Italy: The Smallest Towns are the Best Towns

Submitted by Samantha Smith on the 2017 winter session program in Italy sponsored by the Department of Psychology…

Have you ever heard of San Gimignano, Monteriggioni, and Siena?  I only heard of one of the three before I flew to Italy just two weeks ago.  And, fun fact: You can find all of these cities in the region of Tuscany.  This past week, I was able to visit all three of these areas in Tuscany and quite easily to say: my mind was blown!

San Gimignano is a small, stereotypical old Italian town with a beautiful church, only a couple dozen stores and a clock tower that provides the most amazing sights in Tuscany.  You are able to see for miles the beautiful fields, hills, and cobblestone homes of this town.  I visited on a cold, windy and cloudy day and my jaw still dropped.

Moneteriggioni is an even smaller town about a half hour away with less than 50 residents.  Their most fascinating feature is the wall surrounding this tiny town on a hill.  With an easy climb onto the wall, you can see the nearby forest with packed evergreens, the fields of out-of-season crops, and the roaming hills that disappear with the horizon line.  This small town has the impact to make you feel even smaller by its consuming sights.

Siena is only marginally bigger than San Gimignano and Moneteriggioni and is a medieval town packed full of history.  In the center of the cobblestone town is a cathedral made of green and red marble.  Trust me, on this program to Italy, I have seen multiple cathedrals and basilicas daily, but my favorite is the Cathedral in Siena.  The Cathedral in Siena has the power to stop individuals in their step.  I’m not quite sure how business operates there because it’s so beautiful.

 

I have found that the landscape, views and the impact of small town history is nearly more powerful than the big city and more popular history in Rome and Florence.

Granada to Paris Id y Vuelta (Roundtrip)

Submitted by Jaclyn Roman on the 2012 spring semester program in Granada, Spain…

 

 

Last week I embarked on my first trip outside of Spain since my arrival. Given a long weekend off from classes, my roommate and I had planned a trip to Paris. It’s important to first note that before traveling to Europe, Paris was never at the top of my list of places to go. Countries such as Spain, Italy and Greece always posed a greater interest to me.
However, upon hearing about our long weekend, most of the students in the group began making travel arrangements. Flights direct from Granada to Paris were fairly cheap and easy to book, which obviously helped sway my decision to travel there.

I have to say that since being in Spain for almost two months already, I do feel that part of my heart is now rooted in Granada, which I’ve touched on in my previous blogs. Still, Paris was by far, one of my most incredible places I’ve been in my life. I was pleasantly surprised at how much I enjoyed the trip.

Since I’ve only just begun to gain confidence with my Spanish speaking ability, it was extremely grounding to tour a city and not understand any of the language at all. I’d like to think it enhanced my Parisian experience. I was able to get by using “Bonjour” and “Oui” and was very grateful for the few citizens who understood English.

It’s hard to sum up three days’ worth of traveling into a short blog, but all in all, it really was, simply put, a culturally enriching experience. I experimented with food of course, trying smoked duck and the famous French crepes. Touring the Louvre felt utterly surreal, and just the art and architecture throughout the city of Paris were breathtaking. Everything from the public street markets to seeing the Eiffel tower was truly incredible.

Above all, throughout the trip I reminded myself as often as possible to enjoy each moment and experience everything possible in the short time I had. I think that’s the underlying theme to life in every European culture, whether it is Spain or France, and I’m discovering it more and more as I go – beauty really can be found anywhere.

In front of the Eiffel tower on a chilly February day.

Spain: Importance of Teamwork

Submitted by Samantha Leonard on the 2017 winter session program in Spain and Rome sponsored by the Department of Political Science and International Relations…

It’s week two of this magnificent adventure termed “studying abroad” and my confidence is high after mastering Madrid in a week. I had no troubles getting around with my class on programmed day trips and mini local outings with new-found friends.  I was fascinated to learn the country of Spain is made up of 46 million residents and attracts 70 million tourists every year. That being said, in the capital city of Madrid it was a safe bet the people I bumped into on the street were just as familiar with the city as I was. The same goes in Granada and now Seville. Although,I was made aware of it in my head, this statistic became a reality on the group’s first free day in Granada.

Being the Adventurous college students that we are, a group of us dared to explore the nearby mountain, the Sierra Nevada, on our own. Back in the States, it would be a simple task to catch a couple of buses and head on up to the mountains and back in a few hours time. However, braving the public transportation system in a foreign country proved to be harder than one would imagine. To get us headed in the right direction, the front desk at the hotel was the place to start. They pointed us towards the bus stop and wrote down the correct route.

