a real sense of what I was driving into, a really good idea of the world I was entering.

 

I got off at the right stop thanks to the kind girl sitting next to me, (she was a real testament to the power of positive thinking, my only thought once I got settled in on the bus was that I wanted a female seat companion.) After a couple minutes of puzzled awkward standing around a car pulled up in front of me and the driver motioned me in after a quick volunteering confirmation. He drove me to my accommodation where I quickly showered and passed out for awhile as night buses are not all that restful.

 

I woke up a couple hours later when Caitlin, my roommate and new friend was due to arrive as she chose to fly. We were then given very muddled instructions on how to take the bus to the market, but our coordinator followed on his motorbike, the preferred method of transport in India, so we made it just fine. It can take two buses to get from our very nice little house to the market, which is in the center of Palampur, and although they are often overcrowded, a ride costs 3 rupees, or about a nickel.

 

We explored the market with our guide for a little while and then picked up a couple of essentials for the week before trying our best to catch the bus back on our own. I am confident we would have eventually found one going in the right direction, but we were helped out by a guy who spoke surprisingly good english who we later found out worked for adobe. He was very nice, and offered to give us his number if we needed further help, but we politely declined.

 

Finally we were on our way back! I don’t think I’ve ever touched that many people at one time in my entire life. I was amazed the bus still drove forward after packing that many people in. I leaned over to Caitlin and whispered “Well, nobody said it was luxury travel.” and we kept joking about becoming one with the bus the rest of the ride. There was one person on the bus who had understood that we wanted to get off at the school so when we got there we were waved off. I have never been so relieved to leave a form of public transportation.

 

We were happy to be off of the bus but we were confused. The coordinator had made it seem like the bus would drop us off at the same stop we left from, which was opposite a steep hill from the school, but we had ended up right in front of the school. The sky was darkening, rain was definitely approaching, which would in any other circumstance be totally welcome– it had been HOT that week in Delhi, even the locals thought so, but now we were well on our way to becoming lost. We followed the direction the bus had gone in and decided to take a well-traveled trail up the side of the hill, as we knew we wanted to be opposite the school.

 

We followed that path for a while, passing a couple cows as is normal in India, and I started to get nervous. Caitlin was still in a good mood, she loves rainstorms and wouldn’t mind getting caught in one, but I was worried about what that much water would do to infrastructure in the area and we were without a working phone. When the well traveled path we were following faded and turned into more of a cow path I sharply demanded that we find someone and borrow their phone as a response to her suggestion that we keep following it.

 

So we turned around and walked up a path to some nearby houses where a family happened to be relaxing outside (the weather in Palampur is much nicer than Delhi) I said hello and when the girl asked if I spoke Hindi I said no and just said the word telephone, holding my hand up to my ear. She smiled and said “Of course” disappearing inside to grab a phone for us to use. We called our coordinator, and when he didn’t pick up the first time I started to get really nervous. We called again and he picked up, Caitlin told him we were lost while I asked the girl if she would talk to him. She took the phone and had a quick conversation with him in Hindi, the result of which was that she would guide us to a nearby road and he would come pick us up. The whole family was lovely and gave us chairs to sit in while we made the call. There was lots of smiling and laughing, they politely asked us for a quick picture and of course we agreed. Caitlin got one on her phone too, it was the first “Selfie! Selfie!”- like request we were happy to agree to.

 

As they showed us the way down to the road, of course traveling as a group with the foreignors, it began to rain. And then the rain got a bit harder. And then the wind started, blowing the dust that stayed firmly on the ground all day right into our faces. There was much laughing and squeaking during this walk as we established that we were American and that we did, indeed, have a Facebook. I look forward to friending her as soon as I get back online. The rain was getting pretty hard at this point so we were happy to climb in the car waiting for us with our coordinator inside. We waved and then watched them scramble back up the hill.

 

As we were driving back to our place we heard a thump on the roof. Then suddenly there were more thumps and it was full on hailing on us in India! We couldn’t believe it, the quiet day had turned so violent so quickly, some of the hail was approaching ping pong size. We actually had to wait in the car for a little while even though we had driven basically up to the front door it was so crazy.

 

We ran out of the car with the intention of climbing the outdoor stairs that led to our room but the family that lives downstairs waved us in and we had a lovely cup of tea, watching the sky fall down outside in the dark nibbling on biscuits. When it was over the ground was white with hail, but only for a little while, as it was still warm out and it melted quickly.

