It’s not you, it’s me. I’ve been nonstop! I can’t help it
though, the weather has been amazing so naturally I’ve been outside as much as
possible. I’ve done some really great hikes around the area (Google
Ulriken….kicked my butt. We started from sea level, in the city center, walked
across the entire city then up the whole mountain, which didn’t have much of a
trail. Rough.) and got to experience my first day of boating. Lots of big news,
too. It has been decided that my stay in Norway will be extended until
spring/summer 2013! Also, two of my close friends (one here and one at home)
have recently informed me that they are pregnant! I’m not sure their status on
public announcements yet, so I won’t blow the surprise for them, but I’m pretty
excited! My friend here was the first to tell me and she’s actually my first
friend to be pregnant, sooo that was a new kind of news for me! And then the
day AFTER that, I get the news from home! Baby season! So anyway, I started
writing this blog about a month and a half ago and didn’t quite have a chance
to finish it until now…so I’m going to start where I left off….
ADVENTURE ONE - You know you’re in Ireland when the signs
don’t just advise “Don’t Drink and Drive,” but not to drink and drive the
following morning because you’re most likely still drunk.
This past March has been the wildest month for me, probably
ever. As I last blogged, the month began aboard an Arctic cruise. Then mid-March
brought about my long-awaited trip to Ireland for Saint Patrick’s Day! The
flight was a Christmas present from the Zachrisen’s and it was quite possibly
the best gift I have ever received. The trip was WILD.
I was lucky enough (luck of the Irish?) that a girl from my
sorority (who I never had the chance to meet while at Poly because she was new as I was
graduating) was going to be there at the same time, so we actually stayed
together during the weekend in Dublin. We literally MET at the hostel for
check-in! And our hostel was incredible. We had such nice rooms with super
comfortable beds, ohhh it was more of a low-end hotel than a hostel so we were
soo excited! Livin’ in luxury.
Julie and I spent the first few hours of the trip just
hanging out in the room, relaxing after hours of crazy traveling, and getting
to know each other. She’s so rad, it’s unreal.
That evening started off with dinner and a round of Guinnesses
in a 4-story bar (while there, we developed the now-legendary “double claw
hands then point” motion which I thoroughly over-used and abused that whole
trip but has since become such a funny memory) before we explored the insanely
crowded and festive Temple Bar area. We ended up spending the majority of the
night at some huge bar I never learned the name of where we befriended a very
large group of Basque Spanish guys. They were the BEST. So much fun to hang out
with and they actually all had girlfriends so they weren’t creepin’ at all!
Just simple, nice, fun people. There was also this one Austrian guy who was
drunker than anyone should ever be who just kept buying more and more whiskey
shots for all of us….he’s either really rich or really regretting how much he
spent that night. He got a little weird so the Spanish guys shooed him away. It
was an absolutely excellent night of dancing and hanging out before we headed back
to the hostel in the wee hours of the night.
The next morning was Saint Patrick’s Day! The majority of
our group took an all-day bus tour to Galway and the Cliffs of Moher, but I
stayed in Dublin with one of the girls who is actually from Sonoma State
University. We started the morning off with an amazingly nice Irish breakfast
in the hostel, which was accompanied by some adorable old men playing Irish
tunes. I somehow managed to forget my annoyingly green outfit in the dryer back
in Norway, but luckily I had stashed a dark green AO shirt in the bag at the
last minute! AO to save the day! I was almost GREENLESS in IRELAND on ST
PATRICK’S DAY. Could you even imagine?
So that day was pretty wild. Everywhere was a party. The
streets were crazy, the bars were packed, and everybody was just so HAPPY! We
went to the huge parade down the main street of Dublin, explored the Grafton
Street area, ate corned beef and cabbage at some super locals bar on a small side
street, watched a TON of rugby <3, ended up at a small bar called
O’Sullivan’s where I befriended the sweetest Irish lady ever. She was actually
the girlfriend of the guy singing at the bar so she was more so there to
support him rather than party hardy. We discussed everything from rugby, “traditional”
Irish foods that nobody really eats there, and even the current economy of
Ireland. It’s amazing the kind of people you meet in the randomest places at
the randomest times who really make an impact on you. She was just so cool.
After the other girls returned from Galway, we rallied the
troops for the evening out at the biggest Saint Patrick’s Day party in the
world. We trekked all throughout Temple Bar but it was SO packed that it didn’t
even appeal to us. We randomly ran into the same group of Spaniards while
strolling the streets and we all headed back to the same bar as the night
before. I actually didn’t realize we were at the same bar because we entered in
through the back door and were in a different room than the previous night…I
felt so stupid when I figured it out….the next day. That place was huge though and with such drastically different rooms! Anyway, we danced until it closed at 3
AM, then continued to roam the streets for multiple hours afterwards. Out of
desperation, we got 4th meal at nasty Burger King where we met the oddest
Irish man, drunker than drunk, who somehow joined our table and proposed to me
way too many times. Neiiii takk. After that, we found a shoe in the street and
had an intense soccer game while walking around….it was stupid and wildly
entertaining, especially when one of the Spaniards lunged for it and ended up faceplanting onto a glass door. Worry not, he was fine and the store was perfectly intact. We eventually said goodbye and it was actually really sad. They
had spent so much time with us, looked after us, and really made the two nights
super fun. We didn’t even exchange information, but that’s okay, good times
were had and those memories will last (hopefully) a lifetime. The night finally
ended and we climbed into bed at 5:45 AM…I’d say it was the best Saint
Patrick’s Day ever.
