Sarah’s List

Favorites:

1. City: Warsaw

2. Country: Austria

3. Travel leg: US to London (movies on the plane!)

4. Person we talked to: New York Rangers fan

5. Purchase: CHOCOLATE!

6. View: Prague

7. European food: pineapple and cheese perogies

Bests and Worsts

8. Best meal: the dinner at Karen’s house

9. Worst meal: Ramen and Nutella in Prague

10. Best hostel: Nathan’s Villa

11. Worst hostel: BCD Hostel

When were you most…

12. Awed: going through the Austrian countryside on the train

13. Bored: Lake Balaton, while Corinne and Rosie were playing Purble Palace

14. Dirty/disgusting: after climbing the huge hill in Prague

15. Hungry: the first few days of the trip, before I got used to not snacking all the time

16. Scared: when we walked through the sketchy intersection after 8pm in Berlin

17. Stressed: never

18. Tired: every time we had to walk up a tower

What is something you…

19. Learned about Sarah/Rosie/Corinne:
Corinne is type A, likes to lead, freaks out when she doesn’t have a plan, likes helping people who don’t necessarily ask for it, is really good at making plans, is afraid of getting in trouble, & is super cool!
Rosie is addicted to means of communication (her phone, the internet)…I wonder why that could be…, never loses anything, but forgets stuff in the room, good at reading maps, indecisive, never ever complains, didn’t sleep as much as you would think during the trip, & is awesome!

20. Lost/left in Europe: left: empty shampoo bottles….lost: my pen and sharpie; my Prague souvenirs and water bottle (both of which were recovered)

21. Couldn’t have done without: tide to go pen

22. Found: Germany colored lei in the bathroom at the airport

23. Broke: my battery charger

24. Liked: the food

25. Were addicted to: chocolate; nutella, kinder eggs, sweet food

26. Spent most of the time on the train doing: sleeping

27. Didn’t really want to do at first, but are happy you did: climbed mountains and towers

28. Wish you had packed: a can opener

29. Wish you hadn’t packed: nothing

U.S. v. Europe

30. Most missed American thing: free water at restaurants and free public restrooms

31. Something the U.S. should do more like Europe: public transportation system

Weights and Measurements

32. What piece of clothing you wore the most without washing and how long it was: my pink sweater. I only washed it twice, once at the beginning of the trip and once at the end. I did get caught in the rain twice with it on though…that’s kinda of like washing it.

33. How many books you read (with titles): Dune and 40 pages of Les Miserables

34. When you started counting down the days: 11 days to go

35. Weight of your backpack at the beginning and end of of the trip: 13 kg to 15 kg

Leasts and Mosts

36. Most expensive purchase: chocolate; 20 Euros

37. Least favorite person we met: Canadian guy

38. Funniest moment for Corinne/Sarah/Rosie:
Corinne: when Corinne said “let me help you” to that old guy that couldn’t speak English
Rosie: when Rosie fell asleep mid-conversation

39. Place that was least like you expected: Budapest

40. Most difficult thing you did: climbed stuff

41. Least used item you packed: cell phone

Finally

42. Advice for future travelers: buy food at grocery stores, make sure cans have pull off lids

43. The trip in one word: amazing

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Picture Synopsis

For those of you not on Facebook, here is a link to an album with the best pictures from the trip. Enjoy!

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=42419&l=8318c&id=731281502

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Filed under Austria, Belgium, Corinne, Czech Republic, England, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Rosie, Sarah, USA

Corinne: Final List

Favorites:

1. City: Prague

2. Country: Austria

3. Travel leg: Vienna to Klagenfurt

4. Person we talked to: New York Rangers fan

5. Purchase: Red bag

6. View: Prague

7. European food: Langos

Bests and Worsts

8. Best meal: At the Austrian cafe, the potato and egg dish

9. Worst meal: Ramen in Prague

10. Best hostel: Seventh Heaven

11. Worst hostel: BCD (was it even a hostel?)

When were you most…

12. Awed: Prague view

13. Bored: Lake Balaton

14. Dirty/disgusting: after the long walk to the hostel in Krakow

15. Hungry: Budapest

16. Scared: when the bell rang in the tower of Matthaus Church in Berlin

17. Stressed: the day we missed the flight

18. Tired: Lake Balaton (lethargic is more like it)

What is something you…

19. Learned about Sarah/Rosie/Corinne: About Sarah, she can get distracted easily (especially while navigating), she makes awesome mouth noises, great at calming situations, can pick up people’s moods, and can be pleasingly blunt. About Rosie, she doesn’t complain (ever), has trouble making decisions, doesn’t snack, and is awesome at tap dancing.