Piece of cake, right? So, we thought. Us youthful and excited twenty-somethings set out that morning to catch a 10:00 am bus up to the mountains. Naturally, we scurried off to our first bus stop with no time to spare after waiting around to gather the troops. Together, we follow the hotel’s directions. “Go to the bus stop past the cathedral” Check! We walked past the cathedral. Where is the bus stop? A group member turns to a local, asking the simple question. “No ingles” was their response.

This is when it hits me that I am in a foreign country, I don’t speak the native language and, most importantly, I am without WiFi or data! What is a girl to do? How will I find the nearest Starbucks or even my way home?

Luckily, one glorious group member knows Spanish and gets directions leading us to the correct location. Okay, great, we are at the bus stop. At this point, I uncomfortably succumb to being a follower of the group and trusting my friends with data and Spanish speaking skills to get me to Sierra Nevada. We are looking for route SN1 as directed by the hotel. But, next obstacle, buses are coming from both directions. Do we take the north route or the south route? And which is which? Again, our saving grace Spanish speaking friend is able to save the day by asking for help and deciphering the Spanish bus map. At this point, we are all looking at our watches, thanking goodness that we were able to buy tickets on the bus and praying we will make the 10:00 am bus that leaves in 10 minutes.

When we arrive at the stop to catch the next bus, our friend the translator lets us know we’ve reached the destination and we scamper down towards the buses scanning the signs for Sierra Nevada.  Luckily, the mountain has the same name in Spanish and English. We walk up to a bus with the correct sign and are immediately stopped by a driver who shooed us away. Without our translator, this would have sent me home! But, because she understood him we were able to find another bus going to the Sierra Nevada with more room and run on before it pulled away.

By the time I sit down on the bus, I feel hurried, rushed and very confused. My ego is set back a notch as I realize that I cannot travel alone without resources.  What was supposed to be a quick and easy day trip into the Sierra Nevada ended up being a beautiful day and loads of fun, but also a reminder that it is important to not take things like speaking the native language or having constant access to internet for granted. For me, it is scary knowing that I would not have been prepared to have gone on the trip alone without someone to translate with a local or have someone with a data plan google directions.

Even in Spain as a nineteen year old college student taking 400 level classes abroad, the most profound and humbling lesson I have learned on this program so far is one I learned back in kindergarten. This is the importance in working together, asking for help and appreciation. In the end, traveling around a foreign country is not impossible to do alone, it just takes proper preparation and may not be a simple task! The next time, we decided to go out and travel as a group, we actually had the hotel draw us a map and give us detailed instructions to get us the Granada futbol (soccer) game. (Which was a blast!) This way, we were able to be more self-sufficient and to not be asking the other clueless tourists on the streets what bus stop to get off at.

Ultimately, this incredible adventure of study abroad has been an incredibly humbling experience thus far. I can only hope to be less ignorant on how to travel around these cities by the time I return and gain a new sense of independence. Step one: find the nearest chocolate con churros cafe in Seville.

Feels like Home

Submitted by Caitlin Baker on the 2012 spring semester program in Granada, Spain…

 

 

This past week I was lucky enough to have my family come visit me. My Mom, Dad, older sister, and younger brother arrived in Granada last week. Showing them the around the city and being their tour guide really made me see that Granada has come to be a very familiar place to me. They were able to meet my host Mom and see where I live and go to school. It was great to share such a big piece of my life with them. It made me remember the first time they visited me at the University of Delaware. It is funny how even though I am in a different country, speaking a different language, and learning different things, some things are not that different at all — like the way you share a new home with the people you love.

After spending some time in Granada, we left to explore Cordoba and Sevilla, two cities that are also in southern Spain. Cordoba is famous for its diverse cultural history. Centuries ago, when peaceful religious coexistence was a rare occurrence, it was a city where Jews, Christians, and Muslims all lived harmoniously together. Sevilla is bigger and a bit more urban. It has lots of historic sites. The Plaza de España (shown below) is one of its most beautiful and awe-inspiring plazas, built for the 1929 Spanish expo which was held in Sevilla. The plaza became even more famous when it was used as a backdrop for the last Star Wars movie!

On Tuesday night, I headed back to Granada while my family stayed behind in Sevilla to take off to New York the next day. Studying abroad is certainly a momentous time in my life and I know that being able to share my experience here with my family will make it even more memorable.

