Showing posts with label Bristol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bristol. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 November 2007

Thanksgiving update

Gonna do a little update while we're waiting for the bird to cook. I haven't gotten to write much about Bristol in between trips. Everything here's been great. I'm just going to start writing in no particular order.


Dali's Birthday:



We went to a Japanese restaurant for sushi and karaoke. What a great time! The whole gang was there, and what's better then eating sushi, drinking sake and singing spice girls songs with friends? The sushi was delicious, me and Nick split some kind of sampler thing so we got to try all kinds of raw fish. It wasn't in rolls like a lot of sushi, so that was a little disappointing. But still great.

The bartender was on his computer checking his Facebook, so I made him add me to his facebook friends. He was also watching heroes, and I told him what a great show it is. So now me and Chris Wong are good friends on Facebook.

Big American Party:

Mom did me the kindness of bringing ping pong balls, so we were able to host beer pong! No one had ever played it before; so us American's had to teach. If any of my Brick friends are reading this, just know that we ran house. Some of the British guys played it for 3 days straight after that. I think it's really catching on.

John's Mom:



I didn't get to see John's mom for very long, because she came just a couple days before I left for Barcelona. She brought Pork roll!! We still have a little left. I had no idea how much I missed it until I had some again. She also brought double stuff oreos - always a treat.

John's mom (or as Mai-lys would say, John mum's) took us out to a local pub for a pint, which was very nice. I found out our warden works at the pub. So now we're friendly - he may be stopping by for Thanksgiving.

Guy Fawke's Day:

Guy Fawkes tried to blow up the Parliament building, but failed. "Remember, Remember, the 5th of November." The only reason I know anything about it is V for Vendetta, but don't tell anyone I said that. For Guy Fawkes night, we watched Alex spin balls of fire around in the park:



I tried it too, but they were unlit. I'm not that crazy. People were setting fireworks off all over the place - it's almost like the 4th of July of Britain, but without the barbecues and nice weather. Oh well.

Good cooking:

We've been doing a lot of cooking recently, just to spice things up. It started when I made Toad in the hole. For those that don't know, that's a Yorkshire pudding with sausages in the middle, and usually some mashed potatoes. Turned out pretty good.

Well, Mai-lys and John made eggplant parm, which turned out great. Nick made pasta with homemade sauce - delicious. Mai-lys brought her French friends, Astrid and Francois, and they all made a great rice dish, complete with fancy Tesco wine.

Probably the coolest dinner we made was homemade perogies. Marta had the recipe, and made the filling, and we all helped make the perogies ourselves:

We made 120 in all and feasted all night. We still have a few leftover if you want some.

Piia made pirakas (I hope that's spelled correctly) which is pretty similar to a perogie. It's thinly rolled rye bread with potato in the middle, shaped and then baked.

We went out for Piia's birthday to Revolution bar, which was nice. Nick's brother came, and we got the DJ to play Piia's favorite song. Nick's family went for Dublin the next day, and just got back today for Thanksgiving.

Me and Sehar went out last night to a movie called Persepolis. It's about an Iranian woman and her hardships. If any TCNJ'ers are reading it, yes it was our required reading from freshman year. I really enjoyed the movie, and afterwards we went for kebabs:

Not a whole lot else to report I don't think. Mai-lys and I made a huge apple pie for thanksgiving today, and it looks great. I'll post a picture when I can. We're having turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, veggies, cranberry sauce - the works. And we're expecting about 20 people to eat. Have a great Thanksgiving everyone! Sorry I couldn't spend it with you...

Sunday, 7 October 2007

Double your money

The Giants just won, awesome. Now I have some updating to do:

Ok so the last time I posted was last Friday. Since then, a lot went on, but nothing much happened, if you catch my drift. Friday and Saturdays, Hannah and Dali and all of them go home because the locals are all out clogging the pubs/clubs on their nights off. So we tend to stay in Nelson House and hang out with our international and English cohorts.

Friday night, we went to a pub to watch the English rugby match. Johnny Wilkinson and company beat up on some team that I don't remember anymore. I met this kid Philip, who's originally from Hong Kong but has been living here for 3 or four years now. I just had a couple Guinness' (which is much better here then at home), but he drank far too much. He told me that I should never, ever say sorry in the UK. He insisted that you only get 3 points when you score in rugby, even though I watched England score 5. He also raved on about some other things I've since forgotten. But after the game, we went to his flat for a little while to celebrate.

