Monday, 25 April 2011
Alone in Brussels
Tuesday, 29 March 2011
German Adventure

That night we embarked on the new Europe Beer Challenge. It was the first new europe pub crawl that I have actually thought was worth it. The Edinburgh one was pretty good, we got a fair amount of drinks included in that one. But this one was actually a tour as well. We went to four bars, one of which was the only beer and
The tour started at the Munich main train station near our hostel, and our first beer was a roadie. It was so good catching the train and walking through the street with a beer in hand...legally. The next bar we had a wheat beer which was vey different but quite nice - I think it was a Paulaner. I've since decided wheat beer is the best. Then it was the museum, another one, then a quick walk through the hofbrauhaus before our last bar: the Euro Youth hotel bar. At the end of the night we were all awarded Beer Challange survivors membership cards, and Chris won the Beer Challenge or something by speaking in the most convincing Irish accent - since Michael was Irish. I met this novocastrian girl as well on the tour, the first one I'd met while being overseas, or at least the first I've really spoken to. She was from Eleebana so of course she knew all the landmarks round Belmont and that. She even knows where the Squids Ink was which I think was the most exciting thing.
Today was the day ventured into the Bavarian countryside and found a small dwelling commonly referred to as Neuschwanstein Castle. It is the castle that the Disney castle is modeled off in the Bavarian alps. The best bit about it for me was the fact there are these 2 castles on top of these hills out in the mountains. The insides of them, while impressive, was similar to all the other castles I've seen. Like Versailles. It's all very ridiculously intricately decorated and over the top. If it were me I totally would decorate it less because I reckon it would be really annoying to have every wall in my house so busy. You'd never sleep because there would be so much action happening on every wall and floor!

That night we stayed at Regina's who is a friend of Yazmin's. Funny story - yes, another Yazmin gem. So Yazmin was traveling with Emily, they were meant to keep traveling and end up in France or something because they got mad cheap flights from there. But Yazmin got sick and wanted to hang around or go back to Leeds or something. Either way they split up in Munich and Emily decided to join us to Berlin, she found her own way there and we had a ridiculously early flight to catch. Instead of staying at the airport Regina (Yazmin's friend) invited us 3 to stay at her place...but Regina wasn't there with us. So effectively we stayed at a friend of a friends place, who didn't stay with us. She let 3 people stay at her place whom she had met the day before.
April 10 - what is it with Europeans and gigantic arse pillows
So Chris and I got up ridiculously early at Regina's, we set the alarm for 3:45 in the AM, which I think wasn't even early enough, that or w
Wednesday, 28 April 2010
First Leg - French Alps
So....I’m a bit behind maybe. We pick up the first day of mid semester break...
March 20 - The trip kicked off in Liverpool, but this was just because that's where our flight to Grenoble was from. It was, in my opinion, not real interesting. This may have been because I was with 3 other massive Beatles fans and all we did was see the Beatles stuff around town: Penney Lane, John Lennon's house, Strawberry Field. Joining me on this leg was my ever trusty sidekick and partner in crime Chris, Katie and Yazmin.
March 21 - We woke up in Grenoble, it's this small town about an hour and a half from the ski slopes. We looked around the town in the morning but by this stage I was just so keen to hit the slopes. We settled in to the hotel at Les Deux Alpes and at about 6 we decided we had stuffed around long enough today and was time to go collect our skis...hopefully they don't close. The place we were looking for was called sports 2000, and it was near our hotel, or so we thought. We went in and he said it was the other end of town near stop no 1 or something, we weren't sure. So we walked up the street and found another Sports 2000, not it either. Turned out we needed the one up the hill a loooong way from where we were staying and needed to catch the free shuttle up. We eventually found it at 6:30 and had all our stuff by 7 ready to catch the shuttle back to our door, or so we thought. We waited 25 minutes for a bus that comes every 20 minutes when we met a bunch of German guys who said we can ski back from just over there. At this, Chris' and my eyes just lit up.
We had our boots on in 2 minutes and convinced the girls that we would give them pointers on technique on the way down. Having had a little experience on a snowboard and waterskis, Katie nailed it, Yazmin on the other hand, seeing as though this was her first time on skis, I think she died a little inside. Meanwhile, Chris and I having the time of our lives. I was so pumped to actually be skiing, I didn't care that it was pretty dark, it had been 2 years since the last time and I knew this was going to be a good week.
