Monday, March 30, 2015

One night in Paris!!!

Hello!

So this is my spring break post! Finally it has come. My awesome aunt and uncle visited me, which is great! For the first few days we did lots of things around the city, like went to mass in Santa Croce, I showed them my apartment, my school, I took them to some of my favorite eateries, we went shopping, did some walking around the city center, amongst other things. My uncle bought us leather jackets, which was so nice! Such a wonderful present! Then Tuesday my aunt and I left for Paris for a night, and my uncle wanted to see the Porsche car factory so he went to Stuttgart, Germany! 

We landed in Paris, and although it was raining it was a beautiful city. Cold and wet, but beautiful. We hit the ground running when our plane landed, we taxied to our hotel, dropped off our bags and went in search of our tourism guide office where our bus tour was leaving from. A quick trip on the metro (yay us for conquering it), and after a few stops asking for directions (I asked in French, yay!) we get to our destination. Our bus takes us to a "river cruise" down the Seine, and it came with an audio guide- so we were able to see sights from the river and then hear about them in our audioguide. It was beautiful at night, everything was lit up. Had it not been so cold and rainy we would have sat on the top of the boat.

Anyway, next stop was to the Eiffel Tower! We walked from the boats and we see the Tour d'Eiffel sparkling in front of us. We actually got to go up it! The legs of the tower have lifts/ascensions/elevators so we rode up to the second story! It was really high up but offered a great view of the city. There were even restaurants up there and souvenir shops too! Weird. We then go back down and attempt to find our bus to have the "illumination" nighttime bus tour of Paris. We have some trouble finding it, but after I ask for directions (in French!) we find our way.

Upon getting on the bus, we ride all over the city looking at all these cool sights, which are beautiful because they are all illuminated. After the driver fixed our audioguide (the english setting was the only language that wasn't working, of course) we get a nice historical overview along with looking out the window of our double decker bus. We finally reach our hotel, and my aunt and I stay up to answer some emails from my school- fighting some fires about classes over 5,000 miles away. Luckily they all got sorted out within a week or so. Our hotel room was so cute and quaint! The view outside was a nice survey of the main street below us... The culture in Paris is like no other! The people are so cool, its very similar to New York but somehow more chic. Everything sounds better in French I guess.

The next day we have a wonderful breakfast in our hotel, and we are off early for an audiotour of the gardens by the Louvre, and then the Louvre itself. We get these cool devices from the travel agency that looked like pens, and when you held them up to the pamphlet with the item you want to learn about, you push a button and it scanned it, then it played a prerecorded lesson! It was so cool, there must have been 50 or so, it was upper level technology. So fun! My aunt and I toured the Tuileries Gardens and the tiny arc, and all around there. It was gorgeous! Then we went in the Louvre, and we had skip the line tickets, so we bypassed THOUSANDS of people! At least a 3 hour wait by the look of it, and we just walked right in :) we saw so many things! It was wonderful to see so much art in one place! Everywhere you looked something that I studied in my art class, something more beautiful than the next. So much history and so much culture. We saw Mona of course, Michelangelo's Slaves, Venus de Milo, Nike of Samothrace, Madonna of the Rocks, the Inverted Pyramids and so many other things I can't even remember. I took pictures though! The Louvre also has some insane shopping stores in the bottom level, along with some nice restaurants. Expensive stuff, and there is even a Laduree macaron store in there! It was so impressive!

Next stop was lunch at a cute little cafe. We sat outside- I got a cappuccino, and my aunt got hot chocolate and we both got croque monsieurs.... So very french! And then the hop on/ hop off bus tour was next. We had a bit of trouble with that, because the tour agency gave us the wrong bus company, and all the information we had was for the wrong one. !e had no idea how to find the correct one, and we didn't have their number to call. So we just waited until we found the correct one, and followed it until we saw it stop at the designated bus stop. It took some time out of our day, and it was raining too during this, so that was a little frustrating. But we eventually found it, and managed to see lots of things with our remaining time! Went inside Notre Dame, and while on the Isle de Cité we stopped inside Sainte Chapelle... which was gorgeous. Both of these churches were absolutely amazing. Then we saw the Pont Neuf with the "love locks" on the sides, and we went down the Champs Elysees, and got out and saw the Arc de Triomphe! Wow was that a sight. After that, it was time to go to the airport, so we flagged a taxi.

After lots of traffic and a very expensive cab, we make it to the airport. However, our driver was sleepy and drove us to the wrong terminal; which made us later than we already were because of the insane traffic. We find our gate and everything is going fine, until the guards tell us we can't go through security because there had been unattended luggage close by, and they were going into emergency procedure. I literally cannot make this up, this actually happened. So we have to go through all these loops to get back into the terminal, it takes forever, long story short we have 5 minutes to get all through security and walk to the farthest gate in the airport. Lots of running involved, and many frustrated people. I saw military guys decked out in camo, kevlar vests and huge guns at the ready, it was nuts. Luckily they held the plane for us, because there was so many of us. So thank goodness we make the flight :)

So that's pretty much it! The last night I show my aunt and uncle this awesome nice restaurant on the Oltrarno side called Da Pescatore, and it was so tasty. We had a great last meal together. It was really nice to see them, and I'm glad they got to come :) all in all, even with all the ups and downs, spring break was great!

Ciao ragazzi :)

Sunday, March 15, 2015

The past week or so; Kendall came to visit!

Hello!