 

What a day! So far Palampur has been more than beautiful and the window I was looking for into Indian culture, but also incredibly exciting.

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Delhi, Complete

hamayun

Day 3:

 

Day 3 in Delhi was my first day of cultural orientation. I went in expecting to dive into Hindi, but we actually talked about joint families, arranged marriages, and the caste system. It was really interesting, even if much of the information was previous knowledge, but the real highlight of the morning for me was when Rajeev brought out his wedding album and showed us all of his wedding pictures. He and his wife got married in 1978 and the combination of traditional dress and bell bottoms was absolutely amazing.

 

We spent the afternoon at the Central Market, which had been recommended to us by the incomparable Shankar as we both really wanted to expand our small wardrobes with some traditional Indian dress. I ended up getting two tops which I really like and Caitlin was also very successful.

 

We then headed back to our little apartment for a family style dinner with the other volunteers. Indian home cooking really makes you feel like you belong in a place.

 

tiltyDay 4:

 

Our second day of orientation was truly more focused on Hindi, which was great. I filled 6 pages of my notebook with helpful words and phrases as well as pure vocabulary. We practiced a little bit and mispronounced virtually everything and promised Rajeev that we would practice when we got home.

 

Rajeev then invited us into his home, which was right upstairs where Shankar had magically appeared and let us watch him cook for while, showing how much and what to add to the deliciousness. The only thing we got to touch was the roti (my favorite part) which is a flat bread which magically puff up as you cook it. Oddly enough, we didn’t get to eat that meal, but we got some food at a place nearby.

 

We spent the afternoon at the Red Fort, which was beautiful and amazing. We hadn’t been to old Delhi yet and wanted to see the old part of the city before we left. The Red Fort isn’t just a fort, it was the home/ compound of the Mughal emperors, and you can tell. There are many beautiful white and red buildings on the inside, separated by shockingly green grass, a true luxury in Delhi. We decided to relax in the shade on the grass for awhile and watch the kids play while cooling down. It was a lovely afternoon.

 

One odd thing about this place is being asked for selfies by strangers while simply living your life, merely because you look different. It is just really weird.

 

Day 5:

 

Friday was another sightseeing day with the Lotus Temple, Qutab Minar, and Humayun’s Tomb. It was hot, as it was that entire week, but the sights were beautiful. I think the pictures speak well for these places.

 

We wanted to see a movie on our last night in Delhi so we looked up the trailer to the movie showing at the right time, and we really liked it, so we headed to the theater which actually meant going back to the mall. Who knew that the first time I went to the mall twice in one week would be in India…

 

When we got to the theater we discovered that there was no way we could see the movie with English subtitles, which wasn’t totally unexpected, but we were still so disappointed we decided to see the movie showing in English, which was the new X-Men movie. It was really good and we both felt like we were no longer in India by the end of it. One odd experience was the fact that there’s an intermission in the middle of the movie in which everyone left and then came back with more snacks, as my Papa pointed out, a winning combination of concession sales and AC-time lengthening.

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Spending time in that movie and at that mall really gave me a sense for the entitled feeling among the wealthy elite I had been warned about but hadn’t truly expected. It seemed like all of the rich Indians were being rude to staff and acting as if their interests were the only one’s on the earth that mattered. My instinct was that if you are surrounded so completely by such desperate poverty an easy defense mechanism would be to feel as if you had a right to a better life, a feeling supported by a society divided into castes.
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Final Thoughts on Delhi:

Delhi is a complicated city, as so many big cities are. The harsh disparity between rick and poor here is difficult to process and the city itself seems to always be on the attack, a constant offensive in overstimulation. It is just so completely and incredibly hot– this was a record breaking week in India; the air is dust, its presence is even more constant than people trying to sell you something; and then there is the noise, the cars, the people, the peacocks. Delhi’s an overwhelming place. Those things aren’t pleasant, but they seem easier than the constant pressure created by the old and the new, the east and the west, squeezing together in a place only designed for one. You can feel the tension as sandal sellers pushing carts cross in front of the apple store. It is uncomfortable, like the city is uncomfortable, and although it is a place full of the comforts of the West, I am ready to see something new. On to Palampur!

 

P.S. There are lots of photos in the Gallery!

 

 

 

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Hello New Delhi!

