Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Traveling begins in Athens...


My trip to Athens was AMAZING! It started at 8 am Friday. The bus was supposed to pick us up by 8:15 but because we are in Greece and Zorpeides [the bus company] is never on time, we didn't get picked up until about 9:30.


Most people slept the entire way, which make the ride nice and quiet. We stoped at a Taverna for lunch and continued onto Athens. The trip by bus took us about 8 hours with the stops that we made. It was a rather enjoyable trip. The veiws were amazing! a lot of water, beaches, boats, and mountains.

When we arrived in Athens we drove by the Olympic Stadium that was built for the 2004 Olympics. The city looks like any other large city of 5 million. With a lot of traffic, buses, trams, and of course honking =D. Our Hotel was right on the sea.



Once we checked into our room we took a walk along the boardwalk and took some pictures.




At 10 pm we went as a group downtown to Syntagma Square. This is the main sqare in Athens [Much like Aristotle Sqare in Thessaloniki]. There were shops and resturants, hotels, and the Parliment building was at the top of the square. We were shown a couple of main areas and then we were allowed to go and do whatever we liked. We walked around an went to an Ice Bar and then went home to get some sleep before our long day on Saturday.

Saturday was the day for sight-seeing with our tour guide.

We started by driving around the city a for a little bit and seeing different areas, buildings, parks, tourist attractions.

Our first stop was the Panathenaikon Stadium. This stadium was modeled after a marble stadium that stood in the same spot. This stadium was used for the first modern olympics held in 1896.





From this stadium [like many other places in Athens] you could see the Acropolis [The Parthenon is the most recognizable]



After the stadium we headed to the Acropolis. On the way we passed a really cool statue. Its called "The Runner" and is made out of sheets of glass laid on top of each other.




When we arrived at the Acropolis, we started at the bottom in from of The Odeion of Herodes Atticus, he built this theater in memory of his wife. It can hold 5,000 people and has been restored and is still used today.







From there we headed up the large 'rock' to the gate leading into the Temple of Athena [The Parthenon] and also The Erechtheion. This is the most elaboate gate built for any temple it was designed to 'welcome' its guests. Like the entire site, the gate is also under construction. Where the scafolding is [on the right] there is a room that is The Temple of the Athena Nike built to commemorate the victory of the Greeks against the Persians. On the left there is a room that is believed to be used as a leasiure room. There used to be paintings on the walls but since 400 BC they faded ;).

Next stop is the Parthenon and The Erechtheion. The Parthenon is extraordinary in person. The size is amazing. This temple is dedicated to the Greek Goddess Athena. When you walk into this area you see the back of the temple. As a rule, the entrance of a temple had to face the east.


[This is the front of the temple and me =) enjoying ever min. of it ]


This is the back of the Parthenon. FUN FACT: The Parthenon was built as an optical illusion. For example, the columns are leaning in slightly to make it look straight up and down.

Next is The Erechtheion. For those of you who dont know the story... Athena won the city of Athens from Poseidon when she planted the olive tree for the people of the city. The Erechtheion is built on the place that the olive tree was planted.


The figures that are supporting the the roof of the balcony are known as Caryatids. There are six of them but only five are the originals, the sixth one the British have in a museum and wont give it back.


From the top of the Acropolis you can see everything! We saw the entire city, and also many of the sights we previously visited and other places we would be going.

This is the Ancient Theatre of Dionysos. Experts believe that the origional theater could hold 17,000.



After the Acroplis we went to the Ancient Agora. There were alot of just ruins so I didn't take many pictures but the Temple of Hephaistos is best preserved temple [built in 450 BC].

this is a picture over looking the Ancient Agora onto the Acropolis.




We did this all before lunch! We had lunch at a local Taverna. It was really good food. We had Gyros [umm], Greek Salad, and French Fries. After lunch we could do whatever we wanted so we went shopping and eventually found some friends that were having Frappe in the square. So we stopped. Frappe is a cold coffee drink, actually 'invented' in Thessaloniki, but it is safe to say it is the coffee of the Greeks. Kids at my school CONSTANTLY are drinking this drink and it is probably the most popular drink at the local cafes.


We were so beat by the end of the day, Britney and I were in bed by 10 pm! haha.

Sunday morning we awoke to go and watch the changing of the guards at The Parliment. Every Sunday the guards wear the traditional costume [they have other outfits that are navy blue]. The skirt [yes I said skirt] has 400 pleats, one for each year that Turkey controlled Greece. And they wear funny little shoes. There was a small parade of soldiers that came to the parliment, the guards changed, and they marched away. Its quite a big production. The guards have all of these steps that they have to do before and after changing positions [which I thought would be really easy until I found out that their funny little shoes weighed 6 pounds EACH]. They stand in one spot for an entire hour [not moving! I couldn't do it] Their marching is even different, its made to sound like the galloping of a horse [I didn't hear that but it does have a noticible sound].

