¿Dónde puede usted encontrar una alpaca? I always wanted one....maybe Spain's the answer...? tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-03-08:/blog/?domain=emmelineau 2007-07-02T01:21:58Z Emmalineau img/travel-blog-feed.png The Wrap Up tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-07-01:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=12&entryid=69153 2007-07-02T01:21:58Z 2007-07-02T01:21:58Z Well, I'm back in Melbourne and, blissfully, back at my laptop with all it's keys in the right place and no arabic letters anywhere! It's strange....in the past, it's always been a bit surreal to come back home but this time it's felt like a natural extension of the trip. Not sure why....maybe travellings just becoming a bit more second nature now. Our time in Morocco wound up in typical hot and cold fashion. We spent two unexciting ... Well, I'm back in Melbourne and, blissfully, back at my laptop with all it's keys in the right place and no arabic letters anywhere! It's strange....in the past, it's always been a bit surreal to come back home but this time it's felt like a natural extension of the trip. Not sure why....maybe travellings just becoming a bit more second nature now.

Our time in Morocco wound up in typical hot and cold fashion. We spent two unexciting days in Fez. The most medieval city in Morocco, it's a strange mix of old and new and not an entirely successful one. We felt a bit alienated there; after the friendliness of Marrakech, many of the people we met were downright rude and seemed to resent the presence of foreigners. This was the first time we'd encountered this attiture in Morocco and it was a bit sad. That said, it was a fun city to explore and we met some fun fellow travellers who we introduced to the wonders of hammam! We moved on to Meknes, a smaller but much more enjoyable city. We explored a beautiful roman ruin from the year dot; the city of Volubilis was the Roman Empire's most far-flung outpost and it's incredibly well preserved. We wandered around the virtually-deserted site, inhabited only by storks (whoever decided storks should be the cute bearers-of-newborns was off their tree...storks are seriously freaky birds!) After a morning of this, we wandered the souks and had a great dinner in a palace before spending a couple of quite-cold hours waiting for a night train back to Marrakech. One more day/night was spent in Marrakech, doing last minute shopping, before we headed back to Essaouira for the world-famous Gnaoua Music Festival. The festival celebrates the folk music of Morocco and has many world-music artists on the bill as well. Despite the crazy wind that was blowing a gale and making it difficult to enjoy the bands, we had a good dance and made some new friends who we then took for a beer before we had to get on a night bus to Casablanca.
It was a whirlwind day but soon enough it wound to a close, and we were on a bus to Casa for our flight to Madrid.

Our day in transit was well worth forgetting but then we were in Madrid where we indulged in the pleasure of an english-language film and some yummy tapas in the city centre. It was so nice to be able to show Pip the sights I'd discovered when there 6 weeks before and we spent a beautiful day exploring the city, kicking back in the Retiro gardens and eating tapas in the Plaza. Sadly, Pip was ripped off by a gypsy who managed to make off with a not-insignificant sum in euros. Pip was pretty shaken and I was devestated to have to leave her in the city be herself as I made my way to London via Lisbon. But she kept her head and managed to enjoy the next few days in Madrid before heading to Barcelona to meet up with friends. Our month in Morocco was probably the most time Pip and I had ever spent together, just the two of us, and it was a pretty amazing time. In hindsight, I'm very grateful Mum decided to bankroll her expedition as I wouldn't have enjoyed the trip nearly as much without her.

I spent an uneventful night in Lisbon before making my way to London for three action filled days in London. Sadly, the combination of Wimbledon and Glastonbury had ensured that the weather was completely crap so I spent a lot of time on the tube getting from place to place as opposed to my usual method of wandering the streets until I find what I'm looking for. But it was a great feast of films, theatre and galleries (my usual travelling triumvirate), interspersed with numerous hours trolling the bookshops on Charing Cross Road for new finds. I actually battled a man with tourettes for a short story collection in one second hand bookstore, and gladly came away the victor. I had drinks with my ridiculously cool aunt Ali in a members-only bar in Soho; Ali is a sought-after costumier who works mostly in film and high fashion so she had lots of fantastic gossip to spill. I was equally glad to see Ali and the volumes of gin available (missed gin enormously whilst holed up in Morocco!)
After three rainy days, it was time to venture back to Heathrow for that interminable flight to Melbourne and my trip back to reality.

So here I am, in Melbourne weather that, bizarrely, resembles London's summer weather. Here's hoping this blog provided a bit of entertainment for those of you who've been following my stories...I've put a few photos up and will add some more soon. Lots of catching up to be done so will see most of you soon in person.....