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My journey to Delhi was kind of smooth, but there were a few complications. My plane from Istanbul to Almaty (Kazakhstan) was over an hour late and my connecting time in Almaty was just over an hour so I was really worried that I was going to miss that flight. The aggressive old Kazakh ladies with full sets of gold teeth didn’t make my experience any better. When I arrived in the Almaty airport there was a small beautiful Kazakh lady saying “Delhi! Delhi?” and I ran up to her, followed her wildly motioned instructions and was driven out to the plane. I was the last person on it and I watched the beautiful Kazakh mountains as we flew away.

The rest of the trip was fairly smooth, exploding pens from the air pressure aside, and the passport control in Delhi was very smooth. We landed, I got through passport control, took out money, met the representative from my program, and we were on the road 45 minutes later. And I was in Delhi.

Dheeraj drove me straight to my accommodation, which is basic, but comes with two guardians who make the four of us breakfast and dinner. It is very luxurious for something that is not at all luxurious.

That evening we were taken by auto rickshaw to Dilli Haat, a famous market where you pay an entry fee and then wander around in incense-perfumed air making fun of the “REAL PEARLS” signs with your new friend. The other girls in the program did some shopping, but I held off and just got some dinner.  This was my first real experience of India heat, and I knew pretty immediately that the temperature was going to be one of life-centers for the next three weeks.

Sleep came easily that first night. The heat sucks the energy right out of you, and the AC in our room comes on at 9:00- once the air cools down the beds look very appealing.

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Day 1:

My first full day in Delhi started with a delicious homemade breakfast. Afterwards we were driven from our little apartment to the office space where we were given our first half-day orientation. The coordinator is a very kind man who is shrunken in the way older people often are, and he proceeded to give us a safety good humored safety talk as well as talking about the history of some of the most famous Delhi monuments. The room had a fan, a detail that I now notice with 100% laser-beam focus. Driving around is my favorite part of being in Delhi so far, watching the roads feels like a very honest way to experience daily life here.

I spent the afternoon just napping and catching up with my emails, which isn’t very exciting, but helped me feel a bit more grounded and needed to happen. I woke up to a freshly cooked dinner and headed to bed soon after.

I did have a bit of a freak out that evening, but that was more due to the fact that I was reading upsetting news stories than the fact that I was in India. I managed to get ahold of my Dad and he calmed me down. Thankies Papa!

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Day 2:

I was expecting to launch straight into my Hindi lessons and cultural orientation but Day 2 turned out to be a sight-seeing day. We were driven by air-conditioned car to the India gate, The Lakshmi Narayan Temple, and Akshardham Temple, the largest Hindu temple in the world. These temples were beautiful, but as they are in use, no pictures inside are allowed. Dheeraj, who picked both of us up from the airport, guided us through all of these places, telling us the stories of the Gods, and giving us a sense of Hinduism.

Interestingly, we were the only western tourists at these sights, almost every other visitor was Indian, presumably spending their summer vacations in Delhi.

Akshardham temple was overwhelming in its scale and its attention to detail- every inch of that building is covered in hand-carved Gods, elephants, peacocks, and other traditional designs, but I actually preferred the Lakshmi Narayan temple, where people came not to look and to gawk, but to pray.

We spent that evening at the mall, which felt about as dishonest as it sounds. We had asked to go to an inside market and this is where Shankar, one of the guys who looks after us, had recommended. The AC was definitely a blessing and I was able to get peanut butter, so overall it was a successful mission.

 

India so far:

This is the place that truly feels the most different- which it is, but I feel far away in a way I hadn’t before and I feel unsure in a way I hadn’t before, which is good, I think, because that’s what I was going for. It’s not the food, the dress, the language, or even the insane that driving (though those things help) that really makes it feel like you’re in a totally different place, it’s the underlying feeling that there is something deep and important that you don’t understand, that you could never understand. It doesn’t help that everywhere else I’ve traveled so far I could conceivably be from that place, I may have stood out as a tourist, but it wasn’t inconceivable that I was a local. Here there is no chance of that, but I’m an outsider in a much more meaningful way than simply what I look like.

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Istanbul

I keep this blog mainly as a way to keep my parents up to date with what I’m doing and as a personal “this is what I did” record. I met up with my parents with Istanbul, and we had a wonderful time which we will all remember, so I don’t feel the need to write an entry about the day to day. Enjoy these pictures of that gorgeous city!

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Vienna

Leaving Budapest and taking the trip to Vienna was surprisingly luxurious. The first class ticket cost 3 euros more than the second class tickets so I opted for the fancy option. That ticket also gave me access to the Business class lounge, which had snacks and drinks, so waiting for my train was much more pleasant than I expected.

