Monday 7 May 2012

Long Overdue

Yes. I admit. Blogging has been rather half-hearted of late. I'm putting it down to the fact that final year has ensured I spend pretty much every day sat in front of a computer counting down the weeks til I finish, yet also lamenting the fact that time has gone too quickly. I was saying that this time last year too when I was leaving Nancy. Things never change...

So, the future is uncertain. All I know is I will be saving every last penny to fuel trips, be that in the UK, Europe or further afield (cough NY, Vancouver, Iceland). A day off from studying last weekend took me to Edinburgh to visit an Austrian friend I first met in Cancale, Brittany. I was working in the (deserted) hostel bar and got talking to a couple who were on holiday, doing a mini 'tour de France', as it were. After some great conversation, and (a lot of music swapping!), we swapped e-mail addresses and vowed to get in contact if we were ever going to be in the same place at the same time again.

Fast forward 6 months and I found myself in Austria, halfway through a tour of Central/Eastern Europe. I met up with my friends from Cancale, who were studying in Vienna. We drank beer, laughed at the impatience of Viennese bartenders and vowed to get in contact if we were ever going to be in the same place at the same time again.

(A pattern is emerging). Fast forward 14 months and I find myself a little closer to home in Edinburgh. One of my Viennese friends is spending a semester in the UK as part of her ERASMUS year. We chat, we climb Arthur's Seat, we meet some Kiwis, we eat bagels and laugh at the fact that we've only met three times, and each meeting has been in a different country.

Then I realised. This was what I wanted- time to forget about work and discover an unknown place, knowing that around each corner you might stumble upon a man walking through the streets chatting to his puppet monkey (no word of a lie), a cute coffee shop to wile away the hours, or (as is more often the case in Edinburgh), a tacky souvenir shop filled with tourists. This is what travel should be about- accepting the obvious, and taking the time to search for the quirky things that really cement trips away. However I also realised how these meetings would never have happened had we not exchanged contact details in the first place. I know travelling solo can be fun, but for me, people make a place. And this is what I've come to realise not just over the last year, but over the last four at university. :)

So after a great day forgetting about the demands of the present, I enjoyed the moment, reminisced about THAT year and looked forward to being in the right place at the right time once again in the not too distant future...

View from Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh
Well worth it if you can brave the climb!

Wednesday 11 January 2012

Breaking the ICE

As part of the Travel Belles first Across the Café Table question of 2012, bloggers have been asked...

In 2012 where do you most want to go but haven’t yet, & why?


After a quick look at the 'Where I want to go' section of this blog, and realising I would have to make a tough decision, my ambition for 2012 is...Iceland! Granted, Iceland has had a bit of a hard time of late; the Eyjafjallajokull volcano erupted in March 2012, consequently disrupting flights across Europe and causing inconvenience/general havoc. Let's not even mention the banking crisis...

Actually, it's 'thanks' to the banking crisis that Iceland, one of the world's most expensive countries, has become slightly more affordable- reasons I have not to visit this country of astounding natural beauty are dwindling...

Being a self-confessed 'city lover', Iceland seems a strange choice in many respects. Yet who could resist this?



To do in Iceland

-Reykjavik. Iceland's capital packed with wooden houses and a thriving café culture.
-The Blue Lagoon, Iceland's most popular tourist attraction (and geothermal spa, no less).
-See the Northern Lights (between September and April). Absolutely breathtaking (so I've heard)
-Whale watching
-Eat delicacies, e.g. puffin heart. Er...perhaps not!


I'm off to listen to Sigur Rós...

Thursday 5 January 2012

Back on the wagon


First of all, let me wish everyone a healthy, happy 2012 full of laughter and adventure!

I realise it's been a while since I used this blog....it's strange...after returning from my Year Abroad in France and Spain, I was determined to carry on writing. Yet coveting certain songs/clothes/newspaper articles just didn't seem right. Plenty of other blogs for that, right?

The entries stopped because I got busy, yes, but they also stopped because I told myself I didn't want to write about the U.K, assuming entries would not live up to the spontaneity of trips to Brussels and 2 week getaways to Eastern Europe. Granted, due to study commitments, since September trips have not been quite as spontaneous or frequent as they were before.

