I had a great trip, but it was absolutely exhausting! I wish it had been more like 10 days instead of 16. And we barely made it home, thanks to tight connections. But I am here! We had a great group of kids and my fellow chaperone was super-nice to me, especially when I got a sinus infection halfway through!
The whole trip was wonderful and eye-opening; it also really made me appreciate where I live. The things I liked best were the history, the culture, the art and the people. The things I missed most (besides my husband, my dogs and my family): peanut butter (they don't eat it in Europe!); traffic lanes; large, clean, free public restrooms; being able to be understood, language-wise; large showers, personal space AND my ST girls.
Right now I am trying to stay awake so I can readjust to the time difference. I took almost 400 photos; I'll post my favorites in travel.
It looks like everybody got knocked up while I was gone Congrats to rar210, FashionPrincess and luckyclover!!! Did I miss anything else good?
__________________
"We live in an age where unnecessary things are our only necessities." --Oscar Wilde
welcome back!!! it's so weird, i was JUST thinking of you because i need to research flights to paris and i was like i wonder how hb is doing?! please tell us more about your trip, like what city did you like the most? where exactly did you go? what did you do each day? sorry for the q's, i'm headed there myself this fall and i'm so super-curious!
YAY! Welcome back! I just looked at your pictures.
halleybird wrote: peanut butter (they don't eat it in Europe!);
that's because your supposed to be eating Nutella, which everyone I know thinks is 100000x better than peanut butter and which I miss out on because I hate hazelnuts. It is really hard to find peanut butter though - at my boyfriend's supermarket it's in the "foreign foods" section with soy sauce and taco shells and they only sell teeny tiny little jars for a small fortune.
Did you eat crepes? Gelato? What was the best thing you ate?
glad you're back! and im super glad that the trip turned out fantastic for you after all the headaches just to get to go on the trip! i'm off to check out the pictures...
__________________
"But I want you to remember, I intend this breast satirically." Susan from Coupling
please tell us more about your trip, like what city did you like the most? where exactly did you go? what did you do each day? sorry for the q's, i'm headed there myself this fall and i'm so super-curious!
I have to say that I liked London the most. I liked Paris a lot, too, and I didn't really expect to. Here was my itinerary. It was a whirlwind -- I think a France/England trip and then a separate Italy trip would have been much easier.
Day 1: London: Buckingham Palace, Westminster, then Windsor Castle Day 2: Stonehenge and Bath, then back to London to see Phantom of the Opera Day 3: Canterbury, then drive to Dover, ferry to Calais, drive to Paris Day 4: Paris bus tour of major sights, then Versailles Palace Day 5: Walking tour of Sacre Coeur and Montmartre, then the Louvre. Seine river cruise Day 6: Pere Lechaise Cemetary, the Opera House, Galleries Lafayette. Night train to Zurich Day 7: Arrive in Zurich, drive to Lucerne. Walking tour of Lucerne, lake cruise to Mt. Pilatus, then cable car up Mt. Pilatus Day 8: Drive to Florence Day 9: Florence walking tour Day 10: Drive to Rome, stop in Assisi Day 11: Vatican museum, St Peter's Basilica, walking tour of Rome Day 12: Catacombs, the Coliseum, the Roman Forum Day 13: Drive to Naples Day 14: tour of Pompeii, then the beach Day 15: Ferry and island tour of Capri Day 16: fly home
__________________
"We live in an age where unnecessary things are our only necessities." --Oscar Wilde
YAY! Welcome back! I just looked at your pictures. halleybird wrote: peanut butter (they don't eat it in Europe!); that's because your supposed to be eating Nutella, which everyone I know thinks is 100000x better than peanut butter and which I miss out on because I hate hazelnuts. It is really hard to find peanut butter though - at my boyfriend's supermarket it's in the "foreign foods" section with soy sauce and taco shells and they only sell teeny tiny little jars for a small fortune. Did you eat crepes? Gelato? What was the best thing you ate?
yes! I don't really like hazelnut either. The peanut butter I saw looked dubious and cost 4.50E for a tiny jar. I did eat crepes AND gelato. The gelato was amazing -- I had coconut and raspberry. I think the best thing I ate was this croissant from a tiny bakery in the Montmartre neighborhood. It was chocolate filled and seriously amazing. The food in France was incredible.
__________________
"We live in an age where unnecessary things are our only necessities." --Oscar Wilde
I'm glad you had a good trip, HB! 16 days IS long, though. How's your jetlag? It was always easier on me coming over here than it was when we got back home to Italy. It shouldn't be too hard to catch up!
So glad you are back - I can't wait to hear all about it & see pictures. How did your Pumas do with all that walking?? (sorry to ask about shoes but I've wondered how that would work out since you got them....)
__________________
Who do you have to probe around here to get a Chardonnay? - Roger the Alien from American Dad
Your trip sounds so awesome. I think it's essential to spend your first trip to a new place seeing all the "sights" and then spending your next trip there enjoying the small things you found you liked on your first trip. (Like the bakery in Montmartre, for instance.)
I, too, was wondering how your wardrobe held up on the trip, so Laken you're not alone.
Tell me more about France. I always imagined like in Sabrina - pink light, far-away music in the streets, cafes at sunset. Is it really like that? Or is it dirtier, stinkier, etc.?
You're back!!! Your trip sounds so awesome. I think it's essential to spend your first trip to a new place seeing all the "sights" and then spending your next trip there enjoying the small things you found you liked on your first trip. (Like the bakery in Montmartre, for instance.) I, too, was wondering how your wardrobe held up on the trip, so Laken you're not alone. Tell me more about France. I always imagined like in Sabrina - pink light, far-away music in the streets, cafes at sunset. Is it really like that? Or is it dirtier, stinkier, etc.?
My Pumas were wonderful -- they're really comfortable and look cute. I didn't wear them a ton, though, because they have a strange leathery smell and I was sort of embarrassed to take them off in front of my roommate! So I wore all my shoes about equally. My Target ballet flats were really comfortable but I pretty much destroyed them on this trip, so I tossed them yesterday. My clothes were good, too -- I wished I'd brought more shorts, capris and tank tops, but I made do.
Paris isn't really as romantic as it looks in the movies. There's a LOT of cigarette smoke and exhaust fumes, so it aggravated my allergies. But the streets are really lovely and most of the neighborhoods I saw were charming and historically well-preserved. I didn't find the people to be rude, like everyone says. As long as I made an effort to say "Bonjour/sil vous plait/merci/perdon" initially, they were very nice and spoke English.
__________________
"We live in an age where unnecessary things are our only necessities." --Oscar Wilde
oooohhh. ever since my sister got back from italy and she showed me pictures of capri, i have been dreaming of going to capri! your pictures definitely have my itching to go there.
i think that's so funny that you said that about paris, i can see that being true though.
i'm glad you got to go and you had a wonderful time. i bet halley and scully didn't know what to do with themselves while you were gone (oh yeah, and probably your hubby too. )
__________________
"i tell you one lesson I learned
If you want to be something in life, You ain't gonna get it unless, You give a little bit of sacrifice, Oohh, sometimes before you smile you got to cry.." -The Roots