Em xx

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Monkeys and waterfalls in Morocco....who knew! tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-06-18:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=11&entryid=67036 2007-06-18T15:56:27Z 2007-06-18T15:56:27Z Well we're on the home stretch now; five days left in Morocco. We've had a pretty busy time since we left Taroudant, where we spent a day trying to kill time before our night bus to Marrakech. It was a sweet but pretty quiet little town - our best discovery were a series of little stalls selling Moroccan donuts; enourmous (the size of two hands side by side) and available for the high price of 1 dirham, about ... Well we're on the home stretch now; five days left in Morocco. We've had a pretty busy time since we left Taroudant, where we spent a day trying to kill time before our night bus to Marrakech. It was a sweet but pretty quiet little town - our best discovery were a series of little stalls selling Moroccan donuts; enourmous (the size of two hands side by side) and available for the high price of 1 dirham, about 14 cents!! They were fantastic!
We made it to Marrakech after a ride in the night bus and an early morning stay in a pretty divey hotel not too far from the bus station. In the light of day we hightailed it to the medina; the centre of all the action in any Moroccan city. Luckily we happened upon a ridiculously beautiful, insanely cheap hotel in a quiet back street quite close to the medina. Tiled, with detailed coloured paintwork everywhere and open-air terraces on every level, we were ecstatic to find such a prefect base for our Marrakech explorations.

We took a day to settle in and then began to explore in earnest. Marrakech features miles of souks, interspersed with hammams (communal sauna-like bathing houses to which Pip and I have become somewhat addicted!), mosques and traditional workshops making everything from curly-toed slippers to painted handcarved mirrors. Its very humbling to watch the ancient, wizened craftsmen at work and made buying things from the shops or workshops themselves very satisfying! Pip and I were mostly present shopping; its like a second Christmas finding things that you know everyone at home will love. One of the funniest requests was from our 4 year old niece, Olive, who repeatedly requested 'colourful big girl shoes' when asked what she would like us to bring her from Morocco. Her request never wavered over the course of several months so we took great pleasure in locating the perfect shoes for her, as we thought she might have envisioned them when making the request. One of the most pleasant suprises about Marrakech was how much it differed from other peoples descriptions. We can happilly report that we suffered very little harrasment, just the usual shopkeepers trying to get us into their shops. Luckily, we've perfected our uber-friendly brush off and noone seems to take offense. That plus the grudging acknowledgment by the shopkeepers of my supposed 'Berber likeness', which apparently means a tough bargainer, made our time in the souks pretty hassle free. We have drunk copious amounts of tea, pretended expertise on a ridiculously wide range of merchandise and haggled our little hearts out. We also visited the incredible ensemble artisinal, a series of artisan workshops where some of the best examples of traditional and contemporary crafts can be found. And there we met Nordi!

Nordi was our new Moroccan friend, who worked in the jewellery store in the ensemble. He was very sweet ad invited us for dinner a few times when we visited so in the spirit of adventure, we accepted. En route to his house, we stopped in to visit his mother in the hospital and ,et all the family, none of whom spoke english. Nordi's english was pretty good so he translated back and forth. We then headded to his house on the outskirts of town where his sisters and sisters-in-law had prepared an incredible feast for us. It felt a little odd being such honoured guests for no better reason than that we were westerners, but we brought some flowers ans treats with us to help (partly) redress the balance. Unfortunately we didnt get to spend as much time with the women of the house as we would have liked (as western guests, we ate with the men). But we had great chats to Nordi's cousin from the mountains and played with his little niece and nephew, who were almost unbearably cute! The food was amazing and I wished I had spent some time int he kitchen to observe the preparation, as I'm not sure I could replicate it. But I'm going to give it a try when I get home!!
Sadly, it seemed Nordi was trying a little to woo us (a fact we didn't cotton onto until quite late) and he had a little tantrum when he realised we were going to catch a taxi back to our hotel and not spend the night (and our remaining days) with him in Marrakech!! But it was still a wonderful experience, that we're laughing about now.

The rest of our time was spent in the numerous parks and gardens - such a nice change of pace from dusty squares and the summer heat. We ate a lot of great street food, watched the crazy entertainments in the main square, the Djemma el Fna, and lazed on the terrace. To recover from the heat and mayhem of Marrakech, we stopped off at the Cascades de Ouzoud, about three hours from Marrakech. Huge mountain waterfalls, in lush forest, with wild monkeys hopping about! We went swimming, listened to a little band on the terrace of our hotel and delighted in the almost complete absence of tourists. The town had a quite hippyish vibe and it was so good to be out of the tourist trap for a night.

Now we're in Meknes after a couple of fairly forgettable days in Fez. We head back to Essaouira later in the week for the Gnaoua music festival and then Pip goes to Spain and I to London, both of us via Madrid....the end is nigh!

