Thursday, June 28, 2012

Sadie, everything weighs something.

Leaving.  Today.  Depressed.  Tying myself to an olive tree and never letting go.  Goodbyes suck.  23 hours of travel.  Airports suck.  Yes I am being over-dramatic.  Don't care.  That is all.
I only have two levels.
What are they?  Sad and stupid?

Today is our last day in Greece.  I am unbelievably upset to be leaving tomorrow.  It took me a day to fall in love with this place, and I can't fathom possibly never getting to see it again.  After our free morning, when Vaggelis dropped us off at the port, I lost it.  I cried when we left Irini as well, but saying goodbye to Vaggelis was when it really hit me that I have to go home.  I may never see him, Irini, Takis, or many other of the wonderful people I have met here ever again.  I am definitely leaving a little piece of myself here in Greece.  In such a short amount of time, I have gained a new family and it just sucks to know that we all will never be back here together, experiencing things the way we did.  When you live with people in close quarters for a month solid, you learn a lot about those people.  I am closer with some of them now than a lot of people that I grew up with for 18 years.  Yes, that's completely cheesy I know and very uncharacteristic of something I would say, but it's totally how I feel.  I will miss everything about this place, and since I started out this trip with what I missed from America, I am going to end this blog with a list about Greece:

1)  First and foremost, I will miss the people.  Takis, Irini, and Vaggelis were amazing, and I hope to God that one day I can come back and see them.  And for the rest of the people I spent this last month I with, I know most of us will be back in CoMo and reunited soon, but it won't quite be the same back in Missouri.  I can't just run down the hall and ask if you want to go get some gelato, and there will definitely be no beaches to entertain ourselves with.  Sad day.  I love you all.  Yes, including you Barnes.

2)  The food.  Greece is a fat kid's playground.  I have never eaten so much good food in my life, and tzatziki has forever changed my life.  Not even kidding.  I have never cursed and loved food so much at one time in my life.  It was great.

3)  Greece itself.  I have never seen a place with such diverse terrains and climates.  From the beaches to the mountains, I fell in love with it all.  It has just about everything that anybody could be looking for, and the scenery is beyond gorgeous.  I don't know if I could pick a favorite, but I will say that if I could sit at the Temple of Poseidon everyday and just look at the ocean I would definitely die happy.  Pictures of the places do not capture what we saw in person, but as Irini told me, these places will forever be engrained in brain.

4)  Soccer.  I know Americans play soccer, but it is just not the same.  Being here for part of the Euro 2012 was one of the craziest experiences of my life. 

5)  Greek police.  No further explanation needed.

6)  Every goddamn thing.  If I continued on my list would be 100 pages long.  This just fueled my fire to travel more and get out of the shelter of the U.S. for awhile.  I am so glad in the end that I didn't end up getting to go to Italy last year, because this experience was the best thing of my life.

Now that I am officially sobbing on the plane ride home and have "I Will Remember You" running on repeat, I will stop being a big baby and tell you about my last day.  I got to ride a scooter on the crazy streets of Santorini!  It was great!  We ate lunch with Vaggelis, who could barely speak, and just walked around.  Lauren, Katy, Nick, and Sadie rode the donkeys.  Katy fell into some donkey shit; that was hilarious.  Vaggelis escorted us to the ferry, told us goodbye, and I swear I saw a tear when he left us!  Though that might have been my own, I was kind of already a mess at that point.  I don't really cry unless I am pissed off so for me to cry when we left was really something.  Then we got back to Athens (Takis picked us up and I have never been more excited to see a bus in my life....best bus driver ever!) and went and had our favorite gyros at the Smiley Cafe.  The lady who worked there offered to let me live with her since I didn't want to go home.  I almost took her up on that; delicious gyros in Greece everyday of my life wouldn't be too bad of a way to live hahahaha.  Then bed.

P.S.  If I ever see another damn ferry, I will shove my head into a glass window. They are no longer a fun mode of transportation.

Oh, and I already miss Greece.  Round two anyone???
We're having a Lady and the Tramp moment...
Guess which one you are.