20. Lost/left in Europe: Rick Steves with Maria (she better bring it back)

21. Couldn’t have done without: Rick Steves, sneakers, my folder with all our travel info

22. Found: sticker that says “good for you food”

23. Broke: water bottle

24. Liked: that the first opera was actually a ballet

25. Were addicted to: postcards

26. Spent most of the time on the train doing: planning or Sudoku

27. Didn’t really want to do at first, but are happy you did: walk into the sketchy graffiti art gallery

28. Wish you had packed: a book, pillow, dressing up shoes

29. Wish you hadn’t packed: contact stuff

U.S. v. Europe

30. Most missed American thing: pizza

31. Something the U.S. should do more like Europe: more friendly to car-less people (bikes, walking, public transport)

Weights and Measurements

32. What piece of clothing you wore the most without washing and how long it was: possibly my sweatpants, which I wore as pjs every night, and I can’t remember ever washing them… (the truth comes out)

33. How many books you read (with titles): Dune, the Broker, Rick Steves’ Guide to Eastern Europe, Cordina’s Royal Family

34. When you started counting down the days: when we had one day to go

35. Weight of your backpack at the beginning and end of of the trip: 10 kg to 20 kg (thanks Maria)

Leasts and Mosts

36. Most expensive purchase: my bag $20

37. Least favorite person we met: opera guy who bounced us

38. Funniest moment for Corinne/Sarah/Rosie: when Sarah became Sarah Pfeller, when Rosie got up to pee and couldn’t find the key

39. Place that was least like you expected: Poland

40. Most difficult thing you did: canoeing

41. Least used item you packed: contacts

Finally

42. Advice for future travelers: get cash at ATMs, keep a budget, find a guidebook that has advice, not just information, know how to use public transportation

43. The trip in one word: unbelieveable (still pinching myself)

Thanks y’all for being a great audience! We’ll let you know when we have our next adventure. 🙂

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Day 34 : The Last Day

Corinne:

Let me just start by saying that we didn’t miss this flight. And I don’t think we are ever going to live down the flack we keep getting…

Sarah warned us this morning that she was going to mention everything we did that was our “last.” And she lived up to her word fairly accurately.

We woke up pretty early so there would be no question of making the plane. I bathed in the in-room shower, and then did my hair in two french braids to match the other two. Solidarity for our trip back. We had an easy journey on the tube to Heathrow, where check-in was easy and the comfy couches were accessible. During the wait, Sarah saw a woman eating a cucumber as a hand food. We are pleased : we left an impression on Europe.

Now, I am sitting in Rosie’s bedroom in New York. My eyes are drooping a bit, and I’ve just had conversations with people I haven’t talked to in weeks. I’m taking the bus down to D.C. tomorrow afternoon, and that will be that. The end of the trip. The end of June in Europe. But, to finish things up, we wrote a list of questions we are going to answer for you. Stay posted.

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Day 33: We are on a Perpendicular Street and One Cannot Paddleboat Alone

Rosie:

Today we entered back in to the English speaking world. We woke up and had our second home-cooked breakfast. Delicious. Karen made us eggs in this really cool pan with holes in it. Sarah and I, being engineers, tried to figure it out. There were basically no problems getting to the Chunnel and the ride was pretty short, probably because we slept.

Once we got off of the train we visited platform 9 and 3/4. It was fun but I feel like they could have done a better job with it. The only attraction was an empty shopping cart that was partially sticking out of the wall. We then had to take the Underground to Victoria’s station. The prices were kind of outrageous. A single subway ride was $8. Anyway, after paying way too much for the short ride, they were charging way too much for luggage storage. Sarah and I decided to carry ours, but Corinne payed to keep hers there.

