Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Riga, Stockholm, and the Things Between

The trip began on Friday around noon with shoveling out the car. We had had our first significant snowfall in a while the night before covering the Renault in a few inches of the white stuff. While some cleaned the windows others packed luggage or made. Always have to have your hot tea. Five of us rode in the car and three took the bus; the boys in the car the girls on the bus. It took about four hours to reach Stockholm but I'm not sure I kept drifting in and out of sleep. At one point we stopped to clean the windows again. The condensation on the inside of the windows had frozen too! My ears popped the further north we drove although it didn't seem like a significant change in elevation, then again I fell asleep. We drove through the downtown and got to see a slice of the capital. We pulled up to the port, trudged through the snow with our luggage, reached the terminal but the girls were not there. We waited and eventually called them. It turns out that they were waiting at the Tallinn cruise terminal. They ran over, we checked in and boarded the ship.

It was bigger and nicer than I had expected. I originally had an image of an old barely floating no-amenities boat that took poor college students to buy discount liquor. This was image was created buy the unbelievable cheap price of 60:- and the destination of eastern Europe. The ship is smaller than the big cruise liners I had been on before but not by much. It also had a deck dedicated to cars which I would have expected because how else would someone get their car from Scandinavia to the Baltic states? A long drive through central Europe or Finland.

We made it to our cabins which were on the 5th level like the majority of cabins and the boarding areas. There was some juggling about who was staying where but it all worked out. We went ot into the frigid to watch the boat pull out from the dock. The boat plowed through the ice covered easily. It's a strange sensation to watch a still surface while moving on a boat. It was almost like we were on a giant train crossing the Arctic. We made our way to a lounge where we played a card game and had a few drinks but then the ship broke through the edge of the ice. Once we hit the ice free part of the Baltic Sea the ship began to rock. We all started to feel sick not soon after. The three girls all got really sick by the end of the night and the guys weren't feeling well either. We all went to bed early which turned out to be a good thing because we did a lot of walking and running the next day. The running is a good story. A lot of the other passengers didn't seem to be bothered by the seas and had some loud crazy-sounding parties.

The boat arrived about 9:30 in the morning and we all woke feeling much better. The harbor was equally as frozen as Stockholm's so the ship was still. We got off the boat without any passport control thanks to the European Union and walked through the city passing by the mix of contemporary, Soviet, and older buildings. It was interesting to see all those periods sitting next to each other especially in the States we seem to tear most buildings down within forty years. Sweden has a similar mix of old and new but it was firmly in the prosperous west during the cold war so the buildings from that period aren't as stark. I also saw the combination of communist and capitalist system in the cars people drove. Most cars are modern but I did see, but mostly here, old Cold War cars rumbling down the road. Some of the trams looked like relics and others were the same as those in Sweden. The local currency, the lats, was surprisingly strong. One dollar only bought two lati. It's still a fairly cheap country though.

We grabbed tea and coffee at McDonald's, I can't seem to escape it, and started touring the old city. We wondered through the narrow snow covered streets to the city's large old Church. The view from the Church tower is beautiful but also puts you right in the middle of Arctic winds. We bought some souvenirs from a street vendor and stopped at one of those stores that sells local trinkets and random stuff that seem to be in every tourist town. We wondered around some more and saw the presidential residence, the old King's castle, parliament, and some statues. We all started getting tired and hungry and decided to get a late lunch.