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Vienna welcomed me with one of the strangest coincidences I have encountered so far. A Brazilian guy I met on my Budapest walking tour was sleeping in the bunk below me in my Vienna hostel! One awkward but friendly conversation later we went our separate ways.

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Just looking at the list of museums I could go to if I wanted to made me fall in love a little bit with this city. The fact that there is just so much art here, that that art feels so alive, made me feel like I already knew something fundamental about this place, a welcome shift from the uncertainty of Budapest.

 

schieleDay 1:

I wanted to go on the free walking tour my hostel offers, but I soon learned it was Ascension Day, so that tour wouldn’t be running, and that most stores, cafes, and restaurants would be closed. So I did some exploring on my own, ending up at a couple of lovely places in the city. I spent some time in the Stadt park, which was preparing for a local food festival by putting up what seemed like hundreds of white tents. I had worked out a schedule for my Vienna visit when I first got in, taking the afternoon of my travel day to do some research, and while I had to deviate from that plan, I still made good use of my time.

After walking through the nearly deserted main shopping street and snacking on some delicious Viennese ice cream I decided to go to the Leopold Museum, the museum housing the world’s largest Egon Schiele collection. Their collection is amazing and I enjoyed my time there immensely. (I’m sending some posters home with my parents so I can keep some of Schiele’s work with me. The Museum Quartier is a happening place in Vienna, people go to that open space to hang out and have some coffee, so the whole courtyard felt alive and welcoming.

 

Day 2:

I had a simple plan for day 2; sleep in late, head to the Art History Museum and the Natural History Museum, and then go to a Sekou Kouyate concert at Porgy and Bess, Vienna’s premier jazz and “world” music venue.

That plan worked out wonderfully and Day 2 was probably my best in Vienna. The Art History Museum was gorgeous and full of Van Dyck’s, Ruben’s, and Durer’s, among many others. I had some very fancy hot chocolate and then walked across the garden in between the two buildings to the Natural History museum. They have a wonderful collection including meteorites, fossils, and a life-sized animatronic dinosaur. It was awesome.

Then it was time for the concert, which turned out to be the highlight of my trip. I did have a little bit of trouble finding the venue, but a helpful concierge at a hotel I wandered into gave me excellent directions.

I had the best possible seats at that concert. I was literally using the stage as an arm rest. The music was wonderful and the vibe was great, it was just a lovely evening. I took a taxi back to my hostel and fell asleep very satisfied.

 

Day 3:

My third day in Vienna was mostly a rest day, my feet weren’t happy with me, and I was tired from the late night I had had. I did take some time to explore the Naschtmarkt, Vienna’s most famous market, but I found it claustrophobic and not really worth the visit. I also went to the grocery store and spent a little bit of time watching the people going in and out of the numerous Asian supermarkets in the area.

 

Day 4:

I spent the morning of my last day in Vienna at The Albertina, a modern(ish) art museum in the heart of Vienna. They had a few exhibitions, one on Japanese photography, which wasn’t that interesting, one on Chagall and Russian impressionism, which isn’t my favorite, and one called from Monet to Picasso, a selection of work from a private collection donated to the museum after its owners death. It was a great exhibition and I liked almost every piece, which really only means I have similar taste to some rich person who collected art, but nonetheless, made the experience more enjoyable.

The Albertina also had an exhibition in its basement on the work of Anselm Keifer, a german who makes giant woodcut collages. They were beautiful, and because I disagreed with much of what he was getting at, I was able to spend my time thoughtfully and furiously scribbling notes.

 

I spent my evening at an event called the Festival of Joy, which was supposed to be a concert commemorating the victims of the holocaust, and because the Vienna Philharmonic was playing I was excited to go. I once again got amazingly lucky, I showed up early and was able to get a chair, a real rarity at an outdoor concert designed for picnic blankets. I even suffered through an hour of german speeches only to find that the Vienna Phil was having an extraordinarily off day. I bailed.

 

The next morning I headed off to the airport to fly to Istanbul, where I would meet my parents and turn 18!

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Budapest, Days 1 + 2

riverbuda

I spent three full days in Budapest, and honestly, I’m just sort of confused by them.

My first impression of Hungary was of organized chaos; the train that was supposed to take me from Zagreb to the main station in Budapest turned out to be a train to a bus to another train, but the bus picked us up and dropped us off, we herded politely and there were no problems with the changes. I met a very nice Greek girl who lived in Budapest to study Veterinary medicine to help me through. I went straight from the Budapest train station to my lovely host’s house, via taxi, the first one of the trip. She lives in Buda, the hilly side of the Danube, in the ‘burbs of the city, and I do have to take a combination of the metro, the bus, and my legs to get into the city center, but the comfortable bed, yummy food, and inviting atmosphere make it well worth it.