Our first destination was Harrod’s because I remembered going to the Harrod’s in Knightsbridge with my mom 6 years ago and having the best hot chocolate ever. Corinne found a free map that was not detailed at all and we began to make our way there. We kept getting turned around and eventually she asked somebody for directions. He informed us that we were going completely the wrong way, but after walking a few blocks we asked another woman and found out that that was not entirely true. Either way, she gave us really clear directions the store was pretty easy to find. About a block away from Harrod’s, however, Sarah and I lost Corinne. She walked off down the street to check something and disappeared. We actually found her again but then a bus drove in front of us and she was gone again. We decided that we should just go to Harrod’s and find her there . It worked. We met up right outside the main entrance.

After the best hot chocolate ever, Sarah and I decided to go to the hostel area and drop our bags off while Corinne did her site-seeing. It was probably our best decision on the whole trip because the bags had definitely gotten heavier. We had to ask a couple of people for directions to the bust stop, but overall Sarah and I were really impressed with our navigational skills. Also, the people that wee asked for directions were basically the nicest people ever.

The bus did a really bad job of announcing the stops. It never used street names and sometimes did not even say the name of the stop. Sarah spotted the street that we wanted on a sign, which saved us from getting lost. Our hostel was number 639 on the street, but after number 621 there was a giant cemetery and no buildings. Eventually we decided to walk past the cemetery and we found our hostel. Apparently 639 is right across the street from 850.

Anyway, after checking in and dropping our stuff off, we went for a walk to find dinner. There were a ton of places, but after misreading a sign that said “Nodes” as “Noodles” Sarah and I both craved noodles. There was a street with 4 Indian restaurants in one block, but apparently Indian food does not have noodles. One of the places was Indian/Thai though, so we went there. After ordering, the waiter informed us that they were phasing out the Thai food so there were no noodles. We were going to just leave and go somewhere else, but the waiter really didn’t want us to. After a little while and a lot of confusion, we had our noodles. They were pretty good.

After dinner we found our way back to the hostel despite the fact that Sarah gets confused between parallel and perpendicular. The hostel owned 100s of DVDs and after looking through all of them we settled on Braveheart. After waiting for some guys to finish watching a couple music videos, we started playing the movie only to realize that it was broken. We then chose Pretty Woman, but the guy there actually grimaced when we showed him our choice. He insisted on “the Doors” saying it was very good and just popping it in the VCR. It sucked. Like a lot. We left half way through to walk around and sleep. Oh yeah, Sarah almost bought 10 Kinder Eggs, but I talked her out of it.

Corinne:

So because we split up in London, here is my version of events after we went to the Harrod’s Chocolate Bar for suckao.

I began my adventures alone by helping someone find Harrod’s (apparently it is a common question). I had decided earlier to see Hype Park and BuckinghamPalace, so headed the couple blocks to the former. On the way, I was stopped by a motorcade, so if you know anyone famous who was driving by Hyde Park the other day…. Once there, I found Serpentine Lake, which was covered in paddle boats. Sadly, one cannot paddle boat alone. Instead I walked the Princess Diana Memorial Path to the Princess Diana Memorial Fountain and the Princess Diana Memorial Playground and to Kensington Palace which had Princess Di birthday cards on the fence outside (her birthday is July 1st), and a Princess Di exhibit inside. What can you say? The English love their princess.

While I was meandering on my own, I had my iPod shuffle playing, and it was doing a great job of matching music to the scenery. It was playing slow, melodic stuff while I was at the fountain, and upbeat stuff while I was walking. Apple is creepily amazing.

By the way, found the obelisk again.

I stopped and sat in the rose garden for a couple minutes to eat some pretzels and discovered I was not the friendliest person in Europe (take that, Rosie and Sarah). A nice Indian gentleman sat down next to me, and we had this conversation:

IG: Do you have the time?

Me: 5:40

IG: Lovely weather we’re having.

Me: Yeah, beautiful and sunny.

IG: (something indistinguishable) from?

Me: Where am I from? I’m not from London.

IG: You don’t look like London. Maybe Europe?

Me: No, America.

IG: America?

Me: Yeah, the United States.

IG: Oh, I see. On holiday?

Me: Yeah.

IG: How long are you in London?

Me: 24 hours.

IG: (Laughs and pats me on the knee)

Me: Yep, just seeing some sights before I go home.

(Long pause)

IG: It was nice meeting you.

Me: You too.

(IG rides into the sunset.)

I exited Hyde Park and headed toward the Marble Arch, which I thought was on the way to Buckingham Palace. Actually, it’s not. Should’ve listened to my iPod after it started playing some dissonant music. Good thing I didn’t have to explain my lack of orientation to Sarah or Rosie. I just got a lovely walk up Park Street, the London equivalent of Park Avenue.

