Archive for the ‘Europe’ category

Houdini Holidays and Closing the Angel Chapter

February 25th, 2008

After waving goodbye to BiRT I returned to my Tanzanian ”banda” to lie and listen to the waves of the Indian Ocean, contemplating life. Then I wandered the streets of Dar Es Salaam alone for a couple of days and finally boarded a flight back to London. Stepping off the plane, grabbing my  dusty bags, and joining the fast-walking crowd to the Tube was both a shock and oddly familiar. How can it be that both of those emotions can coexist? 

I had three days in London before going home for the holidays. These were filled with friends and ice skating and emptying bags in order to fill them again with very different items. Out went the shorts and summer wear, in went the fleece tops and wool socks. Out went the climbing harness and shoes, in went the ski bottoms and boots. I shared my room with Caroline, a Swiss architecture student and intern who was subletting my room while I was out, and who I dare say was quite patient as I single-handedly made it look like a bomb had exploded in her/my/our room. 

Roz and Caroline skating

Roz and Caroline Skating at the Natural History Museum

Oxford Circus

Oxford Circus decked out for the Holidays (Check out all those shoppers!)

The Great Escape 

On the day of my flight out, I had a chance to put my climbing skills to use. Having only one set of keys for both Caroline and I to share, she had taken them with her to work (as obviously I would not need them). I could leave and close the door, which automatically locks, and be gone. What no one had considered was the second lock… the bolt lock. In our house, one must unlock the bolt lock (if locked) with a key, from the inside. It’s the only way. God forbid there is a fire and you lost your keys. Or that your flatmates all leave before you and lock the bolt lock, thereby trapping you inside with all your luggage and no way out, when you are already late for a flight, all because you were too dim-witted to leave a note reminding people not to lock you in. 

Must. Not. Panic. 

OK… time to think of a creative solution. I had often wondered if I could exit the house via our front living room window. This is effectively a floor above ground, or about 10 metres high, as there is a deep pit in front of the house, between the sidewalk and the house itself. In earlier days, these pits were used for dumping coal to be used in the kitchen, which is also on the lower (basement) level of the house. Today it just lets light in the kitchen… aaand makes it tough to leave via the front window. 

The other challenge is the fact that the front window sticks. Badly. I could only open it about 12-16 inches high. This was barely enough for me to shove my bags through and toss them on the roof of a small extension to the kitchen below, near the sidewalk. Then I had to pull a Houdini and squeeze myself out, which would have been difficult enough without the 10 metre drop on the other side. 

Squeezing through

Squeezing through the gap (this is a reenactment)

kneeling on the ledge

Kneeling on the ledge

Finally out on the ledge, standing with my back to the wall, arms out as though I was going suicidal or something, I heaved a sigh of relief and slowly turned around to close the window. It wouldn’t budge. There was nothing I could get a grip on to push it down. s@*t! 

stuck window

Stuck window (this is a reenactment)

After squeezing myself back in through the tiny gap, clock ticking, I opened and closed the window as far as I could several times hoping to loosen it up, and exited again. Window stuck again. Repeat. Three times

Finally, at my wit’s end and standing outside on this tiny window ledge, I suddenly remembered that the top half of the window also moves. But surely it would also be stuck? Or locked? I was in luck, it moved! Quite easily! I managed to pull it down to the point where I could then get a good enough grip on the lower window and push down with all my might. All I needed now was to slam it down and have glass shatter all over me, but luckily that did not happen. It behaved.  There was one point where if it had stuck, I would not have been able to go back inside, but eventually the gap completely closed. I turned around gingerly and did a gut-wrenching leap over my luggage to the far end of the little roof, next to the sidewalk. Success! 

On the sill

On the sill, pretty high up (this is a reenactment)

 

Jump path. ;) (this is a reenactment - there were a lot more bags in the way!)

I then bowed to my audience of workers and pedestrians across the street, dusted myself off, and walked away with large bags. Not suspicious AT ALL. Thank God no one called the police, or I would have had some interesting explaining to do, and definitely would have missed my flight. 

I then called all flatmates and left urgent messages (no one had been answering the phone since I had first discovered my entrapment) that the front window was unlocked, and publicly so. Could someone could PLEASE go back to the house and lock everything up before an anorexic kelpto acrobat stole the flat screen TV, thank you very much and now to get on with my flight… 

Holidays and back 

I was lucky enough to spend a full month at home for the holidays. After roughing it for months, it was nice to have some of Mom’s cooking, plus a whole room not to mention bed (!!!), to myself for a couple of weeks. Needless to say, the holidays were wonderful, although it was a bit tough to get used to cold weather and the abundance of… everything. I nearly passed out on entering an Albertson’s (a supermarket) near my parents’ house. Couldn’t even see to the other end of the building! Avocados looked like footballs! People were walking around with carts that resembled small vehicles. What is going on here? 