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Give five, be happy inside! tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-06-09:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=9&entryid=65358 2007-06-09T11:13:42Z 2007-06-09T11:13:42Z Just realised it's been ten days since I last wrote anything which is pretty lazy of me....it's been slightly madcap here though. I spent four days in total in Chefchaouen which was just the rest I needed after Spain. Then nine hours on a bus to Casa (surely one of the world's ugliest cities) where I was to meet my sister Pippa. Pip flew in directly from Melbourne for her first overseas adventure - what a culture ... Just realised it's been ten days since I last wrote anything which is pretty lazy of me....it's been slightly madcap here though. I spent four days in total in Chefchaouen which was just the rest I needed after Spain. Then nine hours on a bus to Casa (surely one of the world's ugliest cities) where I was to meet my sister Pippa. Pip flew in directly from Melbourne for her first overseas adventure - what a culture shock!! It was wonderful to see her; much as I enjoy travelling by myself, sometimes its just good to have someone to chat with. We stayed one night in Casablanca and then jumped on a bus for Essaouria the next morning.

Now many people had great things to say about Essaouira though you always have to take such recommendations with a grain of salt; often one's view of a place can be coloured by a stay in a particularly great hotel or the discovery of an amazing beach or pakr to chill out in. But in this case, all the praise was justified. Essa is a beach town on the southern coast, laid-back, friendly and full of interesting little market souks and cute cafes. We stayed at a place called the Cave, somewhere between hostel and crashing on a friends couch. It's an apartment building owned by a Londoner, the bottom floor of which has all manner of bizarre hobbit rooms filled with beds. There was a random assortment of Brits, Americans, Aussies and New Zealanders (apparently its only the westerners who seem to travel here) staying there and it had a wonderful atmosphere. Particularly great was the roof terrace where we whiled away a number of hours, reading and generally lazing. Sadly, on our third day there Pip was struck down with a nasty bout of food poisoning from which she is onlmy just recovered. Luckily, the Cave was home to a DVD player and a huge number of DVDs so I convalesced in sympathy as Pip lay comotose for 12 hours! She survived to tell the tale though and hopefully, Iùll remain immune thanks to my relatively cast iron stomach.
Once Pip recovered we spent lots of time exploring the beautiful beach (replete with numerous camel herders vying for custom amongst the more gullible tourists), shopping up a storm in the medina and making a few Moroccan friends, one of whom has invited us back to stay for the Gnaoua music festival later in the month. We're thinking about it....!

We then moved on to Agadir, a bizarre place. The original town was destroyed in an earthquake in 1960 so there's virtually no old buildings. Suffice to say it was pretty boring so we spent the entire day laying on recliners at the admittedly very nice beach. Despite the presence of an umbrella, Pip and I are both looking a little pink today and feeling a little bit sore! The sun down here is pretty unforgiving. We decided to give Agadir the flick pretty quickly and have now foun ourselves in the very pretty Taroudant, Morocco's original capital. We plan to swim a bit in the pool, walk around the souks and prepare for the cultural onslaught of Marrakech, where we head tomorrow....30 degrees every day, tourists as far as the eye can see. It'll probably take a bit of acclimatisation after our laid-back past week!

Til next time....

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Kif, anyone? tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-05-31:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=8&entryid=63945 2007-05-31T20:59:47Z 2007-05-31T18:59:02Z I am no good at arabic. The computer on which i am currently typing is configured for arabic so you'll have to forgive me for the potentially erratic grammar and punctuation of this entry. I spent a couple of incredible days in Granada, which is a fantastic example of a classic andalucian city. Laid back, scattered with wonderful, very casual squares and little pockets of garden. I spent a decent amount of time wandering in the gardens of ... I am no good at arabic. The computer on which i am currently typing is configured for arabic so you'll have to forgive me for the potentially erratic grammar and punctuation of this entry.

I spent a couple of incredible days in Granada, which is a fantastic example of a classic andalucian city. Laid back, scattered with wonderful, very casual squares and little pockets of garden. I spent a decent amount of time wandering in the gardens of the Alambra (and some time in the Alambra itself). It's a beautiful, slightly ruined Moorish palace thqt was never designed to last, which is part of what makes it so incredible. Light filters through detailed fretwork on every window and each wall is a haze of intricate plaster moulding. I was blown away and had a spurt of gratitude that I wasn't here in the summer, when the place must be overrun with tourists. As it was, it seemed like everyone there was looking for good photo opportunities but not really seeing what they were taking photos of.

After this cultural feast and with a couple of hours to kill, i decided to go lowbrow and holed up in a cinema to watch Spiderman dubbed into Spanish. Sadly no english or french or in fact any other films playing here, so Spiderman it was. And it was hysterical - luckily the cinema was empty except for me, as I was laughing at all the bits i'm sure were meant to be serious. Truly, if Tobey Maguire had any idea he'd be voiced over by a spanish eunach with a lisp, he never would have allowed it. I cried with laughter! After this I wandered about, getting my fill of tortilla and churros and all the other spanish foods I might be waiting awhile to eat again, before setting off on the commute from hell.