Yet the trips haven't stopped! After a couple of months staying in one place, thumbs were twiddling once again and I began to realise that travel really is what you make of it (clichéeeee!). I want to 'profiter bien' from home and all it has to offer for wannabe jet setters like myself, while my feet are firmly grounded, at least for the next 7 months or so...

Yes, I confess to occasionally reading through previous blog entries, remembering just how happy and carefree I was this time last year as I started the final chapter of the French adventure. I don't bemoan the fact that I am no longer living the 'European' dream. It had to end sometime, and perhaps knowing my adventures had an expiry date always made them all the more exciting.

Having absolutely no idea what the latter stages of 2012 have in store is exciting. And that makes me realise the greatest adventure is yet to come...

Home sweet home...


Wednesday 12 October 2011

Sloth Addiction


After the dream comes the reality. I'm back at university! Studying lots, learning lots and generally just shivering in my big old house (no double glazing= potential pneumonia come December, bring it on). What morphed into a travel blog may just turn into a blog about, well, who knows. Musings, anecdotes and pathetic attempts at humour? Watch this space....

Well at least I have an excuse to return to Barcelona....I'm learning Catalan! Going well so far, it's fairly easy to understand but the pronunciation can be rather complex- take, for instance, the word parallel: paral · lel. Yes, that strange dot in the middle of the word was intentional. Nevertheless, being the language geek I am, I think it's going to be a lorra lorra fun....

In other news, I have a part time job! Sounds right up my street if I'm honest, I'm going to be working as a Student Ambassador for an organisation called Routes into Languages, a government funded project which aims to enthuse young people to study foreign languages at G.C.S.E., 'A' and even degree level. I'm going to be giving presentations in local schools about the benefits of studying languages, running campus open days, film days at the local Tyneside cinema (check it out if you live anywhere near Newcastle, amazing independent cinema that shows contemporary, classic films as well as foreign language ones. Great fun and so much better than the multiplex.) All in all, I'm excited....

Enough about me- check these out:

  • Back into Vice magazine again. Still pretentious, but actually quite hilarious, plus the travel articles are just so interesting. Saw this and fell in love with sloths. My new favourite animal I think. Not sure if Father Christmas will deliver on that one though... I challenge you not to squeal in delight. http://www.vice.com/en_uk/the-cute-show/sloths

  • If the Smiths were reborn and went on a 'gap yah' to Africa, you would get Fool's Gold. Love them. Also check out 'The World is All There is'.


  • Going to see them in Glasgow in December, cannot wait.

  • Heard this on the Budweiser advert and remembered how much I like this song.



Also got myself some coloured jeans. Better late than never...



Monday 19 September 2011

Picture this

We've decided on a 'Year Abroad Feature Wall' for our new house, given that all 7 of us have spent the last year of our lives living it up in France, Spain, Italy and China (!). Our difficult task is to find photos that correspond to 11 or so devised categories. Here are some of mine and why I chose them...

How can you sum up a year of your life? Here's my best shot.

1) The 'really nice food' photo. Taken from our Thanksgiving meal, November 2011. Home made stuffing (bread and celery, who'd have thunk it?), sweet potato mash, corn, home made cranberry sauce, roast turkey (*cough* chicken), green beans, more mash and all washed down with bread and cheese, French style. The day before Thanksgiving, several of us spent a few hours peeling, chopping and cooking. I picked up the 3 chickens from the boucherie, dragging them home with difficulty the morning of Thanksgiving. The Americans took control in the kitchen and delivered the goods. Brilliant night- too much food and a pub quiz followed by even more brilliant leftovers.


2) The 'local festival' photo. Take one cold December evening. Take a load of language assistants. Take 25,000 other revellers all crammed into Nancy's Place Stanislas. After downing some red wine, we oohed and aahed as Nancy showed us what it was made of. We watched as the story of St Nicolas, celebrated in Alsace/Lorraine on 6 December was projected onto the buildings of Place Stan, accompanied by music, dialogue and fireworks. 30 minutes of brilliance was followed by a night out where our Irish friends taught us all to Irish dance in L'Envers, Nancy's club with its very own SLIDE. This was the life.


3) The 'city where you lived' photo. Place Stan, forever in my heart. Meeting point du jour, I'd often meet Jackie there after she finished work. Whilst waiting I'd sit and people watch.Then we'd go get food...


4) The 'funny sign' photo. Found in a cheap supermarket in Brussels. Self explanatory.