Today was our first and only full day in Santorini.  We started out by heading to the Thira Prehistoric Museum.  Santorini was actually formed by a giant volcano, and in 1600 BC the volcano exploded, collapsing in on itself forming the shape of the island that we see today.  At the museum they had drawings of what the island looked like before and after that time, and it's kind of astounding the difference.  I can't imagine being here when it collapsed in on itself; you either plunged into the ocean or were covered with about 20 to 50 feet of ash.  It wasn't surprising that everybody died.  The caldera (the ring of the volcano) is the main island of Santorini with two small volcano-ash islands in the center that used to be the hotspots for the volcano.  It is still active, and as Barnes put it, "We could die any second."  The museum had artifacts that were found from Akrotiri (the Grecian version of Pompeii) that were left behind by the people who fled or died during the eruption.    Then we headed out to the actual excavation site of Akrotiri.  First though, we stopped at the Mountain of Prophet Elijah to take some pictures.  From the top you could see the whole island basically, and it was stunning.  I can't believe how small Santorini really is.  The site of Akrotiri has been covered by a building (thank God we could get out of the sun for awhile) and was really cool to see.  Vaggelis said that the area is only about 5% excavated, so there are probably a lot more things to find that just haven't been dug up yet.  These houses and buildings were rather nice for the time, but were abandoned when something preceding the big volcano scared people away.  The site was unbelievable to see in person, but also haunting to know that those people died in that way and we just came along thousands of years later and picked up the pieces.  Crazy.  After Akrotiri, we headed out to our THIRD winery of the trip.  Yes, the third.  We tried raisin wine at this one; that's definitely a first!  It actually wasn't horrible.  It was really sweet and you couldn't really taste the alcohol in it, but it has the highest alcohol percentage of all the wines we tested.  That could be trouble.  Apparently it is super rare because of the type of grapes used and the amount of labor that goes into creating it.  That means that although a bottle of it was only 20 Euros at the tasting, if we kept that wine for 20 years, it would be worth 300 Euros!  I almost bought some just for that sake, but knowing me it won't make it out alive after that long.  After the winery, we headed out to the black sand beaches.  We were there most of the afternoon, and then we headed back to our hotel.  I have been out in the hot sun so much on this trip that my eyebrows are beginning to turn blonde.  With my sad eyes (three DIFFERENT Greeks have told me that I have sad eyes) and my blonde eyebrows, I am turning into a freak of nature.  After we got ready, we headed out to a small restaurant in Thira so that we watch the sunset as we ate.  Beautiful as usual.  Dinner was really good, and afterwards we headed out for ice cream.  I had been talking about this certain ice cream bar from the little kiosks for days, so Vaggelis said he would buy one for me.  It is a cookies and cream ice cream bar with white chocolate on the outside, and is basically crack for a fat kid like me.  Well when we got there, I saw a different ice cream bar that I thought looked good so I got that one instead.  Vaggelis was beyond pissed at me...it was great!  He kept yelling in Greek how crazy I was for getting a different ice cream than the one I had been talking about all this time. Soooo funny.   After that we headed to a bar where Vaggelis was supposed to join us, but he apparently had an allergic reaction to something, lost his voice, and had to go get a cortisone shot to get it back.  I love him, but him losing his voice for a couple hours would have been nice to experience hahaha.  We didn't stay at the bar long because everything in Santorini is so dang expensive, so we headed back to our hotel and were out for the count...as usual.

Frescos from Akrotiri


Akrotiri

Vaggeli's candid photo of our wine tasting haha

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Only I would pick my nose at a Santorini sunset.

Today we headed out from Naxos to Santorini.  I was really sad to be leaving Naxos; I fell in love with that island!  I was even more hesitant to get on another damn ferry.  Good thing this one was a slow-traveling Blue Star, or I would have really been freaking out.  The ride here was about 2 hours, and the port at Santorini was PACKED.  You can so tell that this is a huge tourist island.  We drove to our hotel and got settled in, then headed out for some lunch and then to relax in the hotel.  It is damn hot here.  Holy crap.  I don't know what it is going to be like here in August if it's this hot already.  We met Vaggelis to head up to Oia to watch a famous Santorini sunset.  The whole island is like 7 miles from tip to tip, so from Thira to Oia it literally took us like 10 minutes with traffic.  Oia is where Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants was filmed and is famous for its cliffside homes and hotels built into the rock.  Most likely if you have seen a picture of Greece, it was depicting this area.  Vaggelis said that some of these cliffside hotels go for 700 to 800 Euros a night; you definitely have to pay for a view like that.  We walked around Oia for a little bit before we finally settled on a spot to sit and watch the sunset.  We sat on the roof of one of the hotels and just took it all in.  That sunset was worth our entire trip here.  I was most excited about coming to this island out of anything that was scheduled for our trip, and with that one sunset I was sold.  The architecture here is so unique with its white walls and blue roofs, and it all literally sits on the side of a cliff.  It's amazing!  After we watched the sunset, we headed back to Thira for dinner.  My dinner schedule is so messed up; we don't eat till 9 or 10 every night, and Vaggelis still insists that is too early for him to eat!  Vaggelis is quite the character.  He was going into the kitchen to talk to the chef and cleaning up our table like he worked there.  I swear sometimes he has adult-onset ADHD.  He just cannot sit still.  Turns out he knew the owners and workers (he lives in Santorini part of the time after all), and it was okay for him to basically cook and serve us at their restaurant, but still.  We ended up closing the place down (Vaggelis insisted that we had to be the last table there even if it was one in the morning).  I am sort of like the resident punching bag here when Vaggelis is around.  Anything and everything I do he makes fun of.  Last night it was about my complaining about the mountain climb and my love of food, along with 100 other things.  I love it though; in my family that's how we show we like each other.  He did tell me though that I could pass for Greek....so legit!  Now I just need to learn the language, and you know, move here.







Saturday, June 23, 2012

Put us in coach, we're ready to play.

