Tuesday, June 23, 2009

My apartment

ZOMG PICTURES!!!! This post is dedicated to my beautiful apartment.

Here is the main hallway (in the hopes that it will give you some idea of how huge the apartment is):


Here are a couple pics of the living room/dining room (look at how vast they are!):



Annnd our kitchen is very modern:



My (single) bedroom! Small, but I don't have to share it!:


There is a bathroom connected to my bedroom, so it's pretty much my own. It has black tile, pretty interesting. Also connects to the kitchen, so I have easy access:


Here is the two person bedroom and bathroom... Part of the shower is actually visible from the bedroom--no barrier inbetween! Should have taken a pic of that (while no one was in it, of course) but I totally spaced, so here are just general pics:


And here is the four person bedroom and the third bathroom:


Finally, here are some views from our living room window! Very pretty, I think:


Annnnnd that's my apartment!!!! :D

The bus, apartments, and more!

Ok, I am going to blog about yesterday before I forget!

We checked out of our hostel at around 9 am. Glad to get out of there...accommodations were nice enough, but the service was terrible! Cat and I went downstairs for breakfast that morning, but waited around for half an hour and never got a menu! And this was after asking twice...That's ridiculous. Eventually we just left, since Sheida and Alison were waiting on us to check out, and we didn't want to give them any more of our money anyway.

Then...was the bus adventure. We had to get from our hostel to the UW Rome Center, which is in the Campo de Fiori--in the middle of Rome! We decided to split into 2 groups--Sheida and Alison rode one bus and Cat and I took the next one. Sheida and Alison basically threw us to the wolves--they had already ridden the bus to the Campo, whereas Cat and I had not, but they decided we should get the experience and learn on our own.

The bus ride was awful. My 50 lb (22.2 kg) suitcase was partially blocking the walkway, and we kept getting disapproving looks from the Italians. We had absolutely no idea which stop to get off at; Sheida had told us the video screen listed the stops, but ours only had the bus number on it! I asked a couple Italian ladies near us if they spoke English ("Parle Inglese?"), but no luck. Finally I just tapped one on the shoulder, looked at her apologetically and said, "Campo de Fiori?" Through hand gestures and broken English, she was able to tell us that we had to get off in three stops. Phew! When the third stop came, we double checked with another Italian woman. She also told us which direction to go to in order to get to the Campo. Downtown Rome is really crowded, filled with both tourist and locals, and a ton of cars and scooters that are all in a hurry! So here Cat and I are, lugging around our huge suitcases in the middle of Rome, with a vague idea of the direction in which we're supposed to go, but no idea how to actually get there or even what the place looks like. We finally found it after asking a couple more people and relying on my keen sense of direction ("That street looks like it could possibly lead to the Campo...let's try it!"). So ridiculous. It's a miracle we made it. Once we finally made it to the Campo, we verified with a helpful nun (she came up and asked what we were looking for) that we were in fact in the Campo de Fiori, and then she helped us find the UW Rome Center. Thank you, nice nun lady! I knew I was Catholic for a reason...

The Campo de Fiori is a market during the day where you can buy all sorts of fruits and vegetables and goodies. It's a bit touristy, but lots of fun and all the food looks delicious! Cat and I still hadn't eaten (stupid hostel...), so we bought a couple pieces of fruit from one of the vendors (that Lisa personally recommended). So good! But overpriced, as we later learned. Then we checked in and moved into our apartments. Our apartment is amazing. Amazing amazing amazing. I will post pictures of it later. It is ridiculous. I can't believe it's a student apartment! The other apartments are nice as well (from what I've seen), but I'm pretty sure ours is the biggest. It's a six minute walk from the Campo, and like two minutes from the Pantheon! There are seven of us total in there, and the apartment has a bedroom with one bed, a bedroom with two beds, and a bedroom with four beds. GUESS WHO GOT THE ONE-PERSON BEDROOM!!!!! Yep, that's me. I also pretty much have my own bathroom. :D

The rest of the afternoon was spent at orientation, getting cell phones, and grocery shopping! I mainly got sandwich makings, cheese, and some fruit. Got bread at a nice bakery. So delicious! And cheap, too. I paid 1.50 euro for a whole loaf of delicious sliced bread.

