Tuesday, February 23, 2010

"I thought she was going there to study."




i took a break from my late night presentation preparations to check out blogs, and i quickly realized (again) how large the space between my posts are. Of course, my response was to begin a draft of a new post, rather than work on my powerpoint. It was that time of the day when i am most efficient, and most extraordinarily efficient in regards to getting all the little things i wanted to do done, not the ones with due dates. It was that time when i seem to be more inclined to clean our shower drain than to settle down to answer chapter questions, and that is exactly what i did. It's odd though, i am currently sitting in the same manner as i was when i posted my last post, arguing (again) with blogspot concerning its absurd random picture placement, and (as always) chastising myself for my horrendous spelling. Here i am in the same situation as before, feeling as though i wrote only a few days ago and wondering two things - how is it possible that it has been three weeks since that post and why on earth did i begin this post at 4am?

Here i go! i have a lot to write about it seems, so bear with me if you have time. If you are short on time, i'll try to get some good pictures up for you to scan through :)





At the moment i am just back from a trip to Frankfurt, originally planned so two of my friends and i could meet up. The title of this post is a quote from my Grandpa Spencer...it was his response when my mom told him that i had been to Stockholm, and Frankfurt, and was planning on going to Italy, Slovenia, and Croatia over our Easter Break, which begins at the end of this month. It made me laugh quite a lot when she told me he said that. Don't worry Grandpa, i promise i am studying too :) Since i have done a bit of traveling as well, i thought it would be good to share some stories and some photos.

i traveled to Stockholm at the end of January. A dear friend with whom i was fortunate enough to live this past summer is currently on a Fulbright in Emden, Germany. We had been wanting to meet up while i was in her time zone, and we managed to put together a trip that would result in our meeting in Sweden. We put it together pretty last minute. Lacey booked the hostel and recruited some friends while i booked my train tickets and Ryan Air flights. i left Bodø in a rush, nearly missing my bus that would take me to the mandatory meeting at the Bodø Police Station. i needed to get my student permit to be here in Norway and then head to the train station to begin the long journey to Oslo.




















Let's begin with something that has become a fact of life and travel here in Bodø...the train. Travel to other countries is fairly cheap from Oslo thanks to the wonderful things know as low fare airlines - such as Ryan Air. They sometimes run deals that can get you fr om one country to another for under $10! The issue is getting oneself to Oslo, which is something around a 500 mile trip as the crow flies, if i have my facts correct. The Bodø train station is as far north as the train runs in Norway, and it can provide a cheap way to get south. Train tickets can run as low as 199 kroner (around $35 depending on the exchange rate) whereas plane tickets can run you over $100 and sometimes even near $200 or more depending on how good you are at planning ahead. If you want to go places, your choice is pretty straight forward - cough up the money and fly for an hour and a half, or pay less and take an 18 hour trip that includes a night train from Trondheim to Oslo. i put up a map of the train routes just for fun (i suppose i should note that it originally came from raileurope.com). You can see where the route stops, and that's my home away from home! Bodø, Norway.

i spent most of my first trip either sleeping or quite agitated. i seem to be a pretty nervous traveler, and when i wasn't resting my eyes or debating whether or not it was actually ok to take the little blanket they give you on the night train (yes, in fact, it is - i now have two) i was stressing about buses, planes, and finding my way to the h ostel. While refusing to get a cell phone has been a near liberating experience, it's also a little alarming to have absolutely no contact with the person you are meeting other than a previously agreed upon meeting time. i knew i was supposed to meet Lacey at the train station in Stockholm, and she knew an approximate time that my bus would arrive.



Now, after several trips around Europe, i'm happy to report that i'm slightly less stressed out when traveling. The pictures i have of the train station in Trondheim are sites that have become almost familiar after three times there. i have this hope that travels here will rub off on travels elsewhere, and maybe i'll just keep getting less shaky when i don't know exactly what i am doing (?) Who knows! The ability to simply think things through and figure them out as i go is one i am hoping to come back possessing more strongly than when i left.