Bluegrass with Dad

A cozy night of Bluegrass with Dad

When my parents took off for their own adventures in Argentina (it runs in the blood), I made my way to the city of Seattle to hang out with friends, drink wine, and do some couch surfing. I also got back to work. Sigh. Actually, it felt good to get back to it on some levels. I won’t lie, though, and say my mind didn’t wander frequently back to Africa. 

Seattle, WA

Seattle

Puget Sound, Seattle, WA

The Puget Sound

Now I’m in London and nearing the end of my contract, again. Déjà vu. Packing up and getting ready to meet BiRT for the second time, only this time I know exactly what to expect. Well, sort of. I’ll join the truck in Jordan just after Easter, and we’ll be going north for three months through Syria to Turkey. Looking forward to it. 

Somehow, though, I’m admittedly a bittersweet this time around. Something is different… I am closing the “Angel Chapter” and that commands some time for reflection. I’ve got that nostalgic twinge making me hesitant to turn the page, looking back, thinking over the memories of the past year and a half. I’ve had a fantastic time, and just as I am feeling at home here in London, I find myself packing up and putting things in storage again. I will be back, but I don’t know when, and things are going to be different next time. That’s not a bad thing, just different. ;) 

When everything is up in the air – it’s exciting and wonderful and… friggin’ scary as all hell! Here we go again – wheeeee! What’s next in this choose-your-own-adventure?

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Passport mini-crisis and a sliced finger

September 24th, 2007

I sent my passport in to get a page supplement and was a bit worried about it, as it’s been looking a bit… let’s just say ‘tired’. I spoke too soon in my last post, in fact. As feared, the Embassy determined that my passport was not in condition to get new pages and that I needed a new one. They were not returning my old one; I had to go there in person. It was Monday morning, and Friday I was meant to be off to Oktoberfest. A week after that, Africa. What to do?

I was first in line at the Embassy on Tuesday, passport photos and birth certificate in hand. Luckily, I was allowed in as an ‘emergency’ and went through the process of getting a temporary passport (phew!) and a new one, which is to take 10-15 days. D’oh! That wasn’t going to be in time for Africa, and there weren’t enough pages in the temporary one for the number of countries I would visit. They gave me a glimmer of hope by saying they’d put a “little note” on it to rush, but to still expect 10-15 days. I put all my faith in the American Embassy, hoping that for once my government bureaucracy could do something right, via a post-it note.

The tightly crossed fingers got in the way of a gigantic beer-stein which smashed against mine during an animated “Prost!” in Oktoberfest. Glass everywhere, I looked down to see blood on the table and thought “Oh no! Someone was cut!” And then I realized that someone was me. Blood was gushing a little too quickly out of my pinkie. It was a very small, but deep, cut across the blood vessel on the knuckle. I knew I would need stitches.

Oktoberfest from above

Oktoberfest (photo taken a previous year)

The Germans, ever efficient, had put massive red balloons up at the first aid stations. No matter how much you drank, there was no missing them. A friend led me towards the nearest balloon, over a tent where they actually glued my finger shut. Interesting, and definitely easier than stiches. Best of all, the nurse stated that I could keep drinking and dancing – probably until I fell over and needed more first aid. She also mentioned that the event organisers had changed the glasses a few years ago. Prior to that, she had seen far more broken bones. Now, it was cuts. Hmm.

I am meant to be using this hand in just over a week to climb Spitzkoppe, otherwise known as ‘The Matterhorn of Africa’ at 1,800m. Now, not only am I out of shape but also with a lame finger. And no passport! Oh, and a bit hung over, but that should pass… I hope.

This article originally appeared on MSN UK Travel.

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Itchy Feet

July 19th, 2007

Wow, I can’t believe it’s been almost a year since my last update… this is what work does to you. Time shrinks down and you don’t even realise how fast it all goes.

Since I last wrote, I’ve settled (if you call it that) into London life. I started up a little company which enables me to be an independent contractor. This has (coincidentally enough) landed me at Microsoft working on deploying MSN sites worldwide. Pretty cool – finally an international role at work! This has taken me to Mexico City, Sao Paolo, Paris, and Moscow.