I had three goals when I woke up this morning: eat, shop, and go to the beach.  Free days are the absolute best!  We went back to the same place that we had lunch with the crazy old man/owner.  He is great and insisted he get a picture with us; I think we're his favorites!  After that we shopped...nothing to complain about there.  I finally got my Greece jersey (#18 my favorite player bahahaha), and then beach time!  Oh yea, and a little day drinking.  It was great.  But the best thing of the whole day was the jerseys we bought; they were all little kids sizes.  This meant it came with the WHOLE uniform, shorts and all.  Soooo like the tacky Americans that we are, we decided to go full-out for the Greece-Germany game tonight and wear the whole thing.  Best decision of my life.  We were like celebrities!  As we walked down the main waterfront street, people were high-fiving us, taking pictures, offering us free food....it was great!  People loved us, and I have never gotten so much attention in my life.  We were being obnoxiously loud as always and we pretty much ran off some Germans that were sitting behind us while we ate.  It was great.  The atmosphere around game time is already intense, but when Greece scored their first goal, I have never seen anything like it.  We had left the restaurant we ate at to go back to the old man's taverna (of course he made room for us even though his restaurant was already over-crowded) and when Greece scored he basically tackled Lauren and I to the ground.  I loved every bit of it, and the soccer players aren't half bad to look at either.  Greece might not have won, but it is still one of the greatest nights of my life.  Probably the closest to stardom I will ever get, and I will definitely take it!


Our favorite old man


Stone cold pack of freaks


The Lion King sunset!


Sunset from the Portara...spectacular.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Ten points for puking in the trash can.  C- for the class if you throw up on me.

There were a lot of firsts for me on this trip, and yet another one today; I got seasick for the very first time in my life.  And not just sick but SICKKKKKK.  Jumping overboard was the best possible solution for the state I was in.  We were taking a day tour to Delos and Mykonos, and to get there we had to take a ferry.  Vaggeli warned us that with the wind conditions the way they were, the size of the ferry, and its speed, it was a high probability that most of us would get sick.  I have been on cruises, speedboats, dolphin tour boats, etc. and not one of those times have I in the least bit been seasick.  So I wasn't too worried and when it came time to board, when we had the choice between the less-effective all-natural pill versus dramamine gum, I took the pill.  I started out on the top of the ferry, but the waves were so rough that it was like riding the water rides at Silver Dollar City.  We were soaked within five minutes, so I decided to come brave the rest of the trip inside the ferry.  First off, it was hot and stuffy in the ferry and the boat was rocking side to side so violently that it felt like we were about to flip over.  It got airborne multiple times, and it took everything I had to keep it under control.  But then, people on the top deck started getting sick, one right after the other and the whole place began to wreak.  I went farther up to the front of the ferry to get away from the other sick people, and Lauren was sitting there about to get sick herself.  I was trying so hard not to throw up that I was shaking and my hands and face were going numb.  Death must feel a lot like that.  I didn't even have the energy to get up and try to go outside for some fresh air, or even speak for that matter.  I saw Lauren head up to the trash can, and I knew that if I saw her throw up I would right there in my seat.  I got up and stumbled to the bathroom, and I guess  when Lauren saw me she immediately turned to the trash can and got sick.  It was God-awful.  Turns out that there were a few of us who were beyond sick.  The trip to Delos was the longest of my life and when we finally got there I wasn't really feeling well enough to walk around a practically deserted island for three hours.  Delos is a famous island where the sanctuary of Apollo resides.  Nobody lives there anymore (except the French archaeologists who are still excavating it) and basically the entire island is covered in statues, temples, and other buildings in his honor.  Most of it is in ruin, but the Temple to Isis on the side of one of the mountains is in pretty good condition.  I know nobody is allowed to live on that island, but at that point I was willing to risk it in order to not get back on that boat.  From Delos we sailed to Mykonos.  Mykonos is famous for being a mecca for the gay community to vacation and is where "all the beautiful people party" according to Vaggeli.  Basically if you are not a model, you are not welcome on some of its beaches.  Needless to say we stayed far, far away from those places.  Mykonos was beautiful, but I was still so sick (although I learned if you stayed outside you didn't get as sick) I didn't really get to enjoy much of it.  The villages on the island are like a maze, and Lauren and I must have gotten lost I don't know how many times.  I don't know how anybody there remembers where they live; it's ridiculous.  After Mykonos we got back on the boat to head back to Naxos.  I chose the stronger dramamine gum and sat on the top deck, but I was still like having an anxiety attack thinking about sailing on that thing again.  Luckily, the ride back was much smoother than the ride there, and I survived it without getting sick at all.  When we got back, we cleaned up and headed out for the Mexican restaurant on the island.  Even the tacos in Greece are good!  And I had a raspberry margarita that was amazing!  I have been craving a margarita basically since we got here and it totally hit the spot.  After dinner we headed out for the Waffle House (and no, not that white trash restaurant in the U.S.).  It's an ice cream shop where they make their own waffle cones.  Vaggelis still owed me ice cream after all.  He told me I could get the most expensive thing there, but I just got a small.  I told him I was a cheap date, but he insisted that he would buy me ice cream again tomorrow, and that I was to get every topping and three scoops of everything then.  I'm game.


"This is Spartaaaaa!" To our credit this was before Vaggeli told us no photos posing, and this was just a large hole in the ground, not a monument.




