Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Au Revoir! :(

Well, today is my last day in France. I find it fitting that of my last two days in France, one was a holiday that no one knows what it is for (Pentecôte was yesterday), and the other was a public transportation strike day (I guess the bus drivers wanted a four-day weekend). Classic!


Let's see, since the last time I updated, I went to Berlin:




And Sarlat: 



Which were both amaaaaaaaazing!!! I know I'm super behind on updating about my travels, but I'm planning to finish that once I get home. Lots of stories to share :D

Anyways, I'm really sad to be leaving France. I leave with a new appreciation for cardigans and warm-weather scarfs, a heightened tolerance for weird meat products, and still in awe of the French alcohol tolerance. And, of course, the important things, like increased self-confidence, independence, and vastly improved French language skills. All that good stuff.

I can hardly believe that in less than 24 hours, I'll be back in the United States.1 Will it be super weird? Will I have reverse culture shock? Will I try to pay for stuff in euros? I don't know. I am really excited to see all my family and friends again though!! But it's hard because whenever I leave Walnut Creek or San Diego, I'm sad, but I know I'll be back fairly soon. With France, I don't know when I'll be back. Someday for sure, though.

Au revoir Bordeaux!



À la prochaine!


1. This is provided I survive transporting both of my giant suitcases. I am literally exhausted just from putting the luggage strap one one of them.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Mon Anniversaire!!!

Woo-hoo 21!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I even had some champagne!!! Crazy times.

Here's my cake:


And now off to Berlin! =D

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Cacolac!

In other canned beverage news, I also tried a Cacolac the other day! I wanted to try one because 1) it is an iconic French drink, and 2) it's mentioned in a Yelle song, Amour du Sol. It is chocolate milk. In a can. Ohhh the French and their strange practices with dairy products. Unrefrigerated milk and eggs, unpasteurized cheese, and now their chocolate milk's in a can?!


Anyways, it was pretty good, but still just tasted like regular chocolate milk. But in a can?? So I guess it's like chocolate milk, but more puzzling.

À bientôt!

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Trop Legit

Just in time before my 21st birthday, I finally bought some alcohol! Just so I could say I did before I turned 21. (The drinking age in France is 18 to buy alcohol/drink in public, whenever in private.) Okay, so technically, I already bought a beer in Madrid, but I wanted to buy some from a store because it seemed more legit.1 So I headed on down to Carrefour, and picked up a Leffe, some kind of Belgian beer. Classy, classy. The best part was I did NOT get carded!!!3


Wooooo!! Now I just need to find someone to drink this for me...

1. http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m0qk8wpQsa1r0l5jyo1_500.gif2
2. http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m26x8jIiPH1qdb4q0o1_500.jpg
3. Shocking because of my face, not so shocking because it was in Europe. They really do not care.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Les Vacances!!!

So I am now officially on summer vacation!!! Craaaaaaaaaaaaaazy!! If I was back at UCSD, I would have like a whole month of school left. Silly semester system.

Although a feeling of melancholy is not something I normally associate with the end of finals, I am actually a little sad that school is over. It means I'll be leaving France soon, and my génial year here will be over. :(

On the brighter note, it's been beautiful outside:









À bientôt!

Monday, May 7, 2012

Le Nouveau Président!

So last night, François Hollande was elected president of France! Hollande is from the Partie Socialiste, and he defeated the right-wing incumbent, Nicolas Sarkozy. According to the Sud Ouest paper I picked up today (for free at the fac!), Hollande won 51.67% to 48.33%.

Over 80% of voters turned up, but a lot of people weren't excited about either candidate. The Sud Ouest article I read said that 45% of people who responded to a survey said the main reason they voted for Hollande was to avoid another five years of Sarkozy (as opposed to saying it was because they really wished for Hollande to be president), and 7% of people cast a blank ballot. Last week, I asked some of the French students I know at school what they thought, and they said pretty much the same thing, that they weren't too happy with either one and were considering voting blank. (The second round, there's only two candidates on the ballot. France doesn't have write-ins, so you can either vote Hollande or Sarkozy, or submit an empty envelope.)

