Sunday, February 26, 2012

misceláneo

Welp, we just got back from Barcelona last night. It was incredible. But more on that later. Just thought I'd touch on some random highlights from the last few weeks:

For our Día de San Valentín, we spent all day in class listening to sappy Spanish love songs and writing equally sappy valentines to each other in Spanish. If you have time, go listen to Solamente Tú by Pablo Alboran, and prepare to be utterly twitterpated. Later that night we had a dessert night for a YSA activity, and Elizabeth and I made cake balls! They actually turned out pretty good, considering we had to do a little improvisation involving magdalenas and nutella en vez de actual cake and frosting.

I failed to recount our trip to Segovia, but it was wonderful, even with the frigid temperature! We got to see the wonderfully-preserved aqueduct and el Alcazar, which was basically Sleeping Beauty's castle. The stairs up to the top of the highest tower were like giant cheese-wedges designed specifically to reveal how ridiculously out of shape we are.


Last week we got the chance to go to ArtMadrid. There was some art there that I wish with all my heart I could afford to buy, and some that I wish I could erase from my memory. But it was so fun to just wander through all the displays and take it all in. I saw this particular piece towards the end, and immediately I thought of my aunt Andi. She makes the most amazing bread, in huge, round loaves with clever sayings written in flour. It sounded exactly like something she'd put on her bread, so I showed it to her on facebook. It was even more perfect because the addition of "pan" instead at the end of "preocupen" would be so punny!
The next day she uploaded this picture of her fantastic creation to facebook. I LOVE IT!

Cuenca wasn't originally on our list of trips, but I'm so glad the Larsens decided to add it for us! The city was breathtaking; I absolutely loved las casas colgadas (hanging houses), and getting barked at was a fun, new experience as well.

Temple de Debod, a super old Egyptian Temple in the middle of Madrid. We got there right as the sun was setting, and the view with the reflections off the water was really amazing. Just me and Anna walking like Egyptians, of course.

Last week we got the opportunity to go to the Madrid Temple as a group! It was such an incredible experience to attend the temple in another country, and still feel the comfort and power of the Spirit that comes from temple work. We've seen some of the most ornate, majestic, and historically significant buildings in the world on this trip, but this one is my favorite. By miles. No contest.
Finally ventured out to Parque del Retiro! It is a sprawling, scenic park in Madrid that I had heard so much about, and it definitely lived up to the expectations. Felt like I was straight outta Gossip Girl or something. Spotted: Little J eating lunch on the Met steps.

To celebrate (or mourn, not sure which) getting to the halfway point in the program, we decided to make a trip out to a store called Taste of America, to indulge in some of the finer things the U.S. has to offer, that unfortunately we don't have frequent access to over here. Namely, Dr. Pepper and Root Beer, Reese's, Pop Tarts, and Milanos. Halle-freakin-lujah, 'twas grand.

Next post will be about Barcelona. I will have to gather up all the blogging energy and prowess that I possibly can, because there is so much to tell!

NSP moment:
helado. gelato. ice cream.
enough said.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

OOPS.

okey dokey.

So it's been 3 weeks since my last post.....my bad. I just got overwhelmed by the prospect of writing about our trip to Andalucía because there was SO MUCH to tell, and I just kept putting it off, and now here we are. So now for the next couple posts I'm just going to bombard you with pictures and little captions from the last little while. Prepare yourselves; lots has transpired.

¡ANDALUCIA!

First stop was featured in Cervantes' Don Quixote. The windmills of Consuegra.

Don't worry, I got a few punches and kicks in to help ole Don out.

Next up was Granada and La Alhambra. Utterly fantastic.

Love, love, loooooove Moorish architecture. The detail on everything is so intricate and ornate, and my eyes and brain were just on overdrive trying to take it all in.

Me and Aly - I'm obsessed with this place.
Anna, Madi, Aly and I just plopped ourselves up on a wall, got some sun, did some chatting, got paparazzied by some Asian tourists, and marveled at how awesome life is right now.

Próxima Parada: Córdoba


Inside the Mezquita. Again, LOVE the Moorish architecture.

Just gettin ma stankyyy leg on in the streets of Córdoba.

Juderia in Córdoba, so many flowers hanging from the buildings, loved it!

Ruins of Medina - once a bustling, powerful city until it all got burned and blown up. War is dumb.



Onward to Sevilla!

Hellooooo. I like you.

Plaza de España! And yes, Star Wars Episode II was filmed here.

Coats of arms inside the room where Columbus had his little chatty-chat with Isabel and Ferdinand about his travels.

Columbus' grave inside the Cathedral of Sevilla (third largest cathedral in the world).

View of the top of the cathedral and overlooking the city from the tippy top of La Giralda (the tower of the cathedral). Climbed like 35 levels of ramps to get up there, but it was a wonderful excuse for some gelato later, of course.

We rented bikes and rode all around the city. The weather was SO nice, we got a little exercise, and it was just all around PERFECT. We even choreographed some synchronized biking in the Plaza de España.
The last leg of our bike ride was a journey to find el barrio de la Macarena. And find it we did. I can now say that I have done the Macarena in Macarena, Spain. (Anna, Jenna, Kim, Whitney, Aly, and I)

Flamenco stage. Absolutely amazing. We couldn't take pictures of the actual performance, but I doubt they would have done it justice anyway.

Last stop, Mérida. Roman ruins.

Roman amphitheater

Where they kept the animals before they set them loose to feed on convicts. Rawr.

Roman theater

Vern KILLING it. Girl gots pipes.

This is our creepy stalker man. He first appeared in Granada, but none of us thought anything of it, just a normal passerby in a red coat, right? Then he showed up in Córdoba, tagging along on our tour of the Mezquita. THEN he continued to follow us around our tour of the city. Tid bit weird, but we shrugged it off. Fast forward two days to Sevilla. Just finished a wonderful bike excursion through the city, and what do I see out of the corner of my eye? Red coat. Same man. Three consecutive cities. WHY YOU FOLLOW US HOMBRE??

Minus the creeper, in a nutshell: Andalucía = love.


NSP moment:
Too many to count. For example, right now it's one o'clock in the morning, and I haven't started my homework for tomorrow! Thank goodness for siesta, that's all I have to say.