Ah travel. Five hours on a train, two hours of waiting around, to hours on a ferry, two hours of waiting around, five hours on a bus. Luckily, all the horror stories people had been telling me about Morocco in general and Tangier in particular amounted to not much. Aside from a huge number of people trying to help me carry my bag (which resulted in them breaking a small part of it and then all backing off very quickly!) it's been fine. Everyone wants to try out their english/spanish/french on you and I just smile and nod and offer a myriad of multilingual greetings in return, since hello is the only word i can say in ten languages. The people here are unbelievably friendly, a nice change of pace after the rafts of generally nonchalant spaniards. I'm holed up in the Rif Mountains, in a little town called Chefchaouen. It's more of the andalucian whitewash, mixed with bright blue - it's very pretty. The village is little enough to explore with ease and now that I've been here a few days the local guys have stopped greeting me zealously and are generally much more respectful! It's odd - I've never been stared at this much in my entire life but I guess girls with moon tans are a rarity here. Today I kicked the ass out of my spanish expedition by hiking for 6 hours up to the top of the nearest mountain range, from which Chefchaouen gets its name. Lots of fun since it's only about 30 degrees in the middle of the day at the moment, since summer starts later this week. I saw a couple of cars but more goats then I have ever seen before in my life. It was like a petting zoo on crack! I offered grapes and bread to the goatherds and in return, got to be in Emily-seventh-heaven, patting groups of cute baby goats. Think I could be a goatherd. A few families live up there too. It's crazy; in the village the kids beg for caramels or coins, in the moutains they beg for antiseptic cream and bandaids. It really is another world up here. Particularly when you come down the mountain and the areas that aren't covered with rocks are covered with kif (dope) plantations. They look strangely pretty, such a bright green against the rocks. Kif is one of Morocco's biggest exports though I must look pretty straight, as I'm only asked about five times a day if I'd like to buy a few kilos. Apparently this is low, on average!! But since Moroccan jails don't look too flash, i might give that a miss.

The sun is setting now so it's time for sitting on the roof terrace, eating watermelon and listening to the evening prayers echoing around the village. Really, another world.

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Andalucia tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-05-26:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=7&entryid=62997 2007-05-26T12:42:04Z 2007-05-26T12:42:04Z Well I made it to Valencia, which is a really gorgeous corner of the world. Big wide streets, lots of palm trees (still trying to work out whether these are native or not, there's so few tracts of undeveloped of unfarmed land left in the south). A gorgeous hotel, right in the middle of things and of course, amazing food. We're pretty spoiled for great food in Melbourne but the seafood here is something else. I ... Well I made it to Valencia, which is a really gorgeous corner of the world. Big wide streets, lots of palm trees (still trying to work out whether these are native or not, there's so few tracts of undeveloped of unfarmed land left in the south). A gorgeous hotel, right in the middle of things and of course, amazing food. We're pretty spoiled for great food in Melbourne but the seafood here is something else. I can report that the paella was fantastic! Valencia otherwise involved lots of wandering, quite a bit of getting lost and a few really great galleries. One in particular, IVAM (Institut Valenciana de Art Moderne), was one of the best contemporary art galleries I've seen anywhere; it was incredibly funny. Not overtly cutting edge or trying to be cool (though it was both those things), it was completely whimsical. Lots of works by people like Andy Warhol, Cindy Sherman, Matthew Barney and a whole host of Spanish artists. I was walking around, laughing quite audibly and I think perhaps the guards thought I was crazy. Or a terrorist. Or both.

I then flew across to gorgeous Sevilla, desperate for some sunshine. It hasn't been cold the last week but it has been relatively overcast. Since I know I'll have to spend my month of sunny Morocco time covered from wrist to ankle, it would be nice to see some sun while I still can! I adored Sevilla, in part because I had time to spend with Ale, who is based there while his mother is unwell. Several of his brothers and sisters live in the area, so we had a pretty amazing feast with about half the family on the first night that I was there. His sister, Ofelia, cooked an incredible rabbit dish (I'm eating previously-unexpected quantities of rabbit....Grampsie would be proud)! In typical Spanish fashion, we didn't eat until about 10pm and there was kids and dogs running around until about 1 in the morning. It's been a fairly full-on few weeks for the family, so I think they were glad to take some time out.
Sevilla is a very picturesque city, filled with gardens and wide, tree-lined avenues. The morning after the enormous feast was a big fiesta in the city centre; the Rocio pilgrimage. Gypsies on horses paraded though the city, followed by a long line of coloured wagons on a pilgrimage to the holy site of Rocio. It was strange, as a very-lapsed Catholic, to see people kneeling in the street and praying. Roving bands of musicians played and all the crowds sang along. It was quite magical. After this excitement, I spent the day wandering and exploring the numerous ancient buildings, particularly the Alcazar, which is the Royal Family's home in Sevilla. It's just nice to come to places that have buildings that are more than 200 years old - maybe a lack of our own physical history is what prompts so many Australians to go exploring elsewhere....