5) The 'photo from another country you visited'. Budapest, Hungary. Just too cool. Thermal baths, Hungarian folk dancing, stew, amazing red wine, Communist walking tours, ruin bars and dubstep. I want to live there.


6) The 'nice scenery' photo. Taken near Nancy's Parc St. Marie, 2 minutes walk from where I was living. I was walking back from a school trip at the end of October, just as the Toussaint holiday was beginning when I took this photo. My favourite season literally on my doorstep.



7) The 'favourite' photo. Being the world's most indecisive person, I don't have favourite photos. Here are some of them though, enjoy...



Wednesday 14 September 2011

Parc-Life

Parc de la Pepinière, Nancy, France. No rain!

Ladies. If you fancy yourself as a bit of a voyageuse, (like me), check out the Travel Belles, a website for females with a real passion for independent travel. Each month readers are invited to contribute to the site across the 'virtual café table' to discuss travel questions and share those unforgettable travel experiences.

This month’s question just happens to be…

‘What’s your favourite spot to have a picnic?’

I’m a firm believer that food always tastes better when eaten outdoors. Perhaps this was thanks to countless days out with the family whilst growing up. Memories of pork pies (Google it if you’re unfamiliar, just don’t count the calories), cheese sandwiches and Hula Hoop crisps take me back to an age where the Spice Girls ruled the airwaves, Sabrina the Teenage Witch ruled the TV and the Furby ruled the playground. Times have changed, but my British picnic food still hasn’t.

A great picnic can happen anywhere. All you need is sunshine (we’ve had about 4 sunny days in the UK this year, so choose your day wisely) , food/drink and good company. And folk/ ambient music if you’re feeling slightly pretentious...

As for my favourite spot I thought of a few favourite picnic locations before settling on the city of Nancy, France. Granted, it’s not the most famous of French cities, but it’s where I worked, partied and lived for the last year, making it a very special place indeed. Nancy’s city park Parc de la Pepinière makes for the perfect spot, situated just behind main square and meeting point du jour Place Stanislas, a World Heritage Site, no less.


Our very own bourgeois pique-nique

On a beautiful Sunday afternoon in April, armed with fresh bread from the boulangerie, Quiche Lorraine, olives, cheese and fresh strawberries from the nearby farmer’s market I headed to the parc with friends. Watching the world go by in France is a favourite pastime of mine and that’s exactly what I did after almost exploding from gluttony/sheer happiness after the pique-nique. I watched as loved up couples laid down picnic blankets complete with hampers, baguettes and organic produce (how bourgeois of them! I can merely imitate). I saw families eating in the sunshine, taking the beloved family dog for a walk and groups of friends casually sipping on supermarket wine, cautiously looking behind their shoulders in case the parc wardens were watching. It is France’s notorious love of food that gives a French pique-nique that reputable je ne sais quoi. Maybe it was the atmosphere in the park that day, maybe it was the way I was feeling....everything was perfect. Yet something was missing. The rain.

Tuesday 30 August 2011

Post euphoria...


...come the blues. Not the full on 'life is shit, can I just piss off back to France' blues (give it time) but the overwhelming sensation that this last year of my life will be hard to top. That and the fact that I have to go back to university and study. And pay over three thousand pounds for the privilege. Bleurgh.

I'm loving....
  • cups of tea
  • cake
  • the pub (continental Europe is definitely missing something)
  • Newcastle. My first love :)
  • The 80's. Music, fashion, the lot. My era I think.
  • The BBC
  • Bed
  • Beyoncé. Finally saw her Glastonbury set, amazing!
  • Football. Particularly this...
  • This....

I'm not loving...
  • speaking English constantly. Boring.
  • the fact that young people in my town look exactly the same. Boring.Same highlighted hair. Same loudmouth attitude. Same dodgy tan. Miaow!
  • the fact that Chesterfield has not changed. Initially comforting, now just frustrating.
  • English coffee. Boring.
  • This. http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/aug/26/stormy-bank-holiday-weekend-weather. Too hot for me in Spain, too rainy in England-never satisfied.

Sunday 14 August 2011

The End. Enfin.


I'm home. It sucks. Well it doesn't, but 'home' just doesn't compare to the bright lights of Continental Europe. It's over, but knowing that I'll probably end up doing it all over again reassures me slightly...

