December 31, 2009

Another Year Over

I started this blog on the 1st of January this year with this graphical interpretation of my expectations for the year:

Life would be rosy, I'd have a pink scooter and my hair would always be perfect. I'd jet about Paris in designer couture and share some love as I went. In actual fact, I was both wrong and right all at the same time.

The skies have often been rosy - sunsets in Santorini and Seville are indeed impressive. But it's not always pink or purple or orange. Grey skies made their way in plenty of times, and some of those times were tough. It was dark and cold in UK, and the heavens showed no mercy in Malta. Just as life is not all sunshine and rainbows, neither was the year. But I took them all as they came, and some of those rainy days in Caen where I was shut up in my room with a cup of tea and a good book were equally impressive on my memories.

I never did get a pink scooter but I had a cool bike called Matilda who took me into town a few times, to the laundromat when the washing machine broke, to my friend's houses and to the supermarket. Dad fixed her tyres when she was feeling flat and she's still at Euro Res now, taking somebody else around town. I think I've covered every possible mode of transport, including countless flights, trains, and metro rides, taxis, buses, ferries and even a horse-drawn carriage. I drove on the wrong side of the highway in the wrong side of the car with a gear stick on the wrong side through the snow the other day - and I didn't die.

As for perfect hair, even that featured a couple of times. Fixed with lilies for the Prom, it grew to my shoulders until July. Then I got sick of it as I always do, and had it cut for free by a student in Edinburgh. In Champagne, after a couple of tasting at the cellars, I literally walked right into a salon and got my fringe back. Since then, I've been looking after it myself with a pair of hair scissors from Carrefour. I even earned a block of chocolate and two hugs for cutting other people's hair at home. Considering the price of haircuts in Europe, I could have charged more, but I'm just looking forward to a decent style again when I get home, for a decent price.

I learned that some days its ok for your hair to be awful anyway. When it's 40 degrees and all you have to keep cool is a spray bottle, you change your priorities. When it's -12 outside and you've got a furry hat and a scarf wrapped around your head, it doesn't matter how your hair looks when you finally make it to the supermarket.

That leads me to the designer couture. Despite visiting Paris 19 times this year, I did not stock up on Louis Vuitton or Hermes. If someone offered me a fancy leather handbag or a year abroad (they cost the same), I know what I'd choose. But that's not to say that I didn't buy anything - a pretty recent journal entry is testimony to that. By the way, of course I didn't manage to fit it all in my case, even with 4 Space Bags. 2.5 boxes were sent home, half of it was rummaged through by those that were staying, and currently 15kg of it sits in London awaiting my return. I've learned that most 'stuff' is just that - if you don't have one thing, you'll have something else, and sooner or later you're sick of it anyway, you throw it away, you lose it, it gets stolen, or just sits there collecting dust. The most important things I have now are already back at home - some are packed in one little box that's already arrived safely, and the others sit waiting for me to return.

As for romance, I had my share of dramas. Those who were involved know who they are and I'm not going to repeat it all now, but life doesn't always go according to plan. Sometimes things are great, sometimes they don't work out, you make mistakes and life keeps going. I have something very special now and I wouldn't give that up for anything. I've learned that those who love you will stick by you no matter what, and maybe even stop in to say Hi.

Having my parents visit and climbing the Eiffel Tower together will be something I will always remember. Going to Italy together to meet new family was so special for all of us, and meeting the families of those who are my new loves is something yet again. The friends I have made this year, those I have lived with, spent every day with, studied with - I'd leave everything I had at a charity store if I could just take these people home with me. Fortunately some of them will be at home when I get there, but others will stay on this side of the world. I've been welcomed into homes, fed, sheltered, and cared for like a sister or daughter by so many lovely people this year, and each of them have made my life brighter. Especially at Christmas, when I am usually surrounded by my family, my fears of homesickness were almost abolished - I was absolutely not alone and still felt as much love as when I am at home. The only thing I wanted was for everyone to come and join me in the snow!

As I said very early in the year, before I left, "being given the chance to study in another country is something that has an effect on you. You end up learning more about yourself than anything else." I stand by that now - but reflect with a strange sense of knowing, that none of my lessons were learned in a classroom.

