Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Photos from Excursion VI: Nature Park


Fountain upon entering park (facing the building that used to be the mansion of the owner of the land). / Gazebo on the river.

Small house for what purpose I forget. / Gate to residence.

Araucaria or Cola de Macao, a tree from Chile.

Bamboo grove and our lovely guide (at the right in first picture).

Photos from Excursion V: Chocolate and Lunch


The first three photos here are from the village that is famous for chocolate. I forget the name, but it has something to do with "beside the church". The first photo is a picture of the church from which the name of the pueblo is derived. The second is a plaza. The houses are typical of what I have seen in the Basque villages.

In the plaza, waiting to board the bus. Eduardo (Belgium) brought his guitar and they were singing a Spanish song while we waited. I say they, because I didn't know the words and so didn't sing along.

The restaurant in another village. This is most of my table. / Suyoun with a really nice girl (whose name I forget) from Venezuela. Suyoun is demonstrating two wine bottle corks because Frédéric taught us a trick with the corks, a sleight of hand that Suyoun is frustrated to have not figured out yet. I don't know how, but I figured it out. It's quite amusing, something to do absentmindedly like twiddling thumbs, but better becasue not many people can do it. I'll show you when I get home (I have two corks now).

Photos from Excursion IV: Walk back to bus


Suyoun and Stani/ Stani and I

Village from road leading from the cave toward the village. Every village is built around a church, and it is usually very visible, like this one. / I saw about 5 or so of these faucets. They can be used by anyone to drink or to use the water for other things. All of them looked the same, like this, too. I'm not quite sure why.

Photos from Excursion III: the cave


Outside the cave on the lower level. This is the stream that flows through the cave and out the other side.

The Cave. Not much to see, but I liked it.

The cave again from below. On the right is a picture of a path that follows the back side of the upper part of the cave.

Picture from the path./ I stepped into the stream to take this photo (well, on a rock, not in the water). It's the same stream from before, just on the other side of the cave. I was amused that Frédéric was afraid I'd fall into the stream. I guess they don't cross rivers on rocks here or climb trees either. How sad.

Photos from Excursion II: Walk to the cave


Road out of the village/A restaurant (I liked the manuscript)

On the walk to the cave/ Suyoun and Frédéric (France)

I'm lagging behind to take photos, so you get to see the backs of the other Erasmus traversing the streets/ Shepherd or farmer

Zivle (Lithuania) and I/ Suyoun (Korea), Ximena (Chile) and Aline (France)

Thursday, March 15, 2007

photos from excursion I


Aline and I/ Ximena and Sandra?? (something like that, but in French) on the bus to our first destination.

From the bus windows

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

march 3

This past Saturday there was an excursion for Erasmus students to the Valley of Baztan, an area very close to France and in the heart of Basque country. We met in the parking lot at the university at 9:30 in the morning and rode in the tour bus for more than an hour until our first stop. Due to the early hour of the trip, most of the Erasmus students uncharacteristically stayed in Friday evening instead of going to the bars, but I think that there were some that arrived a bit drunk from the night before. We rode through a tunnel through the inside of a mountain and up and down windy mountain roads with wonderful views of villages and the countryside, but unfortunately more than one of us were made queasy by the ride. Our first stop was at a cave called Las Cuevas de las Brujas (Witches’ Caves) a short walk outside Zugarramurdi (a small town). It was not huge, like the caves I’ve seen in the United States (like Mammoth Cave or even Marengo Cave in Indiana, but it was nice to visit and it had an interesting, dark but interesting, history associated with it. In 1610 there was a panic in which 300 people were accused of being witches or associated with witchcraft and 40 of the most “guilty” were taken to another city, Logroño, to be judged. They were accused of hating God, celebrating black sabboths with the devil, using metamorphosis, making storms in the ocean, being vampires, and pronouncing curses upon citizens of the area. In the end, 12 were burned, some were let go, and others kept in prison for the rest of their lives. When I was there, I think that there were some Wiccans or “nature lovers” there because there was a group of women from France who were wearing feathers and charms in their hair and on their clothes (hippy-like clothes too) hugging and walking around like the site was mesmerizing them. Apart from the history and the other strange visitors, I was glad to have the opportunity to run around outdoors in greenness and naturalness. There is a lot of green in the city, but it is a city. Most of it is grey.