Traveling is always interesting when you don't speak the primary language. You travel knowing that you will not be able to say much of anything. i was afraid that this would take away one of my favorite things about long times spent in transit - random conversations with interesting strangers. As it turns out, being the lazy one with only one language has been ok, simply because my language is English. If someone is clearly not interested in speaking with me, they won't. i have; however, been able to express my frustrations concerning bus inconsistencies and shared a great trip into Oslo with a very cool German who was on her way to meet her boyfriend; on the train into the city we met a lovely woman from Ghana, and an individual in a Norwe gian metal band on his way to record an album in L.A. (his band's name was Bulk, i still need to Myspace them and see what i think - Norway has a thing for metal music, do you suppose it is the lack of sun through half of the year?) i have flipped through the pages of a book written in Arabic, backwards and strange to my eyes, and have learned a lot about what it is like to live in small-town Germany and be a meteorologist in the Airforce for six years. It is always interesting to see what discussions come up with complete strangers, and i enjoy tracing where the conversations go despite the sometimes multiple language barriers. i eavesdropped on a German/Norwegian conversation concerning eating habits that lasted for over an hour and a half on one bus ride. Oddly, i seem to find myself sharing opinions about the environment quite often, and people (unless completely scornful) usually seem interested in basic life as a student in the United States and abroad.

The trip to Sweden was my first practice round at planning and executing small-scale travel in Europe. i got on the train and was pretty quickly lulled into a sleepy torpor by its steady rocking. This trip lasted into the night, getting me into Oslo early the next day. Needless to say, i missed a lot of great scenery because of the night. i curled up in the corner of my seat with a book and slowly reviewed my travel plans again and again to make sure i had figured it all o ut correctly. i knew at that point that i had 18 hours to kill before the stressful change in my mode of transportation would occur. It was a great relief to hear the conductor give the main announcements in both English and Norwegian.

By now i know several things about traveling. Firstly, you can't count on ALL announcements coming in English, so keep your ears open and eyes peeled for your stop. For example, don't get off the train at the Oslo International Airport when you really need to go all the way to the main station in the city center. Most cities have a main area with a central bus terminal and train station, so listen and look for those when coordinating travels. They are conveniently some of the easiest places to navigate to when confused. Also, information desks are your friends, and yes, just in case you ever need to know, you can catch a bus from the Oslo International Airport to the Oslo City Center (Oslo S) every 20 minutes, except during the wee hours of the morning. It is possible that the ride will take you about an hour and a half and cost you 140 kroner, but then again, i could be wrong.




i have also learned that if you are planning on visiting someone Bodø, you should definitely take the train from Oslo. It's well worth the time. The night train is the journey from Oslo to Trondheim, and then be prepared for some fantastic scenery on the train from Trondheim to Bodø. The further north you go, the better the ride gets. You will find yourself winding your way around the sides of snowy mountains beside lovely bodies of water, and will pass through the vast number of tunnels that have made the rail line possible up here. Just as a note, your ears pop as the pressure changes through a very long tunnel - it's a simple reminder that you have an entire mountain over your head, an interesting thing to think about. At the moment, all the moose i have seen have been from the train - i don't think i mind since i'm not sure i am really very desirous of meeting one face-to-face on the trail - and two times now my train has had to stop to avoid plowing into whole herds
reindeer. It's funny, you can tell who isn't local when this happens. We are the ones with our noses pressed against the windows as we attempt to dig our cameras our of our bags quickly enough to get a shot of the running animals. The Norwegians only occasionally glance up from their pink tinted newspapers. It seems i got the best shots on my second trip northwards. the pictures i have put in are all shots from that journey. My apologies as most were taken through a slightly grimy window.












i keep wondering how much blogspot will let me post, but i guess i will keep writing and simply see! i spent a long time getting to Sweden when you count the train, buses to and from the city center and then to the small airports that low fare airlines utilize, conveniently located many kilometers outside of the cities. By the end of the day, you begin to wonder if you saved any money at all when you consider that you had to pay bus fare several times over to reach your cheap flights. Low fare airlines also use conveniently awkward times of the day, for example, i reached the airport outside Stockholm late late in the day and was finally at the train station where i was to meet Lacey very near midnigt. As it would happen, info desks have closing times. i couldn't see Lacey anywhere when i arrived, and began hunting the station for youngish individuals who looked like they might speak English and be willing to help me out. i found two very nice young women who instructed me to take a city train, either the red or blue line to a particular spot, look for a big open area, and then i should be able to see where i was going from there, at least, they were pretty sure that was the way to the hostel. Needless to say, i opted on taking a cab. i had never actually hailed a taxi before, but found my way through the rather abrupt and a unhappy looking crowd of drivers into the next car waiting to head out of the station. i managed to wind up with a driver who had never even heard of the hostel or the area in which it was located. He was; however, very nice and his name was Vladimir. He spoke to me about Scandinavia in general, how he was from Central America and had married a Swedish girl 12 years ago, and he very kindly did not charge me for the minutes spent driving in circles, quite lost and confused as to how to get to the hostel.