Knowledge comes from doing, and I certainly did a lot this year.

And so tonight, on this last day of one hell of a year, I see the clock strike 12 with some of the closest friends I have made, not just this year but in my life. They have shared so much with me and I am beyond happy to be able to share this night with them. I miss everyone at home, but in just 2 weeks I'll be back where I started and will have thousands of photos to pour over, hundreds of Facebook statuses to keep up with, and a few regular phone calls to make.

Happy New Year to everyone, and may the next one be as good as this has been. I'd like to see it try.

December 19, 2009

December 16, 2009

♥ something cute


This week the theme is Pets Only, which thankfully includes all animals. This shot has got to be in my top 10 favourites of the year, because it was (a) the first squirrel I ever saw and (b) because I fed him peanuts and got him to pose. He's no pet of mine, but if I could train him to dance I would.

St James Squirrel

See the rest of the entries at I ♥ Faces.

December 14, 2009

White Wine in the Sun

by Tim Minchin

And if my baby girl
When you're twenty one or thirty one
And Christmas comes around
And you find yourself 9000 miles from home

You’ll know whatever comes
Your brothers and sisters and me and your mum
Will be waiting for you in the sun

Girl when Christmas comes
Your brothers and sisters
Your aunts and your uncles
Your grandparents, cousins
And me and your mum.
Will be drinking white wine in the sun
Waiting for you in the sun
Drinking white wine in the sun
Waiting for you

I really like Christmas
It’s sentimental I know


Low Cholesterol, Low Fat

I'm getting ready to leave, with a few last minute essential details to cover, such as which meal I would like on my plane flight. I have to hand it to Emirates, their online customer service is great. I've chosen my seats, now for dinner:

Who knew in-flight cuisine gave you CHOICE??!

PS: I love that you can purposely choose a Bland Meal.

The Airport Prayer

Our Hostess, who art at Check-In
Hallowed be thy scales.
My clothes have come.
My shopping done,
my shelves as they are in retail.
Give me this day my boarding pass.
And forgive me my excesses,
As I forgive you for not upgrading me.
And lead me not into Customs Inspection,
But deliver me from baggage charges.

Amen.

Packing

I am simultaneously disgusted at and proud of myself.

December 12, 2009

Baby, It's Cold Outside

It was ZERO degrees when I went for a walk this morning. That's quite chilly where I'm from. I was thinking about all the Christmasy things that don't make sense at home - snowmen, hot pudding, fireplaces... but now they DO! It's cold and frosty and all I want is a roaring fire and some cocoa and snow! Lots of snow! I've instructed my Swedish friends, whom I'll be spending Christmas with, to make sure there is plenty for my arrival next week.

Recipe and image from A Field Journal

Tonight I'm making Mulled Apple Cider, in celebration of my LAST DAY OF UNIVERSITY. Yes, after 7 years, it's about time I had something to say for myself. I haven't officially graduated, but I had my last class, and have just two papers to hand up and I'm done!

So here we are, Kate and Katie, on our last day of school, in front of our French University. It's exactly 2 weeks till 25 December and it's beginning to look a lot like... Christmas!

Last Day of University!

December 10, 2009

To Go or Not to Go?

That is the question, and one not usually answered with difficulty. We're studying Tourism again, and if I've got all the 'enabling factors' (desire, time and money) I don't usually think twice about jetting off to see some amazing attraction. But then I thought about this:

By the time I arrive home in January, I'll have been on 22 flights for the year. That means I'm responsible for about 7 tonnes of CO2. I have to admit, I feel a bit guilty. I don't go around burning piles of plastic bags and car tires, but I don't voluntarily neutralise my emissions with Ryanair either.

We were discussing this in class today, which brought us to the idea of a tourist tax. The idea that you should pay a tax for all the destruction you cause in your effort to see the Taj Mahal or the Acropolis or Stonehenge. As if the entry fees aren't enough already, some places have already implemented additional levies to try to undo some of the damage. Lots of churches in Europe ask for a donation for their upkeep, so why not everyone?

