Katy's Travel Log

Katy traveled around the world for 16 months. Just makes you sick, doesn't it?

Drawing to a close

Ahh, well my time in Lyon has drawn to a close, which signifies also the very near end of my trip.

My time in Lyon was an interesting period filled with lots of juxtapositions. It is the place where I was the most settled, with an apartment, a roommate, classes and yet I can't say that I ever felt completely at home. (Incidentally, I spent about the same amount of time studying in Norway while in college and had a very similar experience; for me, 4 months just ain't nothin' if I want to something ressembling a life.) At times in Lyon I felt possibly the most lonely than any other time on my trip, and at others I felt like I had (and did have) throngs of family and friends surrounding me. Lyon is oft described as the gastronomic capital of France and while I was able to partake of the Lyonnais delicacies on particular occasions, more often than not I was living on pasta and peas; which is also to say (though not a juxtaposition at all) that my time in France, one of the most expensive spots and one of the last spots on my itinerary, was definitely my poorest time (imagine the blow when I realized my meager 14 Euro a day budget was pushing the envelope). On my way to school every day I walked through the St. Antoine market on the banks of the Saone surrounded by incredible smells of flowers, cheese and olives, admiring all types of gorgeous fruits, vegetables, mushrooms, nuts, pastries, meats, fish, shellfish, smiling at the vendors I saw everyday, maybe accepting a free Clementine here or there, and I then spent much of the rest of the walk avoiding dog shit and wincing at whiffs of urine. Lyonnais people are often described as being cold, un-welcoming and reserved and while I encountered plenty of people who fit that bill, I also met a few wonderfully open, warm and welcoming French people, who opened their doors to me, fed me, showed me things they loved about their city and their food.

My apartment in Lyon was often the butt of jokes, and after being introduced to someone who had already met my roommate, it was inevitable to next hear: "oh, YOU're the one without the toilet!" Well, the apartment was in a very old building (I have no idea how old I just realized, how terrible is that) and for the most part filled with lovely, large, rennovated apartments, but in our little aerie on the top floor (think 8th floor and no elevator), time had pretty much stood still for the last, I don't know, 30 years and our toilet was still a "Turkish" deal (a hole with places for your feet) out in the hallway to which you had to bring a bucket of water from the apartment. Truth be told, if I hadn't just spent the previous year travelling to places where a toilet like that might be luxury, I'm not sure I would've known what to do, but as it was, it was no big deal; a little chilly maybe towards the end there, but no big deal. The apartment itself had one little main room with the kitchen and an eating table and not much else, then there was one bedroom off that room and a small, red ladder/staircase brought you up to my room, the ceiling of which was formed by the eaves of the roof, making the room to short to stand up in, but also making it seem ever so cozy and charming to the likes of me. The main window in the apartment had a wonderful view of the rooftops of our neighborhood (the oldest part of town, now protected by the UN from any modernization), over to one of the cathedrals and on again further to another church steeple (we could hear 3 sets of church bells from the apartment). It was the perfect place for sitting in the sun for hours, catching a tiny glimpse of life here or there, but otherwise just soaking in how very French it all seemed.

After a month or so I'd say I definitely got into the French swing of things food-wise, at least as far as lunch was concerned (I don't think any French person would lower themselves to eating pasta and peas for dinner as much as I did). But, because the budget was tight and because my French class was over everyday at noon, my general routine was to buy a round of Camembert and two tomatoes on Monday and then everyday after school I would buy half a baguette, get home crisp it up in the oven, make my Camembert sandwiches and maybe spread the last of the bread with a little jam for dessert. In colder months, this got replaced by vegetable soup, but still with my warm, crispy half-baguette. I suppose my dinners got impeccably French when my mother arrived -- which is to say, we always managed to pull off a salad, open a bottle of wine, relax, have something interesting that we'd picked out that day and top it all off with a fresh treat from the patisserie.

Which brings me to the definite highlight of my time in Lyon: friends and family. A long time ago I had begun to wonder if it would be possible to pull of a Thanksgiving in France with my friends and family from home. It turns out, thanks to my mother more than anyone else, that it was possible and it was even better than I could have imagined. For almost the whole month of November I went from being a solitary wanderer and explorer to being surrounded by familiarity and friendship. First, my wonderful rowing buddies Claire and Katy showed up and we had a wonderful few days catching up, eating, shopping and oggling ridiculously expensive shoes! Then the day after they left my mother arrived for almost 3 weeks, shortly thereafter her friend and daughter joined us, and then my grandmother and her boyfriend and then my brother and then another friend of my mother's and a friend of mine. It was all made possible by the fruits of a desperate search for a place to stay; in the end, my mother managed to locate a wonderful house, owned by one of the most lovely couples ever, not too far out of town, where everyone could stay and it worked out perfectly. The house was comfortable and charming and was the perfect setting catching up with my family, which would have otherwise happened amid rush of Christmas.