I did not go to the precinct to watch the voting this time, but I watched with my host-family as they announced the results on TV. France has really strict laws about covering politics on television, so every network had to wait until exactly 8:00pm, when the polls close, to announce it. It was a very serious moment, but I had to laugh at the ridiculous graphic the news channel used. I mean come on! France 2, have you seen what CNN is doing?? They have holograms!

Afterwards, my host-family and I went to a bar a couple blocks away to celebrate. For a bar, there were a surprising number of families with small children there! Mostly, it was just people in the neighborhood talking and celebrating. As the evening went on, there were more and more people singing/shouting old French songs that I didn't understand the lyrics to, except that they were inserting Hollande and Sarkozy's names into them.

Here's a fun fact I learned: A lot of people on the left or far left (which was everyone at the bar celebrating) think Sarkozy is too elitist and arrogant. Apparently, a particular sore point is that he likes to eat at Le Fouquet's, a famous restaurant in Paris that is crazy expensive, on the taxpayer's dollar euro. In French, to make word into a noun, you usually add "-eur" to the end, like "-er" in English. So, read --> reader, lire --> liseur, talk --> talker, parler --> parleur. So "Fouquet's" becomes "Fouqueur".... And French people are pretty familiar with American swear words, so that gets used how you would imagine...

Anyways, Hollande takes office on May 15th! So soon after the elections! It surprised me that there was not a longer transition time, since in the U.S., there's like two months. It was really interesting being in France for the presidential elections, and seeing how different their attitudes about politics and their election system is from ours. I'm interested to see what happens on May 15th! If you want to read more about the election, here's the article in the New York Times.

À bientôt!

Friday, May 4, 2012

Oh France, tes patisseries sont trop bonnes!

You've probably had a box of chocolate before, but have you ever had a box made of chocolate?


Oh yeah, it was good.



 À bientôt!

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Kehl!!!!!


Crossing over into Germany was like walking into a dream land. See, the walk to the bridge from the last tram stop in Strasbourg to the bridge was way way waaaaaaay longer than it looked on the map, and was along this sidewalk with a freeway on one side and alternating construction sites and empty lots on the other. I thought I was going to pass out from exhaustion and hunger. And when we finally got to the "garden" around the French side of the bridge, and it was barely more than a patch of grass! There were like some signs about where different planets would be if they were on the scale of the distance from the gate to the foot of the bridge. Eh, it was not great. Plus it was all cloudy and gray. Bleh.

But then, we started to cross the bridge to the German side, and the sun came out, birds sang, and we were suddenly surrounded by the cutest town ever!!! Seriously, around the bridge at least, the Kehl side was soooo much nicer than the Strasbourg side. They had an actual park, with lots of statues and benches and an observation tower. And the area past the park wasn't an industrial wasteland but pretty European-y houses, and there was a pedestrian shopping street only like five minutes away.1
Here we are approaching from the Strasbourg side. Grim.
Boom! We get halfway across, and the sun comes out!
The bridge itself is so cool!!! There's two paths you can take to cross, one is up and sort of curves out horizontally, and the other is like a big hill, you walk up and then down on one big curve. The two paths meet in the middle, and there's a space with picnic tables, so you could even eat lunch right on the border! The two columns are at angles instead of straight up, which I think makes the bridge look longer and even more impressive. And of course with the sun out, everything looked even better!

Nom Central. Welcome to Nomsville.
Capital of the Kingdnom of Nomnomington.2
At the shopping street, I made a beeline for the nearest bakery in order to get my hands on some authentic German soft pretzels. OH. MY. GOD. SO GOOD!!!!!!!!! The pretzels were seriously amazing!!! They were crunchy on the outside, soft on the inside, lightly sprinkled with salt... I was in heaven!! Plus, two pretzels and two Cokes was only like 3-something euros, so cheaper than a single Coke in Geneva. And the Coke bottle was pretty cool itself, it was like super thick plastic, it was weird! The bottle was so heavy, it felt like there was still liquid inside it when it was empty.

We walked around a little, and ended up getting seconds on the delicious pretzels!!! I just couldn't resist!!! Christophe wanted to split one, and I was like noooooooooo way, buddy. Some things in life are too good to be split in half.
I am seriously so hungry just looking at this picture.