 

parliament

Day 1:

I headed into the city with a vague mental sketch of a plan and a borrowed guidebook tucked in my bag. Kris (my host) told me which metro stop to get off at and doodled a little map on a post it note for me. The adventure started at the train station where I had to withdraw forints, a currency where one seriously has to pay attention to the zeros. (I was fine, no mistakes were made.) I hopped on the metro and got off at the Parliament stop, Kossuth Lajos tér. Walking outside and seeing that grand and beautiful building was a real shock, as the train station and metro system are, and I’m being kind, functionally designed. After being duly impressed by the grandeur I meandered to the ethnography museum, which Kris recommended, which is also housed in a fancy-pants building, and got a little look into traditional Hungarian culture. I spent the rest of my afternoon wandering around the edges of the main part of Pest, (pronounced Pesht) and sipping a cappuccino at a cute cafe.

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Day 2:

I took the same path into the city on day two but I took the metro two stops further to the very center of Pest. I wandered around this area for a little while before once again settling into a coffee shop and taking some time to reflect and draw. I then headed towards one of the main squares where I joined a free walking tour of the city’s general important monuments. My tour guide was a tiny pixie of a Hungarian lady, who proudly claimed to be born and raised in Budapest and to not want to live anywhere else. The tour started at 2:30 and didn’t end till 5:30, so I was happy to contribute to the donation bag passed around at the end. To hear a Hungarian talk about the history of his/her country is seemingly to hear a story of victimhood, of faultlessness, of oppression. I thought the combination of intense pride and victimhood was interesting, and it taught me early on to enjoy the tour but to listen with my critical thinking engaged. One very cool thing I learned about Hungarian is that “s” is always pronounced “sh” unless it is followed by a “z”, which made the spelling and pronunciation of Liszt suddenly clear. The walking tour ended on the Buda side of the river, so I caught a bus to another bus and made my way back to my accommodation. I had a really nice dinner with Kris and her two children, it has been 6 weeks since I sat around a table with family and a home-cooked meal. It was a welcome change!

matthiaschurch

 

Day 3:

My plan for day three was to spend most of my time in the zoo and botanical garden, but when I got to that stop and looked around it didn’t seem appealing so I headed back to the center and tried out a new coffee shop. I realized that it was getting close to the time that the tour company I went on the walking tour with the day before had another tour exploring the Jewish Quarter leaving soon. As I hadn’t explored the Jewish Quarter and it’s one of Budapest’s most important districts I decided to tag along. That tour went past the three main synagogues in Pest, including The Grand Synagogue, which is the third largest in the world. I have to admit I was a little worried about the victimized tone of a non-jewish Hungarian guide when talking about the Holocaust, but that sensitive subject was handled fairly well. There were a couple of statements made by our elegantly mustachioed guide that rubbed me the wrong way about the harmonious nature of Jewish and Hungarian life before the first world war, but I got over it and enjoyed the tour. I had heard on the previous tour that Hungarians were very smart, in fact they had won 14 (or 15) Nobel prizes, but that factoid was amended on day two by the guide saying, “Well, in fact 13 of them were Jewish, and they were no longer in Hungary when they won.”

The tour ended in a “Ruin Bar” a specific type of drinking establishment that Budapest is known for, but because I had no desire to stay and experience that scene I asked the guide for directions to The Liszt Academy where I wanted to see a show. He told me how to get there very easily and I made it without much hassle only to learn that the concert was sold out! I was very surprised, a young string quartet on a weeknight could not have filled a cafe in Baltimore but in Budapest a concert hall was sold out. So I made my way back to Kris’ house, disappointed that I didn’t get to experience a Hungarian concert, but happy to know that the music I love is valued in this city.

 

So why am I confused by this city? Because it feels confused. Is it the city that loves classical music or the city that sets up bars in abandoned buildings? The city that feels like a victim or a victor? I can’t tell, which is an odd experience, and I find the streets bewildering as well. Even though they are twisted or overcrowded like the streets of Italy the streets here feel like they are waiting for you to get lost, and the gray of the buildings, and over the last few days, of the sky feels very foreboding. Those feelings are in direct conflict with the great kindnesses I’ve experienced here- a man who gave me a bus ticket before I had forints and a woman who gave me a ride up Kris’ street when it was pouring rain. So although Budapest has treated me incredibly well, I don’t feel comfortable, or like I could belong here. Maybe it’s the weird language, maybe it’s the lack of a urine smell, but I am left feeling lost and on the edge of something meaningful, and, of course, still confused.