Rio do Janeiro, Brasil

Other than that, I had a last-minute solo trip to Oktoberfest where I met a group of crazy Irishmen (what is it with me and bumping into crazy irishmen everywhere?), stumbled through Amsterdam, was the only straight girl in gay bars in Lisbon, spent Christmas in Washington D.C., New Years ’07 in New York, tried to Kite Surf in Tunisia (but unfortunately there was no wind)… among other wee adventures. It’s been a very busy 10 months!

It was a bit rough getting back into ‘normal work mode’ at first. However, in the end it began to consume me as it had in the past. Luckily, contracting helps me take a step back and imagine another break as a very realistic possibility. I have also been getting all kinds of entrepreneurial ideas popping in my head. It’s been pretty exciting, if not a mental whirlwind! Now I just need to focus and put some ideas to motion.

London

London has been a great place to rest (ha, maybe that’s not the right word… try “stay put”) and regroup. It’s a very diverse and vibrant city, and it’s forcing me to explore a different part of life. I’ve never lived in such a big city. I really miss the mountains and scenery of Seattle and the chilled-out attitude, but London provides in other areas that Seattle certainly does not. The music scene here is always going (and coming from a Seattlite that is a true compliment), the theatre is unbelievable, festivals, galleries, nightlife – there’s always something to do! I have been to more gigs in the past 8 months than in my all my life combined. Glastonbury, an incredibly muddy music festival, was the biggest event for sure. There were about 300,000 people schlepping around, unable to sit anywhere, and listening to wicked music. Someone told me once that living in London is like being in a giant festival, all the time. That’s the most accurate description I’ve heard. There is a real energy here.

Glastonbury mud-fest

Yes, London is expensive – but once you get over the sticker shock, or better yet earn in pounds, it’s not so bad. I think the “expensive” stereotype is a bit exaggerated, as well. It’s not so bad once you know where to go. There are also a surprising number of free and low-cost jewels hiding in its streets – and discovering them is free entertainment in itself. So it’s been a wonderful exercise in culture exploration, and just living in Europe is always fantastic. I’ve been seriously considering getting another motorcycle and doing a trip through Eastern Europe to Croatia and Italy – stay tuned for next summer!

Another major highlight in the year was a visit from my parents. It was GREAT to see them. We visited Amsterdam (I know, I know), the Lakes District, and walked all over London. My mother has just announced her plans to retire, so hopefully soon they will be able to come visit me, wherever I am, much more often. Yay! My parents hilariously fell in love with Pimms, a typical summer English drink, and they particularly loved the Camden Markets. We had a fab time together.

Pimm's

So yeah, that’s the nutshell update of the past 10 months. The feet are beginning to itch again. Stay tuned. ;)

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London Pavement Rage to Argentine Tango

February 13th, 2006

It’s been a little too long since I’ve written a post. I’ve just been quite, well, lame about writing. And the longer I wait, the harder it is to catch up on everything. So enough of the dribble. You have enough to read as it is. I’ll start with a couple of sexy pictures for you, from where I am now…

Tango in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Tango in Buenos Aires, Argentina

So I popped home for Thanksgiving and Christmas. It was great to spend time with the family and not pack & unpack the bag every few days… to have a shower that didn’t involve carrying a bunch of soap/shampoo/towels into a crowded room with a wet floor, using a bucket, or fighting for a mirror (if there is one)… etc. I had good home cooking, saw good friends (although not for enough time as I would have liked – not having a car can be quite an annoyance in the states) and generally had a fantastic time.

Home

Home

Come new year though, it was time to go again. This time it was off to England, with a brief  New Year stint in Kitzbühel, Austria. I stayed in a random hostel owned by a guy named Dave who LOVED to tell you to f*&k off, but didn’t quite understand why people might ever rate his place poorly on Hostelworld. I actually liked the guy for some reason, but that’s because I was on his good side, for an even more unknown reason.

Anyway, what were doing there? SKIING, of course! Yay! It was great. Powder was easy to find, even off the groomed runs, so I was happy. I also learned how to play “Texas Hold-Em” poker, from a bunch of Kiwis and Aussies in Austria. How random is that?

Kitzbuhel, Austria

Kitzbuhel, Austria

So yeah, England. The UK nearly rejected me at the airport. I’ve never been so close to being turned back by Customs. Why? Well, I was an idiot, frankly. I’m so used to easy border crossings that I didn’t give a second thought to putting ‘UNEMPLOYED’ under occupation, and say ‘oh, about a month or so, I dunno…’ for how long I’d be travelling, ‘LONDON’ as my address in the UK. Hmmm… did I have proof of onward travel? No. Did I have proof of sufficient funds? Um… no. ‘Here’s a credit card!’ I’m surprised they did let me in, in the end! But thank God, they did.