The observation tower
Then we started heading back to the park, and on an (ultimately unsuccessful) hunt for a bathroom, we ended up going up the observation tower.3 The tower was like a huge free-standing staircase. At first, I was like, this is kind of random, there are no major sights to look at around here, but we thought it'd be cool to go up and be like, "There's France! And there's Germany! And there's France! And Germany! And France! Germany! France! Germany! France! Germany! France!"

The view was so beautiful!!! Kehl is such a pretty town, and you can see the river and a lake that was next to the park, and all the houses with red roofs. We got an awesome view of the bridge too. You can even see downtown Strasbourg and the cathedral in the distance.

Soon though, we headed back so we could make it to Christophe's wine basement cave tour. And that is the story of Kehl. I liked it so much, I wish we could have spent a few days there too!

À bientôt!


1. This contrast was kind of weird/relevant because I had just been reading in the news about how Germany's economy is doing so much better than France's, which is a big talking point in the election. Germany has a 5.7% unemployment rate, versus 10% in France, and the disparity is even greater for young people. I remember reading this article right afterwards.
2. I'm cackling at myself right now.
3. No, we did not expect to find a bathroom at the top.
4. Maybe the chanting part was just me.
5. To clarify, this isn't to say that I didn't like Strasbourg! I loved downtown Strasbourg! Just the area between the edge of downtown and the bridge was kind of crappy.
6. Epilogue: I did finally find a bathroom in a McDonalds. No toilet seats though. :/

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Strasbourg!!!


Guten tag everybody! After our day in Geneva, we got up early to take the train to Strasbourg. The scenery riding through Switzerland was really pretty; we saw the stereotypical rolling green fields with cute little chalets and the Swiss Alps in the background. I was so moved, I almost started yodeling right there on the train.

We actually had to take two trains to get to Strasbourg. First, we took one from Geneva to Basel. Geneva is in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, but Basel is in German-speaking territory, and the announcements and message boards on the train actually changed languages halfway through our journey! The train station at Basel is gigantic, like airport-size, and everything was in German! Crazy! Luckily, we managed to run through and make it to our train to Strasbourg without getting too lost. Christophe did insist we take a detour to look through a store that sold only beer. (So German! And Strasbourg is literally right on the border with Germany, so everything there was pretty German too!)

When we arrived in Strasbourg, we got hella lost on our way to find our hotel.1 Despite glowing online reviews, it ended up being in kind of a sketch area. Like, we had to walk through an abandoned lot and squeeze through a hole in the chain link fence to get to the tram stop. We were further discomforted by the 20ish security camera feeds at the front desk. But, you know, the room was fine. And luckily, the tram was pretty easy to use.2


By the time we finally found our hotel and got lunch, it was late afternoon. We decided to go check out Petite France, which is a little island in the middle of downtown Strasbourg (because the Ill River3 runs through downtown) with cool/cute medieval houses and some restaurants with decks on the river. Very pittoresque.4





We also saw the Cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-Strasbourg! Of all the billions of European cathedrals I’ve seen here, this one was one of my favorites. I really loved the brick-color of all the stones and how they were all slightly different shades. There are like hundreds of statues and carvings on the outside, and tons of little spires, all very intricate and detailed. Also, the lighting inside was really dramatic5 and there was a really cool colorful organ. Unfortunately, it was getting dark, so we didn’t really get the full effect of the stained glass, but we decided to go back the next day. 



For dinner, we tried to eat local and have some Alsacien food. We both ended up ordering some kind of potato and cheese dish. It had some long German name that started with a B. It was pretty good, but nothing could match how delicious the appetizer pretzels they gave us were! The Germans truly are the master of the pretzel! (And the pretzels were free! Free appetizers in Europe?? Je ne comprends pas!)

Our first stop the next morning was the European Parliament buildings,6 continuing our theme of international cooperation after visiting the UN in Geneva. The buildings were all really sleek and modern, which was a big contrast with the quaint, medieval buildings in Petite France. We sort of made up for missing out on the flag walk in Geneva by walking down the all the European flags lined up in front of the main building. I felt very international.