March 22 - Chris and I got up early as we intended to be on the first gondola ride. We failed, but I think no 3 wasn't too bad. Our hotel is on the far south of the village which meant we needed to go up and cut across the "front valley" to get over to the good skiing. However this proved more difficult that it first seemed. On my first run in over 2 years I managed to find some very deep, icy powder, impossible to turn in. I think I stacked it about 4 times, none of which were good. We eventually found our way down and went up to ‘Toura’, the hub or ‘mid station’ over the back of the mountain. From there we found some pretty damn awesome runs, by the end of the day though visibility became very poor. Near the top I could barely see 5 metres in front of me.
At the end of the day we went to make our way down but were stopped and were made to catch the gondola down as a small avalanche had blocked the path. When we got back at about 6 we caught up with Katie and Yazmin about their day. We had convinced Yazmin – who had never skied before – to have a lesson, but since she slept in til 10:30 she had missed all the group ones and had to fork out €70 for a private. At night Chris and I added to the pasta of last night and improved it significantly. A few games of Dutch Blitz later and it was bed time.
March 23 – Tuesday started at a similar hour except this time Katie bought a Ski-Sympra pass and joined Chris and I on Pied Moutet, the hill on the other side of the village. Katie is a deadset trooper. By her second day skiing she was parallel turning, the snow plough had long been left in the dust and was keeping up really well.
We went back to the hotel for lunch then Chris and I headed back up to Glacier 3200m. (Sidebar: the Les Deux Alpes village is at 1650m, Pic de la Grave is at 3669m. The temp at the bottom was at least 2 degrees and top was -4...on a sunny day in March.
That afternoon Chris’ binding decided not to tighten properly and he caught the gondola down (again) while I had an hour of skiing to myself which I loved. I discovered the boarder cross and terrain parks which was so much bigger than the ones at Perisher. Then I followed ‘Le Diable’ gondola down to the hotel and rediscovered the icy slush from Monday. At night we went for a walk to find one of the many, many creperies. They were amazing.
March 24 – Wednesday really was where I hit my...slide. My confidence on skis was through the roof. On Monday I followed Chris down every run but today he could barely keep up. But I didn’t mind, it gave me a chance to rest while I waited. We found some truly brilliant runs, my favourite was from the top of Puy-Sailie T-bar, down Dome to the bottom of Le Signal 2. It was so wide, had great snow coverage and was the perfect incline to keep a decent speed while still incorporating good turns. Absolutely amazing.
So I skied down to the ski hire place and the girls met us there with our shoes. On the way back we stopped and bought for dinner tartiflette (just like very creamy, very cheesy potato bake), Raclette (French deli meats with boiled potatoes with melted cheese) and something suacisson (sausages with onion and potatoes in a red wine sauce). All were delicious. Afterward we played more blitz which I won, packed and went to bed.
From the time I landed in France I started to realise every French stereotype is true. From the men wearing turtle necks to their love of food, particularly bread. And for good reason. There was this boulangerie (bakery) just near the hotel and I think I went there every day. I felt very awesome using my limited French to buy something, then walked around eating a baguette.
I think my favourite part of the French experience though was my feeble attempt to speak the language. The course I took last year when I thought I might move to Paris before Leeds was even on the cards helped quite a bit. I had mum post over the notes I got from it and studied up on the way over. Even though most people over there speak (at least) some English it was still a huge novelty to speak differently and have them understand me and reply in French.
The French Alpes was an amazing experience. I would love to come back but I know the rules. Anyway, next stop London. Can’t wait to meet up with Emma today and Amber and Mitch on Saturday. Chris is meeting up with his parents there but I’m sure all five of our paths will cross, but until the next entry...au revoir!
Friday, 19 March 2010
A Change of scenery: Leeds
Dear diary,
This will be my last entry for quite some time as very soon I will be jetting off to awesome all over Europe. I feel like I haven't been anywhere in about 2 weeks. This is largely because I haven't. Despite this, this last week or so in Leeds has been very eventful. Wednesday the 10th Yazmin, Katie, Sarah and Emily had Mitch, Chris and I over and we made our own pizza's. Mitch even made our dough, however this failed pretty hard. It was a good effort but let's be honest, it needed to rise some more or at least be left in the oven a bit longer, neither of which we did. Still tasted awesome though and would definitely do it again. We had a million toppings to put on and was good to hang out with the girls as I hadn’t really had much of a chance to up until this point.
Thursday the 11th. Man what a day. I have no idea what happened during daylight....actually pretty sure I missed a lecture for some reason. Something to do with a confusing timetable, but at night Julia and I set off for Manchester to see Karnivool. For those that didn’t know Karnivool are one of my favourite bands at the moment and are from (Perth) Australia, which made it even better that I could see them over here. They played for about 100 people in this tiny venue called the Roadhouse but that didn’t matter, we as the crowd loved them and cheered them and in return they played an awesome show for us. This wasn’t all though, since it was such a small show, they came out afterwards and said hi and hung out with us fans. I felt like such a fanboy but I didn’t care. I got all the autographs and a few photos, but more importantly got to speak to them. They are great guys and it was so good to be able to talk them about touring and stuff like that. Below is a photo of me with lead singer Ian Kenny.