But here's the thing: when we go to visit ancient/fragile/historically significant things, we are contributing to their destruction. And not just those of us who scratch our name into them, or chip off a bit to take home, but every single person who goes there. The floors of Versaille, the canals of Venice, the stone of the Great Wall - they all feel the wear and tear over time. We can patch them up, or rebuild them completely, but then they're not really the same, are they?

So, our discussion moved to the concept of banning tourism. Do we shut down the ticket booths, lock the gates, and stop people going to these places to ensure they're not worn away to nothing? If so, if our only experience of these wonders is in books and films and photos, are they even worth preserving? Are we willing to pay to protect something we'll never see?

Oooh, I'm getting all uppity about the environment, sure, but seeing some the great wonders makes you wonder yourself - how much longer will they last? I'd like to think I saw Venice before it sank under the weight of over-fed tourists, but ideally I'd like to have seen it and be able to send my kids or grandkids to go see it too. I want it to last!

Do you think places should limit the number of visitors?
Do you think we should just keep going and worry about it when they're gone?
Or should we shut the shop, throw over the dust sheet and just wait till there are suitable virtual reality visits?

Food for thought. And seeing as food is low, I'll chew on this one for a while.


December 7, 2009

Lilium auratum

I thought Australia was only 9 or 10 hours ahead of me, but for some reason they think it's Christmas already, and now all of mine have come at once. I only wanted one thing, and I got it yesterday!

So now I can do this:

soft petals

Thank you Mum and Dad. Thank you Grant. I am going to have my first Christmas away from home, my first (fingers crossed) white Christmas, my first Russian Orthodox Christmas, and now my Baltic festivities can be captured in every little detail. You have made one little girl's Christmas pretty awesome already!

xx

December 6, 2009

December 4, 2009

Caffeine

Caffeine.

It turns out 100mg WILL keep you nice and alert for hours. Especially when you're not a coffee or Coke drinker.

I've never been a student that relies on drugs. I get pretty wired after one Red Bull, which is all I can afford on a night out. But this evening, when we had a 9,000 word marketing plan to get through, I gave in.

I took it.

I took NO-DOZ.

And I'm not tired yet.

December 3, 2009

Bon Appétit!

It's stocktake time at Euro Res, but there are no amazing sales or bargains to be had (unless you want to rifle through a Carrefour bag of odds and ends, I'll accept donations). Sure, I'd rather sell it than store it, but this stocktake is more of the culinary nature.

I have 12 breakfasts, 12 lunches and 11 dinners left in my little house. I have to get through:
  • 3 kinds of pasta
  • half a box of couscous
  • 4 sachets of rice
  • ravioli in a tin
  • paella in a tin
  • haricots blanc in a tin
  • peaches in a tin (I was worried about a nuclear holocaust, obviously)
  • puréed tomatoes
  • popcorn
  • 4 mini jams
  • crackers
  • 20-odd tea bags
  • 1 litre of olive oil
  • 1/2 box muesli
  • 2.5 jars of pesto
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 3 onions
  • 1 leek
  • a lemon
So I'm thinking - crackers with onion and jam for breakfast tomorrow, and maybe a solid carb pasta/rice/couscous salad with a cup of tea for dinner? Ravioli is a dessert, isn't it? Oh wait, that's tiramisu.

Hmmm. Let's go back to that divine restaurant in Malta... house-made tagliatelle scented with truffle and rosemary, served with Xewkija mushrooms and parmesan cheese.... Pan roasted tenderloin of locally-reared pork with char-grilled sweet and sour pumpkin, rosemary, thyme and pumpkin seed gravy infused with local honey... hot soufflé with Grand Marnier...

Or the time we went to La Poterne in Caen with Katie's parents... Tarte d’andouille de vire et de livarot moulin de carel... Magret de canard, foie gras et pommes confites... crème brûlée...

There's always the Vegemite in a tube if I, you know, get hungry.

Any ideas?


November 30, 2009

♥ an old flame


I was pretty happy to see my last entry at I ♥ Faces get a special mention, and lots of people were really kind to leave such nice comments.

