Only two more to go! It has been an extreme learning experience. And I chose to celebrate it by sleeping for almost 18 hours. I slept through the staff party last night and probably could have slept all today, as well, but there were Christmas presents to buy. So I forced myself out of bed to fight the huge crowds on Regent Street. Ugh! Why do they make crowds look so nice in the movies? No one ever seems to bump into anyone else. No one ever seems to just stop in the middle of the sidewalk.
Saturday, December 18, 2004
Monday, December 13, 2004
Hooray for British Pubs!
Haven't had much of a chance to be out and social, but tonight was the Science Department Christmas Dinner... I was not banished to the "boring" part of the table (always a good sign), they were cunning when they made the seating plan. I enjoyed my sea bass and my John Smith pints. At one point I was feeling a bit tipsy (I've lost my tolerance over the last few months), but recovered (graciously, I think) and continued with my glass of wine... Can't wait to visit Charlotte, where I have (or used to have) a fun social life. Until then I am just going to have to meet some REAL drinkers in town (other than the students at my school)... Six days and counting, not sure if there's time before the new year...
Maybe that should be a New Year's resolution...
So far, my resolutions are pretty lame:
#1 - Lose weight (I could sound like Bridget Jones and start talking about the number of stones, but I'll spare you)
#2 - Make some friends (because YES, I am really THAT pathetic)
#3 - Work on classroom management (I have some ideas for the new term)
#4 - start working on what I want to do with the rest of my life...
Maybe that should be a New Year's resolution...
So far, my resolutions are pretty lame:
#1 - Lose weight (I could sound like Bridget Jones and start talking about the number of stones, but I'll spare you)
#2 - Make some friends (because YES, I am really THAT pathetic)
#3 - Work on classroom management (I have some ideas for the new term)
#4 - start working on what I want to do with the rest of my life...
Sunday, December 12, 2004
Bruges Christmas Market
Woke up early Saturday morning to catch the bus - we had to be at the stop at 6:54am. Ugh! Everyone at school said that the coach would have tea and coffee, not my coach, so I spent the first part of the trip sleeping. In Dover we boarded a ferry and made our way across the channel to France. I finally got a cup of coffee on the ferry. Of course every British person on the boat was drinking beer or "spirits" (at 8:30 in the morning!?!) It was an uneventful ferry ride - too cold to go outside, too foggy to see anything and too early to do much else. So, Catherine, Claire and I just lounged around for an hour and a half. Once in France we had about another hour and a half to get to Bruges - more bus time. Finally, around 12:30 (1:30 local time) we made it to Bruges. We were given four hours to see the market and the town and buy as much chocolate as we could...
There are so many things that I loved about Bruges and I don't even know where to begin. First of all, there are tons of bicycles (people ride bikes instead of driving cars) and you'll be walking along and pass a bike rack with hundreds of bikes attached. Next, the architecture is interesting. You can see the German influence - all of the buildings, houses, etc. Look really cool. Then, you have the river running through the town and all of the houses and buildings are built along-side it. There are four languages spoken in the town: French, German, Flemish and English - and most people who live there can speak 3 of the 4!! I could go on and on. My point is that it was a wonderful town.
We made our way to the Market Place - very big, with a large church/clock town on one side and many stores all around the sides. We were trying to find a place to eat - a place with "good French bread" - and decided on sandwiches, to go, so we would have plenty of time to explore. Catherine and Claire were so excited to see all of the French influences in the town. They were thrilled that they could speak French in almost every store we visited. After lunch, we decided that we needed chocolate (since Belgium is so well known for its use of the cocoa bean). We found a store that sold waffles and ordered ours draped in chocolate - it was heavenly! We spent the rest of our time shopping. Then rushed back to the bus for the four hour trek home - (it was a long ride home and we slept most of the time).
The bus stopped in Calais at a huge beer and wine warehouse. We were given 45 minutes to shop and the majority of the bus filled their carts. I would have much rather had the extra 45 minutes in Bruges. But if you say "France" then the British start to drool - there are so many huge shops like this all over the French coast and the Brits go nuts over cheap beer, wine, cigarettes and groceries. So many of them haven't seen past Calais or these huge mega-marts. Um, hello, there's so much more to see than a neon sign!!