As you can imagine I slept in pretty late on Friday considering I got home about 3am. I also misread my timetable and thought my class was at 1 when in fact it was at 12, which meant i missed it...again. Friday night we all went to Anastasia’ place for drinks and then go in to Fruity – the night club event that is on every Friday night at the Union. I was still pretty tired and still recovering from a cold so I decided I would just go to Ana’s and go home. Well, Emma had different ideas didn’t she? She pretty much coerced me into agreeing to come, against my better judgement. The only downside was that we didn’t pre purchase our tickets. So Josh and I waited in the massive line for about 15 mins and it didn’t move. We left. So at the end of the night I didn’t get an good night’s sleep, nor did i get to Fruity, both things I wanted to do.
Saturday night Amber and I decided it was time we found a new pub. We always go to the Eldon and we needed to explore the city a bit more. Everyone came to my place first and about 9 we headed out and went to The Hyde Park. Not the direction we first planned to as we wanted to go to Headingley, but since that’s the opposite direction to where everyone lived and no one was that keen for a real late night we found one a bit closer. We had actually been there before but was still a good change of scenery.
Sunday Chris, Anastasia, Julia and I went hiking in the Yorkshire Dales. Chris found this place called Bolton Abbey. It was a 13 kilometre hike and the destination was a place at the top of a hill called Simon’s Seat, pretty much a big load of rocks overlooking the countryside. It was really quite beautiful. The trail starts near the ruins of an old church, or at least half of it is in ruins, the other half had been restored and they actually have services inside. The path took us past a small waterfall where we stopped and took some photos. I got my photographer on and busted out the tripod and got some pretty sweet flowing water shots, not to mention it helped with the group shot. Right near the waterfall, on the path leading to it we saw so many frogs, and all I will say is we could definitely tell it was mating season. It was actually quite funny, the path was on the side of a little hill and they would jump together and tumble down the side of the hill. We trudged on and eventually came to the top of the mountain and the view was incredible. You could see a cute little village over the side with lots of farms, and the stone walls that form the perimeter of the yards made for a very picturesque view. We ate lunch at the top and cracked champagne to celebrate our success...I imagine that’s what Sir Edmund Hilary did all those years ago. The walk down was much easier, however not as much as you would think, walking down steep inclines gives your legs a really good workout. We caught the bus, then the train back to Leeds and since we hadn’t walked far enough i walked the half an hour trip back home.
Tuesday night was a night of genius. We had really wanted to play Risk for quite some time now, but we didn’t have a board, nor did we feel like paying for one as we are all poor students. What we did have though, was a massive map of England. Mitch went to the effort of drawing outlines around all the counties (territories), and then made continents out of those. Greater London and Isle of Man were their own continents. Playing this game was myself, Julia, Team Ana/Amber, Kayt, Chris, Mitch and Derrick. We played with M&M’s for armies, regular ones worth 1, peanut ones worth 5. With 7 people and a huge arse map, the game did go on for a very long time. Chris will argue that he won, but I say Risk was the real winner in the end.
March 17 – St Patrick’s Day. For me, St Patrick’s Day was quite dull. However, St Patrick’s Night was one to be remembered. After uni I walked down to Primark – student’s heaven – and purchased myself a white t-shirt and some permanent markers. I then proceeded to make my own t-shirt using a four leaf clover stencil I printed out. The night began at Amber’s in Henry Price where we played Kings – an increasingly regular occurrence at our events. It took about 20 minutes for the rest of my costume to be stolen. This picture is only one of my costume in it's completion. My green sunnies were being passed around and Kayt took my green scarf. It was fun though, I don’t mind sharing my awesomeness. The party then moved on the Faversham, or so we wanted. Upon leaving HP we already lost Josh and Mitch’s 2 British friends. We decided not to go in to the Fav because there was a massive line – a memo that Amber and Julia didn’t receive, thus decreasing the size of the group. The rest of us moved on to Old Bar in the Union. At some point at the Old Bar we lost Evan, he just disappeared. He said he doesn’t even know where he went, he just remembers being at the bar and then waking up at St Marks. We got kicked out at 1am for closing and by this stage all that was left were Myself, Mitch, Chris, Yazmin, Emily, Katie and Kayt. We took the party back to the girls’ place, lost Chris on the way, chatted for a bit there then went home about 2:30: a great night was had by all.
