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[1] WTC Nearby Bldg

[2] WTC The Pit

[3] WTC Flowers

[4] Edinburgh Bagpipes

[5] Edinburgh Castle

[6] Lisa and Aaron

[7] Edinburgh Statue

[8] Smart Car
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The first thing I notice about this
computer is that some of the important keys on the keyboard (like
@) are misplaced from the American ones, and that I keep hitting
characters I don't mean to! I can only imagine what it will be
like in an Italian or Greek internet cafe.
My first few days on the trip, in New York City,
were a great way to start out. I was able to make some mistakes,
get into something of a routine, figure out that I'd packed my
main backpack wrong, and in general get used to traveling. I also
learned that snobby art galleries (like the Neue Gallery) are
sometimes more expensive ($7) that monolithic collections like
the Metropolitan Museum of Art ($5). After a few days of kicking
around New York [1,2,3],
I headed to JFK airport for the long journey through Frankfurt
to Edinburgh.
I arrived in Edinburgh, passed uneventfully through
customs and hopped a coach (bus) into the city centre. I checked-in
at the High Street Hostel, which is packed full of young folk
(mostly British). Hostels are interesting, and I look forward
to seeing what others look like. The High Street Hostel is two
floors of five rooms with six to ten beds each. Kitchen, showers
and toilets, laundry, a lounge and a pool table. I think everyone
else my age from the States also notices this when they first
arrive, and I've even been told it before, but it still surprised
me just how many people smoke here.
Lisa
Graham [6] (who was studying at U. Edinburgh this past semester)
has let me check my email at the university library, which closes
soon, so I'll try to summarize my most recent adventures quickly:
The National Galleries here in Edinburgh (all free
this year) are great. The Portrait Gallery was the best, being
housed in a fantastically interesting Victorian gothic building
in the centre of the New Town (adjacent to the Old Town, even
though both are older than the US, I believe). There's a small
church called St. Giles that I visited yesterday morning. I was
surprised that there were so many war memorials inside it (usually
brass plaques on the walls). I also met the minister, who turned
out to be an American and former Harvard professor. He'd even
heard of Haverford. Small world :) Today, I saw the Edinburgh
Castle [5], which sits on what's called Castle Rock. The Castle's
had a rather tumultuous history, involving lots of sieges and
has swapped hands between the Scottish and the English several
times. Most notably, it was the birth place of King James VI (of
Scotland) and I (of England), who united the two nations. This
'Castle Rock' thing that the castle sits on is the basalt base
of a long dead volcano that was uncovered when, in the last ice
age, glaciers carved the area. When the glaciers hit Castle Rock,
they flowed around it like water going around a rock (only a lot
slower), and also left a long 'tail' of softer volcanic rock behind
it. It's on this tail-mound that the Old Town of Edinburgh is
built. The Castle also has a dog cemetery in it that was used
in the 1600s by the garrison's officers.
Other fun things: I hung out in an Irish pub (there
are pubs everywhere in Edinburgh. Literally one on every corner),
heard a band called The Roods, and had two free pints of Guinness
beer (cold, not warm. phew) courtesy of the Guinness Girls who
were luckily doing some sort of promotional thing, and thus giving
out free beer. I ran into a friend Sarah Leer from Wake Forest,
who I got to know while I was working on a play there last Fall;
she was studying in Bristol this past semester and just happened
to be traveling with her family and just happened to be at the
Castle Edinburgh at 9:30am this morning when I was buying my entry
ticket.
I was rained-on two days, and had two days of rainless
cloudy days (which are apparently the indicator that spring/summer
is around, rather than winter). I've seen a couple of the ultra-compact
cars made by Mercedes
[8], Daewoo and Toyota (of all companies) that are literally
less than six-feet long. Almost all of the cars here are compact,
and much smaller than the behemoths you see in the States. The
Jeep Grand Cherokee (of which I've seen only one) looks gigantic
next to the small European cars! And finally, I got to see my
friends Lisa and Cat, which was a very nice way to start out my
trip.
Tomorrow, I head to London and am looking forward
to a new hostel, seeing some theatre (my friend Madeleine has
recommended seeing the play 'The Distance from Here' (which stars
a guy I met at a party she took me to last summer, Jason Ritter)),
riding the Tube, and seeing some major British museums.
Cheers from Edinburgh!
[4]
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