It took us a while to decide where and what to eat as it does with any large group of people especially one as diverse as ours. We were four Poles, two Brazilians, a Burundi born Belgian, and me the American. We eventually went to a Latvia buffet style fast food restaurant. I tried a dish very similar to Polish pirogies, a fried cheese bread (which is exactly what it sounds likes), and bread sop for desert. The first two were very good the dessert was not so tasty. That's when the debate about when the boat was leaving started. Some thought it was leaving 4:30 Swedish (central European) time others thought it was was 4:30 Latvian (eastern European) time. We debated it one the way to the grocery and liquor stores. While we were getting groceries one of the girls remembered she had taken a picture of the schedule which said the boat was leaving at the earlier tie so we quickly payed for our things and began walking back to the harbor. The closer we got the more panicked we became the minute hand kept ticking towards 30. When the boat was in sight we started to run. We even ran through a field covered in snow up to our knees. We kept running, becoming more and more spread out along the route. One of the Poles was first to reach the terminal, I wan't far behind, and we ran though its empty seating area up the gangway to the ship. The crew was already starting to pull the gangway away from the ship but stopped when got there out of breath. I was about a foot from the ship and a couple burly sailors grabbed our arms and helped on the ship. It sounds more exciting and dangerous than it was. It was mostly just tiring. Eventually everyone got on board and the guess n they were able finishing closing the doors. They didn't check our ID's or boarding passes. I geuss they figured if we'd tried that hard we were passengers.

After almost being stranded in Eastern Europe we all needed a shower and a nap which we all did. The seas on the way back were much calmer. The ice also extended really far out. The bay around Riga is pretty big so maybe it was shallower? We had dinner which mostly consisted of toast, cookies, and other junk food. The Polish had brought a travel toaster which was smart but probably against the rules. That night we bought liquor on the ship since we didn't have the chance in Riga. It wasn't as cheap as the city but still better than the Systembolaget. The store onboard was about as big as a typical ABC (state owned liquor monopoly in VA) with a big selection except for gin, my choice sin.

The night was fun, full of watching karaoke and drunk people generally making fools of themselves. A man proposed to his girlfriend in the middle of karaoke. Classy. I was exhausted after hour Baltic adventure and went to sleep around midnight which again was smart because we spent the next day walking, but not running luckily, all over Stockholm. We pulled into the city port about eh same time we had in Riga and went to the Renault to drop of some things and then caught the bus to our hostel. Of course the bus stop at which we got off was not really that close to the hostel so we had to walk though the snow covered streets with our luggage. My bag was on wheels so that made it doubly fun. The hostel was housed in a hundred year old building in the old city about a block from the royal palace. The palace is mostly a tourist attraction now but the King holds a couple ceremonial cabinet meetings a few times a year and maintains an office in the complex. After checking in we took a tour of the treasury and old royal apartments in the palace. After that we wondered around the narrow streets and alleys of the old city. We walked around other parts of the city saw the parliament building which was only built in the 1970's and a little of downtown. We made the free pasta provided by the hostel and then I went to bed. The heat in room went off at some point in the night and I woke up freezing. Of course I was too much of achicken to ask for a refund.

The next day, Monday, we visited the Royal Coin Museum which I really liked because I'm a bit of a novice coin collector. Then we walked to other side of the harbor to a wonderful museum about all about a ship that sand a few hundreds years ago in the Baltic Sea. The ship was found a few decades ago and raised fairly intact. The museum was built around the ship and you can see it form all angles. Next we walked back to the old city to have a quick meal before I and one of the girls had to leave. We ate a rather disappointing Mexican place near the hostel. Then she and I grabbed our bags from our friends' room and started walking to the central station. We passed by many of the buildings we'd seen including the palace, parliament, the foreign ministry, and others. The station was easy to find even though we didn't have our Polish guide. One of the guys had become our leader and map reader over the weekend. We had a Swedish course we couldn't miss so we had to leave a day earlier than everyone else. See, this isn't a total vacation? It's a large nice station located near downtown. We had a little trouble finding our gate because there were signs saying "1-8 this way" and "11-19 that way" which left ours out. It turned out ten was between those signs and behind the information desk. We boarded the train and got settled for our 3 hour ride. The train was stuck one stop from home for two hours because the tracks were frozen, but I guess that's life in Scandinavia. I highly recommend Stockholm. There's a lot of history and culture to see. but go in the warm months. It was miserable to that much in that cold of temperatures.