Thought I'd leave you with this. I wrote it during my last week in Nancy in April 2011, typing away as I tried to avoid packing my life up and moving on to pastures new. It sums up how I was feeling throughout the final term in France, oh the euphoria. :)


Tales from the industrial heart of France. Nancy -je t’aime.

The other day as I came out of the train station in Nancy, I arbitrarily decided to take the Place Saint Leon exit, the exit I had taken upon my arrival in France on a rainy September night in 2010. The memories came flooding back instantly of that 10 hour journey from Chesterfield, England to Nancy, France (chez moi for the last seven months). So much has happened since my arrival in the industrial heart of France I can hardly believe it’s all coming to an end.

Integration in France got off to a good start when three days in I caught sight of myself in a car wing mirror. Wearing a stripy top and carrying a baguette under my arm (the beret and garlic were to come later), I had already ousted my inner Française. Perhaps it was this pivotal moment that set the ball rolling for what was to become an incredible seven months.


After learning I would be teaching in what is known as a ZEP school in France (that is to say a school which is given extra funding and more autonomy due to the generally underprivileged area (quartier) in which it is situated) I had my reservations. The looks of pity I got from just about every French person I came across in Nancy during my first two weeks as I told them I was working in the Haut du Lièvre quartier nearly drove me insane. Matters were made worse during my first day at work when I discovered one of my students had a dog called Sniper. I was more than a little concerned….

Fast forward a couple of weeks of teaching and strikes broke out across France (no surprise there- they were striking over Sarko’s decision to raise the normal retirement age for public pensions from 65 to 67). Luckily my school stayed open throughout the protests that almost ground France to a halt (schools were closed and fuel supplies were running out).I became blasé about seeing manifestations (protests) that had seemed so exciting at first, although found it hilarious when one of my 6ème students facetiously declared he was on strike when asked to take his pencil case out of his bag. Luckily hardly any of the teachers chose to ‘faire grève’. The P.E. teacher who spends every moment of his spare time fishing went on strike, only to remain chez lui. When asked by another teacher if he went fishing while the strikes were going on, he chuckled ‘Pas d’essence’. No petrol. Mais oui.

As I worked in a ZEP school, there were students who had real behavioural/ personal issues that often made teaching English a challenge. There was also the task of teaching English to students who could barely speak French. Take B, a 13 year old 5ème student who came to France last year from Algeria where he never went to school- he looked after the family goats. I couldn’t expect to perform miracles- the general level of English at school was below the national average, but oh was I going to try…

Oh and when they got it! That made everything worthwhile! When I had an enthusiastic group who were prepared to speak (and make mistakes), teaching was thoroughly enjoyable. My favourite classes were the 4èmes with whom I made a television programme in English. I helped groups of students write scripts before filming them and putting everything together to make a 30 minute video. Everyone got involved (including the deputy head!)- there were presenters, sports stars, weather forecasts and even a film preview. The tables soon turned when two of my students politely requested that I present the weather forecast for Britain. Nerve-wracking to say the least- and I was speaking my mother tongue!

As my school was a small one (around 250 students and 30 staff members), I got to know everyone pretty quickly. I often went out for meals with the history-geography teacher who has visited EVERY country under the sun (or so it seems). There’s also N, who advised me ‘Il faut manger locale’- ‘You must eat locally’ when it comes to finding a French boyfriend and A, a French teacher with whom I often talk about books, music and shoes (très cultural). Two of the classroom assistants have become my cinema/ soirée friends and constant sources of amusement. I feel incredibly lucky to have had such welcoming and hilarious co-workers- definitely helped me to settle in sans problème.

Given that my timetable was a mere twelve hours a week, my life in Nancy was not all about school. I made friends with students at the nearby Ecole des Mines (engineering school) and consequently got to go to their soirées! This included a ‘rave in a forest’- we were driven out of Nancy to the nearby Fôret de Haye and dropped off at a normally derelict building which had transformed itself into a boîte de nuit for the evening. Dancing the night away in the middle of a forest until 5am was definitely a brilliant Year Abroad anecdote, particularly due to the fact that the toilets turned out to be non existent...Thanks to the ridiculous number of bank holidays the French have we didn’t have to work the next morning either! Win win situation!