Morocco: Cats

Submitted by Rachel Dunscomb on the 2017 winter session program in Morocco sponsored by the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures…

All throughout our journey around Morocco, we’ve seen stray cats everywhere. Orange, black, grey and mottled, they’re always around looking for food or sleeping majestically. So even though, I absolutely love cats, I’ve gotten so used to them that they’re almost more of an annoyance than cute. As a result, I was very reluctant to talk to or pet the grey cat that was at our camp in the Sahara Desert. He came around looking for food during dinner and the others gave him a little to eat, but to me, he was just another cat interrupting my dinner.

The next morning, we all got up to see the sunrise in the desert. The best view was from the top of a dune where there were a few chairs and a table so I decided to go sit down and enjoy the view. The moment I sat down, though, the cat came out of nowhere and jumped up on my lap. The poor thing was freezing and, despite my misgivings, I immediately fell in love. As we symbiotically shared our heat in the freezing morning air at the edge of the Sahara Desert, we became best friends for life and a piece of my heart will always remain in the dunes with him. Farewell, Sahara cat, until next time.

New Zealand: Hobbiton

Submitted by Carly Battistoni on the 2017 winter session program in Australia sponsored by the Department of Chemical Engineering…

This past weekend was our free weekend without any scheduled excursions planned.  Some people flew up to Cairns to snorkel in the Great Barrier Reef; I took the weekend to visit New Zealand.  And I can honestly say it is as green and hilly as everyone says it is.  I traveled to Auckland and then woke up incredibly early to take a bus down for a tour of Hobbiton – Sir Peter Jackson’s creation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings series.  The set was made on the lands of a sheep farm which is home to 13,000 sheep.  The owner of the sheep farm requested that the set be made permanent following the installment of The Hobbit trilogy.  It is now a major tourist attraction that draws people in from around the world.  I think that’s what amazes me the most – just how globalized our world is and how cultures are colliding.  People from places so different than where I am from share common interests with me.  We have shared in a common experience that transcends the confines of our geographical locations.

It was incredible to see the movies I have seen countless times come to life.  Iconic scenes from the movies, such as the party scene for Bilbo’s 111th birthday, were shot right where I was.  It still doesn’t quite seem real that I got to see the Shire. The hobbit holes are so cute and the attention to detail is truly remarkable.  If I wasn’t already in love with the movies enough, I fell more in love with them after the tour.

Liquid Gold

Submitted by Caitlin Baker on the 2012 spring semester program in Granada, Spain…

 

Olive Fields by Caitlin Baker

This past weekend, a few friends and I went on an awesome olive oil tour of Andalusia. Since the winter months aren’t a very touristy time here it ended up being just us and our guide. It was very personal! We toured a beautiful olive farm and visited an old mill where they used to make olive oil before the process was modernized. The mill was in this little town on the outskirts of Granada — very quiet and peaceful. There was a drinking fountain there that spouted water straight from the Sierra Nevada!

Afterwards, we sampled olive oils with bread, cheese, Serrano ham, and some wine tasting. So Mediterranean! It was such a good time and such a great way to explore more of the culture of Andalusia. Olive oil is one of Spain’s, and specifically Andalusia’s, biggest agricultural products so it was interesting to gain more insight into the history and process behind it. We took the tour in Spanish which made it feel even more refined. It is funny how something as small as that can influence the feel of something so much! We had a perfect day for it too — high 50s and lots of sun. Warmer weather is finally coming to Granada and I can already tell it will make me love it here even more!

Olive Oil Farm by Caitlin Baker

Caves and Critters in Barbados

Submitted by Jacqueline Warner on the 2017 winter session program in Barbados sponsored by the Department of Human Development and Family Studies…

On Saturday, some of our group went on a caves and critters tour of Harrison’s Cave and then to the Barbados Wildlife Reserve. The tour was organized by a tour group and our driver, Kevin, was a really nice older man who tried (unsuccessfully) to teach us how to have a Bajan accent. Mine personally keeps coming out British…

In Harrison’s Cave the tunnels are about two miles long and there are still three miles they have not fully uncovered as the cave digging began in the 1970’s. The tour is taken on a tram through the cave. The cave goes down 160 feet below the surface, but we were still 700 feet above sea level. I had no idea how high up Barbados was, I just assumed that the island was mostly sea level because of the beaches. The island itself is a coral reef, the only Caribbean Island of its kind, that was pushed above the surface of the ocean at least four times during tectonic plate shifting. The coral reef acts as a water filtration system which is why the island was so sought after once Europeans discovered this, because the water is very clean and great for drinking. In the cave, we could see two different underground rivers, and in a cave next door that is not open to the public, you need to scuba dive in order to get around because there is so much water. The bottom of the cave had a small lake that was nine feet deep and had a waterfall coming from the ceiling.

