About This Blog:

I
thought creating a blog would be an easy way for my family and friends to follow my semester abroad in the Czech Republic, viewing pictures and reading short posts about the places I hope to visit and things I hope to do during my four months overseas. For the less technologically inclined (namely Mimi and my Mom), the blog should be less difficult to navigate and more straightforward than Facebook. In hopes of staying consistently connected all fall, albeit one-way, I will try my best to update the site regularly.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Praze, Sweet Praze: SLU in the CZ














Unfortunately, we had to postpone the trip to Paris we had planned for the weekend of October 15, opting to heed the warnings from friends and the media alike that that particular destination was especially unsafe for American travelers. The message from the State Department and a family friend was that Paris, London, and a number of German cities have been identified as potential targets for terrorist attacks in the near future. That realization, and our eventual decision to call off our trip, drew our attention to an important topic we had not yet encountered: terrorism and being Americans overseas. The ability for an attack of any kind to shut down a city, a country, a region, or the entire industrial world is a scary prospect, one that has become a glaring reality to us. It was a tough decision, but we eventually decided that the potential costs of traveling to France that weekend outweighed the benefits. We were going to Paris to see all of the major tourist attractions-The Louvre, the Eiffel Tower, and the Pompidou, among others-and being in those types of locations with flocks of American tourists at a time of high security alert was not the most sensible option. Europe is enormous and Paris will always be there. We still feel incredibly safe in Prague and, until now, have not been hindered by reluctance in our travels.  

Our reservations about visiting The City of Lights didn't necessarily stem from the fear of an attack (we didn't even want to consider that), but from the real possibility of getting stuck in France with the French people for more than three days, which was just too intimidating. In addition, the country is also up in arms over a proposed change in the retirement age and unions had scheduled paralyzing strikes for that weekend. Terrorists and angry, mean French people constituted a one-two knockout combo enough to deter even the most confident traveler.

Instead, Molly, who was to meet us in Paris, came to Prague for a relaxing weekend in our home city. Our roommates were all traveling, so Molly, I, and our trusted third wheel, Tucker, got to spend some time really getting acquainted with Prague. Having not seen each other since August when she left for Madrid, some time together was perfect. She, of course, loved the city and all of its beauty and dove fearlessly into the Czech culture: eating a pork knee, ditching her smile, and shopping at H&M.



Molly, I, and our Third Wheel at Duplex, a 6th story club on Wenceslas. Tucker pulled some V.I.P. strings and got us a balcony booth.


Molly just couldn't get enough of Praha and was determined to try pork neck (the Czechs don’t hold anything back when it comes to identifying what part of an animal comes with a certain dish) and returned this past weekend. Emma Heuber, a close friend from SLU flew in from Florence, where she is studying for the semester. We all got to spend some more quality time with the Czech people, who have yet to warm up to us, or each other for that matter. As tolerant and understanding as I try to be, its frustrating when the entire country seems to be in a bad mood all of the time. Third Musketeer, Caroline Carpenter, also in Prague, completed the trio. The reunion in the airport was quite a spectacle, as Caroline and Molly went scrambling in chaos towards her general direction. Molly ended up sprawled out on the ground in the middle of the terminal with a few dozen spectators and I think the SLU D-Line has a new D-end. Needless to say, we spent the weekend eating cookie dough and reading Cosmo in the apartment. Not quite, but close to it...

The next day, we trekked to an observation tower on a hill above the city and enjoyed breathtaking panoramas of the city. It was a vantage point from which I had never seen the city; the weather was gorgeous and the visibility was incredible. Caroline's boyfriend Matt, also in Prague for the Fall semester, tilted the gender scale a little in my favor and the five of us walked around Old Town together, although Matt and I continually found ourselves in pubs waiting for the girls to finish their shopping. There are innumerable jewelry and scarf stores in this part of the city and apparently, they are all different because the girls had no problem visiting each one. After a long day of walking, we retired to the apartment to relax for a bit. Matt and I prepared dinner (although we revealed our true colors when Matt cut an entire zucchini instead of a cucumber for the salad and I melted the brie down into a slosh of molten cheese) while the girls video chatted with three other girls back at SLU in what proved to be the most unsuccessful, unproductive interaction between people I've ever seen. Imagine six absolutely elated girls screaming through one 13-inch computer screen...


The ladies on top of the observation tower. Matt and I spent the day warding off cheesy advances from sleazy Italian men, not enjoying the city.


We went to a restaurant on Saturday where each table of six has its own tap. A computer tallies the number of ounces poured at the table in a competition not only between individual tables at the restaurant, but between a number of restaurants all over the country. After weeks of training and an exhibition appearance at Oktobefest, the SLU Women's Drinking Team took first place.


The five Larries overlooking Old Town. From the left: Matt, Caroline, Emma, Myself, and Molly.










Between the hot, mulled wine and the pork knee, Molly had her fair share of Czech culture. I was proud considering she won't even try seafood back in the States. If you look closely, you can see in knuckles...


Comrade Molly at H&M looking for some headwear worthy of the North Country.


Caroline showing off her firm grasp on European fashion. With a few minor changes, most notably dying her hair black, she hopes to turn this same outfit into her Halloween costume for our trip next weekend to Madrid: Trinity from the Matrix.

Everything on the home front continues to go well. The academic intensity of my classes has increased a little, but after a four month summer some intellectual activity isn't necessarily a bad thing. We've started to explore the second of 40 cases in the Czech language, so we're making light work of the grammar. We have a cleaning lady that comes weekly, before any of the spore colonies in the boy's bathroom have enough time to multiply into a real problem. Brisk days now vastly outnumber their warm predecessors as Autumn has set in. The leaves are in full color and the only thing we are missing to bring full circle the fall atmosphere is some warm cider and pumpkins. Hot wine (a Czech thing) may have to do for now, although it is utterly disgusting, somewhere between hot cough medicine and flat Coke...

Vayamos a Espana en el proximo fin de semana! 

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