Sunday, September 5, 2010

And so the adventure began... without our blog

I don't really know how into this blogging thing we are, but we decided to give it another go for our mothers' sake. Savannah has now finally gotten herself over to the same continent and even city, but that wasn't as easy as we expected (more on that in a minute). Here is a very brief summary of what we have been doing for the past 2 months.

England- Savvi arrived in England a day later than Erin expected, which left Erin (I am now doing the very thing which I hate, which is people speaking in the 3rd person) at Heathrow airport a full day early with a *wicked* awful neck ache from the constant craning/turning/bending from searching for someone for a full 2 1/2 hours who had not even began their journey to the very airport she was at. Savannah arrived the following day and I was there to pick her up with plenty of practice at this point. We stayed with our dear friend Angus in Wimbledon (it's in London, we hope you know) at their college bachelor pad (+1 Scandinavian girl named Linda). While in London we did, well, pretty much everything you could and should do while being their for 2 whole weeks. All of the museums, all of the towers and tall things and old things. We ate our fair share of pizza and Indian food and English candy and sweets. We felt right proper well sick when we finally made it out of there. Highlights included: Les Miserbles with NICK JONAS woooow man, urban fox spotting, mysterious Crystal Palace dinosaur tour.

I was awoken on my birthday with the best nutella chocolate cupcakes I've experienced, compliments of Emily Meade. They even had edible sparkles on them, truly incredible. We took a day trip out to Oxford to celebrate the concluding day of my teenage years where we tried to do all things sophisticated but failed immensely. We ate scones with clotted cream at the Old Queens cafe, visited the literary land marks of C.S. Lewis, shopped around at book stores. We may have been a successful adults apart from our inability to stop laughing at Even Song at Christ Church at the spotting of the largest breasts on planet earth (As I type, Savvi keeps repeating, poor woman, they were so big, so big), and the overwhelming urge we had to spit from a bridge at the punters (lucky rich people who get to go on cool boats around the rivers at Oxford) below. After Oxford Savvi surprised me with sticky toffee pudding and light up balloons. Cheers to the best 20th birthday and friend a girl could have.

While looking up 4 hour bus tickets to go to Bath, England, we realized that in a mere 6 hours more we could make it all the way up to Scotland. Overnight bus rides sound a lot shorter when you are imaging it via the internet. We convinced our friend Erika from Australia to come up with us to Edinburgh. We arrived there after a 10 hour bus ride and set out exploring the city. We hiked up lots of muddy hills, stood in front of castles wishing we had enough money to go in, ate more pizza and our first ever baguette hamburger, drank tea at the Elephant Cafe where we paid homage to JK Rowling along with the rest of the H.P. tourist sites with the rest of the losers, and even went to a Tartan factory. Good thing Savvi and Erika were there because I couldn't understand a word anyone said to me with a Scottish accent. I would like to blame it on my being in Spain for 2 months and being overly comfortable with the word "what" in more languages than my own, but I might have just been really stupid. The next day we made it out to a little fishing village which neither of us remember the name of, and couldn't pronounce it at the time anyway. We hiked out to a little island and took naps on the semi warm beaches. That night we got back on the hellish night bus back to London, which turned out to be even worse than the first round. We had arrived at the bus station an hour or two early to claim our spots as first in line, which was the same goal as two very competitive Spaniards. Lucky for us, they weren't after our prized emergency exit seats or the back bench. Unlucky for us, we were not able to enjoy our winnings the entire way back to London because we got kicked off of our stuffy non-air conditioned coach, which was replaced by a freezing cold double-decker city transportation bus that swung side to side almost as much as the hilarious boobs we encountered at Oxford. After 6 hours of cold plastic chairs we were very glad to be back in London again, but even happier to be leaving for Norway!

We flew into Oslo, Norway and were picked up by our friend Anders, who gave us the most enthusiastic hug and laughter filled reunion imaginable (for any of you who know Anders, you'll understand). We went on a drive through the "armpit of Norway", which at that point we thought was incredibly beautiful, but we hadn't anything yet. Anders took us into Drammen where he lives and bought us a lunch of the most expensive kebabs in the world due to the 400% tax they pay there (that's kind of an exaggeration). Next we went into Oslo, which is a cute little port city and tried to show us the "roughest part" of the city. All we found was a woman washing her hair in a fountain with an unfortunate looking back side. We met Mikael that day, who was to be our new traveling companion and the most Americanized Swede. We all took a swim in a lake and Savvi and I were happy to be out of the city and to have a little taste of something we had been missing from Utah summers. That weekend we went on a road trip west to Trolltunga "Troll's Tongue" with the rest of the Norwegian/Swedish gang; Claes, Marcel, and Patric. We pitched out tent wherever we pleased, which could have been almost anywhere since we are pretty convinced no one really lives in Norway. After a 7 hour hike we felt victorious standing on a ledge with a couple thousand foot drop off into a valley of pale blue watery abyss. It was definitely the highlight of our time in Norway thanks to Claes's mountaineering skills, Marcel and Ander's entertainment, Mikael's never-ending supply of posed model shots, and umm Patric's winning smile. We think that's the closest we'll ever get to Helm's Deep. After chasing sheep, attending a giant Norwegian barbecue, eating the best brown goat's cheese, and enjoying the hospitality of the Aabo family (including home made ice cream), we were very sad to leave Norway, especially considering that we spent 7$ the entire time we were there!