Once we made it to town we had to wait for our bus. We talked to a friend who had been on the same train; she was coming back from her own vacation. It was really nice to be back in familiar territory. It's strange how quickly my new dorm has started to feel like home. The town had gotten a lot of snow while were gone but being Sweden it was mostly already mostly plowed or shoveled. The dormies appear to have their own wild weekend. The common room was in a state I've never seen! Furniture was upturned, trash was everywhere, and we seem to be missing a couch... Also someone jumped out a window on to the igloo. Dorm life is never dull, I've missed it.

I'm off to Brussels and Bruges next! I'll bring my computer and do some blogging from there if my one small carry-on can hold it. These long after-the-fact entries are exhausting to write!

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Riga After All

It's a short one this week guys, sorry.

Well, it seems I typed to soon last week because I am going to Riga after all. I wasn't able to go on the Riga cruise this past weekend because of poor planning but an opportunity came up to go this coming weekend. My Polish-igloo-engineer friends were planning on going and had an extra space. The cruise only last 40 hours and ost of it is on the boat. It seems that most people go to party and buy really cheap liquor. We're driving to Stockholm on Friday and then setting sail that night. We'll have most of Saturday to explore the city and load up on booze if we so wish and then we sail back to the Swedish capital. On Sunday and Monday we'll explore the city and then some two of us have to come back Monday night because of a class that has required attendance. The others are staying another day or two to explore.

The school week was pretty typical. Classes, homework, and all of that. The interesting things happened on the weekend. We were planning on having a big party for the fake holiday of Valentine's Day it was facebook official (joking, of course) and it looked like it was going to have a lot of guests. But somehow the never-responds-to-email landlord found out and put up posters all over the dorm stating the police would come and shut it down if we went through with it. I don't know how he found out or why decided to care all of a sudden because we've had many parties before with no cops. The party was cancelled by the organizers at the last minute so a lot of people showed up anyway and so did the cops. Apparently though there weren't enough non-residents to violate any fire codes and meet the legal definition of a party. Though there was a lot of running around and some wrestling.

On Sunday I had a lovely dinner and fika with my contact family. They made a French dish because the wife is a French teacher and in love with all things French. We chatted for a few hours and then had the traditional Swedish fika. We talked all about our families and countries. It was a really good day. They sent me home with some Swedish bread and a promise to meet again. On the drive there the husband to buy flowers for his wife for All Saints Day which is a national way to celebrate.

Today in Swedish language class we had a substitute teacher who told us about the traditional way to celebrate Fat Tuesday. They eat a traditional baked thing that is like a giant cream puff. She said that over six million of the tasty treats are sold on this one day every year. That's quite for country of nine million!

I'll post another short entry next week between my two trips but I'll write a long one about both the my trips, Riga and Brussels.

Monday, February 8, 2010

A Polish Igloo, Fires, Hockey, and Brussels

It's been another fun week here in southern Sweden!

Earlier this week several Polish engineering student friends of mine built a real and structurally sound igloo. They had talked about building for a while but I was a little skeptical to be honest. But when someone mentioned that they were actually building one night early in the week I raced to my room, threw on my coat, and flew out the door. I was very excited to see a real igloo. I had tried to build a couple when I was a little kid but it never worked so I was doubtful it could be done by non-polar inhabitants. I arrived to a nearly completed snow and ice dome. They said it took them about four hours to build. They let me slide in, which I had to do on my back because it had a small entrance. It was surprisingly comfortable inside it. I wouldn't say warm but a lot better than outside. Well done boys! They have talked about building a bigger one eventually

Wednesday saw quite a bit of excitement around the house. I was working in my room when
the fire alarm went off. It sounded more like a fast non-stop school bell. We all left our rooms to
leave but someone said the was not fire and it was burnt food form the first floor kitchen. We went
down the spiraling concrete steps to investigate. They were right. I and a few others didn't want to
pay a possible fine so we exited the building anyway. The fire department is downtown so it took
them about ten minutes to get the house. The pulled up and jogged inside. The funny thing is that we
were scheduled to have a fire safety seminar with them later that night. We got quite a talking-to at
it. We each got to put a gas fire with the extinguisher and put out a fire on a dummy with a blanket.