The good news is that i got there, just in time to play a guessing game as to what room i should be trying to find. The man behind the desk helped me figure it out with a couple clues from conversations i had had with Lacey while planning. The room was not booked under her name, but she had mentioned a friend named Adi and something about needing to make special arrangements for a room of five people. That was enough to get me in. Hooray for my planning abilities. :) i paid, joined Hosteling International, and got my key. Much to the surprise of Lacey's friends Ilke and Vanessa, i tiredly hiked into the room. They had just returned from the station where they had been waiting for me for several hours and Lacey and Adi were still there! i'm very glad they had cell phones and were able to contact the two at the station and let them know i had safely arrived. Later, Lace and i compared notes. Apparently they had missed me in in the short window of time they had used to take a break from the vigil to get a coffee! i still feel very badly that they waited for so long.

i spent some time getting to know the crew Lacey had brought with her and catching up with a dear friend. We planned to simply go out and explore the next day, more specific plans would follow. It turns out i really liked being a tourist with a fun set of people. We spent the first day exploring shops and the beautiful buildings of the Old Town (Gamla Stad), and then opted on buying a "Stockholm Card" for the next two days. i think a lot of cities have this option. You pay a blanket fee and get to utilize all public transportation and get into tons of museums and similar attractions. We made supper, planned our routes, and taught each other various games at nights in the hostel. i got to refresh my basic German, as we spoke a great hybrid of English and German the whole trip (well, i mostly listened to the German part). i had a lark of a time getting to know Adi, Ilke, and Vanessa as we goofed off and explored.

bugger...i need to go and get some studying done before supper. As Ellen put it, i have already written a book, so i will post my pictures and continued stories in my next post (which will hopefully come sooner rather than later.) Thanks to Lacey's creativity and a few pictures i took, i have some really neat ones. And thanks to my parents i can show you some things from Frankfurt too.

i hope to type at you soon! lots and lots of care from here up north. If you are tired of my sporadic posts, do keep in mind that i have a lot of my friends blogs linked to this one. If you look on the left hand side of the page, you can see a list of links. There are three from my friends here in Norway and then a bunch from friends all over the world. Zoe is my Canadian neighbor from across the hall, Jen is one of my dear flatmates, and Sam is another Canadian friend who lives in the other student residence here. i think she may be the most consistent in terms of blogging. She happily informed me the other day that she was up to 22 posts! oops, sorry guys. If you want, give their writings a read over. i'm sure you will find lots of good stuff :)

happy day to all!

3 comments:

  1. You are lucky about the blankets on the train. They are not free for the taking here in Thailand. I had to pay 300B ($9) for one when i barfed on it in the middle of the night and then couldnt find it the next morning. I know i left it somewhere near the bathroom.
    In other news, barfing out the window of the bathroom feels way better than in the toilet.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Also Steve and I both are going cellphone free for the semester, so we abide by the half hour rule to simplify things. This rule says when looking for someone, try for a half hour, then give up. This way if i lose him at the mall I dont have to feel guilty about heading back to the appartment, and i dont have to wonder if hes still looking for me or if he headed back. After a half hour its every man for himself.

    ReplyDelete
  3. hmm...i may have to try the half hour rule, although it's been my good fortune that some of my friends are willing to wait longer. i went to Frankfurt and if Scott hadn't waited at the station for over an hour, i would have had to navigate the city alone at 1 AM! not really a thought i relish as i seem to be directionally inept.

    i'm sorry to hear about your train experiences Josh! i hope not all your rides are like that!

    ReplyDelete