Next, we headed back to the cathedral, but it was closed! I think it closes in the middle of the day to get you to buy the tour of the belltower instead of visiting for free. Pshhh. So instead, we headed to some random wine cave Christophe had found on the internet. He did not however, look up specific instructions, despite reading that it was hard to find.7 So we wandered around this huge medical complex for a quite a while, then figured out the vague directions on the map we had were wrong, and eventually found it. Surprise! It was also closed for a very long lunch break.

Well what to do when everything is closed but hop over to Germany?! Since Strasbourg is literally right on the border with Germany, there is a pedestrian bridge over the Rhine, and on one side, you’re in Strasbourg, France, and on the other you’re in Kehl, Germany! So cool! The bridge itself is really cool and sort of twists and curves. And obviously, it was pretty chouette to be just casually walking over international borders.8 Anyways, this is getting long (how shocking), so I'll put Kehl in a different post.

After our brief venture into Deutschland, we headed back to that wine cave Christophe wanted to see. It was smaller than I had expected, and there was no real visit or tour, you kind of just walked around this dank basement and looked at big wooden barrels. We did see the (supposedly) oldest wine in the world though, from 1472!!! Sadly, there were no tastings...

Then, we headed back one more time to the cathedral. And there was a movie being filmed inside!! :O Luckily, the production was only using one side of the cathedral, so we could visit the rest of the inside. It was pretty cool because they had all their professional lighting set up, which made everything look really cool and dramatic. And we got to watch them film a couple scenes! Couldn't really tell what was going on though except a lot of pacing and yelling...


Awesome organ

We grabbed some crepes for dinner and headed back to the hotel exhausted! The next morning, we were off to Paris!

À bientôt!


1. Eventually we took the road that I originally wanted to take but that Christophe had insisted was not a real road. Didn’t someone work for a prominent mapping company for several summers??
2. The stop announcements were awesome because they used different music and a different person’s voice every time!
3.  River, why you illin'?????? Hahahahahahahaha I had to say it
4. I literally forgot how to spell that in English haha
5. Ohh, foreshadowing!
6.  Strasbourg is the seat of the European Parliament.
7. I roll my eyes.
8. Yay Schengen zone!

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Genève!!!

On to Switzerland! I was super excited to go to Geneva because I'd never been to Switzerland before, and also because I love chocolate. And watches. And international diplomacy. And there was plenty of all of those things! We arrived around 10:30 and checked into our hostel, which was walking distance from the train station. The city of Geneva gives you a free public transportation pass for the duration of your stay if you're a tourist staying at a hotel or hostel, which was pretty awesome.

After leaving some of our stuff in a locker at the hostel, we hopped on the tram to visit the United Nations building! Geneva is the European headquarters of the United Nations, and the main building is the Palais des Nations (Palace of Nations) which used to be the headquarters for the League of Nations. There's also a lot of UN and other international orgnizations based in Geneva, like the World Health Organization and the World Trade Organization. The Palais de Nations has a really cool walkway of different countries' flags in front of it. Usually, you can walk down it, but unfortunately it was closed that day because there were a lot of protests going on outside the gates. Oh well, c'est la vie... it still looked pretty cool!

Next, we used the rather crappy map the hostel gave us to go to the Parc des Bastions, where there were giant chess and checkers sets! I admit, when I saw it marked on the map as "giant," I kind of expected them to be even bigger, but they were still fun. Christophe and I played checkers. After a while, I nobly sacrificed myself1 so we could finally go eat. My stomach was about to claw its way out to search for food on its own, so something had to be done.

Leaving the park, we walked by the Reformation Wall, which is a monument to the Protestant Reformation and has statues of William Farel, John Calvin, Theodore Beza, and John Knox (these guys are in the photo on the right), as well as other major Reformation figures. In case you don't remember you last European history class, Geneva was a major center of the Reformation movement, especially for Calvin (his ideas are the basis of Calvinism).