After the cave, we visited a town famous for chocolate and I bought some dark chocolate coated orange slices. Mmmmm. After the chocolate we drove to yet another small town to eat lunch. It was a traditional Spanish/Basque lunch. Bean soup with break to begin with, a beef stew for the main course, coffee and a sweet (ice cream this time) for dessert, and a bottle of wine to be shared among 4 people during the entire meal. At my table, only one person wanted to drink, though, so he got the entire bottle. Apparently it was good…I didn’t think so.

After lunch we visited a natural park that once was a huge private property. Close to the house, there was a garden with trees planted from all around the world. China, Chile, United States, Korea, countries with very different climates were represented, but the trees all seemed to grow fine in the park. Our guide explained to us that the breeze from the ocean, which was less than a 30 minute drive, keeps the climate mild. I saw a tree from Chile, which made Ximena happy; a sequoia and cypress from southeast United States, which made me happy; and a gingko, which made Suyoun, my friend from South Korea, happy. I was glad to be walking with a friend of mine from the United States who had taken a botany class recently, and so understood the latin names. In this way we were able to translate the trees into English from Spanish (via latin) and understand a bit more what we were seeing. The park was our last stop, and then we headed back to the University, tired.

Thursday, March 8, 2007

Same trip: Part XVIII





These are photos of Casco Viejo, the old section of town. The impressive looking building is the old Ayuntamiento, where the government was housed. Unfortunately, the building is not open for touring, and all you can do is look and read the sign (which says more in Spanish than in French or English, perhaps due to lazy translators). Wow, just to let you know, it is a strange feeling to type in English while talking to a friend in Spanish at the same time. The square with the gazebo is Plaza de Castillo, which is a famous meeting point in Pamplona for friends and everyone, since it is so well known and close to everything (shops of all sorts, restaurants, bars).

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

march 4

The past two Sundays, including today, I have attended church at la Iglesia Cristiana Evangelica. Both Sundays I have ridden the bus, because it is more than a 30 minute walk. Last Sunday Ximena went with me, but this Sunday I went alone, arriving a little late because I missed the bus by one minute and had to wait 20 minutes for the next one. (oops) I enjoyed it a lot. Unlike in the masses I have attended here, the people sing and there is teaching directly from the scriptures and it feels like a community. Last week, when Ximena and I entered the church, we were greeted by many people to ask us our names and where we are from (after hearing our accents), and to welcome us to the church.

I was surprised to recognize one person in the church from the university. It was a man that I had seen in a Spanish class that I attended for one day to make up for missing one of my own section. His name is Luke and his wife’s name is Jodi. They are here, with their six kids, to be missionaries. The family is from near Grand Rapids (small world), has lived for 10 years in Romania, and has been here for a year and a half. Next year they will open a church in their town, near Pamplona, called Multilva Baja. I also met, between the two weeks at the church, two au pairs, two from the United States and one from Canada, and a high school foreign exchange student from Nevada.

Today, after church, Jodi invited me to eat lunch with the family. So much food! And so good. I ate more today than I have than I have at any one time this month. I’m not quite sure why the family is still thin. It was my first time in a house (not apartment) and with a family in a month. I spent all the day there and there was a Bible Study with one of the guys from the church and the older kids from the family in the evening at the house. We played games, talked, and it was so nice to just relax in a house with people and understand everything that was being said. It was a genuine day of rest. A half day in English I think isn’t bad when I haven’t spoken even close to a total of twenty-four hours worth of English here yet. Jodi is going to teach me how to make tortillas here (flour, like in Mexico) and pancakes so I can have them in the apartment if I want. I found out that there is a Bible Study on Friday evenings as well in the house, so I’m going to ask for a ride out to the house to attend it this Friday.

Thursday, March 1, 2007

Other side of the river ("Tour Part ?")


Bridge to barrio Rochapea/ shadows of Suyoun and I



View from Old Bridge across River Arga/ the old bridge (San Pedro or something like that)


River Arga

church on river