Friday, October 28, 2011

Fall Break and Italy!

I first would like to send out a big "HAHA" to my fellow dukes because we have fall break here, and you don't have it there.  Secondly, this last week was pretty tough school-wise, but I can't really complain, it's not been the most rigorous work load of my life thus far.  I had a business test today that went decently, there was some peculiar stuff on it, but oh well.  I bought a SWEET belt today, that's like a mimic of the spanish flag, from a store that had a 50% liquidation sale, for 13€, it's awesome.  We are going to a concert tonight of some sort, not quite sure, then off to Madrid for the weekend.

After Madrid, I fly out to ROME for two nights and three days, then head to the South of the boot of Italy, a little town called Reggio di Calabira, to stay with my roommate's cousin who plays professional volleyball there!  We are going to explore the small town and definitely go see Sicily, which is only a half hour ferry ride away.  Gonna be an awesome trip, I'm sure there will be lots more blog posts after the trip!

Hasta luego!

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Andalucía!


 Mile count: 894

Day One: Granada

7 am came real early once again, as we had gone out the night before.  It’s OK though, my last minute addition to my luggage was this neon green microfiber squishy pillow thing, and it was quite possibly the best thing I packed – it’s a LIFE SAVER on the bus.  I put that bad boy in the corner and put on my “Nap” playlist on my Bose headphones…lights out.  Four hours later, abra ca dabra, and we are in Granada.  Andalucía was a trip of Cathedrals and Palaces.  Don’t get me wrong, it was cool to see, but we saw three cathedrals and three palaces in four days…they get somewhat repetitive.  

Anywho, the Cathedral in Granada was neat, my favorite part was the obnoxiously big organ set they had, it was GIGANTIC.  

The ceiling was pretty cool, but other than that it wasn’t anything to phone home about. 

Our Flamenco dinner was another story, it was legit!  The restaurant was in Old Granada, which is what you would imagine when you think of Spain – small streets, cobblestones, old little houses, Rolling Hills, the whole bit.  The Flamenco place was literally in a cave. 

First, the meal was obscenely huge, as are all the meals here.  Thank God I have Only put on five pounds thus far, I have no idea how.  
Zuchinni Fries! With syrup type sauce

so. good. 

I think it’s because we literally do not snack here, only meals, and we eat alot for those.  Anyways, the meal was great and as we got our dessert, the Flamenco started.  Talk about intense!  The guitar player and singer were both like something I have never heard.  The singers voice is really tough to describe, but I would liken it to an Indian tribal voice, but singing in Spanish about this really sad story.  There certainly was a story line, but we couldn’t follow it since he was singing it.  
Singer

Whole group, on the left are the dancers/clappers, and the singer and instrumentalists are on the right.

There were four dancers, one male and three female – and they were all in peak condition, Flamenco-ing for 20 minutes a piece, straight.   One would dance, and 5 other people would clap a rhythm (not simple, very complex, each would be on a different beat) while the guitar player and singer both did their things – I can’t imagine how much practice it would take to be as good as they were.  
The women had on the most intense, “I am going to kill you and eat your baby” looks on their faces, like the black girls on step team when they step, except this was WAY better than step team.  They moved their feet so fast and were so into it, it was one of my favorite things yet.



After flamenco, we ended up having a bro night out – Tim, Glenn, Carl, and I went out to meet up with one of Tim’s friends who was studying there.  It ended up being alot of fun, we first went to this place that I could only liken to a huge skate park where there were literally hundreds of people congregated and drinking – it was just a huge pregame.  

View of La Alhambra at night!

Then we went to this really cool disco that had an all glass dance floor, that went out to a huge patio which had a view of La Alhambra that was breathtaking.

Solid day one.

Day Two: La Alhambra in Granada and Córdoba

So on day two our wake up call came EXTREMELY early, but the shower had great water pressure so that woke me up.  We made our way to La Alhambra, which is an Arabic Castle in Granada that was taken over by the Spanish when they reconquered Andalucía in 1492 (it was a good year).  This was pretty cool, unlike any architecture I have ever seen.  They had some gardens that were pretty damn cool, but we have seen lots of royal gardens, and they are starting to lose their luster.  

What did not lose it’s luster was the really pretty reflecting pool that was in one of the buildings, as well as the fantastic views of Old Granada. 
View of Old Granada

On to Córdoba.

Córdoba: Here we saw the Mezquita, or Mosque turned Cathedral.  It’s the oldest Mosque in the whole of Spain, even though it’s not really a Mosque anymore.  This was probably my least favorite because it was architecturally exactly the same as what we had just seen at La Alhambra hours earlier.  Boring.  We went out again in Córdoba, which was alot of fun.  

We started out in this little local bar with house music, which sadly only played for like ten minutes after we got there.  Still cool.  Then we went to some discos, and I was really excited about asking for a beer and being served Budweiser.  
Excited about budweiser in Spain!