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Zagreb

I’m sorry this post is so late, the blog was down for a little while.

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Zagreb greeted me with cold and rain but I didn’t hold that against it. This is a beautiful city, and very manageable. Plus it had the absolutely amazing strength of having also attracted my grandparents at the same time, and so gave me the gift of spending time with people that I love.

 

Zagreb is not a big capitol, and two full days here definitely felt like enough, but it is a lovely city, and this place feels lived in and comfortable.

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I basically spent both days just walking the city, first with my grandparents and then on my own. There is a cute little old town, a bustling market, a street devoted to coffee, and a horse-shoe of adorable parks.

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I spent all of my first day in Zagreb with my mom’s parents, who were accidentally in the same city at the same time as me. I joined their tour’s walking tour in the morning, we learned about the origin of the word Kuna, saw a miracle painting, and rode the world’s shortest funicular. We had lunch together, and then we spent the afternoon visiting the museums in Zagreb’s old town. The Croatian folk art museum was excellent as was a nearby museum dedicated to sculpture, both providing sketching opportunities and food for thought. It was so nice to spend time with family after being on the road alone for 6 weeks.

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I spent the day I had on my own in Zagreb exploring it’s many parks including the botanical gardens, which were beautiful and deserted, my favorite combination. I wandered into the botanical gardens, where there seemed to be no officials of any sort so I just walked through the gates and started exploring. I then strolled through the other 6 parks that were nearby.

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In the afternoon I went back into the old town for a bit to see it in the sun light as it had been rainy the day before. The rain had driven away many of the tourists, but on day two the main square was bustling. I took some time in the afternoon to explore Zagreb’s coffee street, stopping at a little cafe that served fresh squeezed orange juice with their cappuccino for the equivalent of $1.50. I had a lovely dinner with my grandparents and then headed off to bed, prepared for the train ride to Budapest the next morning.

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Venice

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The journey from Florence to Venice was very smooth, as every journey so far has been. I went straight from the train station to my accommodation, a campsite 10 minutes by bus outside of Venice where I got my own “mini-chalet” for the same cost as a dorm in the city. It was a nice little place and they made surprising good pizza.

Real day one in Venice was not ideal. The weather decided not to cooperate at all and it was cold and rainy. The city was still beautiful, and the gray drizzle gave an appropriately solemn tone to my stroll through the Jewish quarter where,  unsurprisingly, everything was closed for Passover. I had planned a day of visiting museums and churches, but I felt there was enough to see on the canals and in the little narrow streets that there was no need for me to oversaturate my experience. I look forward to seeing the Guggenheim collection and Palazzo Ducale, on my next visit. Plus I was a walking giant green damp ball thanks to my ridiculously oversized poncho.

My father’s friend and former classmate Christiana was kind enough to give me several recommendations for my visit to Italy but her truly excellent advice in Venice was to not follow the tourists and to find beautiful, quiet places. I couldn’t have spent my time better than doing just that.

An unfortunate side effect of the rain was my poncho, which completely prevented me from taking pictures, except the one pictured above through my neck hole. It was not a comfortable experience. A one picture day! What a shame in this amazing floating city.

I decided to call it quits when the wind in St. Mark’s square was so strong it pushed me around a little bit. I am not an easy lady to push around.

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Luckily Day 2 was much more of a photographic success. I woke up prepared for another mildly miserable day, even went so far as to put on three layers of pants only to find when I opened my door that the weather was sunny and beautiful. I took the bus into Venice and just enjoyed the weather. I had planned on spending all of Monday taking the many vaporetti, but the weather was so beautiful I decided to just walk the city and have a day of exploring and of taking pictures. I ended up never going inside a single building in Venice, just looked at the surface of the city. It’s one of the reasons I know I will return.

I found many wonderful little back alleys and quiet white marble corners that vanished into soft blue green water. I happened upon hidden gardens and courtyards, watched fierce old Italian ladies mutter over tiny bridges. I would find a wider street with a stream of people holding cameras and bright umbrellas and I’d simply go in the opposite direction. I never got lost because I never had a destination.

 

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p.s. There are more photos in the gallery!

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