Thanksgiving itself raised the bar of our expectations forever more and it I don't think that we'll be going to back to the old style of Thanksgiving any time soon (our Madison family around the table at my mother's house). We had 12-15 people, depending on how and when you counted, a mix of Americans, Canadians, French, Swedish and Scottish and an all-American Thanksgiving spread (per my strict orders, missing one Thanksgiving was enough for me). Wine and conversation flowed quickly and easily; most everyone didn't know most everyone else and it worked beautifully. It was a new kind of Thanksgiving for my family, and I, for one, vote to keep it that way!! (Granted, once State-side it could be a little hard to replicate an atmosphere flooded with different cultural perspectives and the relaxation that comes with being far away from the responsabilities of home.) Anyway, it was a good time, and definitely my best evening in Lyon!

After things had wound down from Thanksgiving, most everyone headed back in their respective directions and my brother and I spent a few days in Paris with the express intent of adding Disneyland Paris to our illustrious list of Disneyland experiences! That done (on a chilly, chilly day when a couple big attractions were closed, but one on which we had "snow"!), we bummed around Paris a bit, walked a lot, had a few good meals and then headed off on our own ways once again. I had one more week to prepare for my Lyon departure and filled it with lots of errands and cleaning and packing, but more importantly with some really good eating and some wonderful evenings thanks to a couple of generous invitations! And then, that was it! Au revoir Lyon! Until next time....

So, now that the Lyon chapter is behind me, I find myself with about 2 more weeks before I am back in Madisonm, Wisconsin -- a weird, but comforting thought. I am ready and excited to start a new, semi-normal, non-nomadic life!!! A little jaunt to England, a couple of nights in New York and that's officially it! The pack will be un-packed one last time!! I think it'll be good to be home...

December 14, 2004 in Europe | Permalink | Comments (0)

France

Well, well, well! For those of you who don't know, I'm in France and unlike other logs this one does not mark the end of my time here. Instead this log marks the beginning of a whole new phase of my trip.

I've spent the last year (well, almost a year) galavanting about in all these wonderful places, seeing new things, finding new places to stay, meeting new people, getting to understand a different country's infrastructure and rules and while I've had enough pit stops along the way that I'm not exhausted, I think I do qualify as a weary traveler (oh how I long for a West of the Andes sandwich from old Weary). I'm two weeks short of a year and my wonderful Papermate pen has finally run out of ink; my handy, dandy notebook from Ecuador is finally full; my round-the-world ticket is set to expire and I am well sick and tired of having to find a new place to stay every night -- SO! I have decided to stay where I am, to spend my remaining 3-4 months living something inbetween home life and traveling life.

Almost as soon as I'd officially decided what I wanted all the pieces started falling into place. After arriving in Paris (and marvelling at the fact that it is as beautiful as all the stories make it seem), I headed to Lyon to check it out as a possible place to hang around for a while and was pleasantly surprised by a city built at the meeting of two rivers, with tons to do and a not-too-expensive French school and lots of students looking for apatments. My first day of looking I met a Swedish girl who will be studying Economics until Christmas and we had the very good fortune of finding the apartment of our dreams. And while there were a few significant bumps along the way and we thought the dream apartment was simply to good to be true, it finally worked out and we have moved in and made ourselves quite at home!

So, picture this, if you will: standing at a wide-open window with little lace curtains looking out over red tile roofs and chimneys (think chimney-sweep scene from Mary Poppins, but more colorful); there's a cathedral straight ahead, a smaller kind of gothic church futher on, and a big thing up the hill that vaguely resembles the big castle at Disneyland; there's and a river and a city off to your left, of which you mostly see more tiled roofs; there's some ratatouille stewing on the stove behind you; a few strains from the accordion player down on the street mixes with the music from Amelie as as the sun sets and you sip your wine and wonder how it was that you got to be so very lucky. It promises to be a very good life here in Lyon.

