YO. So Monday we went to Vilnius. Unfortunately, I haven’t had time since then to write about the trip, so I just wanted to get the photos out before too long. I’ve already got a ton from Berlin, so… yeah.
Anyhow, Vilnius was great. When we first got there, we had to deliver flour to several giant grocery stores, which was weird and exciting, I think- it was the first time a store the size of Rimi was stocking the flour my friend makes. Cool. Afterwards, we drove around the city a bit, then started a-walkin’. Vinlius has soo many churches, but they’re all pretty unique looking. The best was this church that wasn’t impressive from the outside, but once you got in it had some of the most elaborate sculptures I’d ever seen in a church. I think I posted a picture. Um.. yeah!!
Um.. Yeah!!
I’d say more, but I think the pictures do the city some justice. Mostly though I’m tired, so I’m going to go to bed. Maybe pictures from Berlin tomorrow, if I get my act together.
So I came to Lithania on Saturday, spent the afternoon in Riga, and then Saturday night we went back to my friend’s house outside of Siaulia, which is the fourth largest city in Lithania. So if you live in a town outside of the fourth largest city in Lithania, you can imagine that there aren’t a whole lot of skyscrapers around. There weren’t.
Saturday night we watched Lithuania’s national basketball team put up a noble effort against Spain, but, unfortunately, they lost by 12 or so points. It was good to se though, as it was a nice introduction to how basketball crazy the country is. When I walked around town the next couple days, there was ample evidence that this was *the* sport. In a sense it felt like home, if only because people didn’t care about soccer. Good style, Lietuva.
(We call it Lithuania, they call it Lietuva. It’s funny, because they don’t have a voiceless dental fricative, so they can’t actually pronounce thie country name the way we do. I’d sugest calling it their way, but I don’t know how they’d feel about being called Lietuvians.)
Sunday morning we drove into the city and saw the sites. Our first stop is the Hill of Crosses, which is exactly what it sounds like. The pictures I took don’t do it justice, but if you like right angles generally or the lower case letter ‘t’ specifically, this is the spot to see. Really, quite a lot of crosses. Also, I saw a frog. (Alas, no picture.)
After the crosstravaganze, we went into the town. Like most of the towns I’ve been to this summer, they’ve got a really impressive collection of statues and sculptures around the city. Pretty much every other block or so there’s something to look at. We lucked out and had some beautiful weather, more notable as it was the first nice weather any of the Baltic countries seem to have had in the last two weeks.
After we got back from town, we went to my friend’s family’s cabin a couple miles away to make some dinner. Other than the cheese and the olive oil, I think everything we ate was grown by the family. Intellectually, I understand that vegetables come from plants and the ground, etc., but it’s still weird to walk into a field and dig up some potatos, pluck some zucchini, pick some berries, and make a meal. Really weird, but really super awesome.
After dinner, we went back and hung out at the house and I finally bought my plane ticket to go to Berlin. I’ve got a thing about waiting until the last minute. Unfotunately for them, I was only able to get a plane ticket on Tuesday afternoon, which meant they had to deal with me for an entire extra day. As usual, my vegetarianism was a bit perplexing, but with access to the incredible vegetables they have, I think even the most blood-thirsty carnivore would be rarely be hungry.
Hey. So. Yeah.
I decided rather last minute to come to Lithuania. I called a friend in Lithuania and said, more or less, “Are you busy this weekend? Can I come hang out?” And somehow, the friend agreed. I left Tartu on Saturday morning, took a four hour long bus ride, and arrived in Riga. We were to meet at the Freedom Monument. I was a little concerned, because of course I didn’t bother to get a map or otherwise try to figure out where said monument was, but when I got to the bus station, I saw the top of a big statue in the distance. I walked toward it, figuring that at least it would be a big statue, and it turned out to be the place I was looking for.
Having found the correct place, I went to a coffee shop to rest and.. get some coffee. I ran into a guy from my class there, which would have been weird had we not just been on the same bus from Tartu. Actually, it was still pretty weird, but it was about a twenty minute walk away and a weird, expensive coffee shop. (Really expensive. Coffee and a little sandwichlet cost me almost 4 Lats (Latvian currency, duh…), and Lats are almost 2 bucks apiece. Crazy. Anyhow, I met my friend, we walked around Riga, spending most of our time eating and searching for a cat statue, then we drove south to Lithuania, where I am as I type. I am only gonna post photos from Riga today, maybe tomorrow I’ll get around to the photos of Lithuania, which are awesome but deserve their own post.
For those interested, I’m going to be in Vilnius tomorrow, and Berlin (somehow) on Tuesday. Keep your eyes peeled.
That’s right! I went walking!
Yeah! So the Tartu Film Festival is this week, and they set up a giant, inflatable screen in the town square and showed some movies. The theme is love, which of course explains the Kirsten Dunst period piece science-drama extravaganza that they showed. I didn’t have much interest in it, but there was a (film) festive atmosphere in Tartu and the weather was nice, so I wandered around with my homies and took some pictures.
Not from last night but cool nonetheless are the pictures of my pesumaja and juuksur. On Saturday I went and asked the hotel dude if I could get some laundry done, and he said yes. LAst time I was at a hostel in Tartu, a load cost about four bucks, so I figured that in this hotel, maybe eight or ten. No. The prices were similar to the fancy hotel I stayed at in Oslo, aka ridiculous. Like 3.50 for a pair of socks. So I got directions to the place (the same place that washes the hotel linens, incidentally), and I got my clothes done. They weren’t ready until today though, so I had to go buy some new underwear and socks. (SMOG is the name of a popular brand of undergarments, sold exclusively at the store New Yorker. Unrelated, presumably, to the magazine.)
On the way back, I got my haircut. As some may know, I have a thing for getting my hair cut in different countries. Unfortunately for my pocket full of silly stories, but fortunately for my hair, the barbress spoke English. Easy enough. Also, I saw a V40 on my walk home. I took a photo of it, believe it or not.
In other news, I only have three days of class left! What the heck? Then who knows what, followed by confusion, regret, denial, embarrassment, and a flight out of London on the 24th. Still not sure if I’m gonna spend more time in Estonia or go to Finland or Germany or Lithuania or whatever, but we’ll see in the next couple days. In the meantime, I’ve got some dialoogid to tõlkima and then I have to magama because I am väsinud. See if you can figure that one out sõnaraamatuta.