I think it was that night that I made my pact to wrestle Vidar at some point this semester. He's a big boy:
That's my roommate, Pilla, on the left, and Vidar on the right. He's going down. He don't even know. (We're good buddies, it's just in fun)

Phillip proceeded to make all of us laugh the rest of the night. He tackled Lora, Vladimir's girlfriend, and begged her for a kiss. He stole a bite of Donner Kebab right off of Vladimir's fork. When Vladimir went to get him back by putting a dollop of mayonnaise on his face, he licked it right off his finger (ugh). He's lucky Vladimir's a peaceful guy, because he's very big:

That's me and Marta on the left, while Vladimir enjoys some of my fine American hip-hop music (these pictures are from last night, which i'll get to).

So after a while, Phillips alcohol consumption caught up to him, so he had to throw up, and then he had to go to bed. We kept right on hanging out in his flat though, hahaha. Eventually one of his English flatmates came home to find us, and asked if we wanted to go upstairs to hang out with more people. Me and J.B. went, but everyone else went to bed.

Up in 092 were some new English people who's names I've entirely forgotten. They were very nice though, we talked about America, and how every last one of us eats McDonald's everyday and carries guns, and loves George Bush. It was funny.

The last time I posted on this blog, I didn't know my last flatmates name. Her name is Maï-lys (my lease), from France. Mai-lys is a very nice girl. She drew me a picture, and she made us quiche one night, which was scrumptious. Her and John hadn't seen the Clifton suspension bridge, so on Saturday me and Nick walked with them, all around town. Again. It was a nice day though, and I wanted to walk, so it was nice. We also ruthlessly degraded the wonderful statues of Bristol:

Take that, pirate beetle that makes no sense!


On the walk home, I got to take a picture of a piece of graffiti by a man named Banksy. I forgot to mention him last post. Banksy is an anonymous man from Bristol who travels around the world and puts graffiti art everywhere, including the Israel West Bank barrier. They are usually satirical messages. He's recently become very famous, his canvas works selling to the likes of Angelina Jolie for hundreds of thousands of dollars. He has two pieces in Bristol that I know about. I like the other one better then this one:

But this one is posted on the side of a sexual health clinic, which is pretty funny. The people of Bristol voted to have it stay, rather than be removed.

After a long day of walking, we hung out in Ben's flat the floor below.
Vladimir made some of the most delicious pizza I've ever tasted. He used eggs and mushrooms on one, and it was actually really really good. He said he's going to open his own pizza business one day, and I told him I'd buy stock in that. He's going to make pizzas for us one night also, hopefully.

On Sunday we went to campus to watch the French vs. Georgia rugby game. (We watch a lot of rugby, it's the world cup so we have to.) The French won 63-7 or something ridiculous like that, it was really funny to watch.

I think Sunday night we met Dali's dad at a pub. He seems like a pretty nice guy, and he works in computer security, so I told him about my internship this summer. When Mai-lys ordered a round of beers, they gave them to her warm for some reason. She asked them for new ones, and they refused saying they warned her, so she said "I don't speak English!" Eventually they gave us a bucket of ice, and we drank our lukewarm beers.

The week was pretty tame. On Monday we went in, and me and John had a bit of a row with our advisers. They told us originally that we could take history classes, but when we came in they said that we couldn't. Eventually John got his Mom involved, and she put her two cents in. Moms fix everything. So now we can take history classes, but it took almost all week.

I had my first class on Friday with John, which was Intro to Visual Culture. The lecture itself was pretty good, our professor is quite intelligent. We learned about art and how technology throughout the ages helped art expand, basically. After a short break, we had a second half of the class, with a tutor. This was much more boring, because the guy just carried on forever and actually said little to nothing.

Art classes are on a separate campus, and everyone there is dressed like...art students. They all wear crazy clothes and have wacky haircuts, and there's me and John, the engineering/math degrees, dressed like lazy Americans. Me and John both fell in love with a girl with dredlocks and a miniskirt. Like dredlocks, she's on top of the rasta.

