Wednesday, November 19, 2014

The Hague, Eindhoven, & more Dutch stuff!

One chilly but sunny Saturday afternoon, two of my unitmates and I ventured off to the Hague! It's only about 45 minutes away from Utrecht, so it was a really nice day trip. We had a really chill day because we were all tired from not having slept much that week, but it was nice to just relax. We started off by getting some coffee (Note: a coffeeshop is where you buy weed, and a cafe is actually a bar, so what do you call a place where you get coffee?? That is the question...), and then we went to the Mauritshuis, a beautiful museum holding many famous Dutch art pieces, including Vermeer's "Girl with the Pearl Earring," many Rembrandts, and more! Dutch museums are like heaven for me. I love taking it all in! It's also fun to see museums in a new light because of the Museum Studies course I'm currently in.

Mauritshuis
The Girl With the Pearl Earring
After enjoying the wonderful museum, we ate at Bagels & Beans (did you know bagels are a bit of a rarity here?) and then explored the streets in the city center a bit. We also saw the Houses of Parliament and one of the royal palaces.

Royal Palace (one of them)
It's a lovely city! When it gets warmer in the spring, I'll go again to visit the beach, and one of these days, I will also visit the ICJ and other cool official buildings.

All Dutch cities are starting to look the same...but still beautiful
Our new friend
The following weekend, my unitmate and I visited Eindhoven for Glow, a light festival spread out across the city. We went with a girl she knows from home and the friend's Spanish and British unitmates -- it was a super fun crowd! Eindhoven is the home of Phillips, so they're really into lights and stuff...that's pretty much all I know about the city. Oh, they also have an airport that cheap budget airlines fly from! We arrived when it was dark already (which is pretty early these days...like 5-6pm) because it's a light festival, and the city looked pretty nice by night. It's small, but still pretty cute! While it was nice, I still Utrecht is the prettiest city I've seen so far in the Netherlands. It's so so beautiful with its canals (yeah, so not all Dutch cities have canals -- surprising but true), and it's the perfect size. Also, because it's above sea level, the canals are lower than they are in other cities, so you walk along the road above and look down and then can go down staircases to sit beside the canal...ah, it's soooo nice!!! Anyway, back to Eindhoven. We saw lots of cool light shows projected on different buildings and stuff; it was a pretty cool event!

Is this not the coolest and most beautiful thing you've ever seen?!
The next day, it felt like Seattle. It was rainy and gray all day, but we still managed to go out in the rain and rush to town on our bikes (biking in the rain exposes so much more of your body surface to the rain, and you get really wet thighs, arms, and feet...it sucks) to see Sinterklaas arrive in town! He officially arrives and is filmed on TV in a different city every year (this year was Gouda, where the cheese comes from!), but we just went to the one in Utrecht, which was less crowded anyway! Sinterklaas is Dutch Santa Claus, but he's skinny and is from Spain. He also used to be a bishop and has a billion "helpers" called Black Petes, who are white people with blackface, an afro, red lips, and a gold earring. So yeah...I prefer Santa. While the Netherlands is a very progressive country in many ways, this tradition is not one of them. They love Sinterklaas, and they love Black Pete, who they claim is only black from the soot in the chimney (I'm still not sure where the afro and earring came from in the chimney...). Just starting last year, there has been a lot of national and international debate surrounding this tradition and whether or not it is racist. It's hard to let go of traditions, so the Dutch are very defensive of this, but I really hope things will change in the next few years. I felt extremely uncomfortable seeing all the Black Petes come down the Oudegracht (the canal), but it was interesting that this year, there were also some Rainbow Petes and other colored Petes.

Black Petes leading the way for Sinterklaas
Does anyone else feel as uncomfortable as I do???
Seeing Sinterklaas after an hour of discomfort in watching the Black Petes prepare the crowd for his arrival was a bit anticlimactic, but it was cool to see a Dutch tradition all the same.

HI SANTA!!!!!!!
Sinterklaas will now stay in town and put little presents in Dutch children's shoes when they set them out by the fireplace any night between now and December 5, which is the actual day of Sinterklaas (it's also the name of the holiday). They celebrate Sinterklaas much more than Christmas, so it'll be fun to be here for that!

The Dom in the fall (note the majestic Utrecht flags at the top!) 
Other than exploring the Netherlands and experiencing Dutch culture, I have been keeping busy with:

  • cleaning my room
  • keeping up with Downton Abbey
  • searching for cheap flights to every European city I can think of
  • hiding while my unitmate bravely tried (and failed after screaming and dropping it) to bring a giant spider outside in her hand so that I would not take its life
  • having dinner at the home of a dear friend who studied on exchange at UW two years ago -- she has the sweetest family!
  • trying not to deplete my dining card money before the end of the semester
  • taking advantage of the little time we have left with all the other exchange students before they leave at the end of the semester :(
  • participating in research studies to get a little cash
  • going on a Utrecht Underground tour where we learned about homelessness in our city
  • visiting the market in town!
  • and studying, of course...
Sarah and I at the market with fresh warm stroopwafels <3
Olivier -- a church-turned-bar!!! So cool!

Yogurt (actual yogurt, not the frozen kind) with Rhea, a girl from India who studies in Singapore and is on exchange here! The Dutch love their yogurt!
Look at the pineapples and then realize how massive those Nutella bottles are!!!

Monday, November 3, 2014

Hitchhiking to Spain

At my university here, they have something cool called a fall break. It's like spring break...but in the fall!!! So I got to have a whole week off halfway through the semester and explore the world.