Short post tonight, I promise! I have to get back to studying for midterms... they start this week yay... And I have to finish my clutch bag for handbag construction by this week too yay... Oh well, after Thursday I'm free for spring break! Lord help us get there... everyone is starting to stress out lol. Even midterm stress is universal.

Anyway, I had the most wonderful week spending time with my boyfriend that flew 5,000+ miles to see me! We did so many things that I had to keep a list so that I wouldn't forget. This is all in order, mind you. Are you ready? This is a whole week's worth of stuff every single day...

             I took him to Caffe Firenze, el emporio gelateria, GustaPizza, Santa Maria della Fiore, the Palazzo Vecchio museum, our local mercato, Pino's panini, Santa Croce, my school, Piazzale Michelangelo, Ladureé, The Fool's trattoria, Amalo, La Milkeria, The Uffizi Gallery for hours, Doner Kebap, inside the Baptistry of florence, we climbed 414 steps to the top of Gioto's Campanile, inside Basilica de San Marco, Basilica della Annunziata, the Opetale del Innocenti, Grom gelateria, Yellowbar, the mercado centrale, la strega nocciola gelateria, Astor cafe, the Accademia Gallery for the David, the Boboli Gardens in Pitti Palace, Vivaldi's gelateria/ sweetshop for live music, the secret bakery, spent time on the Oltrarno side by going into the Basilica de Santo Spirito, Santa Maria del Carmine, San Frediano at Cestella, and dinner at a really fancy restaurant Gilli.

So if you ever come to Florence for a week and you want to do lots of things, this is a really good itinerary of stuff to do! :) I showed him all the sites that most tourists see, and some that they don't i.e. the inside of my tiny apartment, lol. All in all it was a really packed week, but not too much because I still had time to study and time for us to just walk around or to hang out with my friends. So that's that! Check out all my kagillion picture on my Flickr :)

Ciao ciao!

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Montepulciano and Pienza

Hi everyone!

I'm tired todayyyy. I think the weather is making me sleepy. It was nice yesterday and sunny, but today it's cloudy and rainy and gloomy. It also might be gloomy my entire apartment is sick... we all have some sort of illness. Me and one other of us are getting over the flu (we think), one has a cold and one might have bronchitis. Woo. Also, it seems like the entire Italian population has the plague right now, so we might get it from someone else. Apparently a month after being in a new place is when you start to catch the bacteria and get sick. Wash your hands people! This has been a PSA from Logan.

So, this past weekend (2/28) I had a day trip to Montepulciano and Pienza- two small medieval cities about two hours away from Florence. This was a mandatory field trip for a whole bunch of classes at FUA, I think there was about 5 or 6 busloads of people. Two of my roommates went with me, but were on other buses because they came through their wine tasting class, while I went through my architecture class. We had another early call time in the morning for the bus, and then half of the busses went to Montepulciano while the other half went to Pienza, because the cities were too small to have us all there at one time.

We had the wine tasting first; so we walked down a large hill and had a tour of a small vineyard that produces something called Vino Nobile di Montepulciano and we saw their little bottling area and their little storage facility. I say little in relation to the other wine tasting I went to in Assisi, which was huge. This one was family owned, and right on their property that they own, but they are still was able to produce a lot of wine and even bottle/ label it on site. We tried three different kinds of reds. I thought this was cool, what they wrote on our itinerary about the Vido Nobile di Montepulciano. "According to DOCG rules, to be labeled as Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, a wine must come from vineyards on the hills which surround Montepulciano...the aging period for any Vino Nobile di Montepulciano is a minimum of 24 months of which at least 12 months must be spent in oak barrels. Local winemakers long used large Italian botti, rather than the smaller French barriques, as barriques would bring an undesirable level of toasty, vanilla oak flavors to the wine." Because wine tasting is no joke! They have this stuff down to a science! I don't really understand all the different flavor notes and things, but it's cool that some people can.

We then had to walk back up the large hill to get back to the bus (the valley was to small for a bus to drive down) and then drove into the main part of town for a few free minutes to take pictures and walk around the main part of the city. Oh funny story, they were counting us to make sure we had everyone, but they kept coming up short so they panicked and assumed they had left somebody at the vineyard. About 20 minutes of counting and recounting, and trying to reach this person but to no avail, they figure out they didn't even start the trip with us. They were counting an absent name the whole time... lol awkward. The wine made us sleepy so we took a nap on the bus :) and we were off to Pienza.

Pienza we finally got to do some stuff related to my architecture class. We went around to various churches and buildings that had comparable architecture to Florence because they were done by the same architect. The tour was pretty quick, I wish we would have had more time to learn about things, and also my teacher was talking really fast. But, there are some serious great views in this city because it is on a hill overlooking the large tuscan valley. So pretty! We also had a cheese tasting at a local store where we had some pecorino, which is the cheese Pienza is famous for. However, they never actually fed us lunch which was kind of annoying, and we didn't have time to go get lunch anywhere because all the extra free time we had was trying to find a bathroom or a gelateria. (side note, gelaterias are literally all over florence. Like CVS's there is one nearly every 30 feet. But apparently not here because I never got any gelato.) And that was pretty much all to be had there, and we went home.

A beautiful trip for sure, however it wasn't the most organized trip it seemed like, and so unfortunately that did affect the fun factor a little bit. Now that it is rainy today I definitely miss the sunshine we had there. I also miss not being sick, lol. But it is okay, because my awesome boyfriend comes in 3 days YAY and then my awesome aunt and uncle come in a short while after that, yay! I just have to survive this illness and do my homework by then :)

Ciao ciao!