Mykonos


Temple of Isis


Mykonos
That's just gross.
That's why we all nose-goesed.
*Shwungggg*

One word describes today: painful.  Plus a large number of expletives, but I'll get to that later.  Today was our first full day in Naxos and we spent the day touring the island with Vaggelis.  We started out our day driving to Kouronochori village and then walking through it to get to Melanes village.  And this is where the bad words come in to play.  First off, Vaggelis told us that this was not a hike, more like a walk between the villages.  Wrong.  Next he was sprinting through it like we were being chased.  We don't always get to see these things, and I would like to be able to look up at the scenery once in awhile instead of looking at my feet the whole time so I won't trip/slip/crash and burn.  The walk was pretty cool though because we got to see the typical houses of the small Greek villages, and it is exactly like what I had always pictured in my mind.  The second village led to the Kouros statues that were abandoned in the ancient times.  They were just left on the ground after breaking and buried over time.  The Kouros are on private property, and were found and left as they are today.  After the Kouros is when the next round of expletives occurred.  Truthfully, probably the most expletives I have ever said in one setting.  After the HIKING/SPRINTING, I told Vaggelis to slow down because we wanted to enjoy the scenery and we were having trouble keeping up.  Did he?  Not one bit.  And this time we were climbing up to the top of a mountain to see a supposedly great view of the island.  Two minutes he said.  Two minutes to climb this giant mountain.  Two minutes my ass.   And to top it off, this mountainside is COVERED in thorn bushes.  Not like rose thorns; think more like barbwire on a stick.  The entire climb up I am leaping over bushes and rubble to try to avoid scratching myself, which is basically impossible.  I managed to make it up (very, very, very slowly) and the view was amazing.  But, I was slightly fuming at Vaggelis.  I was already scratched up, sweaty, and hot, and we still had to go back down.  The way down was HELL.  I fell 3 times INTO thorn bushes.  You know what's worse than falling into 3 thorn bushes??? Trying to get back out of said thorn bushes.  I have battle wounds.  I was bleeding the entire way down the island and had to hop like a kri kri to avoid cutting myself more.  I had thorns sticking out of me everywhere, a sprained ankle, and a ridiculous temper by the time we got back down.  I was the only one that fell IN the bushes and therefore had to be helped down by Barnes, Steph, Vaggelis, and Kelsi.  F*** and s*** have never been said that many times in a row ever, and I complained the whole way down.  We all have our days and this was definitely mine.  I apologized to Barnes later for being such an ass, but I was in pain so at the time I didn't care.  We settled that Vaggelis owes me ice cream...expensive ice cream.  After the God-awful mountain we set out for a Kitron distillery.  Kiltron is a type of alcohol that is in the family of Raki, but with a more citrusy flavor to it.  Not horrible, but still not good.  After the distillery we drove to a local pottery maker's workshop.  We got to watch him make a pitcher, and it was really something to see.  He was talking to Vaggelis the entire time and looking away, yet the pitcher was pretty much perfect within a few minutes.  Then Sadie got to try her hand at it.  She struggled, but it was funny and he is going to fire the clay and bring her pot to her later.  We got to shop around, and his work is amazing!  He can make anywhere from 50 to 100 pieces everyday and it ranges from pots, to vases, to unique items you can only find in Naxos.  He just sells straight out of his tiny shop which is kind of off the beaten path, and this is where Vaggelis and I got into it about how a shop like that in America would not be able to support itself.  Maybe I was still mad about the thorns in my foot; getting your skin ripped off by sharp objects can really put you in a funk for the rest of the day.  After the potter's, we went to the Temple of Demeter at Sangri.  It is believed to be one of the very first temples in Greece and set the tone for all the temples built after it.  It was different from any of the other temples we have seen in that it had full walls on some of the sides instead of just pillars all the way around.  It also had a pure marble ceiling instead of the typical roof ceiling found in all other temples.  I guess you could say it was more of a prototype for cult temple building in the centuries B.C.  The temple was surrounded on all sides by hay fields, and if there wasn't that giant temple there, it would be just like the fields I used to rake at home.  So weird, but nice to see something so familiar!  Then it was beach time for us.  We ate at a Tex-Mex restaurant right on the water, and a taco has never tasted so good!  I experienced I guess what you could say was my first semi-nude beach.  No, I did not participate.  We all don't need to know each other THAT well.

Now back to how my day was painful...again.  There is this large rocky/dirt hill that leads from our hotel to the rest of the town.  On our way to dinner tonight, I tripped over a rock and busted my toe open.  It of course gushed blood and I had to go all the way back up the hill (we were already nearly down) to clean it up, stop the bleeding, and get it bandaged up.  The irony is that I was just in the process of explaining to people that I REALLY AM more coordinated than they perceive me to be, then bam.  F***.  By the time we got back to the hotel, my shoe was covered in blood and my toe was throbbing.  Thankfully Steph helped me out and we finally got to dinner.  Vaggelis, along with everybody else, proceeded to make fun of the way I walk, my eyes, my complaining today, etc.  I haven't laughed that hard in a long time, even if it was at my expense.   I am just a wreck today and feel like I just need to go to sleep and start this day all over again.  Vaggelis did slowly start to win me back though.  We taught him the word "swag"; it was great.  Now sleeeepppppp!