At 7:30, our entire program (24 of us plus two professors) met for dinner. We went to this nice restaurant called Trattoria Moderna. We were seated at two long tables and immediately were brought bottles of regular water (naturale), sparkling water, and pitchers of wine. My end of the table soon became notorious for its wine-drinking (not me, I swear!)--it's probably a good thing our pitchers were never refilled! Our meal consisted of four courses. First, there was the onslaught of appetizers. There were these spinach-cheese cake things, tomatoes and mozarella cheese, some sort of tuna, fried eggplant and cheese, artichoke hearts, and cooked vegetables. Most of us were full after the first course! Then, we had a pasta course. We had a choice of ravioli with spinach, fettuccini with eggplant and feta, rigatoni with broccoli and sausage (my order), and risotto with mushrooms. I tried a bite of each, except for the ravioli, and they were all so good! Then, as if we needed more food, we had a meat course. We had a choice of getting chicken in red sauce or this Roman dish with veal topped with prosciutto. Both came with delicious potatoes. I wasn't feeling very adventurous, so I got the chicken, but I tried the veal and it was really good! Both were great, but after tasting the veal I think I made the wrong choice...oh well. Finally, we had tiramisu. BEST DESSERT EVERRRRRR. So good. So much food. And all free!!!!! Well, I suppose we already paid through it through the program, but still.

Afterward, we were pretty whooped from eating, and it was already 10 or so, so most of us just went back to our apartments and went to bed. Wanted to make sure we got enough sleep, because we had a big morning planned! I will blog about that later. This one is already ridiculously long! Sorry!

Sunday, June 21, 2009

First full day!

Ok, so I suppose this is my first ~real~ blog post. Yay!

Today was my first full day in Rome. Yesterday was good: had a great flight with Lufthansa (3 words: mini Ritter Sport), a fun car ride to the hostel, and a good dinner, then completely crashed.

Today was even better! I woke up early, got breakfast at the hostel, and then walked to Mass at St. Susana's with Mayme, Erin, and Cat. It was a really pretty church, and Mass was in English! Afterward we explored a little bit, and stumbled upon the church that has the Ecstasy of St. Theresa in it! That was really cool, especially since Mayme is doing her project on it and could tell us a lot about it.

The rest of the day was spent exploring the area around our hostel. Cat and I ventured off in search of pizza, and ended up walking for at least an hour before we found a place...which ended up being less than a block from our hostel! Woops! The pizza was really good, and cheap--we paid for it by its weight, not by the slice! I had one piece with cheese, zucchini, and tomato, and another piece with potato slices (yes, potatoes!) and sausage. The sausage in Italy is amazing, by the way. It's really nice to just walk around and look at all the neat buildings. There's always something interesting to look at! Cat and I ended up finding this garden place with a bunch of statues and stuff. Felt really American when I put my head on one of the headless statues for a picture. Teehee... Anyway, we got back to the hostel and took a lonnnnnng nap (all four of us, since Sheida and Allison got back from the Baths of Caracalla soon after us).

Finally woke up, and it was dinner time! It was Nick's birthday, so eight of us (there are a ton of us at the same hostel) got together for dinner to celebrate with him. We ended up walking for like an hour...somehow found ourselves in the Roman ghetto. There were a ton of locals just drinking and hanging out in a square, so Sheida went up to some lady and asked where there was a good restaurant nearby. We were directed to this restaurant called Porca Vacca ("fat cow" in Italian), which was my best experience in Italy so far!

We were seated in the back of the restaurant. As I walked through, I noticed that everyone in there was Italian. We also walked by this glass case that was filled with huge chunks of meat. Pretty much a vegetarian's hell...glad I'm a carnivore! After we were seated a waiter came up to us and asked if we speaked Italian ("Parla italiana?"). We got confused and just kind of stared at him blankly. He gave us an exasperated look and got an English-speaking waiter from a different section. It was a bit embarrassing, but I have a feeling that's not the last time it will happen...hopefully I will pick up some Italian soon! The second waiter was really nice and helpful, gave us advice on what to order since the whole menu was in Italian. I ordered gnocchi with pesto sauce and a salad. Most of the others got pizza (Mayme and Erin accidentally ordered one with a hardboiled egg on it!). We split 2 liters of wine (when in Rome...) among eight of us. Everything was delicious! Really great experience. It was just a lot of fun being with such a big group in an unfamiliar area, eating delicious food and trying to figure everything out! And the wine helped as well. :D

Ended up being like a 10 minute walk back. Woops once again! Tomorrow we check out and move into our apartments! Sooo excited. I haven't seen the Campo de Fiori (where the UW Rome Center is) yet, excited for that too. We also buy cell phones and get a free dinner! Anyway, I'm so tired, and this blog has taken a ridiculous amount of time to write, so I am off! Night!