The critters part of our day took place at the Barbados Wildlife Reserve on the north of the island. They have deer that I absolutely adore, I want to take one home, but I think it won’t get through customs 🙁 They are the size of large dogs and are very fluffy and have no teeth! They were trying their best to eat some sweet potatoes put out for the birds, monkeys, rabbits and tortoises, but it took them so long that I could have watched it all day. Below is a picture of them eating in their “watering hole”.

The monkeys were really funny. One sat on a bench on his butt eating just like a human and they would run to the food through our legs as we watched. The monkeys also would just stand on the tortoise shells and eat whatever they wanted and the tortoises just let it happen (although, what could they really do to stop them?). The animals all let us get very close and the only ones who ever really seemed nervous were the deer and the birds. We also saw a peacock try to protect itself from a tortoise and fanned its feathers (I have some great photos of that) and the tortoise  just kept walking, right through the fanned feathers. The tortoises were all generally like that, they walked along the pathways with us and tried to bite our toes, but we always managed to get away. Apparently, they think that nail polish on the toes looks like berries so they try to slowly go in for the kill – which is adorable.

Through these tours I saw a different side of the island, something different than the beaches on the coasts. I was able to see a part of the countryside that many tourists either don’t know about or don’t bother to go see. I am very happy that we chose to see this side of the island and experience the wildlife here.

South Africa: A Dream Come True

Submitted by Khadia Baptiste on the 2017 winter session program in South Africa sponsored by Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice and the Alfred Lerner College of Business and Economics…

Only a fourteen-hour flight they said. Well, I have to admit it felt like a twenty-four hour flight. Despite the long flight, I made it safely to South Africa! Who would’ve thought they would have the opportunity to fulfill their dreams of going to Africa while in college? Well, I am fulfilling that dream at twenty-one years old by studying abroad and it has been too A-M-A-Z-I-N-G thus far.

During my week here,  I have been to the Ann van Dyk Cheetah Centre, where I was able to pet a cheetah. Let me tell you it was the scariest, most exhilarating  and breathtaking moment of my life. Coming from the little island of St. Thomas, I’ve never experienced such animals like I have seen in South Africa. The beautiful wildlife besides the cheetahs includes animals such as African wild dog, brown hyena and Cape vulture. It was a very altruistic of Ann van Dyk who volunteered her parents’ chicken farm when the National Zoological Gardens of South Africa ran out of space to continue their captive breeding programs. Now, the cheetahs are no longer on the endangered species list thanks to her heroism for wildlife preservation. I also hiked and visited the Union Building where the Nelson Mandela statue is located.

My experience in South Africa have been one like no other. From the beautiful view to meeting people with the warmest hearts. On the bad side, it has been rough adapting to the seven-hour time difference between the United States and South Africa. On the bright side, I got the opportunity to taste crocodile, lamb and ostrich meat. I have been overseas, but I never have been to a place that has such a variety of meat choices to eat. In addition, I realize that South Africans are very crafty with their hands. Their ability to use readily available resources and make them into valuable treasures is a skill that amazes me. South Africa, you are as beautiful as your people and I am thrilled to be here! The weather is definitely amazing, better than being in eighteen degrees right now.

New Zealand: Missed the Boat

Submitted by Jonathan Sypher on the 2017 winter session study abroad program in New Zealand sponsored by the School of Marine Science and Policy and the Department of Geological Sciences….

Sitting on the front of the boat meditating on the Pacific was holy. We followed a pod of bottle-nosed dolphins for over a half an hour. We sat out on the bow and the stern and soaked up the sun. It was beautiful. The ocean was a majestic blue, switching between aquamarine and royal blue and sea-foam green. We drove between islands, and out into the open ocean in search of more pods of dolphins to interact with. The gannets, with their yellow throats and black rimmed wings sat proudly on the water, and dove down into the water to catch their fish. We enjoyed each other’s company, and the ocean breathing salty on all of us as the larger waves buffeted against the boat. To the environmental and marine science majors, this was as good as gospel.