By the way, we are to the point of smelling our clothes one-by-one to see if they are suitable to wear for the next five days.  There are some gray areas, and it's a struggle.  These people are going to be surprised when we meet again and they realize that I don't really smell in real life.




My battle wounds






We traded hair!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

I am not going to flush the toilet paper this time...I remembered!
Do you want a high five for that?

We left bright and early for Naxos today.  7:25 to be exact.  It was a five hour ferry ride to the island from Athens.  I mostly slept (go figure) and read.  Naxos is beautiful and our hotel is by far my favorite that we have stayed in so far.  If you have seen Mama Mia or The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, Naxos looks very similar to that.  The buildings are mostly white and our hotel has only 20 rooms in the whole place.  20 rooms!  All of our rooms are accessed through an outdoor courtyard/garden and we have double doors that open out to it.  The hotel is right on the sea, and the view is spectacular.  I don't think this is real life.  When we first got to the hotel, the owner (it's all family-owned and operated by the way) made us sit in the dining area and served us homemade wine, orange juice, a mushroom casserole bar thing, and chocolate bread before they sent us off to our rooms.  I feel more like we are staying in somebody's beautiful home than a hotel.  We walked down to the tavernas on the water and had lunch.  The owner was a crazy old man who was showing us magic tricks and mind games, and he was cracking us up the entire time.  Do you know how to flip a hard-boiled egg that is sitting in a glass without touching the glass or egg or anything?  I do now.  He bragged that that is how he gets free drinks at bars in America.  Must make a note to try that sometime bahahaha.  Then we headed back to the hotel where we sat out on the cliffs overlooking the water and just relaxed.  I have been here less than six hours and have already fallen in love.  We got ready for dinner and headed out for an Asian restaurant called EastWest.  It was so good to get a break from Greek cuisine for a night.  The place is ran by an Australian couple, and the food was amazing.  I had the equivalent of cashew chicken, and I actually really liked it (even though it wasn't Springfield style).  There is nothing more American than Chinese food, owned by Aussies, in Greece.  There is apparently a Mexican restaurant on Naxos too that is owned by Canadians.  Weird.  On another random tangent, apparently the crime rate is like 0% here.  Barnes said that the last time he was here he actually considered going home, getting his stuff, and moving here.  If that's the case for me, I might be screwed if I go down the attorney path.  No crime would mean very little use for me on this island.  Maybe I should just move here and become a bartender. Bahahaha just kidding mom!  You can stop having your small heart attack now.  But seriously, it's amazing.


The courtyard in our hotel





Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Dear NASA, your mom thought I was big enough.  Sincerely, Pluto.
Pluto wiener jokes...you just made my life.  Cheers to that!

Six hour bus rides are not the most exciting thing in the world.  I probably slept 5 and a half out of those 6.  We did get to see Mount Olympus (the tallest mountain in Greece) though, and that was pretty cool.  We did find out on the way back to Athens that Irini had been Linkin Park's tour guide in Athens some time ago.  She was laughing because nobody in Greece recognized them, but since she had friends and acquaintances coming up and talking to her all day, she was more famous then them here.  Very cool!  We got back to Athens mid-afternoon, and it was slightly odd because it felt like we had come back home.  It seems forever ago since we were last there and since it was where we had started, it just felt like home.  Especially seeing the Acropolis again, that was like a too-familiar site now.  We went and shopped around the Plaka some more and then headed back to get ready for dinner.  It was our farewell dinner with Irini.  I am really going to miss her, and it was so sad leaving her behind.  She was definitely more like a friend than a guide, as cheesy as that sounds.  She and Thalia (one of the manager's of the tour guide company that our program is through) gave us all gifts to remember them and our time in Greece by.  After dinner we headed to a little bar for our last night out with Irini.  The bar was really cool and had all these different colors and flavors of alcohol lit up along their shelves.  The alcohol tasted like cough syrup but at least it was pretty!  Then it was back to the hotel and bed to rest up for our early morning to the islands tomorrow.  So excited for this little mini vacation from our vacation!

By the way, Lauren and I thought we would go up to the top of the hotel to see the Acropolis all lit up one last time.  You can see the Acropolis museum from where we were at and I swear to God we saw a centaur in there.  Okay maybe it was just a guy riding a machine that I am assuming cleaned the floors there, but it freaked us the hell out.  That is the exact area where the centaur pediments are displayed as well.  We got the hell off the top of that roof is all I know.


Mt. Olympus




You both are ridiculous. I never did get a picture of JUST the pretty bottles.


The review I wrote for our bus driver Takis :)


One last time :(

Sunday, June 17, 2012

You wreak of swag.