This week the theme is I ♥ Tooshies, which conjures thoughts of lots of bums in nappies, but since I don't have anyone like that around, I thought I'd enter this shot of an anonymous couple looking out over the Eiffel Tower. They seemed to me like a couple thay might have said one day in their twenties "We'll make it to Paris one day, my love." And there they were. Awwwww!

At Last

Storm in a Teacup

Storm in a Teacup

Taken on my bedroom floor this morning.

November 29, 2009

Communal Living 101

Living just doors away from your friends has its advantages. Sure, parties get big pretty quickly, and we're all sharing one washing machine between 59 apartments, but let's accentuate the positives.

Like making Russian dumplings with your Russian friends. Or schnitzels and glü wine with the Germans. There was the mighty Australia v Britain Mite-Off between Vegemite and Marmite, and the big Spanish lunches complete with sobremesa. You can borrow saucepans, spatulas, butter, pasta, spices... You can introduce each other to all sorts of delicious oddities, and never have to venture outside.

Now please excuse me, I have a curry waiting in No. 36.

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November 28, 2009

Money in the Bank

Apparently, it's rather outrageous that someone would want to deposit cash in the bank here in France. Faced with my last rent payment, an insufficient bank balance and a subsequent cash injection, I thought it a rather natural thing to just pop down to the bank and deposit the bills in my account.

I waited in line, I got to the counter, I had all the right French words, but the teller laughed at me. Laughed! Ok, perhaps it was more of a scoff. A scoff!

Me: I would like to deposit this money.
Teller: *pitiful smile*
Me: Ummm...?
Teller: No.
Me: Ummm...?
Teller: Sacré bleu! French french french 9am to 12 noon french french castle french french french automatique.
Me: Oh.


So I have to go to the branch near the Castle between 9 and 12 and use the ATM. I think.

This woman works stupid hours, and not stupidly long but stupidly stupid. They have lunch-time closures and a day off on Monday because they had to work 3 hours on Saturday morning. So I guess I will have to carry my money around in my shoe like a normal crazy person until I make it to the castle.

After all, this is France. You just give up on things making sense.

November 26, 2009

Dear Santa

Dear Santa,

Mum said I have to ask you for the expensive stuff, so if you have a Canon EF 85mm f/1.2L USM II lens in your bag, please give it to me.

I've been really good this year.


Really, really nice photos by Siebe

November 24, 2009

♥ a little flare

I'm a bit of a lurker when it comes to other blogs, so I'll admit it's taken me a while to get involved with I ♥ Faces, but I saw this week's challenge and I thought of this shot I'd taken a little while back of my gorgeous friends Alice and Katie on our trip to Champagne.

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If you're into photography (specifically portraits) and need a little inspiration every now and then, have a look at:

November 17, 2009

Bragging Rights

My apologies if you know me and you've read about this already, but I thought I'd mention it here.

Not long ago I wrote about Grant's birthday in Malta, and mentioned a certain present. He did most of the work actually, I just helped with the presentation. Well, this is it:


My boy wrote a book. He told me about it not too long after we first met, and I wanted to read it, but he said it was in no form for reading. After all, 175,000 words on a computer screen are hard to get through, hence only a couple of readers had ever finished. Not to be deterred, I was given the file and the matter all but forgotten.

He did ask me a couple of times over the next few months how I was going, if I liked it, where I was up too. "Oh, it's good, I'm starting to get into it," I'd say. Then I'd tell him all about the 'real' novel I was reading at the time (The Book Thief, highly recommended). "When I finish this one, I'll read your's."

Truth was, I'd printed the manuscript, read it twice, added a few missing full stops and had it printed at Blurb. It turned out really well - it looks and feels like a real book. Who am I kidding, it IS a real book! And sales have already sky-rocketed to double figures.

If you can't shamelessly plug your boyfriend's book on your own hedonistic online journal, where can you? There are boys with swords and snake-people but don't let that stop you - it's actually a decent read and I am more than proud of him. Ok, I'll shut up now...

1st Edition
By Grant D Mills

November 15, 2009

November 12, 2009

Carte Postale

mask

Once upon a time, I had an income. Mostly it was a tiny little wage from some big scary corporate, but every now and then people would let me do fun things, and then pay me for it. Those fun things became Urban Safari. For government/student relations, I had to put a hold on that while I was away, but it hasn't stopped me having fun. I've really gotten into photography and it's changed my direction a little.