It’s now Thursday night, nothing exciting happened today and nothing is exciting is expected to happen tomorrow. My Micro lecture is cancelled so I will probably spend the day getting ready for Spring break, leaving on Saturday. A month of travelling.
Tuesday, 9 March 2010
Ramblings of a Traveller
Friday, 5 March 2010
Praha 26 Feb - 1 March 2010

Day 1
The excitement began at Leeds airport going through security. Chris got stopped and couldn’t understand why. After a thorough search of his bag he found 2 cans of beer that he forgot to take out the night before.
Once in Prague, getting to the hostel proved quite a mission but we did it and were pleasantly surprised to see how nice it was. We had a room to ourselves which was great. We settled in and went to a restaurant in Wenceslas Square called the Beer Factory. In the middle of our table was our own beer tap. It was really expensive but the food was so good and quite a unique experience.
Day 2
We woke up relatively early and meandered into the city, looked around Old Town Square before our free tour began. The tour took us to the Church of our Lady Before Tyn, the Astronomical Clock, Wenceslas Square, the Jewish Quarter (Josefov) and finished near the Charles Bridge. Now something I am noticing in my time here is people from the Middle Ages really loved their clocks, they are everwhere. But no clock will ever compare to the Astronomical Clock in Old Town Square. It tells – among many things - old Bohemian Time, Roman (normal) time, what sign of the zodiac it is currently and whether it is day or night. They thought it was so good that they burned out his eyes and tongue so he couldn’t make a clock for any other city.
After the free tour we took a much less free tour of Prague Castle. Apparently the tour meeting point was a bit too obvious for us, so Amber and I walked past the group of people hanging around the tour guides and just assumed that wasn’t it, so we walked another 10 mins past looking for it. We saw the changing of the guards...They march really slow. The tour covered St George’s Basilica, Powder Tower, Strahov Monastery/Brewery, and climaxed at St Vitus’ Cathedral which was absolutely gorgeous. However it has buildings built really close around it and was impossible to fit it all in one photo.
By the end of the day we were exhausted (a common theme I am noticing) and everyone insisted we go on the New Europe bar crawl. We seemed to stay at places a long time which meant we only went to 2 places before we called it a night...I was ok with this decision.
Day 3
The tour we went on yesterday walked us through the Jewish Quarter but we didn’t go in anywhere and it seemed really interesting so we headed back there this morning. It is really significant in Prague because from 1938 to 1945 (yes, a year before WWII) the Nazi’s occupied it and many Jews were killed and exiled. We visited the Jewish Museum which had all the names of the Jews killed and paintings children painted to express themselves during the Nazi regime. Outside there was the Jewish Cemetery where for about the 300 years from 1478 Jews had to be buried on top of one another due to lack of space, up to 12 layers deep. As a result it is now several metres above street level.
After the Jewish stuff we walked across the Charles Bridge which you can just tell is now set up for tourists. It was packed and along the sides of it there were vendors with stalls selling little souveniry things...I bought one. Just over the bridge was the John Lennon wall (right), I have no idea why it was there and until we got there I didn’t even know it existed. After lunch we left Ana and Amber, and Evan, Richard and I walked up Nerudova Street (a very picturesque street. Some of the houses have pictures above the doors instead of house numbers as they weren’t invented until 1770. ) and went back to the Castle to see inside the Cathedral as we didn’t get to the day before. Unfortunately because it was Sunday it was closed. On the way back we stopped at the Rudolfinium on the Old Town side of the River to where the line for the Louvre in Paris was filmed - They'll have us believe anything won't they. So of course we took our own robot fight photos and looked very silly in the process...worth it.
Went back to the hostel for a nap and headed out for a late dinner. We found an Aussie pub showing the Canada – US ice hockey gold medal match. We also met Norm, the owner of the bar who is Australian who moved to Prague when he a Czech woman in Sydney.
Day 4
Getting home took a long time. Our plane got in to Birmingham at about 3:30 and our connecting train to Leeds didn’t leave until 8. We got a train in to the city, had lunch at the big shopping centre there and played some cards in a pub.
Then I went home.
Wednesday, 3 March 2010
Life goes on
I'll pick up just after returning from Copenhagen... yeah yeah I know, this needs more Chronology but after my next post hopefully I will have sorted it out a bit better.
So Wednesday the 10th of Feb I had the day off uni and decided it would be a good day to visit Chantelle who had just recently moved to York - about
Sunday was Valentines Day!! Which means I went to see Lostprophets. Not much to say about this except that it was awesome and they played all my favourites...except for the song that got me into them in the first place.
