Monday, 11 January 2010

the December Adventures

Well, it's been a while. a rather hectic, rather fun while.
My parents got here on the 10th of December, and after taking them around Swansea, we headed over to Cardiff for the night. I showed them the bay, and then the next day we hopped on a train to London and then took the Eurostar from London to Paris.

Millenium Centre at night.


We only had one day in Paris, so we stuck in as much as we could. We went all over the place--the Arc de Triomphe, the Eiffel Tower, down the river to Notre Dame and to see the Louvre, up to the Moulin Rouge, and then back to the Arc de Triomphe and the Champs Elysees to the Christmas Market (which was packed). by this time our feet hurt, so we headed back to the hotel.

Arc de Triomphe


Tour Eiffel


Notre Dame


Inside Notre Dame


The Moulin Rouge


The next day we hopped on the Thalys (a super-rad high speed train) that went up through Brussels over to Cologne, and then down to Bonn to meet our distant-relative cousins, who were wonderful. They showed us all around Bonn, which was really fun. Occasionally there were complications with the language, but everybody did really well.

at the Beethoven Haus


this is where Beethoven was born.


After Bonn we headed over to Berlin. We had three whole days and we saw a lot, but we didn't even put a dent in the city. The first day we went to the Brandenburger Tor, then walked through the Tiergarten to the Siegessäule (the Victory Column) and climbed up it (280 or so stairs--my legs are still sore). After that we walked over to Potsdamer Platz and then to Alexanderplatz to the Christmas Market to wander and eat dinner.

Brandenburger Tor


Siegessäule


The second day we started out at the Berlin Wall, then went down to the Ampelmann store (the little green man on the walk signs in East Berlin). We wandered down to the Checkpoint Charlie museum, then up to the Holocaust Memorial and walked down the Unter den Linden to another Christmas Market.

Berlin Wall.





Holocaust Memorial


The third day we went to the Zoo in the morning, which was really fun, and then we wandered over to the bombed-out church, then to the Potsdamer Platz again to the Museum of Musical Instruments, and then back to the Christmas Markets for dinner again.

the Elephant Gates


After Berlin we stopped at Prague on our way to Munich. We had about five hours, but I showed them all the good spots--the castle, the astronomy tower, the bridge, etc. Then we hopped on a train to Munich and got in late.

Prague in the winter-time


We didn't spend a lot of time in Munich other than sleeping--on Saturday we hopped on a train to Rothenburg ob der Tauber (which I've actually been to before, with the High School) and wandered around the city. It was freezing but really pretty.

Rothenburg ob der Tauber


Sunday we took a castle tour up to Linderhof and Neuschwanstein, two of the castles built by [Mad] King Ludwig II. It was really cold, but also really pretty.

Linderhof





Neuschwanstein


After Munich we took a train to Zurich and spent the night, and the next day we headed over to Chur, where we would catch the Glacier Train to Zermatt. It was gorgeous--everything was white and mountain-y, and when the sun shone it was so bright you had to close your eyes. Zermatt is a cute ski town right below the Matterhorn, although for a car-free town it's pretty dangerous in terms of motor vehicles almost running everyone down. We got in after it was dark so we couldn't see the Matterhorn, but we found dinner and walked around. The next morning there were clouds over the Matterhorn so we didn't actually get to see the mountain (which was unfortunate) before we left for Geneva. We spent Christmas Eve and Christmas Day in Geneva, keeping it low-key and playing a lot of Euchre.

Zurich


on the Glacier Express


what we could see of the Matterhorn


Lake Geneva


On Boxing Day (the 26th) we headed to the airport and flew from Geneva to London. We went to Westminster that evening and saw the city at night, then went back the next morning to ride the Eye and see everything in the daytime. When we were done with that we went down to London Bridge, Tower Bridge, and the Tower of London, then found our way up to the Zebra Crossing on Abbey Road. there were a lot of people at first, but it was a large group and they left. It was strange, to see all these people find this precise zebra crossing simply because four people took a picture there a long time ago. After Abbey Road we went over to Hyde Park to the (still ongoing) Christmas Fair, and the next morning mom and dad left (and from what I hear, had a great time flying home, after the Christmas Bomber). I'm really glad they came to visit. It was fun times all around.

The London Eye





Platform nine and three-quarters


Westminster Abbey


View from the Eye


Tower Bridge


Abbey Road


I hung out in London for a couple days after that and went to see Peter and the Wolf live (it was amazing), then went over to Canterbury for a few days over New Year's. I just hung out and wandered around the town a bit. From Canterbury I went to Oxford for a couple days and wandered around there, then came back to Swansea.

Peter and the Wolf


Canterbury Cathedral





I've spent the last week writing my second essay for Genocide, which I turned in today. Next I write an essay for my Picaresque class that's due on Thursday. After that I think I'll just rest in the in-between time and read a few books. Classes start on the 25th. This semester I'm taking Welsh again, the History of Propaganda, and Contemporary American Fiction, and I'm looking forward to all of them. Like last semester, I have classes on only Mondays and Tuesdays, which leaves some weekends open for (hopefully) a lot more travel.

also: I apologize for the super-long post. in retrospect, I suppose I could split it up, but now I'm too lazy.