We've been playing wii bowling and other games at Dali's flat. John's so good at boxing, he doesn't even have to look at the screen, he just throws his fists while he sits and talks to us. Eventually, the opponent gets knocked out. Amazing.

One of the nights early in the week we tried to go out to Oceana, but it was kind of late and the bouncer didn't like the look of me, or something. So I was going to just walk back to Nelson House, but Nick and John left and got me. We Americans stick together. I feel so loved <3. size="3">Żubrówka (zoo brohf kah), which is "Bison Grass Vodka" from Poland. Marta brought that. It comes with a blade of grass inside the bottle, which is like a classy version of the worm at the bottom of tequila bottles. Naturally, I ate the grass once we finished the bottle. It tasted like...grass.

A good time was had by all. Even Pilla joined in!


Jean Baptiste had a little too much to drink and threw up on our carpet, and all in the girls bathroom. Poor guy, it's not his fault - his country is going to win the Rugby Cup! Luckily he didn't let that get him down, as you can see:
Phew, finally done! I have a headache now from all that writing. The things I do to keep good memories...

Friday, 28 September 2007

Cheers Drive!

Ok ok, so this blogs supposed to be about my studies in Europe and I haven't posted a single thing about it yet. I've been putting it off for too long, so here it goes from the beginning:

I woke up early Sunday, nervous and excited. After one last family breakfast, I did my last minute packing up and watched the Giants lose again. Then after a couple of hours of "Am I forgetting anything?" me and my mom left for the airport.

We brought Chris, because he's going to NJIT right next to the airport. After a very sad goodbye with my mother, I checked my guitar and behemoth bag, which was actually 3 pounds overweight but they let me get away with it. Then Chris and I talked about how excited we are for what the future would bring. I think he's going to school is going to do wonders for him.

Ok so on the plane I sat next to an elderly couple from somewhere nearby Bristol. They hate air conditioning apparently. They gave me the inside scoop on Bristol and what to expect. He said I should go see the suspension bridge and go to Bath, both of which I did. He also suggested I go to Prague, but we'll have to see. The plane trip was long and I didn't get much sleep. It was cool when the sun came up though, the clouds were really pretty and you could also get a pretty good view of Ireland's farmlands and such.

When I got off the plane, my taxi wasn't waiting for me like planned. So I had to keep calling UWE from a payphone until they sorted it out. When the taxi did come, he was very nice. He gave me a pretty detailed tour of the city. He also told me that in England, the two things you can never trust are the women and the weather, which was a good laugh. I tipped him 5 pounds and went to go in Nelson House, but they don't have an office there where you pick up your keys. I had to go all the way to campus and back with the taxi just to get them. I tipped him another 5 pounds for that, but I just found out that you never tip taxis here - in fact, you rarely ever tip anyone! That's good for keeping my bar/club expenses down a little bit, at least.

Ok so when I finally got in my flat, I was all alone. So I unpacked and tried to take a little nap (I was exhausted) but I couldn't. So I walked around until I found a Wilkinson (not Sainsbury, long story) and bought my cleaning supplies. When I came back, I ran into my first flatmate, Nick. I also kind of met my flatmate Piya (I don't know if that's spelled right but it sounds like pea ah, she's from Finland). She was stuck behind the door, because are lock was jammed somehow. So me Nick and Pilla spent a good 5 minutes trying to open the door as our first experience together. Since then, we've gotten a new lock.

I accompanied them back to Wilkinson to get supplies again, and we went and ate at a Subway. That night, me and Nick stayed up and had some Strongbow, which is a type of apple cider. Apple cider is very popular here, and it has about the same strength as beer. We were both really jetlagged though, so we stayed in that night.

The next day, John arrived, with his friend Hannah. Hannah goes to UWE, but studied at TCNJ for a semester, along with her boyfriend Dali. Christina also arrived, and she's from Germany. I still don't know my last flatmates name actually, but it starts with an M and she's French. I'm actually going to make sure I know it by tonight, as I told her she has to come with us to watch the rugby game with our french friends. More on that later.