Okay, I have a problem.  In the past two days I have went to Ble four times.  FOUR TIMES!  And we are going back again tonight after dinner.  That will make five times in two days, four of those being today if you're keeping count.  Granted I have only actually ate it twice today but still.  For breakfast I had this chocolate stracciatella mousse thing that first off was too pretty to eat, but that really didn't stop me.  Then for lunch we went back and had their pizza, which was amazing (potatoes and feta pizza...yum!) and then two little mini pastries.  The first was a chocolate cookie bottom with chocolate mousse/frosting on top with a strawberry and the second was a vanilla cookie bottom with custard and fruit on top.  Delicious!  Then after dinner we went back and I got an apple pastry thing and this custard/fruit thing.  I am in fat kid heaven.  I even got more to take for the bus ride back to Athens tomorrow! Who knows if I will ever see that place again so I am stocking up!  Anyway, after my awesome breakfast this morning we went and saw a couple Byzantine churches in Thessaloniki.  Since it was Sunday there was a baptism going on in one of them, and it was cool to see a Greek Orthodox baptism.  It was strange though because people were just coming and going during the ceremony to tour the church.  Definitely something unique that I will probably never see again.  It's still hot as hell here and after the churches we just went back to the hotel and relaxed in the air conditioning.  Everything is pretty much closed because of the elections today, so it was nice to really not do anything for awhile.  I even found some Fresh Prince and House in English on the television....always the little things!  Dinner was good as usual.  The area it was in was quaint and quite different from where our hotel is.  Tomorrow we have a six hour drive back to Athens.  Ugh.  At least I will get a chance to nap on the bus.  Our actual class is pretty much over, we are now just waiting to start the extension.  So sad that it is almost over!

Oh by the way Happy Father's Day Dad!  Miss you and love you!  Hope you had a good day, wish I could have been there!

And these pictures are out of order and it is too much of a pain to change, so sorry. Deal with it.


"When I have children some day, I want them to look just like this."


The first church


The smurf cake that we wanted to steal for Katy. No significant value other than it is freaking adorable.


The baptism we got to watch

I always had this ability to pull it out in the end.
That's what she said.
No, that is NOT what she said.

I am going to need a vacation after this vacation (okay yea it's technically study abroad, but come on, I am having a blast!).  I am beyond exhausted and waking up early this morning was not pleasant in the least.  I fell asleep on the short ride to Pella and had to pry myself off the bus to go into the first museum.  The museum was pretty cool though.  Pella was the original capital of Macedonia and the its ruins (especially known for its elaborate mosaics) were really neat to see in person.  The mosaics are still in amazing condition and were part of these people's homes in ancient Pella.  After seeing the site and the museum, we headed back to Thessaloniki to go the Byzantine museum.  The museum was very different from what we have been looking at for the past couple of weeks.  This period of time is A.D. and very Christianity-oriented versus the paganistic time of the Greek gods.  There were some really neat artifacts that were in surprisingly good condition for being from the 4th and 5th centuries.  There were two tombs from the Byzantine period that had been moved to this museum and they were amazing to see as well.  But what I really fell in love with was this book that held ancient gospels in it.  Kristen and Kara will know what I am talking about when I say that the book looked like the one that starts the fairytale of Ever After.  It just reminded me of a big book of fairytales, and I kind of wanted to steal it not gonna lie.  After the museum we walked back to our hotel and then headed out for lunch and shopping.  I am sick of seeing the same old clothes over and over again, and if I could would buy a whole new wardrobe.  I swear I am going to burn these ones when I get home.  After shopping Lauren, Jackie, and I stumbled upon the bakery that Tim Brandt had told me about right before I left for Greece.  We weren't even looking for it and in this huge city we literally just ran into it...it was totally fate!  It's called Ble and walking into that place was like walking into a tiny heaven.  The place is HUGE and has a million different pastries and desserts of all sizes and varieties to try.  I asked the lady working there what was her favorite thing they had and I would take that.  It was basically a biscuit or cookie type thing on bottom with a cream cheese vanilla custard on top of that.  On top of the custard was a variety of berries and the whole thing was surrounded in chocolate.  I had already had dessert at lunch not an hour before that so I told the lady I would take it to go thinking that I would eat it later tonight.  I made it to the bench outside before I started digging in.  Lauren and I ended up splitting it because she tasted it and decided she had to have some too.  Fat kids at our finest.  I told Barnes about it and we are going back again tomorrow for breakfast....sooooo excited!  We came back and got ready for dinner.  The dinner was good but the best part was I actually found a red wine that I liked!  It tasted more like grape juice, but whatever; it still counts.  Oh and Barnes drank enough Ouzo to tell us his story of failing calculus in college.  It was in the early 90s and he totally had long hair, that he wore in two pigtails no doubt.  He also wore checkered vests and high tops...great mental picture.  We were crying we were laughing so hard.  After dinner we came back and watched the Greece-Russia game.  Takis was showing us which soccer players were single and saying if we wanted a Greek boyfriend he would hook us up with his friends.  But, unless he is friends with number 18, I don't want any.  Greece won 1-0, and everybody went crazy as usual.  I wish America had a sport that we got behind as a nation like that (besides the Olympics and yes I know we have soccer, but nobody watches them).  It's so cool to see all the bars and tavernas showing the game and people yelling and cheering together.  Now bed!






"Let's pretend that we haven't eaten half of this already so I can take a picture."