Buckingham Palace was extremely underwhelming. After all the palaces with grandiose architecture and manicured gardens, it was a cemented-in blob. With guards. So I decided not to end there, but continue on toward the Thames. I headed to Big Ben and Westminster Abbey. I didn’t go in either, but seeing the famous structures (and the London Eye) was a lot more impressive than the Palace.

I scurried my was back to Victoria station to pick up my luggage, paid with my last pounds, then couldn’t call the hostel for their free shuttle (my card didn’t work in the machine, then I didn’t know whether to include the 0 or not, then was too late). I ended up taking the Underground to find Sarah and Rosie watching some creepy Doors movie. And the rest is (or will be) in Rosie’s blog.

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Day 32 : Drinking Alone with People

Today was our only full day in Belgium, since, I’m not sure if you know this but, we missed our flight two days ago. It started off very strangely since Corinne, who is usually the one to wake us up, decided to ignore her phone and sleep in. Of course, I’m not complaining, but still…it was weird. Anyway, we went down stairs and had the best breakfast we’ve had in about 4 weeks. We had some pastries and these really delicious rolls with cheese. I’m not really sure how rolls can be so good, but they were.

Afterwards, we went to Lier (leer) and walked around for a bit. Lier was really peaceful and cute. It had cobble stone street in part of it and some really cool churches. One of them had four figures that moved and struck bells on the hour and then showed pictures of some of Belgium’s kings. We also saw a beautiful church in Antwerp which Karen’s mom described as small…it was not, but is was pretty.

Here is a quick list of the things we did in Antwerp (not in order): went shopping (Rosie bought a pretty dress), ate delicious waffles, went inside a pretty building, had hot chocolate/tea at a café where I sneakily stole some sugar with the help of Corinne’s bag and a very convincing stretch/yawn on my part, and bought tons of chocolate.

After we came back to Karen’s house, we walked into town and got fries for dinner. Beforehand we were all thinking, “fries? for dinner?”. Then we learned how filling fries are, especially when they come with meat and sauce and are delicious. Also, there were these litle plastic forks to eat the fries with and they were adorable.

After dinner, we walked back, relaxed in our room for a little while, and then went down stairs to watch the EuroCup finals (Spain won! yay!). So yesterday, I found an abandoned German flag colored lei in the bathroom at the airport and I took it as a souvenir. Today, Corinne wore it for the second part of the game, but it did not help Germany win. Meanwhile, we all ate more chocolate and cookies and Corinne had some Belgian beer, because apparently it is better than American beer. Rosie and I had water, thus Corinne was drinking alone with people.

After the game, we were all tired so we went back upstairs and talked about our plans for London. Rosie had the best hot chocolate of her life in London so of course we are going to go there. We were all very disappointed in Corinne’s inability to navegate the Chocolate Bar’s web page. So far our plan for tomorrow includes getting hot chocolate, visiting platform nine and three quarters at King’s Cross, and seeing Buckingham Palace. Corinne wants to harass the guards, but I’ve always felt bad for them because people do that and because that job must be boring. I realy want to do something nice for them, so we might read them a story or something to keep them entertained. Rosie suggested we make one up about a young boy named Guard, but we haven’t decided whether that would end up being harassing behavior or not. We might also get tea and hang out in front of the palace. All I know is that if Corinne makes me learn anything, I’m going AWOL and taking Rosie with me.

K, so no pictures, obviously, and I’m not going to pretend that there will ever be any. Way to end it on a high note, I know. (Yay! Pictures now!)

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Day 31: Oh. That looks delicious.

Corinne:

It’s been one of those days where you aren’t quite sure where one stops and the next begins.

I feel like Rosie kind of down-played the fact that we missed our flight and were stuck in an airport for nearly 24 hours. About 14 of which took place today.

We had decided to take shifts being awake, and Sarah and I fell asleep at 2 (after running around the airport for an hour making post 30.5). We were on linoleum, and it was hard and cold. Rosie woke me up at 4:30 for my shift and I never got comfortable enough to go back to sleep. And here I am still going (chalk one up for living on little sleep during freshman year).