On to baggage claim. My connecting flight in Copenhagen had been severly delayed due to a snow storm. They decided not to load ANYONE’S bags in the plane because it was too snowy. They could load people and fly, but they couldn’t load bags. Does that make ANY sense? So I had no luggage. And I was going to Austria the NEXT DAY to ski with no luggage which meant no winter gear, at all. Yeah. I think the UK was giving a giant finger on arrival. ‘We don’t want you here!’  Oh, and I chose not to mention the fact that I was applying for a work visa in the UK! (which, by the way, was ACCEPTED! YAY!)

Classic bicycle in London

Classic bicycle in London

Living in London for a month was an interesting experience, coming from laid-back SE Asia and then laid-back Keyport, WA. London is fast paced; people run you over if you dawdle in the street and then curse you for it. Eye contact = aggression (like in the world of apes), so you’re supposed to duck and run in the masses of people on the sidewalk to avoid pissing anyone off. They don’t default to one side of the sidewalk in organized “people-flows,” either. I thought everyone would be walking on the left side of the sidewalk (called “pavement” here). Nah. It’s all out pedestrian warfare; survival of the fittest. Road rage meets the sidewalk. “Excuse me” means “get out of my f-in way” and “sorry” means “excuse me.”

And let’s not talk about the tube (the underground)… ok, let’s. The main thing to know is you keep your eyes down and it’s best if you have a trashy paper to read. Actually I believe there are two separate worlds in the tube. That of people who look up, and that of people who don’t. Those who look up sometimes connect eyes and telepathically agree, nay, bond yeah, we’re in the world of people who look around. This feels great, until you get the freak who decides to come up to you and have a chat. Then you learn to always, ALWAYS look down. And best if you have some sort of trashy paper to read.

In the end, London is not a bad place. The people warm up a LOT when the sun (yeah, it actually does come out now and then) goes down and everyone heads to their local. Ale + Gossip, whether political, global, or local is endlessly entertaining.

Kind of love it, actually.

London

London

However, without a job, London can get a bit boring. Yes, I did just say that. Being a bum is no fun when crossing the street isn’t a life & death dash (although crossing the sidewalk might be!) and there aren’t any good hiking trails nearby. I’m not really much of a museum person, and after a few days of museums and battling the sidewalk, I felt I had saturated London´s capacity for entertaining a homeless, jobless vagabond. I made pathetic attempts to shop, but the city is so expensive I more doubled my monthly budget! And I wasn’t even paying for lodging. With a job, things could certainly be a lot more fun.

So I was supposed to go to India after London. That didn´t exactly work out as expected, so I spun the globe and took a fresh look. Decided to go to a whole new hemisphere. Back to warm weather! Don´t Cry for Me Argentinnnnaaaa… I am writing you from the southernmost city in the worrrrld. Ushuaia.

Tierra del Fuego National Park, Argentina

Tierra del Fuego National Park, Argentina

Usuaia, Argentina

Usuaia, Argentina

Cool bus in Usuaia

Cool bus in Usuaia

From here, people go to Antarctica. Unfortunately I don’t have 4 grand to spare, so I likely won´t go unless I can fit in someone’s suitcase. I dare say I might actually try it. To see Antarctica would be a dream come true. I will get to realize another dream though – Patagonia. I’m very excited about the trekking prospects.

Before this, I stopped in Madrid for a couple of days, then Buenos Aires, saw some Tango, learned how to play cribbage (wha? that’s not spanish!), and ate some steak… ahhh, nice.

It feels good to be here. My Spanish is coming back like a flood. It’s nice to be in a place where I feel like I fit in. In fact, I was just thinking that the other day.. walking along the sidewalk in Buenos Aires, no one running into me, enjoying the sun on my cheeks… thinking  Yeah, I fit in here. And that feels good. And just as the thought grew to the point where it was almost cocky, overconfident – I stood a little straighter and strutted like a local – I fell FLAT ON MY FACE. I was fully sprawled on the sidewalk, arms spread, groceries everywhere, people staring… Doesn’t matter that there was a huge gaping hole in the sidewalk. Locals just don’t do that.  That is grace for you. Yeah I fit in REAL good.

More Tango in Buenos Aires

More Tango in Buenos Aires

…And now I’m in this new, unknown town with no guidebook (again) or any idea what I should do (again). I’m sure I’ll figure something out soon. :) As usual I am completely unprepared and disorganized. It’s 11pm and I haven’t eaten dinner. We’ll see what happens!

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