Am now in the village of Cartejima, the highest village in the Andalusian mountains. The whole mountain range is scattered with tiny, white-washed villages that, from a distance, look like birds perched in a tree. The people here have lived here for centuries, and they're somewhat inbred and corrupt! They know not a word of english and their spanish isn't even like actual spanish; all their words slur off into nothingness and they all look at you sideways, with suspicion. I feel a little like I'm on the set of a Hollywood Western.
Am staying at an incredible little pension, owned by an expat Brit who bought it a few years back (with cash!) and now operates it as a hostel. He's a former chef, so we're eating like kings and last night sat around the table with a couple of lovely American backpackers and ate and drank into the wee hours. Today I explored the mountains for a couple of hours - this is possibly the most energetic thing I've done since I left Melbourne!! So a lie down is in order!

Off to Granada tomorrow and then next week to Morocco, to meet Pip at the end of the week. Thank god, another moment without sunshine and I think I'd just about cry.

Footnote: Adventure Owl was stolen yesterday, en route to Ronda. He was taken from my bag at the Sevilla Bus Station. I'd like to think he's flown on to greater adventures, possibly in Neverending Story territory. Vale, Adventure Owl.

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Adventure Owl....possibly to be renamed Bastian tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-05-20:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=6&entryid=61864 2007-05-20T15:20:57Z 2007-05-20T15:20:57Z It´s the little things I love. I love that in Spain there is living grass, actual, green grass that indicates it´s rained here for more than 3 days of the last 1825. I love that up and down the Ramblas (Barcelona´s main strip) on a Friday or Saturday night, there are hoards of guys with 6 packs of beer, willing to sell you one if you need a traveller to last the 20m to the pub (unlike NYC, ... It´s the little things I love.
I love that in Spain there is living grass, actual, green grass that indicates it´s rained here for more than 3 days of the last 1825.
I love that up and down the Ramblas (Barcelona´s main strip) on a Friday or Saturday night, there are hoards of guys with 6 packs of beer, willing to sell you one if you need a traveller to last the 20m to the pub (unlike NYC, where you can get thrown in jail for drinking a beer on your own front step).
I love that this city, which is cool in the way that Collingwood is cool (significantly seedy, somewhat industrial in parts, but full of hidden treasures) celebrates music that hasn´t been cool in quite along time - in some people´s opinion (though not mine). In the last week and a half, I have heard the Neverending Story Theme Song three times, on a bus, in a very cool bar and in a shop selling only things made out of string (suprisingly cool). I have not heard the Neverending Story Theme Song this frequently since the mid eighties and I admit, I owned the album. On vinyl. Thus, I am thinking of renaming my Adventure Owl, after the lead character, Bastian.
And speaking of my Adventure Owl, somebody offered to buy him from me today, for ten euros. For those of you who are not aware, I was gifted the fairly-awesome Adventure Owl shortly before leaving for New York. He was made by my sister Anna and I would not part with him for all the world. I´m not sure if her intention was to enable me to take actual tourist photos (instead of my usual photos of random doorways and unidentifiable objects) by inserting the Owl into the shot, thus delivering the requisite amount of irony. ¨I´m not really a tourist, I´m just taking an ironic shot of this stuffed Owl¨ - that kind of thing. Or maybe she just thought I´d need something to cuddle in the absence of Leroy.
Whatever the reason, I now have a not-insignificant number of photos featuring the Adventure Owl. He´s having an awesome holiday!

Anyway, much has happened that is not owl-related. Alejandro has remained in Seville, leaving me to go for broke in his apartment. I have discovered my favourite thing; the Barcelona Filmoteca. They have these government-run palaces of film in most large cities. You can see a movie for E2.70. Yup, that´s about $4. You can get a pass to see 50 movies for about $45. It´s incredible! And they´re great films - this week I´ve watched an entire retrospective on Steven Soderberg (happily in English, for the moments where I just need to hear something I can understand!). I´ve also seen a few great Catalan films and last night I saw this bizarre movie from the 1940s called ´Black Narcissus´about a group on nuns who establish a convent school in a palace on a mountain in India, that was formerly used to house concubines of the local Raja. Part religious drama, part murder-thriller, it was totally insane and extremely cool! Seriously, get it out on video (soooo won´t have made it to DVD). So my evenings have been filled with watching weird films, eating cheese and drinking wine. Nothing more high-tech or high-brow than that!