On Thursday night a group of us went to see the Jönkönping hockey team, HV71, play. The team is in the elite national league here in Sweden. The game play was a little slower than North American and there was no fighting, much to the dismay of my friend from Quebec. The game also ended in a tie which was disappointing. Instead doing a "shoot out" like in the NHL they added time to the end of the game with the hope that someone would score. Overall it was fun though!


On Friday I tried going to another "afterwork" cheap buffet; this time it was at a Irish pub. The
food was as bad as the others. It did come with a decent white wine though. The bar also required
you to check you coat for 20:- so that made the meal not so cheap. I don't think I'll be going to
another one. My Finnish friend and I decided to go for pizza afterwards and managed to find a
place that had American (thick crust) pies.




Today I walked from downtown to our dorm which is 2-3 miles. I took the path I mentioned in an
earlier post. The path is on the edge of a cliff overlooking the lake and the fishing and boating
cabins that seem to run all along its edge.

Plans to go on the cruise to Riga fell through because of multiple factors. There weren't enough
cars and people didn't want to pay for bus tickets. Even with bus tickets we'd still going on a cruise
to another city for less than a $100.00.There is good news though. Four of us will be going to
Brussels, Belgium at the end of the month. We found really cheap tickets through RyanAir and it
looks like bus tickets to and from Stockholm will be a lot more than the flights. I'm really eager
to see the historical sites and the European Quarter. The EU fascinates the geeky government
major side of me. Hopefully there are tours of the European Parliament and Commission!

It's very curious to watch the "snowpocalypse" from a Nordic country. Fairfax County, VA has
had more snowfall in the last week than I think we've had all winter. Sweden has been covered in an
seemingly permanent layer of snow since December but it's not that deep. Shouldn't it be the other
way around? The weather forecast, at least the one I look at, always predicts snow within the next 2
or 3 days but it never seems to happen. The forecast gets pushed back every time. I don't want to
sound like I'm complaining because we'll probably have our own snowpocalypse, or in honor of local
Norse mythology "winter-ragnarök." Credit goes to a friend back for that one. The picture of a GMU
parking lot was taken by my good friend Blaine Darnell. It's his unfortunate car covered in feet of
snow.


Random Observations:
  1. The flusher (is that the right word?) on every toilet is on top of the tank not the front side.
  2. Swedish people rarely say "excuse me" when passing. There more likely to shove you.
  3. Europeans think it's strange to only have cheese on a pizza. Good luck finding that here.
  4. Cars are legally required to have their lights on all the time.
  5. Modern buildings are built with spiral staircases that only let one person walk at a time.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Apologies if the formatting is weird but blogger doesn't seem to take well to having Word 2007 docs posted in it:


This past week wasn't as exciting as the past few but I'll report my observations. My classes are plodding along well. Swedish is very easy, grammatically speaking, the pronunciation is nearly impossible. I've probably mentioned that before but it's true for me. I'm enjoying the class nonetheless because we're all in it together and misery loves company. We learned the Swedish word for flashlight, ficklampa, which made all the German speakers giggle me included. "Fick" means something dirty in German look it up if you really want to know. It is also similar to the Swedish custom of fika, which is the requisite twice-a-day, long coffee and pastry break. We were told during induction week to go for a fika break. Another amusing example of the fun of language is the Swedish word 'gift' pronounced yiiift. It can mean marriage or poison!

I finally got around to buying a alarm clock-radio this week and observed something unpleasant: electronics are expensive in Sweden! The cheapest, in all of its negative connotations, was 200:- and that's about $28.00! I bought it at a Best Buy type store so that might be the reason, but that still seems overpriced even for Best Buy. I was hoping to listen to Swedish music but all but one of the songs I've heard has been in English even the Swedish artists! I did discover the winner of the Swedish version of Idol, Erik Grönwall. His number one hit and winning song is a decent cover of "Higher." It probably didn't hurt that he's easy on the eyes.