To top it off, because we were from the states, the bartender gave us free shots of Jack Daniels...God Bless America.  I love going out in Spain because it is a totally different scene, and for some unknown reason, it is somehow easier to understand and speak Spanish after having a few drinks.  I suppose I am not worried about sounding stupid or being wrong or being perfectly grammatically correct, so I just speak and don’t worry about it.  As for the listening part, I can’t explain it, but everyone is in agreeance it is easier to understand after having a few drinks.

Day 3:  Sevilla

This day started out even earlier, and even more struggling.  When in Spain...

It also started out with another Arabic royal palace.  Once again, neat, but it got a little boring.  There was however some really intricate tile work and paint schemes in this palace. 

Lion tile work, it was like this all over the place.

Cool tile work

The most ineresting fact about this particular royal palace is that Spanish Royalty still stays there when they come, and we visited the room where Coloumbus was initally denied permission to go explore and find what turned out to be America.  Any explorer who wished to get funding from the king and queen had to pass through this room – very cool. 

The gardens outside where a lot like the others, except there were WILD PEACOCKS just walking around mingling; it was quite odd but pretty sweet.
Peacock Chillin


Onto my favorite cathedral, the Gran Catedral de Seville.  It is the third largest cathedral in the world, and there was some ridiculous number of masses on Sundays, something like seven or eight.  The stained glass windows were incredible – detail to the nth degree and just beautiful.  
Unbelievable stained glass

So bright!

Thank you firework mode on my camera, it got some very very clear pictures of the stained glass.  Also, the remains of Columbus’s son, as well as, Christopher Columbus himself were both in that church!  Kinda creepy yet pretty freakin cool says the history nerd inside of me.  Lastly, there was a tower about 50 stories high that we could go up in, and there were some absolutely wonderful views of Sevilla from up there. 

Lots of rooftop pools and restaurants which is a great idea, there should be more of those in the US.  I did not go out in Sevilla – I had a few glasses of wine and watched “Jerry McGuire” in Spanish and crashed.  The “HELP ME HELP YOU” scene, is even funnier in Spanish, incase anyone was wondering.

Day 4: Merida

Merida, Spain is close to the Portugal border, we had about a 2 hour busride from Sevilla to Merida, then another 4 from there to Salamanca.  We log some serious time on that bus.  We have the same driver, David, who is hilarious and always wears sunglasses, a shirt and a tie – we joke that we think he is a secret agent.

Anyways, in Merida we visited the Roman theatre and ampitheatre – they were straight out of gladiator.  Built by the Romans to hold 25,000 people, the ampitheatre was huge.
Gladiator style

It had the places to hold animals, the Royal box, and the moat they would fill with water to have little boats fight.  It was dam cool.  I can’t imagine walking into an arena fileld with 25,000 people know that I am either going to kill someone or be killed.  The adrenaline rush would be out of this world.  Right next to the ampitheatre was the Roman theatre, which was also dam cool.  

Very old roman Theatre

The natural acoustics of it were pretty unreal; we could here people talking in regular voices on the stage from probably 300 or so feet away.  The Romans were some smart freakin people that’s for sure. 

All in all, the Andalucía trip was a success.  Cantabría is still definitely my favorite trip thus far, but I have many more to come.  Team Flacco no Sacco (my fantasy football team) is struggling, currently on a 3 game losing streak.  Oh well...This blog was a long one so I probably won’t blog again for a week or so.  Thanks for reading!  

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Segovia Day Trip


Early morning yikes.  I passeddd out on the bus ride, and we got to Segovia 3 hours later before I knew it haha.  Our first stop in Segovia was the Royal Gardins of Queen Isabel.  I can't remember the king, but she was the Queen of Spain, and married another royal person from a country that I can't put my finger on right now (somewhere in the Middle East I believe).  As a wedding gift, the Royal Family of Spain had all of these ridiculous gardens and fountains built. 
Gardens

Sweet fountain, but they only run the water through it like 3 times a year and it's  HUGE deal


Jesús was talking to us the WHOLE time through these little machines that we plugged headphones into and he had a mic attached to his shirt collar.  It was certainly interesting but he rambles sometimes and can be hard to understand.  He would get on a roll and start using words none of us knew, but the fountains and gardens were still cool and pretty.  Another perfect day in Spain, it was a bit colder like 60s but still nice out.

From the gardens, we hopped on the bus and headed to the aqueduct.  This was SWEET.  First of all, they used this aqueduct for running water until 1950, which absolutely blew my mind.  They built the aqueduct because the city center is at a low point, and water would not flow through it, then back up hill, so they built this super tall aqueduct to carry water through the city. 

So Cool!

Aqueduct = Awesome!


There is also a purification house that used super old techniques like running the water through sand and what not to get the water clean.  As you can see in the closeup, there is NO CEMENT used on the pillars or the arcs, just at the top to keep the water from leaking out.  How they did this, I do not know, it was certainly an incredible engineering feet. 