Our search for food was when we realized just how expensive Geneva is. (It's the second most expensive city in the world, right after Tokyo!) The cheapest lunch we could find was in a bagel shop,4 where I got a bagel with cream cheese for like $6. Christophe bought a Coke for 4 Swiss francs, which is like $5. When I heard the price, I decided to stick with water. Better have been a good Coke!5 Really though, the prices were shocking.7 On the plus side, a Swiss franc (CHF) is not as expensive as a euro ($1.10 vs. $1.33), but that did not help much. Also, most places let you pay in euros, since Switzerland is surrounded by the Eurozone, but they usually give you your change back in francs without converting to the exchange rate. So we lost some money there, since we decided it wasn't worth paying ATM fees to withdraw francs when we were only there for one day.

After savoring those bagels we paid so dearly for, we decided to splurge on some fancy Swiss chocolates. SO GOOD OMG. I cannot express in words how delicious Swiss chocolate is. If you ever go to Europe, you have to try it!! We got three truffles each, and I chose dark chocolate, mocha, and champagne flavors.8 Délicieux!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Mocha, Champagne, and Dark Chocolate :D


Next, we headed to the Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Genève (where John Calvin used to hang out!). The cathedral was really beautiful and well-maintained. The wooden pews were really pretty, and there were a lot of cool engravings and statues. There was also some amazing stained glass (of course) and a really interesting-looking organ. Architecture-wise, I really liked the look of the spire on the north tower, which is made of copper that's now all green (understandable since it was built in 1405). We climbed up the tower and got a beautiful view of the city and Lake Geneva.




My new friend :]
View from the tower - Lake Geneva!
We then walked around the old town area and headed toward Lake Geneva. We passed a ton of watch stores and swiss army knife stores. Sadly, these were a little out of our price range! Luckily, walking around Lake Geneva is free. The lake is really blue and pretty, with a lot of boats. There's a concrete walkway where you can walk out pretty far and then look back at the shore. Usually, there is the jet d'eau, this huge jet of water 140 meters high (459 feet!). It started out as an occasional thing to relieve water pressure in the city's hydraulic system, but everyone loved it, so it became permanent. Unfortunately, it was off that day for some reason (maybe it was too cold?), so we didn't get to see it. It's too bad because it looks pretty impressive in pictures.



Afterwards, we walked around a little and tried to be frugal by splitting a pizza for dinner. I enjoyed overhearing these two chatty flight attendants who were at a nearby table make conversation with the waiter, who I'm pretty sure was only pretending to understand what they were saying. The next morning, it was off to Strasbourg!

À bientôt!

My extended ramblings:
1. Some would say I "came in second out of two."2
2. Okay, fine, some would say I lost.
3. Very long story made crudely short: It all started when Martin Luther and others found that the Catholic Church and its clergy were getting way to corrupt. Luther was particularly offended by the sale of indulgences (you could buy forgiveness of your sins, basically pumping ridiculous amounts of money (and therefore power) into the church), and he also felt that the clergy should have no special religious authority; Christians should have a more direct relationship with God. Luther nailed his Ninety-Five Theses to the door of the local church 1517, protesting this moral degradation, and Reformers used the recently invented printing press to spread the word quickly and effectively. Around the same time, John Calvin was establishing his own ideas, which were also a rejection of certain aspects of the Catholic Church but which focused more on predestination and total depravity; basically, humans are essentially evil and have no free will; God determines everything. Calvin eventually became the religious leader of Geneva, which became Protestant. The pope was not pleased, people got excommunicated, politics got involved (rulers were tired of the Church having so much power), there was a lot of violence, and ultimately Protestants broke off for good from the Catholic Church. 
4. First time I'd had a bagel since leaving California! :O 
5. Christophe probably spent like $50 on Coke during our trip. Exchange rates, European sales taxes, and the many other reasons soda is so expensive here, were not friendly to him.6
6. Fun fact: France has a 19.6% value-added tax, reduced to 5.5% on food. (If you don't want to get too technical, a value-added tax is like a sales tax.)
7.  I went into a Starbucks, just to see how expensive it was, and the cheapest smallest Frappuccino was $9! What would Claire do! :P
8. Champagne-flavored Swiss chocolate in Switzerland?? How much more high-rolling can you get?!!