We dilly-dallied in our little bit of wall, having a nutritious breakfast of rolls, possibly with some Nutella and pretzels. I had a delicious sandwich of Nutella and Honey Nut Cheerios (not quite as good as the peanuts, but still worth a try). Sarah, on her lack of sleep, reacted with a little disjointed but empathic ‘Oh. That looks delicious.’ She was running on as little as I was.

At noon, we checked in for our flight (on time this time).

At 2, we took off.

At 3, we went down through some turbulance that got us all jittery, (including some less annoying gaspers behind us), but an extremely smooth landing.

At 3:15, we were walking through the huge airport making up a story problem about the speed of luggage reaching the conveyor versus the time it takes a passenger to get there.

At 4, we had our luggage and started looking at the cars for an Audi and our host for the weekend, Karen.

At 4:25, we used a payphone to call her.

At 4:45, we finally connected.

Then we spent a pleasant evening with her and her friends and her town. More info later, but we are safe and tired in Belgium. Finally. And have been harassed at every turn not to miss our flight back to the US.

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Day 30.5 : Sleepover at the Airport

Corinne and I were thinking…



 

 

ourselves

 

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Day 30 : Fun at the Airport

So Sarah refused to include this in the blog yesterday, but at dinner she ate a lot of the sugar from the shaker. When we had to leave, she then proceeded to fill her napkin with sugar to save it for later. As we were walking around, she tried to funnel it into her mouth but the napkin started to rip and she spilled it all over herself. Like her face had sugar all over it, it spilled down her shirt, and somehow even got under her money belt.

Okay, so yesterday Sarah mentioned that a group of people came into the lounge while we were hanging out and there was this really annoying Canadian guy. So anyway, along with the Canadian guy and the girl from Carnegie Mellon was this group of guys from New Jersey. We didn’t talk to them at all while we were up there, but later when Sarah and I were going to take a shower we ran into them again. We were in the bathroom and Sarah was already in the first shower and I was about half a step away from walking into the second one, when one of them was like “hey, where are you from.” I’m pretty sure he was not completely sober, but we had a short polite conversation until his third friend came in and he had to switch into show-off-y guy mode. He decided to finish the conversation by saying something along the lines of “if you are going to get naked don’t let me get in the way” and then “I am in bunk 40 by the way.” After they left the room Sarah laughed, but through the whole thing she was completely silent and of no help.

When we woke up this morning, the guys from New Jersey were just getting up too and we had another short conversation with them, but this time they were sober. It turns out that after the WallCanadian guy had left us alone, he went and attacked one of them with questions. He wouldn’t stop talking to him for at least 45 minutes and asked him the same stupid questions about how old the world was and whether he liked George Bush. I guess we were lucky to get out so soon.

After actually leaving the hostel, we went to the East Side Gallery, which is the largest section of the Berlin Wall still standing. After seeing the second largest section, I was expecting this one to be way smaller, but it was probably about six blocks long, if not longer. There was graffiti all over it, and most of the graffiti was pretty cool. We kept walking until the next subway station and then went to a museum type thing about the wall. On the way there we passed an area where there were poster boards and a few people walking around. We looked in and it turned out to be a memorial. Apparently the Berlin Wall especially affected people on this street because it ran right through it and blocked off a major church. A while afterwards, the church was demolished.

Across the street was the place that we were actually trying to go. The major point of the museum was the replica of the Berlin Wall and the death zone in between the two walls. On our tour a few days ago, we learned that the Berlin Wall was actually two walls that ran parallel to each other, and the walls were mostly there to slow people down so that guards could shoot them while they were in between. Anyway, after climbing about four flights of stairs you could look down and across the street and see the replica. Inside there were also film clips taken by American and British people.

We decided to take the tram after the museum to get back to the train station where we had stored our bags earlier. After turning the corner though there was a ton of traffic and the tram was averaging about 5 minutes per block so we got off and took the subway. After a few transfers, a 15 minute wait, and an unexpectedly long subway ride, we ended up at the airport about 20 minutes before our flight was scheduled to depart. When we got to the right counter, the woman told us that it was too late and boarding stopped 40 minutes before scheduled departure. After looking up prices and times for every single possible type of transportation, we discovered that the cheapest thing to do would be to switch our flight to the next flight offered by our original airline with the 50 euro penalty. The problem was that the next flight was at 2:00 p.m. tomorrow. Soooo here we are, in the airport 11 hours later with about 11 hours left to go. There is no way that we are missing the next one. Corinne and Sarah went out to get food a while ago and then we watched a third of the new Indiana Jones and three episodes of Greek. All in all, it hasn’t been too bad so far. Almost like a relaxing Carnegie Mellon day. We even made a friend with a two year old boy who seemed to find us very intriguing.