"Take the picture! I am only going to be weird for 5 seconds!"

Saturday, June 16, 2012

It was like a buffet...a handsome Greek policeman buffet.

Today we started out by heading to Vergina.  This is the site of the tomb of King Phillip II of Macedonia and the museum that surrounds the tomb.  Phillip was the father of Alexander the Great and lived in the 3rd century B.C.  Again, like the hanging monasteries yesterday, I had no prior knowledge of this site going into today's visit.  Again I was completely awed by the experience.  The tombs, containing not only King Phillip but his seventh wife (most likely) and his grandson, were found in immaculate condition and had fortunately not been raided by looters.  The tombs were built and then buried into a hill so they were hidden until archaeologists dug them up in 1977.  The museum itself is built on top of the exposed tombs, and I have to say that this museum is probably one of the coolest places I have been ever.  It is all underground and dark with the exposed tombs and other structures sticking out in different places throughout it.  They wouldn't allow pictures inside the museum, which was pretty much devastating because there is no way to describe the place and do it justice.  The things they found in the tombs were amazing as well including golden wreaths and armor that were buried with the deceased.  The most impressive part was though was definitely the tombs.  Oh my gosh, they were practically still sticking out of the ground and they were right there in the museum for everyone to see!  It was one of the coolest things I have seen here. I will try to google some pics and see if I can put them up because it was amazing.  Also, when we were leaving, a group of about 100 police officers came to tour the museum.  Greek policemen!  Soooo great.  I would have stayed longer if I knew they were coming!  After Vergina we headed to a winery in Naoussa.  Still hate wine.  Probably always will.  I do feel like a loser though because everyone else drinks it and I asked for water at a winery haha.  The winery was a little bit smaller than the last one we visited.  They produce about 25,000 bottles a year.  The meal they served us was amazing, and it was cool to see more of the process of how it is made.  There is so much that goes into wine making and tasting, it is all rather confusing actually.  After the winery we headed to Thessaloniki.  After staying in small villages for the last few days it is weird to be back in a big city again!  This is our last stop before going back to Athens and starting the island extension.  Soooo sad.  But what is cool about being here is that the biggest election in probably Greece's history is on Sunday and we will be right here to witness all of it!  Everyone on the planet is talking about Greece right now and how their new government and economy is going to work, and we are going to see it all happen first-hand.  Everything will most likely be shut down on Sunday because of the elections, but I can't wait to see the Greek election process at work at such a critical time in their history.

Oh yea, I got to Skype with Britt today!  Sooo good to finally get to talk to her in person, I miss her!


You can kind of see how on either side of it there is still dirt because it is still underground.


The amazingly intricate wreath that was found in the tombs.


The fortification wall in Thessaloniki




The vineyards

Thursday, June 14, 2012

On a scale from your goldfish died to the Holocaust, how sad were you?

Today we started back out at the site of the Delphic Oracle, except today we saw the lower part which contained the temple to Athina and the gymnasium that the athletes trained in for the Delphic games.  What was more spectacular was the views from the edge of that hill.  It was beautiful.  Oh and I also got a picture of the side of the mountain that made me so car sick.  When you see the road that we were on, you will totally understand why.  After Delphi, we set out on another 4 hour drive to Kalabaka.  This is the site of the hanging monasteries of Meteora.  I have to say that this site was probably one of my favorite so far.  I had no idea what the hanging monasteries were before this trip, but if you can see only a few things in Greece, this needs to be one of them!  These gigantic monasteries were built on top of these free-standing cliffs that have spent millions of years being carved out by water, wind, and earthquakes.  These cliffs tower over the town of Kalabaka and to see them in person was just amazing.  This was another instance of me getting angry with my camera because none of the pictures I took did any of it justice.  These churches were built in the Byzantine period, and I can't even begin to imagine how they built those giant structures on top of these monstrous cliffs without modern day tools.  Heck, I don't even know how we would build them now.  We got to go inside two of the monasteries, both of which are still being used by monks and nuns.  You have to wear proper attire while inside because it is considered sacred ground.  That means for girls: skirts that come past your knees and your shoulders have to be covered.  And for boys, a nice shirt and jeans or pants will do.  Thank goodness I brought my maxi dress, although climbing 300 stairs to get to the monastery in it was not my favorite moment of the day.  On top of that, it is still ridiculously hot and I was sweating through that long dress like no other.  I know, gross.  If you did not wear proper attire, they provided you with wraps to cover yourself for the time being.  Pictures were generally not allowed in any enclosed areas of the church, but there were a few "gray"  areas where it could be debated whether it was inside or outside so those are the only pictures I really risked taking.  I wish I could have gotten a picture of the inside of the chapel part though.  The frescos on those walls are 800+ years old and were absolutely stunning!  They all portrayed the more scary and grotesque stories from the Bible in an effort to show the people who entered what their fate will be if they are not Christians.  We also got to see where they keep the skulls of the past monks in recognition of all they have sacrificed for their faith and where they prepared their meals, etc.  Reverence was asked of us at all times and being there was just a totally sobering experience.  The nuns at the second monastery were adorable as well (one of them was likely 100 years old, 4 ft. tall, and I just wanted to take her home in my pocket) and the one was so friendly.  Except to Nick bahahaha.  After the monasteries, we set out for our hotel.  It is huge, with an extremely nice pool and big rooms.  We laid out by the pool this afternoon and then got ready for dinner.  Jess and I broke this hotel...again.  Well not really, but in the pursuit of clean laundry we flooded the bathroom (who knew you couldn't let the bathtubs drain all at once because the water would come back up through the floor?).  You really don't appreciate something until you don't have it anymore, and let me just tell you that if I would have lived before washers and dryers I would have just stank.  It is a pain in the butt and we end up flooding the bathroom floor.  To top it off, to dry our clothes we have to lay them out on the balcony and our bus driver Takis was on the balcony next to ours and saw us hanging up our underwear, bras, and everything.  We literally aired all our dirty laundry to him.  He took a picture of us hanging up our laundry and put it on Facebook.  He just couldn't stop laughing.  I love him though, he's great.