So Hannah took us to Asda, which is basically the British Walmart - in fact, it's owned by Walmart. It's part of "the Walmart family." Hannah took us out to a pub for a couple drinks, and she taught us a bit about british culture. When you get off the bus, you have to say "Cheers drive!" They actually say cheers quite a bit, instead of saying thank you.

I kind of forget the order of what nights were, so I'm just gonna say some of the things I've done now. It's probably my own fault for being too lazy and waiting until i was here almost 2 weeks to post anything.

I think on the second or third day we were here, we went to UWE for orientation. International students get there own special little 4 day thing, and then freshers have a whole week as well. However we ended up skipping most of it, because it's mostly things like "don't go out late at night alone" and etc. We also had icebreakers, where we had to remember everyone's name and associate it with an animal. This was by far the funniest part of orientation, because everyone was foreign and not everyone had a good grip on how to speak English. Vidar from Norway couldn't think of any animals, so i told him he could be a vulture. No one could pronounce Paulius the Panther's from Lithuania's name because he says it kind of wierd and fast, like this: ball loose. Other notable people from the circle was the very foxy Fiona the Fox and the lovely Loren the Lion, both from France. I've also talked to Cidar the Camel from Germany, but i haven't seen him in a little while. I was John the Jaguar, and John Bryndza was John the Jackass.

Ok so I think we went back to Hannah's flat that night and met some of Dali and Hannah's friends, and had fajitas and some drinks. We also watched The Mothman Prophecies, which is an essential part of any good night. John left Thursday night to go to London to see his girlfriend Caitlin, also from TCNJ and I've also never met, and me and Nick stuck around in Bristol for the weekend.

On Thursday evening, we met a bunch of French guys who are fantastically fun. Vladimir is a 6'5 giant who loves "vode kah". Jean Baptiste is a slick guy who tried to teach me French curse words when I was drunk. Ben has a ludicrous hair cut, and drinks too much Vodka Red Bull's. Also there is Loren the Lion, who's a crazy artist. And Damien, who I think is probably gay. In some ways stereotypes of the French are very accurate, and in other ways they aren't. For example, they are all very fashionably dressed and they all smoke cigarettes. However, they aren't snobby or mean to American's at all, at least from what I've seen.

We went to one of the bars on campus (there's 3 - did i mention British people love to drink?) for the rugby game, which was France vs Ireland. I think the score was 25-3, and it was good fun for all of us at the table. I think we watched a soccer game, Man U vs Chelsea, on friday with them too, but it was a bit boring.

English students started arriving in Nelson house on the weekend, and there were a number of parties in the dorms to welcome everyone in. I played this English drinking game called arrogance. You put however much alcohol you want in a cup and then flip a coin. If you lose the call, you drink, and if you win you pass it on to the next person. Unfortunately it doesn't matter what your drinking, so you could end up drinking 2-3 different types of drinks in one, ugh. Of course this happened to me, and it was a very large cup because it got passed in a full circle. I met a bunch of British people, who's names I don't really remember at all. I do remember one black guy named Solsa, or something like that, he's fun. I think I went out for my first doner kebab that night. The only way to properly describe them is, the most delicious drunk food on earth.

I think Saturday or Sunday morning, me and Nick walked to the Clifton Suspension bridge, which wasn't really that exciting, but that's ok. It was about a 40 minute walk, mostly uphill on the way there, so some nice exercise. Apparently it was built in the early 1800's, so it's quite old:


Sunday evening there was an official pub crawl, where a whole bunch of students from Nelson House went bar-hopping. I went with Loren Lion and met her flatmate, Marta, from Poland. She talked to me a little about Poland and how they have vodka with a blade of grass in it. I have a bit of a crush on her, but I haven't seen her since that night, unfortunately. I only had one beer that night and left when the group moved on to the next pub, because I was a little tired of drinking.

This week we spent going out to clubs with Dali and Hannah's friends, who are mostly Indian. There's Sud, Zak, Tanj, Raj, Shalini, 2 Becky's and a Lisa, and also a few others i'm forgetting. (No guarantees that any of those names are spelled correctly). Lisa's from Ireland, and after talking to her a lot at the club last night, I've got a bit of a crush on her as well, haha. All of them are a lot of fun, and we've had all kinds of fun together.