After that was over we could go on our own until lunch or there were three events we could choose from. I went on a walking tour of the Roal Gardens and for the hike up the HUGE hill, Lykavvitos Hill. The gardens used to be the gardens for the palace [which is now home to the Greek Prime minister and President] but it was converted in to a park for the city. In the park they had random animals, like bunnies, roosters, geese, donkeys, and other assorted birds. After the garden we headed for the hill that is one of the highest points and you can see the city. IT WAS WORK to climb up to the top but it was really worth it. you could see EVERYTHING.



This is the hill...but this doesn't include the streets and stairs before the hill that we had to treck. you can kind of see the trail that zig-zags to the top.



But like I said....TOTALY worth it!

At the gate of the White washed curch on top of the hill.


After our journey back down the hill we went to lunch. After lunch is was time to head back to Thessaloniki [or so we thought!] Come to find out our bus was broken. So we walked to where the busses were located to find out more details. We ended up waiting about 3 hours for someone to come and fix our bus, mean while there was a park near by and many of us went and played [like we were 5 :)] , we went to a couple of sights near by, and then we went for coffee.



We got to see Hadrian's Arch. The Athenians built this arch in 131 AD in honor of Hadrian.



AND The Temple of Zeus. There are 16 standing pillars today but there used to be 104. They where HUGE columns.


This is one that fell....you can see how they out the columns together in pieces.


They ended up getting the bus fixed and we headed for home.





All in all it was a fabulous weekend and I leave in 3 days for my spring break adventure. So many more pictures and stories to come!


















Monday, March 23, 2009

Byzantine Museum and Rotonda

So on Saturday, dispite the drizzle and cold weather [30 degrees...burrr] Britney, Annie, and myself went to tour the Byzantine Museum and Rotonda with my art teacher. Our first stop was the Rotonda.

[cross landscaped into the bushes]





[fountain outside the Rotonda]

It was built originally as a Pagan Church. Then when Christianity became legal it was converted into a Christian church. Then the Turks took over the region and made it into a mosque and since they don’t believe it icons they covered and ruined much of the art work that was designed by the Christians and the Pagans. During the time of the Pagan religion there was an opening in the middle of the dome for the smoke to escape.


So there was a man-hole cover below the hole so when it rained the water could escape. When it was converted into a Christian church the hole was closed and a picture of Jesus was placed in the middle, but of course it was covered by the Turks and the only thing left is the original charcoal outline of the Jesus that was painted.

[You can see the center has been ruined. theres a blue ring and a ring of Ivy then there are 4 angles, three are visable.]

[Wider view of the dome. The darder ring is a view of 'heaven'. They were large building with peacocks on them. There were saints painted on all of them. there were originaly 16 but only 8 have survived over the years. You couldn't see them that great because of all of the scaffolding]

Over the doors there were mosaics made with real stones and gold and silver. They were gorgeous. The peacock is apparently a religious symbol [never knew that] symbolizing heaven. The Turks left these because they were just simply designes. The cracks you see is from the Earthquake the happened.








The Rotunda was surprisingly small. The walls were 6 meters thick [that’s about 18 feet thick!]. The Romans [who build the Rotunda] thought it would be a weak structure since it was round, so they build the walls extra thick. The Rotunda has no religious purpose today but the Greeks do hold a church service there sometimes.



Next we walked, in the wind and the rain [ewww], to the Byzantine Museum which is a continuation to the last museum we went to.
We saw a lot of byzantine pottery. They only drew designes and they used a lot of earth tones.
Around this time they started making print copies. They did this by taking a piece of metal, scratching the picture into it. then placing the ink on the metal and trasfereing it to a black piece of paper. Some of the prints were really large. There was so much happening in each picture. They were amazing.
They had a room full of just Icons. There were many of Mary and Jesus, this one was one of my favorites.

They had a lot of beautiful class vases. Beautiful colors and designs.



More mosaics. During this time they started puting mosaics on the walls and ceilings of thir homes so they used gold and silver and real gems.


Beautiful bracelet, its real gold! Yes please :). you can buy replicas I hear.




Hand painted book. Its hard to believe that, at one time, people had to write out all of the books, like the Bible! That would take a very long time. And all of the books were hand painted too.



A silver box with scenes from the Old and New Testaments.



This is the Ambo. Its like a pulpit that the priest delivered his message from. This is an elaborate one, not all were like this one. It was of course built from marble and it was mostly reconstructed but it was still beautiful.
These were some of the highlights. I have many more pictures from these museums. I will have to but a slideshow together to show everyone. But Britney took 419 pictures in the museum and thats just a lot to put on here =).
Anyways I'm just getting really excited for Spring Break! Its three weeks away. Next week I have midterms...EWWW! but then Next weekend [the 3rd-5th] we are going on a school trip to Athens. PARTHENON! I'm really looking forward to it. This next weekend is my last free weekend in Thessaloniki. We have something planned every weekend after that until my last weekend here! so I will be pretty busy soon with many stories and pictures to share with you!
More to come!
Love,
Sarah

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

ALSO...