I took the wrong bus by mistake one day this week. It gave me a chance to the outskirts of the city. The bus I wanted, #26, was supposed to come at 3:25. A bus did come at that time but it definitely wasn't the one I wanted. Instead taking the lakeside road north to Vilhelmsro it went south. Soon as we kept going around the roundabout I pushed the button, instead the usual string in the States, for the driver to stop. Once I got of the bus I started walking towards what I thought was downtown. Well it wasn't the right direction so I ended up in God-knows-where-Jönköking. I almost flagged down a passing police officer but decided against it. (Side note: The police drive station wagons. I’m not sure if they’re Volvo but his is Sweden so that’s a safe bet. Offices also wear uniforms almost completely covered in reflective material. At least the ones walking around do.) I trudged back to where I got off and followed the road back to the Juneporten the main transportation hub in the city. Once I finally got on the right bus I ran into one of my dorm mates I hadn't met yet. He was a very nice, shy, engineering student from Poland and one of the guys who built our welcoming snowman.

Several people from the "house" as we call it went to Copenhagen for one the Australian guy's birthdays. I wasn't invited which was fine they probably went to change their drinking scenery. But it did spur discussion among the rest of us and we've started planning trips of our own. Destinations include Copenhagen, Stockholm, Gothenburg, Tallinn, and London. I'll let you know if and when things come together.

I gave into temptation this week and went to McDonald's. If anyone has ever told you that it tastes different in Europe, they're lying or delusional. It tastes the exact same, at least in Sweden anyway. It was nice to have a little slice of home even it was mediocre fast-food. While wondering around downtown in the middle of the week I decided to try pizza in Sweden. I picked a small place on a sidestreet. I think i was the one restaurant where they don't speak English! After trying my five phrases in Swedish and gesturing I finally ended up with a ha and cheese pizza. It was very thin, uncut, and baked with a slightly sweet bread. It was different than home but not bad. I could grow to like it.

We are all assigned various cleaning duties throughout the semester. This week I was assigned to clean the corridor I live on. So a nice but kind of odd Russian guy vacuumed and mopped the orange hallway. It was surprisingly quick and easy job. It only took us about a half-hour; other people have taken a long time on there tasks such as cleaning the bathrooms and kitchens.

One day while waiting for the bus by the Soviet-esque grocery store I decided to walk back. I found a beautiful trail that follows the edge of the lake from Vilhelmsro to downtown. I’m sure it’s a lovely walk in the warmer months. I’ve decided to follow it to school once it’s warm enough.

I forgot to mention this last week but it's a good story. Last Friday those of us who didn't have class were sleeping in the morning. I was starting to get moving when there was a very loud, brief ring of a ball. I thought it was a dream and laid back down. It happened again so I got up and popped my head out. A few other people were doing that too and I had an image of prairie dogs in mind. We wondered around to see if anyone knew what was happening. It turned out to be the landlord testing the fire alarm. According to the housing office he was supposed to warn us and hold a real drill. That didn't happen. I've stories form others about him and they're not good.

The weekend saw the usual crazy dorm antics. There were wrestling matches, chasing, and knocking furniture over. A French Canadian and English Canadian got into a couple wresting matches and had their own Civil War. A Mexican guy and a Bulgarian girl also got into a match. It was very entertaining to watch. They also chased each other around the house. When I walked into the common room on Sunday morning, I use the term loosely, many of the coaches were knocked over apparently in an attempt to create a bar?

I had to end it on a drunken note but that’s a major part of life in Sweden so there you go.

Random Observations:

-Pizza places always serve kebabs

-Many stores have red carpet out front. Not for elegance but so you wipe your feet

-If you speak Swedish with a foreign accent expect answers in English

-The liquor is only open for four hours on Saturdays.