Oh yea, when we flooded the bathroom, Irini told us that she has had groups of 40 and 50 before but we as a group of 11 have caused more destruction than any of them combined.  We really are special.


Imagine that I don't look like a bum, we were about to go on a 4 hour bus ride.


If you look really close you can see that zig zag line on the mountain. Yea that's what made me sick.


The gray area hahaha





We needed wedding cake toppers, sooooo we sent our friends to go get the smurfs out of our smurf village...

It. Is. Hot. As. Balls. Here.  I seriously thought I was going to die of heatstroke today.  We went to the site of the Delphic Oracle today and let me first explain the city of Delphi and its surroundings.  Delphi, as I said yesterday, is situated on the side of a mountain.  And I mean literally on the slope of that mountain, meaning there is no walking on level ground.  To get from one street to the next is a series of what seems like a million stairs, ramps, or just plain uphill treks.  Although I do have to say that coming here was like coming home because Delphi is known for only having two streets (four-way stop at Clever anyone?).  Anyway, to get to the Delphic Oracle, we had to first walk up a hill to get to the gate that lets you in.  Then, it is a straight up the mountain using stairs, ridiculous curving ramps, and climbing to get from one site to the next on top.  For those who don't know, the Delphic Oracle was an elderly woman named Pythia who people from all over Greece came to get advice about their future endeavors.  She was said to be in touch with the Gods and could bring answers to people's questions.  In reality, what researchers think happened is that she was sitting in front of a large crevice (I hate that word) that was expelling gases from under the Earth's crust (they think the crevice was caused by an earthquake) and that these gases were putting her in a state of ecstasy.  So basically, she was high and people were asking her questions about their life and she would mumble some incoherent nonsense and the people would then base their life decisions on her advice.  Emperors and high city-state officials even came to her for decisions about war and power.  Another theory was that she was drinking water from the ground that contained an anesthesia-like chemical that produced her transient state.  Either way, she was high and people thought she could tell their futures.  Real smart.  We got to see the temple of Apollo and the stadion that was at the very top of the site.  The stadion was a place for foot races, but this one is in probably the best condition of any of the ones we have seen so far.  Again, it is extremely hot here, we are all running on a general lack of sleep and we were all practically dying on the way up to the stadion.   Afterwards we headed to the museum and then lunch.  What never ceases to amaze me is how everybody here can automatically guess that we are Americans without hearing us speak a word.  Today at the museum I smiled at an older gentleman that worked there, JUST SMILED, and he immediately goes, "American eh?".  Holy hell how do they do that?  Is it how I dress?  How I act?  Do I just scream American?!  And I really don't know if that is a bad thing or a good thing, but it's crazy nonetheless.  Anyway, after lunch we headed to another small museum at the house of a late-Greek poet and his wife who brought theater back to this region back in the 20's and 30's.  After that, I went back to the hotel and took the most epic nap of my entire life.  I slept from 2:30 to 6 this afternoon.  I don't even really know if you can call that a nap, it was more like a a good nights sleep.  And the sad thing is I was still tired when I woke up.  I will be asleep as soon as my head hits the pillow tonight.  I am still loving every minute though!  The naps are just an added bonus every now and then.  After my nap we headed out for dinner, but not before Jackie and Katy broke the hotel first.  A few of us were sitting upstairs in the lobby using the internet and all the sudden the fire alarm starts blaring.  In the US if this happened everyone would clear out of the hotel and the fire department would basically already be there waiting, we just stayed sat and went about our business.  After about 5 minutes of it going off we decided that maybe we should go downstairs and check to see if our rooms were on fire.  None of them were obviously, but when we got back up to the lobby the manager was there and was speaking with Irini.  Apparently Katy had started the shower and let the hot water run with the door closed to get the wrinkles out of Jackie's dress.  The steam set the alarms off!  Never a dull moment.  At least it wasn't me this time!

We calculated that we only have 6 days left before the island extension starts.  That is thoroughly depressing.  I am going to bawl when I have to leave Greece on the 26th.  I am going to come back home kicking and screaming.  I miss my family and friends, but can't you all just move here with me?!  I am not ready to go back to the real world yet.





Temple to Apollo