…and then I woke up at 7:45AM. The day before, I had
attempted to shower at about 9:30 in the morning, apparently after everybody
else in the hostel used up every drop of warm water. That had been the most
painfully cold shower of my life…like, it wasn’t just un-heated water, it felt
like refrigerated water. So, I learned my lesson and forced myself out of bed
early enough to beat the hungover folks to the shower. All was well and then we
had another delicious Irish breakfast, walked around the city, and hit up some
of the popular tourist sites. I also bought THREE Starbucks drinks within about
a two-hour time period because Norway only had 1 Starbucks in the country and
it is nowhere near me. I’ve missed that chai so much.
At 2 o’clock, I parted ways from Julie and her French group, as I was off to
the second half of my trip on my own: Galway <3. On the bus trip I sat next
to and befriended the sweetest Irish girl in existence, Rebecca. We actually
have a mutual friend from Martinez! The world, man…so small. She was sooo nice
and offered to help me find my hostel (major confusion with the address) and
even to take me out with some of her hometown friends the following night
(ended up not being able to happen but we still keep in contact). My first
hostel roommates were a cool young Australian couple who had been backpacking
Europe for a ton of months. The guy is about to start his PhD in stem cell
stuff…impressive. I headed out on my own to walk around the town, visit the
Spanish Arch and stroll the Salthill area for sunset. It was one of those
experiences where you are just so happy to be where you are that you can’t stop
smiling…so I basically just looked like a creepy sleep-deprived loner walking
around at dusk. Cool by me! I then went on a quest for dinner but that never
quite happened….
Since most of everything was closed for the holiday, it was
pretty hard to find a restaurant open. I wandered into a very out-of-the-way
bar and was immediately adopted by the nearest group of locals. Although the
bar was no longer serving food at that hour, they definitely made sure my
stomach did not stay entirely empty. It was quite embarrassing though, I could
not understand half of what they were saying. Such thick accents! Such fast
talkers! Such different sayings! I don’t think I’ve ever really heard an Irish
accent in person until this trip, and it really threw me for a loop. It’s a
whole new English in this land.
This bar, I think I remember it being called The Merry
Fiddler, was one of the coolest experiences ever. I was alone in Galway, made
all of these new little-while friends, watched an amazing local band play (The
Atlantic Pirates), and just took it all in. Literally, everybody knew everybody
else. People of allll ages were there. There was even this really old man,
probably about 80, who was hanging out with his friends and then started
pretending to get into a fight…he was yelling “HOLD ME BACK!” and was flailing
around and then started doing high kicks! I kid you not, he kicked his leg up
on top of the bar multiple times! Then he danced around and it was hilarrrious.
Everybody was dancing and laughing and having such a good time and I just sort
of stood in a corner for a bit to take it all in. At one point, this one
younger guy started singing acapella
in the front area of the bar and everyone just stopped and listened as he sang
some old Irish song. I wouldn’t say he’s got the best voice I’ve ever heard but
he sang with such emotion and gusto that it was just beeeautiful. Amazing
experience to be the only foreigner in a place and really get absorbed into the
local culture. Not saying that the local culture is entirely in a bar setting,
but c’mon, the Irish love to drink. I actually picked up a great saying in the
bathroom of that bar…a mom was on the phone with her daughter and said, “If you
can’t be good, be careful!” Wisest words I’ve heard in a while.
After the most amazing time at that bar, I decided I NEEDED
to head back. I had wandered in around 7pm and headed back to my hostel around
midnight. I somehow survived Saint Patrick’s Day and an entire day of walking
around Dublin, riding the bus to Galway, walking the entire city twice over,
AND a night at the bar (without dinner still) with only having had 2 hours of
sleep. Whewwww. So I went to bed and snoozed so hard…until like 7am.
The next morning I took the touristy route, I signed up for
a bus tour around The Burren and the Cliffs of Moher. I am pretty certain I was
the only lone wolf on the bus and I ended up sitting in the verrry back of the
bus with this loony Italian lady and her very normal son. She was fun to talk
to and all, but because SHE couldn’t quite understand the tour guide over the
speakers, she just kept talking and talking and talking the WHOLE time. I was
getting pretty frustrated with her because she really was a space cadet kind
ruining it for everyone else around her. -______-
Anyway, so we visited the typical tourist stops, like some
old ruins, an ancient burial site, some leprechaun dwellings (duh), and some
other cool little places. We even drove past the Matchmaker Bar where they have
an event every September for which people come from all over the world to be
matched up with the love of their life. So, who wants to go with me?
We eventually made it to the Cliffs of Moher and it was
breathtaking. Of COURSE I went past all of the warning signs and such.