I leave Barcelona tomorrow morning and head to Valencia for a few days. My main mission for Valencia is to eat paella, lots of paella. I´m in training now, much like those competetive eaters from Japan. Ah, paella. If I survive my crazy eating plan, I´ll write again.....

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¿Donde esta me brain? tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-05-17:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=4&entryid=61392 2007-05-17T13:32:44Z 2007-05-17T13:32:44Z It seems like an eon since I last created an entry here and much has happened since I did! New York wound up in an inimitable fashion - I caught up with Nik for dinner in the West Village before he led me to a divey bar on the Lower East Side where we drank a few beers and tried valiantly to ignore the hideous sounds of air hockey (the worlds most aurally offensive amusement!) I managed to see some ... It seems like an eon since I last created an entry here and much has happened since I did!

New York wound up in an inimitable fashion - I caught up with Nik for dinner in the West Village before he led me to a divey bar on the Lower East Side where we drank a few beers and tried valiantly to ignore the hideous sounds of air hockey (the worlds most aurally offensive amusement!) I managed to see some great avant-garde film in the last couple of days - the kind of films you just know will never make it to Melbourne (even in MIFF). Lastly, my best discovery of the week: Strand Books!! This is a veritable mountain of second hand books. There are also new copies that are extremely well priced. I was in Emily heaven, attempting to weigh up (literally) how many books I could realistically cart around Europe and Morocco. I decided that, for me, a holiday involves copious amounts of reading and I´d be glad of something to accompany me.

So I bid farewell to New York with a last dash to MoMA and Central Park, ready for Madrid. Short flight (7 hours, seems like a walk in the park when you become accustomed to long-haul flights from Australia)....then Madrid´s gorgeous new airport. Yep, it´s new, beautifully-designed and I loved it for about 30 minutes. Until I went to get out cash in Euros (having proudly disposed of all my US dollars so I didn´t have to change a tiny amount). My ATM card didn´t work. I tried 7 ATMs and no love. AT this point, I was getting a little cross. So my Production Management brain kicked into gear and I began coming up with increasingly-ridiculous plans of how to get cash. I discovered that in Madrid you can´t buy a train ticket, a phone card, ride in a taxi etc etc using a Visa card. This is a bad thing. With no actual cash and no place to use plastic cash, I was stuck. Actually stuck, faced with the possibility of living in the airport. I wandered around for 5 hours (yes, 5 hours) trying to use my horrendous Spanish to get people to help me. It didn´t work. The police laughed at me. I´d hate to have been in actual trouble. Finally, as I was contemplating flying to London to use an ATM (and I´m not kidding here), the lovely lady at Iberia Air let me use her phone to call the bank and see if they could sort it out. They did, in about 15 seconds. I hate Westpac.

So finally I could leave the now-loathed airport, after hours of wandering and at least one fit of tears. My first night was spent in a little town about 45 minutes south - for reasons unknown) but maybe to do with the big fiesta commencing on the Tuesday), I couldn´t book a hotel room in central Madrid for the first night. So I caught a bus to Chinchon, a little village that apparently is the home of the liqueur Anis. I didn´t drink any but I did crash out in the hotel for about 12 hours to rid myself of the airport horror. The next morning, I wandered the village and checked out their local castle. The castle looked out over a valley that was alternately crops, grass and olive trees. It looked like a giant patchwork quilt.

I caught the bus back to Madrid later that morning and checked into my hotel. I promptly fell in love with Madrid. A lot of people aren´t that impressed by this village-like city but it really resonated with me. I particularly enjoyed that everything worth having was within a 2km radius of the central plaza. Bars, museums, cinemas, shops...you name it, it didn´t take more than half an hour to walk there. I holed up for several days visiting musuems in the mornings, siesta-ing in the afternoons, seeing films or theatre in the early evening before holing up in a bar somewhere to read and generally chill out. Seriously, I could grow to like this lifestyle of nana-naps being a national past-time and dinner being at 10pm. I found a fabulous little bar that seemed to always be playing Billie Holliday or Ella Fitzgerald, so that became my surrogate home for the week. I ate meals that consisted entirely of cheese (and regretted it later!) I found a Museo de Jamon (thats Museum of Ham - actually just a shop specialising in ham) that my mother and sister Anna would have LOVED! And I´ve come to view tortilla as a foodgroup (who needs fruit when you have potato and eggs!)

