I am now three days away from leaving
Monday, 14 May 2007
Finishing up
Friday, 27 April 2007
(brief) Return to America
Last week I left
Sunday, 15 April 2007
The rain in Spain DID fall mostly on the plain!
Saturday, 24 March 2007
End of Semester!
Yesterday was the last day of classes – I handed in my two 3000 word essays (the only required projects up to this point), and that was that. Woah. Im not really sure when the semester happened. Compared to the American system, there is a lot less contact / in class time in the
Thursday, 15 March 2007
Ghosts and essays
Wednesday, 7 March 2007
Last Wednesday I went down to Edinburgh Turnhouse Airport (love the name) to pick up non other than Don Lopez, whom I nearly walked straight into while I looked distractedly sideways at the Scot Airways ticket counter. We went to a pub and had some haggis, and the next day set out early for the Isle of Arran, located south of Glasgow in the Firth of Clyde. The trip, which involved 2 trains and a ferry, took only about three hours total, but upon arrival we felt a world away. The Caledonian MacBrayne ferry dropped us off in a small little village called Brodick, which I gather is the sort of “capital” of the island. It was really quite sleepy, and there weren’t many people about. Coming during the off-season meant, I gather, that the pace of life was even slower than it would be during the spring and summer months. We had Coronation Chicken sandwiches (which made a big impression on Miguel), and then walked around the town a bit. Next we walked along the beach to the Arran Brewery, where the proprietress gave us a sample of some of their products. Having arrived without a car, and thus relying on the very infrequent bus service around the island, we ran back from the brewery just in time to catch a bus to our hotel in Catacol. The bus rides we took over the next two days gave us an excellent over view of Arran – mostly empty, with high, ragged mountains in the north part and rolling hills in the south. Our hotel was a small homey place located next to the water in a little town that seemed to consist of about three buildings. The owners had lots of friendly petable dogs lying about, and it seemed to be a hang out for some of the local Scots, who got rather boisterous and loud later in the evening while we sat upstairs watching Scottish television (they have a penchant for really scary public service announcements) and Alien II (scary!). The next morning Miguel and I set out to see the sights of Arran, starting with Lochranza Castle, which was about a 15 minute walk from the hotel. The whole place seemed stereotypically Scottish – the castle was a half ruined tower standing next to a small bay around which lay the sleepy village of Lochranza. The sheep aimlessly wandering about helped perfect the ambience. Next we hopped on the bus again (which, it being early morning, was doubling as the local schoolbus) and went down to Machrie Moor, where the friendly bus driver dropped us off at a sheep gate and told us to walk across a big empty field to reach the celebrated standing stones of Machrie Moor. After about 20 muddy minutes, we came to them – giant weathered liths dating from 2500 BC that stand silently in a rolling, open moor in the middle of the island. It was a pretty evocative place, complete with rolling clouds, brooding mountains, and empty moorland. We hung out on the moor for a while, and then took an epic hour long walk down the road from the moor to the seaside village of Blackwaterfoot, where we caught a bus back to Brodick and the ferry. We were quite lucky – it only started raining as we boarded the ferry back to the mainland. Miguel didn’t get to spend too much time in Edinburgh itself, but the visit was most excellent. I am excited about going to Spain at the end of the month!
Yesterday was Anna’s birthday, which we celebrated by eating Scottish Chinese food – which is rather like American, but somehow a little less flavorful I think – and then watching an amazingly bad movie called “Gladiatress” while eating tasty cake and drinking wine. Things are starting to get a little busy here as I have 2 3000 word essays due (one on Wagner and one on Beethoven) on March 23. Also – I will be returning to the US on April 19 to hear the Columbia Bach Society perform my piece ‘Tremors: A Report” at their Spring Concert at St. Paul’s Chapel on the 21rst. I hope people can come to this! I am really excited about it and looking forward to seeing CU folks!
