Saturday, 3 March 2012

Long List of Updates

It's been a long time since I've updated this. I came back from my 3 week winter trip to Morocco, Spain and France and was a little overwhelmed by the number of photographs and stories I had. It was simply too much to sort out and put onto this blog. Instead, I think I'll just post links to a flickr slideshow from each of the places I visited. Hopefully I'll get around to uploading the pictures from France soon. Find the pictures I have uploaded here:

Morocco (Marrakesh / Fes)

Morocco (Holga Camera)

Spain (Seville / Granada / Barcelona)

Spain (Holga Camera)

Now that the past is taken care of, let's get back to the present. This week has been a busy week for me. I've done the following in the span of only a few days: see the Queen in person, watch an England v. Holland soccer match and visit the Wimbledon grounds. Let's start with the Queen:

The Queen arriving at the Sommerset House (East Wing) to open up the new Law school building at King's College:


The Queen leaving:




Now, here are two pictures and a video from Wembley Stadium, where England played Holland in a "friendly" (a game that doesn't count towards or against either team's record).





I also was able to make a visit to the All England Club where Wimbledon is held each year. Stefan, his sister, his sister's friend and I all took a tour of the grounds. It was a pretty cool tour and motivated me to "queue" up for day-of tickets once Wimbledon rolls around. The grounds were a bit smaller than I was expecting, but very cool nonetheless. Oh, one more thing: you'll notice that none of the courts have nets or paint on them. That's of course because it's the off-season and the focus is on regenerating the grass. The machine you see across Court 1 and Centre Court is a sun lamp to help the grass grow during the dreary English winter. Also, if you can see, there is a thin electric fence surrounding both courts which is there to keep the foxes from soiling (pooping on!) the courts. England, to confirm the stereotype, does in fact have a lot of foxes. Enjoy the pictures below!


Court 1


Court 1 in the foreground, Centre Court in the background

The court where Isner played Mahut (see picture below)


Press Conference location

The outer grounds


Centre Court (the thing across the court is the sun lamp)

Retractable Roof!

Wednesday, 7 December 2011

Stonehenge

So, I decided to take one last trip around England before the holidays. Stefan, myself, and one of Stefan's friends, named Gernot (a South Tyrolian), decided to rent a car and drive out to Stonehenge. We rented a 4 door hatchback (all cars in Europe seem to be hatchbacks) that had MANUAL transmission. That meant, of course, that I couldn't drive it.

Stonehenge was just a couple of hours west of London. My favorite part was coming over the hill in the car, seeing the stones for the first time, and being maybe 3/4 of a mile away, thinking "Dang, those stones are HUGE." It was a very cold day, in the 30s with a gusty wind blowing across the treeless meadows. All in all, it was a nice visit. You get to walk surprisingly close to the stones, and all the way around them on a walkway.

After Stonehenge, we drove an hour and fifteen minutes north to Oxford. We had lunch at an old pub and walked around the city a bit. The school buildings were disappointing, but the colleges and city center were very nice.

Some pictures:










Thursday, 17 November 2011

South Tyrol, Italy

I just got back from a 10 day trip to an autonomous region of northern Italy known as Sudtirol, or South Tyrol. Boy was it amazing. It was clearly a trip unlike any other I have ever taken. This was the first time I have traveled overseas with someone native to the country I was visiting. I'll tell you what, that makes all the difference in the world. Every single thing I did was something I would never have done if I were traveling alone or with other Americans. I am so incredibly grateful to have had this experience.

I flew into Verona from London - Gatwick on Easyjet, the discount airline, the evening of November 4th. It was already dark, so I didn't get to see much of the countryside as we drove north into the Italian Alps. After an hour and half, we arrived in Tramin, a small town of about 3,000 people, home to where my flatmate Stefan lives with his family. Over the next 10 days, I visited a winery, played cards in a mountain cabin, saw Otzi the 5,000 year old iceman, visited Innsbruck, Austria, toured a silver mine, played the South Tyrolian equivalent to bowling, ate traditional South Tyrolian meals (mix of Italian and Austrian), went hiking at a UNESCO world heritage site, viewed the stars through a mountaintop telescope, and played in a Watten tournament (a traditional card game played with a German deck of cards). What a week it was. Picture below!



The view out Stefan's window

Stefan and his family





The church in Tramin, Italy

Tramin
Tramin

Tramin
Tramin

Some of the MANY vineyards in Tramin

The cabin we played cards at

The winery Stefan's dad works at

Wine caskets at the winery

The winery lobby

Wine tasting! I brought two bottle back to London!
The wine cellar at the old winery

Storing a few bottles for special occasions

Stefan's aunt and grandmother. His aunt and uncle bottle applejuice for local apple farmers.

Bolzano town square

Church in Bolzano

Outdoor market at Bolzano
Otzi the 5,300 year old iceman
Where we went hiking

Innsbruck, Austria

Innsbruck







Beautiful building in Innsbruck


Lunch in Innsbruck!
Innsbruck
Innsbruck

Innsbruck
South Tyrolian bowling. Smaller balls that you cup in your hands (no fingerholes), and the pins are attached to strings that pull them up after knock them down.
Stefan and friends bowling

Me bowling!

Toerggelen! Lots of meat and wine.

Yum!

Yum!

Chestnuts to cap it off!
Watten tournament hotel
Hotel bar



Watten rooms
The prizes
A game in action


Mountaintop telescope

The moon! Taken by holding my iPhone up to the telescope eyepiece.

Jupiter and 3 moons.
400 year old grape vine!