Anyway, getting back into England was interesting. The bus stopped at the Border Partol gate and replied "all British" to the patrolman when he asked, "What nationality are your passengers?" The patrolman decided to spot-check our passports and when he found an American and two French girls on board he got a nasty attitude (myself, Catherine and Claire). He looked at my passport and started drilling me, "What are you doing here?" When I showed him my Work Permit, he started drilling me, "Where do you work? What do you teach? Where is your school? How long have you been here?" It was a little disturbing.
I really enjoyed myself, it was just a very long day. The funniest part of the trip was when Claire and I decided that we wanted to learn how to say 'Hello' and 'Thank you' in Flemish. We met this very nice vendor and asked her. It turns out that the way to say 'Thank you' in Flemish sounds like the way you say 'take it in the ass' in French.
I don't really know what to say about the Christmas Market, we kept wandering around the town trying to find it. We'd find a little area with a few booths set up selling t-shirts or food, and say, "Is this it? This can't be it." Turns out that when we got back to the bus, our driver said that the market ended at 1:00 (and we arrived in town at 1:30). So, I missed the Christmas Market, but I really couldn't care less - I loved what I saw of Bruges. It is a great town - with or without the Christmas Market.
There are so many things that I loved about Bruges and I don't even know where to begin. First of all, there are tons of bicycles (people ride bikes instead of driving cars) and you'll be walking along and pass a bike rack with hundreds of bikes attached. Next, the architecture is interesting. You can see the German influence - all of the buildings, houses, etc. Look really cool. Then, you have the river running through the town and all of the houses and buildings are built along-side it. There are four languages spoken in the town: French, German, Flemish and English - and most people who live there can speak 3 of the 4!! I could go on and on. My point is that it was a wonderful town.
We made our way to the Market Place - very big, with a large church/clock town on one side and many stores all around the sides. We were trying to find a place to eat - a place with "good French bread" - and decided on sandwiches, to go, so we would have plenty of time to explore. Catherine and Claire were so excited to see all of the French influences in the town. They were thrilled that they could speak French in almost every store we visited. After lunch, we decided that we needed chocolate (since Belgium is so well known for its use of the cocoa bean). We found a store that sold waffles and ordered ours draped in chocolate - it was heavenly! We spent the rest of our time shopping. Then rushed back to the bus for the four hour trek home - (it was a long ride home and we slept most of the time).
The bus stopped in Calais at a huge beer and wine warehouse. We were given 45 minutes to shop and the majority of the bus filled their carts. I would have much rather had the extra 45 minutes in Bruges. But if you say "France" then the British start to drool - there are so many huge shops like this all over the French coast and the Brits go nuts over cheap beer, wine, cigarettes and groceries. So many of them haven't seen past Calais or these huge mega-marts. Um, hello, there's so much more to see than a neon sign!!
Anyway, getting back into England was interesting. The bus stopped at the Border Partol gate and replied "all British" to the patrolman when he asked, "What nationality are your passengers?" The patrolman decided to spot-check our passports and when he found an American and two French girls on board he got a nasty attitude (myself, Catherine and Claire). He looked at my passport and started drilling me, "What are you doing here?" When I showed him my Work Permit, he started drilling me, "Where do you work? What do you teach? Where is your school? How long have you been here?" It was a little disturbing.
I really enjoyed myself, it was just a very long day. The funniest part of the trip was when Claire and I decided that we wanted to learn how to say 'Hello' and 'Thank you' in Flemish. We met this very nice vendor and asked her. It turns out that the way to say 'Thank you' in Flemish sounds like the way you say 'take it in the ass' in French.
I don't really know what to say about the Christmas Market, we kept wandering around the town trying to find it. We'd find a little area with a few booths set up selling t-shirts or food, and say, "Is this it? This can't be it." Turns out that when we got back to the bus, our driver said that the market ended at 1:00 (and we arrived in town at 1:30). So, I missed the Christmas Market, but I really couldn't care less - I loved what I saw of Bruges. It is a great town - with or without the Christmas Market.
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