The Museo de Prado was excellent, with queues to get in on a Sunday. Grandparents, mums with toddlers, hip cafe-dwellers who looked like they just woke up.....here is a nation that has perfectly blended their love of art and sport. Everyone goes to a museum for a wander around and a chat and then sits in a bar to watch the football. Cool.
The Museo itself was great, mostly Old Masters and a focus on Spanish greats like Velasquez and El Greco. Best of all was their focus on Hieronymous Bosch - all of his best works are held at this museum.
But for my money, the Prado has nothing on the Centro de Reina Sofia. This contemporary art museum, housed in a former hospital, is the home of Picasso´s Guernica (it has a whole floor dedicated to works about/contributing to/inspiring/cataloguing Guenrica) plus volumes of work by Miro, Picasso, Dali and other luminaries of contemporary Spanish and international art. It was incredible....I spent 6 hours there (admittedly with a mid-museum nap in the downstairs courtyard, as much to clear my brain as for any newfound dedication to siesta).

Time came to leave Madrid and return to the hell-airport for my quick flight across to Barcelona. Alejandro met me at the airport: for those of you who don´t know, Ale is a good friend of mine who works for a theatre company here in Barcelona. He´s going to be my unofficial tour guide around Southern Spain. Sadly, while I was in Madrid, his mother had a stroke, so he is going between here and Sevilla helping to care for her. She is apparently bearing up well but has lost her motor skills and speech. Anyway, I´m staying in Ale´s apartment and will hopefully meet up with him when I get to Sevilla at the start of next week.
Barcelona is proving a little more difficult to navigate than Madrid, being a lot more spread out, but equally fun. This morning I explored an ancient ruin situated under one of the plazas in the Gothic Quarter. Sadly the magnificent gothic Cathedral is being renovated so is shrouded in scaolding and fabric but there´s so much to see just wandering around. I feel very much at home in Spain: the focus on the arts and literature, as an inherent part of the culture, makes sitting in the street just watching people or reading a book, a perfectly acceptable pastime. I´m hoping to get the chance to see a little more theatre while I´m here, but we´ll see how we go. In some ways, it´s nice to have a break from it!

But it´s getting on for 6pm, and time for more cheese. I´ll check in again from Sevilla.

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Walking is fun. Kind of. tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-05-10:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=3&entryid=60170 2007-05-11T13:37:53Z 2007-05-10T20:15:33Z So my madcap week in NYC is winding to a close. I can't even remember half the things I've done and it's only been 6 days. Actually my most potent memory is of being almost mauled by a giant chipmunk in Prospect Park in Brooklyn, whilst taking a nap in the sun. OK, so it wasn't like a human-sized chipmunk and perhaps mauled is going a little far but it was still pretty scary. I was ... So my madcap week in NYC is winding to a close. I can't even remember half the things I've done and it's only been 6 days. Actually my most potent memory is of being almost mauled by a giant chipmunk in Prospect Park in Brooklyn, whilst taking a nap in the sun. OK, so it wasn't like a human-sized chipmunk and perhaps mauled is going a little far but it was still pretty scary. I was taking a nap in the sun and awoke to find myself face to face with said chipmunk, which was gnashing it's not-inconsiderable front teeth. I screamed, chipmunk vamoosed. Now that I've got that horror of my chest, I'll try and conjur up some less rodent-focused stories for you....

Have mostly been staying with my mate Lee, who works in A&R for a record label here in New York and lives in an apartment on the Lower West Side with his dog Cato. His apartment is about the size of the kitchen and living room from mine and Anna's house in Richmond. It's a small apartment for one New Zealander (Lee), one Aussie (me) and one springer spaniel (Cato). Nevertheless, it's been great to be so much in the thick of it. The Lower West Side is a very cool neighbourhood and I've been indulging my passion for secondhand books though I know I'll end up lugging them halway round the world, cos try as I might, I just can't let books I've loved go!

The weekend was spent just exploring, seeing some good bands (including the UK soul singer, Amy Winehouse, at the Highline Ballroom - she rocked), seeing some great theatre and contemporary dance, attending several too-cool-for-school benefit parties (one for a new theatre company and one for a gallery). Then Lee and I holed up in the Hamptons for a couple of days. Yep, the Hamptons, of Sex and the City fame (they're probably namechecked all over the place but thats my only reference). The Hamptons are kind of like Portsea - for the mega rich. Yep. The houses are a whole new level of big. Lee had borrowed our house from a rock friend so we spent the day sitting on the deck drinking Lee's almost-toxic South Island Ice Tea (I think it might have had actual fermented New Zealanders in it). We made chowder and played scrabble and walked the dog on the beach, reveling in our impression of a really bad made-for-TV movie.

We then flew to South Carolina, to Charleston, for 24 hours. Bands, beer, crazy civil war museum, staying in National-Trust-registered house with actual bulletholes in the walls from the Civial War, more scrabble (seriously, you can never have too much scrabble). It was strange and southern and I can't do it justice here. You'll have to ask me about it when I get back.