One of the clubs on our campus arranges a hitchhiking competition every fall and spring break. They choose a location that is pretty far from Utrecht and have groups of two and three race to get their first. The only rule is that you can use no money for transportation and must only hitchhike. It was an unforgettable and incomparable experience - it was the craziest thing I've ever done in my life!

Our destination this year was Zaragoza, Spain, which takes 14 hours if you drive there directly. I teamed up with a guy in my class (it's safer if it's a guy and a girl), and we headed to Zaragoza! Here's a recap of our incredible trip that consisted of almost 20 rides with the absolute kindest and most generous people in the world:
Above: Liege, Belgium

Below: French countryside
    1. Utrecht to Eindhoven (Netherlands)
    2. Eindhoven to Maastricht
    3. Maastricht to Liege (now in Belgium)
    4. Liege to Bastogne
    5. Bastogne to Martelange
    6. Martelange to Arlon
    7. Arlon to Longwy (passed through Luxembourg and now in France!)
    8. Longwy to Metz
    9. Metz to Nancy
    10. Nancy to Toul
     11. Toul to Dijon
     12. Dijon to Beaune
     13. Beaune to Vienne
     14. Vienne to a small rest stop in the middle of France
     15. Random rest stop to Orange
     16. Orange to Montpellier
     17. Montpellier to Perpignan
     18. Perpignan to BARCELONA (finally in Spain!!!!!!!)
                                                           19. Train from Barcelona to                                                                                                    Zaragoza (we got stuck)
      We left Saturday at 1pm and arrived in Zaragoza on Monday at around 9pm. It was the most exhausting but memorable trip ever. We did not win (the winners arrived at 2pm on Sunday after getting a direct ride to Zaragoza in a delivery truck!)...but we met the kindest people. Most of the people we rode with could not speak English, so in Belgium and France, we mostly just used broken French/English and hand gestures, but in Spain, I was surprisingly able to recall and utilize my Spanish from my high school days. We connected so well with all our drivers though; it really taught us that language is no barrier! Some of the memorable moments with our drivers:
      • The Belgian police picked us up on the side of the highway because they'd been getting calls all night about a 14-15 year old girl (...me) trying to hitch a ride in the dark on the side of the highway. They were extremely kind and brought us to the border of Belgium and Luxembourg "for our own security" and so they wouldn't have to keep getting calls about us.
      • A kind Belgian lady brought us to see a monument in Bastogne dedicated to American soldiers who fought in WWII. She then gave me her phone number in case it was too difficult for us to find a ride and we needed help.
      • We fell asleep on the car of the sweetest French couple and woke up to the wife giving us food she had bought us at a gas station. They then drove 30 minutes farther from their home in order to get us in a better and busier location and then, knowing that we knew no French, proceeded to ask everyone in the rest stop where they were going and whether we could ride with them to Spain.
      • The police picked us up again...but this time French! He was half-Spanish and was excited that we were going to Zaragoza, so he brought us 30 km to a better location but first told us to promise not to tell his boss.
      • A limousine pulled over for us but unfortunately was not going in the right direction.
      • We slept one whole night in the truck of an extremely generous and kind Romanian truck driver.
      • One lady in France missed her nephew's birthday party for us because she couldn't find a safe and well-lit place to drop us off, so she decided to drive us to a major city 30 minutes away instead (and then drove 30 minutes back home).
      This trip really restored my faith in humanity, haha. Everyone was seriously so nice and kind and completely selfless. There are those few creepers (we fortunately met none of these) who give hitchhiking a bad name so that everyone thinks you'll get murdered doing it, but after the 50+ hours that we spent on the road, I came out with a much different and much more optimistic perspective on hitchhiking that I had before.

      Made it to Zaragoza!!! (view from my hostel window)
      After arriving in Zaragoza, we spent a few days with the other 30 teams who had all participated on the trip as well. I met up with my unitmate Cassy, and we explored the city together and also went kayaking with the group on the beautiful Ebro River. It was also really fun getting to use my Spanish! It was very helpful, and I was so excited that I could actually communicate with people.

      Kayaking on the Ebro River w/ the Basilica behind
      Aljaferia Castle
      Inside the Basilica
      Walking through the streets of Zaragoza
      Excited about our churros con chocolate...yum!!!
      After two days, we then traveled to Barcelona! There, we stayed at a cheap hostel right on La Rambla, the main street with MANY tourists that really never sleeps.

      View of La Rambla from our hostel balcony
      It was so fun to go sightseeing all around, especially with Cassy, because both of us were too cheap to take the bus everywhere, so we literally walked around the whole city and know it well now, haha. It's a beautiful city, and it was fun to see all its different areas -- it's right by the Mediterranean so there's even a long strip of beautiful beaches!

      Barceloneta Beach
      All the architecture and art was beautiful too; they are very proud of Gaudi and Picasso...for good reason! We saw many of Gaudi's buildings and visited Park Guell, a beautiful park up on a hill with tons of beautiful buildings and structures designed by Gaudi. We also visited the Picasso Museum for free!

      Gaudi's Casa Batlló
      La Sagrada Familia!!!!!!!!!!
      View from Park Guell
      We were also too cheap to buy expensive food, so we ate lots of bread and cheese but still were able to try tapas and sangria and paella and other Spanish goodness. Barcelona was also very different than Zaragoza, as the two are in different states. Barcelona is in Catalonia, where they speak Catalan (as well as Spanish, but Catalan is the main language), and Zaragoza is in Aragon. It was fun getting to see both cities!

      Olympic Stadium
      El Mercado!!
      Arc de Triomf
      We went home feeling very happy and refreshed. It was my first and best fall break ever! Now onto my next adventure!!!