Tuesday, 20 February 2007
Birthday / London
This past week contained a couple of exciting happenings – my birthday on Thursday, and a trip to London to see Rosalind at Kings College who was also celebrating her birthday. The week was somewhat defined by things having frustrating beginnings that turned out well in the end – my birthday began with a failed attempt to book a train to the island of Arran for when Miguel comes to visit, after which I battled it out with Finale for a few hours in a frantic effort to finish my Bach Society piece for an upcoming rehearsal. I finally did finish around 4PM (woot – at least that is finally done), and round about 6PM Jack, Annabel, Katie, Anna, Cindy, Rachel, and myself departed for Kushi’s – a posh but not overly expensive Indian place that was recommended to me by Anna 2 and Corinne. Kushi’s was a pretty nice treat – it is set in an old converted church, and is adorned with ridiculously big chandeliers and large potted plants. The food was quite nice as well – a little heavy (the Housewife’s cookbook keeps things lite) – but very satisfying. Afterwards we retreated back to Warrender where we decided to rent a movie and drink some materials. It being my birthday, it was my movie choice, and on a whim I decided on “Sideways.” My dad had been rambling about “Sideways” for a while after it came out (“it caused a big spike in the price of Pinot!”), and Paul Giamatti reminds me of my cool older cousin Tim, who is a pro violinist. Not very good reasons to watch it perhaps, but it was a decent movie. The characters were funny enough, and it makes California look absolutely beautiful. Anyways, the plan was eventually to go out clubbing, but it got rather late and most everyone decided to head off. Jack and I, however, decided to continue the night, and met up with Courtney and Hannah at a club called Medina near the uni. We drank perhaps a little too much, and did a little dancing (Medina is a hip hop oriented club), until the club closed at 3. 5 Hours later I was up again and on my way to Edinburgh station, where I had to catch the 10:30 train to London. Aside from feeling pretty woozy at the outset of the journey, everything was going well, until I realized that I had forgotten my Young Person’s Railcard and I had accidently brought “Sideways” with me (it was rented from an hourly movie place). Things only got worse when the train arrived in Peterborough (1 hour north of London) where we were told that there were electrical problems on the railway, and that there was another train heading back north if we wanted to catch it. This did not bode well – 2 hours later I boarded a bus, where I sat next to some very entertaining girls from northern England who were very nice but also very difficult to understand – they were fond of saying that things were “fab,” or “mint,” and used “me’ in place of “my” and “lad” for “guy” and other such things. Anyways I finally got to London after about 4 hours, met Rosalind, Ashley, and Kendall at Kings, and promptly accompanied them and some British friends of Rosalind’s to a club somewhat like Medina in another part of London. The next day Ashley, Ros, Kendall and I went and had lunch at a delicious tea and sandwich shop in a sort of indie-ish neighborhood called Camdentown, and then went to walk around Regents Park. My friend Max, who is spending the year at Cambridge, also met us up. We dropped by the British Museum briefly (got to see the wonderful Rosetta Stone and the Elgin Marbles), but it was closing, so we were soon headed back to Rosalind’s for her birthday celebrations, which were to be held at the small and friendly student run bar located in the King’s College dorms. The bar did not disappoint, and Rosalind was subjected to a slightly watered down version of a Kings College birthday tradition in which the birthday guy / girl has to down an obscene amount of gin in very short period of time, while onlookers sing a traditional “gin song.” Anyways it was good times (and Ros did very well), and the next day we woke up late, went to lunch, and then I headed off to catch the 3PM train back to Edinburgh. It was really good to see Ros, Ashley, and Max again – everyone seems to be doing quite well, and being abroad has certainly given all of us new perspectives (some favorable and others not) on Columbia and the past few years of school. The general sentiment seems to be that Columbia is better academically, but worse socially than the UK. Although I wasn’t in London long, my impression was positive – it resembles New York in its size, multiculturalism (although there seems to be more of an African and Arab presence there than in NYC), and hustle and bustle, but it is also more spread out and in some ways felt more livable than New York – perhaps that is a function of the reduced density. I hope to go back before I leave.
Happy Birthday to Rosalind!