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Day 29 : Sarah, Put Down the Hedgehog

Sarah:

Wake up> Breakfast> Make lunch>
Corinne got really excited after we went shopping for groceries the other day since she has been wanting mayo on her sandwich since we started making them. A few seconds later she realized that we would be having tuna sandwiches for the next few days. Flash forward to today: Corinne puts mayo on top of her tuna.

Charlottenburg Palace. We went there, wandered the grounds, and hopped back on the bus within 2 hours. At first we were all a little underwhelmed, but the gardens turned out to be really beautiful. So beautiful, in fact, that we took a picture in front of the palace, a picture in front of the fountain in front of the palace, and a picture on a bridge in front of the fountain in front of the palace.

We were going to get a picture in front of the bridge in front of the fountain in front of the palace, but the person we asked for help didn’t actually know how to use a camera and thus we lost the fourth layer of our photos. Oh well, at least we found an obelisk. Finally. We’ve been looking for that thing since Warsaw.

After the palace we wandered along Tiergarten, and checked out Potsdamer Platz. We played on some outdoor spinny chairs (I won the spinning contest) and then went into Matthaus Church and wandered around a bit, eventually finding our way to….a tower!!! So of course we climbed it. The view from the top was pretty good. We stayed up there for a while and decided to head down. I opened the door, and just before we all left, I pointed to a building and said something about how I liked it because it was special looking. Just then, the bell rang, catching us all of guard. I immediately shut the door, Corinne started to hyperventilate, and none of us could breathe because of the fits of laughter that completely consumed us. While Corinne and I were in shock, Rosie was apparently not afraid at all…sure.

Afterwards, we went into a few museums but didn’t see any exhibits since they were not free for a few more hours. To kill time until 6pm we went to look for a restaurant. This is usually the hardest thing to find, not matter where we are, and today proved no different. After settling on a place, we each got meals consisting of some combination of sausage, potatoes, and in my case, eggs. It was really good and both Rosie’s dinner and my dinner came in little frying pans on plates. So cute.

I also make friends with a bird.

By the time we finished, it was past 6pm so we headed over to museum island to check out the free exhibits. Our first stop was the museum that had an exhibit on the 7 wonders of the world. Unfortunately, this “special exhibit” was not free. Not wanting to miss the other museums, we moved on. We saw an exhibit in another Museum about Egypt. It was pretty cool. We saw the bust of Nefertiti and Rosie decided that is was nothing special. We browsed the gift shop afterwards and I found lots of items with a cute little hippo sculpture pictured on them. Then I saw a postcard with an adorable hedgehog sculpture on it, which Rosie told me to put down (yay, title explanation). Afterwards we moved on to a museum that had german art in it. It was nothing special, but it did have a few pieces by Cezanne, Monet, Manet, and some other famous artists. By the time we left that museum it was 9pm. Instead of visiting one more museum, we killed time on the grass doing bad cartwheels and awkward somersaults. We also split another cucumber and practiced our secret handshake/3 way high five.

Walk to find a subway station> Stop to watch the Euro cup (Spain beats Russia 3-0)> get back to the hostel > hang out > the end 🙂

Nope, just kidding. After I finished this, a bunch of people came out into the lounge. One guy from Britain said “hola” to me. Not the first person I’ve met who assumed I could speak Spanish. I feel stereotyped and all that. The next person we met was some guy from Canada who, according to Rosie, was “on something.” Here are the awesome conversation starters he had in his small talk arsenal:

1) Do you like George Bush?
2) Are you religious? (Follow up to Corinne’s yes: Do you think people were around at the same time as dinosaurs?)
3) Do you think the US is the greatest country in the world?
4) Can I use you computer for 30 minutes for a Euro?

Needless to say, least favorite person of the trip. Luckily, he went to go bother the people from New Jersy.

Finally, we met someone from….CMU!! How cool, right? She graduated from the drama program and we’re convinced that she is Mimi in the future. Her are the facts:

  1. She went to CMU
  2. She speaks exactly like Mimi
  3. She looks kind of like her
  4. She is from LA

the real end.

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