After my first thousand or so photos, with them all sitting quietly on my hard drive, I thought it would be nice to, you know, print them. As my grandmother told me, she can't take the computer to bridge to show the girls my photos - she needed real ones. Long story short - the postcards I could buy from tourist spots were (in my opinion) not that nice, and I had some good shots I wanted to show off share. Enter Moo - problem solved! Real, sturdy photos, with space to write on the back and put your stamp and plenty of room for your photos!

I chose a few pics from my first month abroad, made 20 postcards, and sent some home. The others were a bit mediocre, and I still have them under some dust somewhere. But since then, there have been thousands more photos taken, and now I have some favourites. So I've made some more postcards, added a new name and some decorations - and they're on their way in 5-15 business days! And because I want to thank all 7 of you who read my blog, you can even view the set here.

pisa

November 9, 2009

The Land Before Time

When I imagined my time in Europe, I honestly didn't consider Malta. I had bigger plans, bigger countries on my list but, as it happens, the world has a habit of changing your plans. I came, I saw, I dived (or dove?) and I loved it. I've talked about the diving, I've talked about the landscape, but there's a couple more things before I move on.

Firstly, the towns. Malta is a Scrabble player's dream - Xhagra, Marsaxlokk, Birzebbuga... If proper nouns were allowed, Xewkija would be worth 78 points - and don't get me started on the triple word scores.
I spent my days on Gozo, the smaller island. Frankly, it's a little behind the times, but in a good way. This is a place where 7-Up battles for top spot with Kinnie, and you can make up your mind about Best Soft Drink whilst enjoying a cheese or pea pastizzi for 25c. They complain that the euro has made everything three times more expensive, but they are still WELL behind France when it comes to expensive.

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The buses are also cheap. Super cheap. As in, you can get around for 47c, and why wouldn't you when it's in one of these babies:

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I really want to highlight the buses. Coming soon to a tea towel near you, these buses definitely emphasise the journey over the destination. Malta has several bus types that are no longer in service anywhere else in the world, and the operation model dates back to a system introduced in 1977. The bus authority determines the schedules, which are then operated by the private bus owners, who remain responsible for the condition and upkeep of their buses - and believe me, the Maltese know how to pimp a ride.

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The Virgin Mary looks down from her spot above the windscreen, right next to framed photos of previous buses. They're all named, and they convene in Valetta around the enormous fountain like the cool kids hanging out at the mall.

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We took one from the ferry into Valetta, the capital of Malta. Now, I know what you're thinking. You're thinking that the capital city has got to be a little more modern, a bit more 'with the times'. Well, it's not. But that's not a bad thing - life moves at a different pace, which is about as quick as ice cream melts.

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We walked around Valetta for most of the day, stopping to see the noon canon fire over the bay, and again later at the snack bar for an icy cold can of Kinnie (think creaming soda with orange peel and spices). As you can see, Valetta is not a flashy place. Understated is a suitable term - it's not about to waste time with unnecessary pomp and glamour. It's certainly no Hotel Ritz, but this place on Gozo is:

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Malta boasts no shortage of local characters. Here's a couple of my favourites:

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I walked past this gentleman in Valetta, and couldn't help but smile. He smiled back, and I continued walking. A way up the street, I stopped and looked back. He was still looking at me, grinning. As if he had a thought bubble protruding from that hat, I could tell he was thinking "She totally wants my picture." He was right. I went back and asked if I could take his picture and he grinned even more. "Bingo," went that second bubble.

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This dashing gent was parked by the Inland Sea on Gozo. I wasn't going anywhere near a man wearing two shades of red simultaneously, especially red corduroy, so I took to stealth approach and pretended I was photographing the van. Sneaky.

So there it is, my autumn vacation in Malta. 2 weeks well spent, and now I'm qualified to see the world up to 18m below sea level. Don't discount this place, it really is a different side of Europe and a welcome break from the account-draining streets of Paris or Rome. I loved it, and I think you could too.