We then went into the center of town (like a tne minute walk from the aqueduct, Segovia is not a big city) and had some lunch.  After lunch we headed to the Royal Castle of Segovia, the one Walt Disney based his caslte on.  FINALLY we were allowed to take pictures inside a caslte or palace!  It was pretty neat, not as cool as the one in Sintra, but neat in it's own right.  

Look Familiar?  This is the REAL thing!


The stained glass was super inricate and well done.  The coolest part about the caslte was the room of the kings, and they had a color sculpture and name inscription of each king at the top of the walls and it went all the way around a massive room.  
beautiful stained class hourseman

VERY VERY cool Room of the kings!

The view was nothing special, just lots of history and a good day in Segovia!  Of to Andalucia, the south of Spain, to visit Córdoba, Granada, and Seville this weekend, should be a blast!  Sunny and hot!

Clase de los Niños!


I am now a little bit over a week into my class where I get to go into an elementary school called a “colegio” and teach the little kids, and it’s pretty awesome.  I have six hours a week to do, and a Journal to write, and that’s the class.  I go Monday, Tuesday, and Wed to the colegio which is not more than five minutes walk from my house, which is SO convenient and way easier than walking the 25 minutes to where classes are.  I teach first and third grade, but all in English.  I am still not quite sure what the philosophy is behind the way they teach English to their students, but apparently they only have one hour a week dedicated to English, which I am there for.  However, some of the other subjects, for instance science, they have in both their Castillan Spanish and in English.  Very interesting.

The first graders are pretty tough to work with.  Happy go lucky and very funny, but also frustrating at the same time because they don't listen to ANYONE, and are always yelling out and getting up from their desk to do whatever it is five year olds do.  The second graders are MUCH better, which is interesting since the age gap is not huge, but they are much better behaved and learn ten times better.  The teachers have interactive DVDs that they play on the projector screens: they have songs in english to help remember things like animals and parts of the body.  Just in the one hour that I teach them, they make noticeable progress, but forget it by the time I get back for the next English class.  If I had an hour a day with the same class I know I could make their English tenfold better, and they would definitely make my Spanish better.  Oh well.

First grade class!

The teachers, who teach them English, are not well spoken in English.  It would have been the equivalent of me trying to teach a class in Spanish after finishing Spanish 2 or 3 in high school.  I wouldn't be able to do it, and they have a tough time with it - part of the reason they have so much trouble with English is that, as I have noted, certain phonetic sounds in the English language do not exist in the Spanish language.  Therefore, neither the teachers nor the students can say letter combinations like "th" (although it's very similar to the "s" sound they make here when the speak spanish) or anything with a hard "A", like my name...they call me "Jota".  Overall it's a really great experience and I love the kids and the teachers I work with, invaluable to see into a elementary school in a foreign country for my future in education as well as my Spanish.
One of my favorite 2nd grade students, his name is escaping me right now

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Reflections after a MONTH in Spain


I can’t believe that I have already been here for a month!  Time has flown and it has certainly been a whirlwind.  In this month I have learned hundreds of new words, phrases, and a whole new culture.  Until you are removed from what’s familiar to you, from the language you were raised on, from your home culture, from everyone whom you love most, you take it all for granted.  Not in a bad way, but living here without all of my close friends, family and wonderful girlfriend has made me appreciate them all that much more.

That being said, I miss them dearly, but the friendships I am making over here are awesome, and certainly lasting ones.  We are all learning the same thing, and it is an experience, a phenomena that is tough to put into words.  We are forming an awesome relationship with our madre, she is a trip and big joker, which is perfect for us.  Each and every day, I learn something new, something I didn’t know before – whether it’s a coloquial phrase specific to Salamanca, or learning a new basketball term when I go to the park and play.  The regulars who play basketball at Salas Bajas (the university sports complex) now know me, and we talk and play and banter just like back home.  

My taste buds have fallen in love with the Spanish food, they have some great flavor combinations and the Iberian ham here is out of this world.  The weather has been picture perfect, we had rain our second day in Salamanca, and on our trip to Cantabria, but aside from that EVERY single day has been blue skies and sunny, between 70 and 85 degrees, without much humidity.  The general adult population of Salamanca is not very friendly, store workers give you short, one-word answers and just are not very nice.  The college students of Salamanca, the spanish ones and other international students like myself, couldn’t be nicer.  Everyone is really cool and it sometimes works out that I want to practice Spanish and the spanish speakers want to practice english, so we will have a bi-lingual conversation, which is pretty neat.  A lot of times we just speak Spanish, which is what I prefer, right now I’m working on getting my Spanish accent better.  It’s tough because the phonetics are totally different, so Spanish words we would pronounce one way with our English phonics are supposed to sound a whole other way with the Spanish phonics…I’m getting there, slowly but surely.  

Big shout out to my sister BETSY who I AM SO PROUD OF for getting some awesome job offers and interviews, she has worked harder in her college studies than anyone I know, and deserves every single one ten times over.