I'll try to give a rough outline of how almost every night has gone this week: we walk over to Dali's flat at around 8-9 with something to drink. We sit around and chat and play drinking games, such as Code or Ring of Fire, which is Kings to us Americans. Code is a funny game because there is no real code, but you just say four random colors in a row and people say if its right or not. If you're wrong, you drink. You don't tell 2-3 people that there isn't a code, and you watch them get confused as hell.

Around 10 or 11, people say they're ready to go out. Then there's a waiting period of about an hour, where we're waiting for other people to join us. At 12 o'clock, we leave, but then we wait in the hallway for someone. Then we wait in the elevator lobby for someone. Then we get downstairs and wait for someone. Then we finally leave for the club, where we're out until 3 or so, dancing to the same 20 or so songs. I'm not a very good dancer, and I sweat alot when it's that stuffy, so I doubt I'll be attracting much women on the dance floor, but it's fun anyway. Anyways, after that you have the option of going to get drunk food, going to the casino (I haven't gone yet, I think that's probably a bad idea with my funds), or going home and passing out.

Ok so Monday night we went to some bar named Tiger something. I tried to escape the round of sambuca by dashing onto the dance floor, because i knew i was going to throw up if i did it. Alas, Hannah hunted me down and forced me to join, and I had to rush up the stairs afterwards to the bathroom to throw up. That's ok though, because John has me outclassed: he knew he was going to throw up on a sambuca shot as well, and Dali forced him to take it. He did, and thought he'd managed to keep it down. But then he threw up all over the bar. Take that, 2 pound cover charge!

Tuesday Night was Oceana, which is a huge nightclub on the waterfront. I went with the Frenchies and Nick. Oceana has 6-7 different rooms that all play different music. The bottom floor is like a psychedelic one I think, then there's Icehouse which plays the typical club music and is air-conditioned. Next to that, there's Aspen, Colorado, a ski lounge theme, Paris, which is a snooty sophisticated bar I think, and the one on the third floor is supposed to be New York. That one's fun, it's plays funk music and the dance floor lights up all different colors, very funky. There's also a couple other bars that are smaller and hard to explain. Oceana is really fun, but it gets kind of crowded.

Wednesday night we went to Syndicate, where John had a dance-off with some crazy guy. He's got some pretty sweet moves, I must say. He's why cavemen painted on walls.

Last night was Panache, which wasn't really that great of a club. They closed at 2, which is a little lame, and the DJ wasn't very good. Also, I took a shot without looking very closely at it, thinking it was sambuca, which is cheap here so everyone does it. However it was tequila, and I very nearly threw up. Afterwards, we walked and got some food. I talked with Lisa on the way, who told me about the cultural differences between Ireland and England.

I've been planning a few trips. I'm going with John, Dali, Hannah and many more to Amsterdam Oct 25th-28th, which is exciting. Nick may or may not come, depending on if his friend is coming to visit him later. John convinced me and Nick to go with him to Istanbul, which is apparently dirt cheap once you get there - 9 euro for top rated hostel rooms... Also I just read in my email that my mom wants to come next month and go to Paris, which would be thrilling. Maybe I can convince her to come to Italy too, because I can't find anyone to go with me yet. I'll be going to London when the Giants go to play, and probably at least one other time. Oktoberfest got scratched off the list because I didn't plan it early enough. It's too hard to get there now. Also, we'd like to go to Dublin and to Spain at some point to see a bullfight. It all depends on how long my money lasts really!

Yesterday we took a big trip to Bath. I went in Taj and Shalini's (sha lay nay) car, and Taj told me about crime and CCTV here. Apparently there are cameras everywhere here - Big Brother is watching you! It's only about a 40 minute drive, and Bath is very nice and quaint. There's a lot of shops, and of course there's the Kings and Queen's Baths, which is a cultural heritage site:

I just took a picture of the outside. There's a museum inside you can go look around, but it's expensive and not everyone wanted to do it. There's also a lot of other nice buildings, including some that don't really make sense, like this one:















We went to a pub there and I had my first fish and chips, which was delicious, and also I sampled the local Bath brew, which was decent. And then after that, we walked around a little more and headed back to Bristol. I think I'll try to update this a little more often so i don't have to write for forever. Cheers!