Suffice to say I profité-d bien from my assistant salary/vast amount of free time. In France I visited Metz, Strasbourg, Colmar, the Champagne Region, the Vosges mountains, Paris and Lyon. I also went to Luxembourg, Brussels, Saarbrücken, Basel, Krakow, Budapest, Bratislava, Vienna and Prague. My responsable, S, called me la voyageuse (the traveller) and teased me whenever I stayed in Nancy for a weekend. Not only have I fallen in love with France all over again but I’ve been able to travel across Europe visiting countries and cities I’ve read so much about in books.

It’s not only the ‘You’ll never guess where I went this weekend’ moments that I will look back on fondly. S, my responsable always gives me a lift to/back from school if we start or finish at the same time. It enables us to chat, discuss, and more recently have a gossip. Even if it’s just pointing to something and saying ‘How do you say this in English/French?’ the time I’ve spent with her has been not only invaluable but remarkably enjoyable. This summer she’s leaving her lifelong friends, parents and two sons in Nancy and moving to Toulouse to be with a man she met last summer who works as a doctor in Africa. Why? ‘C’était un coup de foudre’ she told me one day- ‘It was love at first sight’.


Things I will miss about France

ÿ The people. Clichéd but very true.

ÿ Filler words in conversations: Bah oui, bah non, bah je ne sais pas, bah franchement! I started imitating for a joke but have now found I do it naturally…

ÿ The food. The French find it amusing that I like strong cheese à la Roquefort/Munster ‘Mais t’es pas une vraie anglaise!’ (you are not a real English girl’) they say…Bah oui!

ÿ Paul the baker’s. Think of it as an upmarket Gregg’s.

ÿ The constant ‘Where is Brian? Brian is in the kitchen!’ jokes from French people. This catchphrase refers to a sketch by comedian Gad Elmaheh who remarks that the same characters appear in every English textbook in France- Brian, Sophie, etc. Most French people I have come across have re-enacted this ‘hilarious’ sketch much to my amusement.

ÿ Double decker trains. We have to get these introduced in Britain. The novelty just doesn’t wear off!

ÿ Nancy in particular Place Stanislas- main square and meeting place for all. Dubbed ‘la plus belle place du monde’ (I can vouch for that) there’s nowhere I’d rather be when the sun is shining.


Things I will not miss about France

ÿ The parking. Oh have I seen some sights this year!

ÿ The lack of queues. It’s in my British nature to form a line quietly without complaining. Don’t judge.

ÿ Avoiding patisseries. I could win a gold medal for abstention when it comes to boulangerie dodging, which isn’t an easy task when the bloody things are round every corner.

ÿ The notorious French bureaucracy. Social Security always on your back asking you to send in passport photos/ birth certificate copies, your right arm, etc.

ÿ The famous Nancy winter weather which came out to play in November (it proceeded to rain virtually non-stop for 15 days; there’s a reason why I went through 6 umbrellas this year!).


Yet all those ‘things I will not miss’ dwindle in comparison to the great memories I’ve got from this year, meeting and teaching people from completely different backgrounds to my own, speaking lots of French and quite frankly having the time of my life. I travelled a lot, I learned a lot and I most definitely laughed a lot.

Sitting here now, I’m feeling nostalgic to say the least. It’s my penultimate day at school, the weather is beautiful and conversation in the staff room today has focused on cheese, smoking, contraception and 60 year old prostitutes. I could only be in one country- la belle France!

Tuesday 2 August 2011

Altea





Yes, I'm lazy and this is not exhaustive. But alas, time is not on my side....

Altea

The most surprising thing about Altea is its beauty, considering it is a stone's throw away from the bright lights of Benidorm (read previous blog to discover just how much I hated Beni-Vegas). Altea, much like Benidorm, is a former fishing village, famous for its beautiful Virgin de Consuelo church with its impressive blue roof. With my amigos in tow, upon our arrival at Altea's tram station (that directly links the town with Dénia and Benidorm) we wandered up the STEEP hill into the town centre.
Luckily, Altea's town centre was nothing like Benidorm's. With its beautiful whitewashed houses, terrace restaurants and general PEACE and QUIET, it was the perfect antidote. Granted, there's not a great deal to do in Altea and the craft/souvenir shops are bloody expensive, but a nice few hours were spent oohing and aahing at the general quaintness of everything. Had a nice meal before wandering into the new town and spending a few hours on the beach- which is best avoided if you don't want to look like a complete idiot when you want to swim in the sea (lots of pebbles= lots of screaming out in pain...).

Let the pictures speak for themselves.