I am officially a student again for the next three months. I have registered and paid for my classes, taken a test for the first time in many years, bought my books and await my student card. A life with some semblance of routine lies not too far ahead of me and I relish the thought, the thought of getting up at the same time everyday in the same bed and getting into the same perfectly normal shower with guaranteed hot water, the thought of buying something in the large size because it's cheaper and I will actually have the opportunity to both store it and eat it, the thought of cooking in my own kitchen when I want to and grabbing something to eat in my own neighborhood if I don't, the thought of walking around Old Lyon and knowing that I'm one of the people strolling on the cobblestone alleys and gazing at diners on the sidewalks who can call this little part of Lyon their own. I don't have a phone, but I do have a mailbox. I also have keys and seven flights of old stone stairs to walk up/down every day. I have an old Italian landlady who speaks with such a thick Italian accent I can just barely understand her. I have unpacked my bag and do not plan on filling it back up again until the journey homeward in December. Maybe this all seems very undramatic to you, but to me they are all signs of a different life and a very dramatic change in my standard of living. (It does bear mentioning though that the toilette for this particular apartment seems to have been imported from India - something Martina, my Swedish roommate, and I have yet to fully accept.)

So, for the next few months, Lyon is the place to be! I have a bunch of family and might-as-well-be-family folk coming around the last two weeks of November and a few other friends also coming for a French holiday and their one chance to see what promises to be the best apartment of my life (in character, if not grandeur) and this lovely city filled with culture and fantastic food! Anyone else who's interested drop me a line! The apartment is fairly tiny, but there's floor space for one or two, plus there's accomodation for all budgets in Lyon. So, I hope to be a good excuse for anyone who needs an extra nudge to head to France this fall!

NEXT STOP? Nowhere! I'm staying right here!

August 26, 2004 in Europe | Permalink | Comments (1)

Norway

Well, believe it or not, another chapter has fairly quickly come to pass. I arrived in Norway from China/Hong Kong about two weeks ago and have been enjoying the gross over-abundance of stunning natural beauty while also feeling personally offended by the sky-high prices. (It seems almost legend here among travelers; "it's more expensive than Switzerland;" "it's more expensive than Japan," etc.) So, I've decided that I have appreciated enough fjords and eaten enough Gudbransdalost and recognized enough of the country I knew (which really hasn't changed) and so onward I go!

I feel like much of my time has either been on a boat or a bus. Either way they were perfect ways for sailing by perfect vistas and still feeling like you got to see them and enjoy them -- between the fjords and mountains and Caribbean-blue water and forests and lakes, it is clear that Norway got more than its lion's share of natural wonders.

I will fill you in on more later, but just wanted to let you know I'm off to...

NEXT STOP: France!


Details:

Fly Oslo to Kirkenes (not much in town, decided to cathc boat out next afternoon, Midnight Sun)
Hurtigruten Kirkenes to Tromsø (2 days on boat, last of the official Midnight Sun)
Tromsø (Tromsø musem, Samis, Polaria with bearded seals, walking)
Hurtigruten to Risøyhamn
Bus to Andenes
Andenes whale watching (only bad weather day, saw three sperm whales)
Bus to Risøyhamn
Hurtigruten to Bodø
Bus to Trondheim
Trondheim (Olavsdag festene, Nidaros domkirke, walking, perfect little neighborhoods with cafes and apt.s)
Bus to Ålesund
Ålesund (Atlantic Ocean aquarium, walking)
Bus to Oslo
Oslo (walking, Vigelands park, Slottsparken, Nasjonalgaleriet, Karl Johans gata)

August 11, 2004 in Europe | Permalink | Comments (0)

My Photo

Photo Albums

  • View over Banos
    01. Ecuador
  • Making our way back down
    01a. Ecuador: Cotacachi
  • Clear, cool streams
    01b. Ecuador: Jungle
  • Katys_pictures_109
    01c. Ecuador: Pinan Lakes
  • Cusco_parade
    02. Peru
  • Yep, we're both dorks
    03. Fiji
  • Marlborough Sounds (S.I.)
    04a. New Zealand: North Island
  • Hokitika_10
    04b. New Zealand: South Island
  • Bangkok_grand_palace19 [JBarnes]
    05. Thailand
  • Vendor in McLeod Ganj 2 [JBarnes]
    06a. India, the Northern bits
  • Center of my gorgeous tabletop [JBarnes]
    06b. India, the (more) Southern bits
  • Guangzhou water life 3
    07. China
  • Hong_kong_19
    08. Hong Kong
  • Oslo_09
    09. Norway
  • 2063272_948dac00ef_s
    10. France
  • 2063203_6567db1c52_s
    10a. Markets and food
  • 2063541_fe497147b3_s
    10b. Disneyland Paris
  • 2054772_fdfdf4eb44_s
    10c. Thanksgiving
  • Geneva_19
    11. Geneva
  • Dsc01185
    12. England
  • 2063375_ce993957e0_s
    My favorites!
  • Park-hopping in Geneva
    My homage to narcissism

Recent Posts

  • Well, that's it!
  • Drawing to a close
  • France
  • Norway
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  • New Zealand: Week 1
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