I've edited the settings on my blog so ANYONE can leave a comment. You dont have to create an account this way. What you do is: Write your comment in the box, and below the comment box there is a a line that says "Comment as:" then there is a drop down arrow. Click the arrow and all the way at the bottom is says anonymous. Choose that and you should be able to post a comment, if you would like to. [please just put you name at the end of the comment so I know who it is from =)]

Thank you

Latest Life Update

YA SAS! [Hello in Greek]

So I've been in Greece, for officially, a month and a half. It's crazy to think I've been gone this long but I dont think I would exchange this experience for anything. I've learned and seen so much since I've been here! I wouldn't be here though without the love and support from my friends and family, so THANK YOU SO MUCH for that.

So I just finished my first paper for my managment class and it was 10 pages [woot woot]. It was hard work to get that many pages on my topic but I got it done! =) My teacher didn't give us much criteria for this paper, no number of pages or what kind of information we needed to include, which is not what I am used to. At Eau Claire they tell you page length, how many sources you need, what kind of information to include, so without the structure I [and many of my American classmates] were confused as to how to approach our paper. Other wise my classes are pretty good. We've had a quiz and a paper in my marketing class and they were both 'refridgerator' material [aka I got a 100 and if i was at home I'd hang it on my fridge, but I have no magnets here and our fridge is tiny...haha] My art class and greek class are still my favorite and I'm learning so much in both classes. I'm understanding the locals a lot more and I can communicate better with them. I also CAN NOT WAIT until we go to Paris and we go to the Louvre so I can see all of the beautiful pictures I've only seen on slides in our art class =).

Speaking of spring break we only have 3 more weeks of waiting...YEAH! The week before spring break we are going on a trip with the school to Athens, so be expecting some pretty cool pictures from that. Also this Saturday we are going to the Rotonda and the Bysantine Museum , so more pictures to come from that as well. The Rotonda is one of the oldest standing buildings in Thessaloniki and inside, i've been told, there are beautiful mosaics that have been resently, just in the last year, been released to view for the public. You could always go to the Rotonda but there was construction going on from an earthquake that happened, I believe, many years ago.

So those are some key dates to keep in mind to check back for some cool pictures. Over spring break I'm not taking my computer so you may have to wait until I get back before I can post a lot of my pictures [sorry] but i know we will have lots of fun and I will have MANY things to tell you!

Also, If there is anything you would like to hear more about, something I've mentioned in past blogs or something you've maybe heard about, just let me know because I'm always looking for something to blog about.

Until Next Time,

Love,
Sarah

Saturday, March 7, 2009

I'm still alive...

Mom gets worried when I dont post a new blog :). But nothing really happened this week. We didn't have classes on Monday because it was 'Clean Monday' which is the start of their lent. But I had a quiz on Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, and had a paper due on Friday so my week was busy with school work. This weekend the school organized a trip to Volos but I didn't go. Today Britney and I went downtown to Red Rock because our friend Stephanos was working so we went and had coffee with him. Well Britney and I had Frappe which is 'the coffee to drink in Greece'. It was actually created in Thessaloniki. Its cold, theres ice cubes, coffee, i get mine with sugar and milk and then there is foam on the top and u are supposed to drink it SUPER slow. Its offensive if you suck it down. Greeks are all about socializing and taking their time. They eat outside a lot too its nice. But Britney and I actually drug out our frappes for like 2 to 2 and half hours. =) Becoming more and more European with the days...haha. Thats about it. NO actually Britney and I got lost today on the the STUPID bus today. We took a little adventure but we got to see different areas of Thessaloniki so it was productive! Britney and I may go to an art gallery, or the zoo, or the white tower tomorrow....or maybe all three depending on when we get up!

but i'll let u know if we do any of those things....

love u

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Family Dinners....

Its your lucky day! You get 2 new posts : D. Ok so usually once a week Annie, Britney, Stephanie and I cook dinner and all eat together [family syle]. Well on Friday we asked Vasili to join [because he lives upstairs and we are nice] ANYWAYS Stephanie and Annie made us chicken, mashed potatoes, veggies and we had some salad. Heres some pictures! haha....







The chicken Annie and Stephanie made...


Family picture... The mashed potatoe touch was my idea =) you know like those old pictures with the mom serving the dinner and the family is always rediculously happy...yeah thats what we were going for...haha. PS Vasili isn't 'special' he just cant take a serious picture to save his life =)
Something was apparently REALLY funny.


Annie really liked her mashed potatoes....hahaha


Stephanie didn't want any more...hahaha. i actually think Vasili was pretending to throw them at Steph. haha