So now Lee has gone to Phoenix for work and I've been filling the days by lying comotose in Central Park, a bit of museum action, some great films, the Bronx Zoo etc etc. I almost feel like a tourist, though people do ask me for directions all the time which makes me feel quite smug! Have also been exploring Brooklyn, which is such a fabulous neighbourhood. Filled with great bookstores, funky clothes stores and an incredible vibe. It's a great antidote to the tension of Manhattan and somewhat similar to home (feels very much like Fitzroy with a better view).

Am going to run now - Nik Pajanti (lighting designer from my work) is in town for a Broadway Lighting Design Masterclass so we're going to go and get drunk in the West Village, Melbourne style (that's really cheaply, in case you were wondering).

Next stop: Madrid.

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I need to learn how to read. tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-05-03:/blog/?domain=emmelina&thisblog_entryid=2&entryid=58726 2007-05-03T07:18:06Z 2007-05-03T07:18:06Z OK. 18 hours to go. The madness of the Melbourne Comedy Festival and it's 18 hour days is almost behind me and it's not a moment too soon! Lucky for me that I have an organised mother who rang me earlier in the week offering to drive me to the airport, for my flight at 10pm Friday. Checking the ticket again for finer details, discovered it was a 10am flight. Yep. My brain (still ... OK. 18 hours to go. The madness of the Melbourne Comedy Festival and it's 18 hour days is almost behind me and it's not a moment too soon! Lucky for me that I have an organised mother who rang me earlier in the week offering to drive me to the airport, for my flight at 10pm Friday. Checking the ticket again for finer details, discovered it was a 10am flight. Yep. My brain (still stuck in the alcohol-infused fug of Comedy Festival) had miscalculated and I lost a vital 12 hours. So now am madly packing, trying to finish off documentation/budgety stuff/assessments for our volunteer TAFE minions, exchanging buckets of gold coin donations from the Photobooth Project into US dollars etc etc. My reputation as the mistress of uber-organisation is slipping. I blame the Comedy Festival. No joke, Comedy has ceased to be funny.

Lucky I have been doing some packing earier in the week, culling items I know I won't need. It's highly unlikely I'll get caught in a tornado or a blizzard, I'm extremely unlikely to be cast as an extra in Law and Order whilst wandering around the wrong parts of New York and it's 100% unlikely that I will trip over Ryan Adams, who offers to fly me to Louisiana on his private plane. Probably won't need all my tornado-defence/TV extra/random star sighting outfits. I'm getting better at this packing thing, but once a Production Manager, always a Production Manager.....I have a stellar tiny first aid kit and little theatre kit full of batteries, safety pins, multitool etc. Ready for any non-tornado emergency.

It's the moment before, that night before you get on the plane, the hours before you realise it's actually happening. I haven't had the headspace to get exited so you'll likely all be subjected to crazy stream-of-conciousness ramblings as I disembark in New York and immediately fall prey to some nasty post-festival flu. Cross fingers for me everyone!

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8 weeks to go.... tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-03-08:/blog/?domain=emmelineau&thisblog_entryid=1&entryid=49084 2007-03-09T03:32:56Z 2007-03-09T03:32:56Z Finally. After all my scheming and planning, my trip is actually drawing near! Being a pathological organiser, with a touch of OCD, I tend to organise my travels pretty far in advance. Thinking about where and when to go, researching destinations and where to stay and where to find quirky little-visited places to visit. So now I've hit the point where all the big stuff is paid for, most accom is booked and I have a ... Finally. After all my scheming and planning, my trip is actually drawing near! Being a pathological organiser, with a touch of OCD, I tend to organise my travels pretty far in advance. Thinking about where and when to go, researching destinations and where to stay and where to find quirky little-visited places to visit. So now I've hit the point where all the big stuff is paid for, most accom is booked and I have a vague idea of what the hell I'm going to do once I skip town. Bliss!

I've dreamed about Morocco for a long time - it's always held a firm place in my imagination and although I try not to build things up in my mind too much, for fear of disappointment, I have a feeling that Morocco will meet, and surpass, my expectations. Best of all, my mother has been feeling somewhat philanthropic and decided that my youngest sister, Pippa, should get her travelling feet wet and join me in Morocco. Since I'm travelling with a friend in Spain and was planning to do Morocco solo, this seems like the perfect plan. Specially for Pip, if Mum is footing part of the bill...maybe my fee for 'finishing Pippa on the continent' will be Mum footing the bill for my shopping trip to the medina in Marrakech! Think Pip and I will make quite good travel buddies - she's the perfect foil to my pathalogical organising (she's spontaneous to the n-th degree). We even have a little international film project on the boil....but more on that later.

Probably time to procrastinate some more and find some new cities to visit!

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