Must.push.the.limits! Don’t worry though, I didn’t do anything too risky. I may
not have slipped near the edge of the cliffs on the hardly-even-“forbidden”
path, but I DID take a nasty spill on the nicely paved pathway near the parking
lot. Woo, go me. Traveling alone, falling in public, no one else even
acknowledged me. Awesome. Highlight of my life. Yay.
Out of embarrassment, I decided to go spend the last 15
minutes of our time there just sitting on the bus. Our tour guide was the
cutest oldest wrinkliest funniest man and when I walked on the bus, he was
hanging out in a random seat with a huge ice cream cone and ice cream smeared
all around his mouth. He said, “My ice cream doesn’t taste as good as you look.
You need to move here and find an Irish man to sweep you off your feet.” Well,
that sounds mighty fine to me. Embarrassment from falling immediately
forgotten.
The cool thing about the way back is that the crazy lady stayed
behind! The whole bus, including her son, were all waiting for her to come back
and she finally walked up to the side of the bus, holding hands with some guy,
and said she wasn’t coming back! She literally stayed behind with this random
guy she met and told her son she’d meet up with him back in Galway later.
CLASSIC. It became the big joke of the entire bus during the ride back.
I got back and met my two new roommates at the hostel,
Claudia from Germany and Metta (sp?) from Indonesia. Way cool girls. Metta is
Muslim and when it came time for her prayers, she asked me if I would be
offended if she did them in the room…I was like, “GO FOR IT! I’d actually be
very interested in seeing this in real life.” I was in Ireland, learning more
about Islam…so awesome! After that, the three of us headed to McDonagh’s for
their world-famous fish and chips. Now, this was actually my first fish and
chips experience, and it was magical. I befriended three guys in line who were
from England, South Africa, and New Zealand. Oh, swoooon. I actually promised
to meet them at Taaffes a couple hours later in the evening but I got a bit
distracted when I returned to The Merry Fiddler with Claudia.
I had promised my friends from the previous night that I
would return, but THEY never actually showed. That’s okay though, saved me
money on a round for them. But the bartender remembered me and we chatted for a
while, since the bar was nearly empty. He gave Claudia and I some free shots,
which he called “mini Guinnesses,” since they were similar in coloring. Now, I
don’t really like the taste of many things alcoholic but those were delicious!
Then, in walked a father-son duo that I immediately pinned
as Americans. Their teeth were straight. And since living abroad for 6 months
now, I’ve developed an ability to easily identify Americans by even the
smallest mannerisms. Anyway, I started talking with them and by the end of the
night, I felt like we were old friends. Eddie, the father, lives in New
Orleans, and Zak, the son is living near Orlando. Zak and I talked for hoursss.
I wouldn’t say we “hit it off” or anything but we definitely got along very
well and we had a really great time chatting. It was so cute, Zak and his Dad
decided to do a trip to Ireland since they both really love Guinness, while his
mom and sister were on a trip in Italy. Zak bought us all a round of really
fancy whiskey, which was very nice of him. I offered to next and I told the
bartender to pick for me but to keep it reasonably priced….he went for the top
shelf stuff, still in the box, poured it in the glasses for us….and told me 12€! Only
12!!!! We googled the type of whiskey (which I now forget) and found that it
runs for about $60 per shot in the US!!!! The bartender said he’s just been
waiting and wanting someone he deemed worthy to open that bottle for. We felt
so honored! And, my wallet was even more so thankful. Another amazing night at
The Merry Fiddler.
Zak ended up giving me his information, in case I’m ever in the Orland
area and then we parted ways. They hadn’t yet had dinner before getting caught
up in a night of drinking and Irish music, as I had he night before. They
invited me to join them for a late bite, but I thought it best for me to head
back to the hostel for a few hours of sleep.
The following morning, I was up by 5am, on the bus back to Dublin by
5:30am, and watching the sun rise over the Irish countryside as I began my
journey back to Bergen. Quite possibly the funnest and greatest trip of my
life…
Upon return, I went back to Norwegian class, graduated from
Level 3/4, soaked up the rare perfect weather, and prepared for my Cal Poly
friend, Andrew Tofflemire, to arrive just a few days later….but all of that
will be in the next blog soon….
Although I will soon be continuing to recap my life during
the past month, there are a few things I’d like to mention now. I recently met
a Martinez girl in Bergen, who also went to Cal Poly, here! Her boyfriend is in
my Norwegian class. What are the chances?! And I’d really like to thank Zia
Anna and Zia Fris for keeping me in the loop with postcards and AO Guide
Letters!!! And thanks to Lillie for sending me the sweetest handwritten letter!
Expect something soon, Lillie! And Kara sent me an amaaazing package full of
books, intensely warm neckwear, s’more necessities, and a jar of Central
California shells, rocks, flowers, and sage. I almost cried.
And now I’m currently sitting in a hotel room in Nice,
France with my mother…that will likely have to be a whole ‘nother blog of it’s
own. But FYI, KLM Airlines gives out free beer and wine on the flights….whoa!
This blog makes me sound like an alcoholic….I swear I’m not.
Lastly, happy late birthday to Zia Fris and little Vincenzo! <3
Lastly, happy late birthday to Zia Fris and little Vincenzo! <3