We got in Ander's car for another road trip, this time through Norway/Sweden to Stockholm. We had a fake birthday for Savannah in Stockholm and had 50+ people sing happy birthday to here in a square while a magician used her as a prop for his tricks. Stockholm was great, we didn't really see much of it because we were too busy climbing up things and on things with Marcel, and missing our ferries, twice.... We thought we only had a couple hours in the city, but it turned out that we had almost 2 full days after we watched our boat sail away on two separate occasions. We finally got on our ferry and set off for Helsinki, Finland.

Our favorite part of Sweden is what we saw from the ferry. We sailed through thousands of little islands off the coast of huge wooded forests with orangey-red sunset skies. We missed the first day of Fest i Nord, which is a young adults conference held in Helsinki this year. We all stayed at a school about an hour outside of Helsinki for the week. We met really incredible people from all over Europe (even from Iceland!). The week was filled with activities, dances, classes, and well, just a lot fun. We booked our flight out of Helsinki about 4 days after the end of the conference, so we had some time to kill. Some friends of a friend let us stay at their apartment along with our German friend Carsten and Mikael (still) in Helsinki, but we ran out of things to see there after about 5 hours, so we planned a trip to Tallinn. Carsten and Mikael headed back to their respective countries and Sav and I left for Estonia. We didn't miss our ferry this time and snacked on Haribo candy until we got to Tallinn, another place we had no idea what to do in, or why were there.

Accidental Adventures in the Baltics

We ran into the first hostel we found because it was getting dark and there was a staggering drunk mumbling slurs of what seemed to be attempts at compliments. The hostel turned out to be alright except for the snoring girl that was sleeping next to me. *Savvi is now typing** I wake up to Erin saying over and over "This has to stop, this has to stop, what is she thinking, why is she snoring, she has to stop". I tried to roll over and ignore this, but the other guy in the room couldn't, so he finally got up and put a pillow over her face until she stopped snoring and Erin stopped yell/whining.** Erin again. While in Estonia we never really figured out what we were doing there- We ate breakfast at a diner with half naked pictures of women on the wall, took walking tours of the city, went to a movie (it was raining, we have an excuse), were lost 90% of the time, walked through creepy Russian markets that sold everything from panties to cleaning supply, attempted to go to the "beach". We really did everything there was to do, so then we went underground and saw the Tallinn tunnels, which turned out to be the coolest thing we did. Overall we were really glad we made it to the picturesque, medieval city of Tallinn. After that we made it back to Finland, where there was still nothing to do.

Latvia- left Finland and took a 40 minute flight to Latvia, where we have a 14 hour accidental layover thanks to some very skillful traveling agents who were ... us. We arrived in Riga and took a bus into the center and met up with a friend of a friend who served her mission in Riga. She showed us around the city and told us all about Soviet times in the Baltic Countries. The last bus went back to the airport at midnight, and we caught it just in time, so then we had a 10 hour wait until our plane left. We became more and more homeless looking as the night went on. First we tried to assemble makeshift beds out of metal benches, which was surprisingly comfortable until it became freezing cold and we had to wrap scarves around our head and I had to put on my flannel shirt. Then a bunch of flies came in, probably trying to find someplace warm too, so we ended up sleeping on benches in plaid shirts with flies bugging us all night. After that we were really ready to make it back to sunny Spain.

That's the first month of our travels. There's still a lot that has happened since then, but we'll save it for 5 months from now when we finally decide to write on this thing again.

Until then, hasta luego!

2 comments:

  1. girls!! this was so entertaining;;; im relly into these blogs now. Write more dearest friends. Love

    ReplyDelete
  2. POST MORE OFTEN!! Erin you are the best writer ever! I enjoy every line. I miss you and am SO JEALOUS of all your adventures. I'm trying so hard right now not to be depressed and feel ungrateful for my own boring life but seriously.. I want to be you so bad right now.

    ReplyDelete