Copenhagen!

Jun. 7th, 2015 11:22 am
aggienaut: (Numbat)

Tuesday, May 26th - "Excuse me, ... sex?"

   I was rather taken by surprise. I had just walked around the corner from the hostel I'd just checked into in Copenhagen, and a woman dressed fairly nondescriptly in a puffy black jacket had said "excuse me" in a politely insistent manner as if she were about to ask me for directions.
   I was at a loss for a second mainly because my immediate reaction to any kind of solicitation I want to have nothing to do with is often to respond "jag prata inte engelska" -- "I don't speak English," but this reaction was immediately tripped up by the simultaneous realization that I was in Denmark and there were pretty good odds she could speak Swedish and/or would be well aware that pretty much anyone who can speak Swedish can speak English. So I was left sort of stammering "uh, no thank you!"

   I was on a sort of lightning tour of Europe -- 24 hours in Copenhagen, 24 hours in Amsterdam, about four days near Frankfurt, and about two and a half days in Sweden. The occasion was a good friend's wedding near Frankfurt. I had found a wicked good deal on Norwegian Airlines -- $560 round trip between Los Angeles and Copenhagen!
   Norwegian is definitely a budget airline. $60 if you want an in-flight meal! If I'm paying $60 for a meal it better be filet mignon and accompanied by candles and a string quartet! Not something microwaved and plastic-wrapped! So I spent a very hungry flight. The couple next to me had booked themselves food service, which led to some awkwardness because the woman clearly felt bad that I wasn't eating and kept glancing over at me while I studiously tried to look busy reading my book -- trying not to make them feel guilty or worse be given food by them and feel like some kind of freeloading lout.
   "You're not hungry?" She finally asked.
   "I didn't want to pay $60 for the meal" I said, feeling cheap.
   "It was??" she turned to her husband in surprise. Now I felt guilty for making them call into question their purchasing decisions. No end of awkwardness over this situation basically.



   It was very easy to catch the comfortable little train from the airport to the downtown station (about 20 minutes) and then my hostel ($37 a night) was right across from the train station. It was nice, smallish, on the more comfortable side of hostels I've been in (bunks weren't just freestanding but each set in its own nook with walls fore and aft, a solid shelf under the mattress, and a curtain to pull across the open side for privacy. After checking in and leaving my bags there I set out to see the town.
   And as mentioned immediately encountered a prostitute. Who didn't even look like a crack-whore. Welcome to Europe! As it was after 5pm I figured the museums would all be closed so just started walking downtown. It was rather brisk, I'm glad I brought my peacoat. I walked through nice cobbled pedestrian-only streets downtown in a canyon of tall old European buildings. I stopped to read the menu on the "Modern American Restaurant!" and a waiter tried to beckon me in, I just laughed merrily.
   I found my way to Christiania, an anarchic district of Copenhagen I had heard about where laws aren't enforced. I had always pictured it as a thriving flea-market of things being sold tax-free, maybe illegally copied DVDs, suspension of alcohol and drug laws, and probably where the prostitutes would be (rather than around the corner from my hostel). I was fairly disappointed though, all I found there was a sort of rastifarian village. The walls were covered in colourful graffiti, red, yellow and green flags fluttered by the dozens in the cold wind, images of Bob Marley an Che Guevara woven on hemp tapestries festooned the shops. The smell of marijuana wafted thickly on the air. I didn't see anything other than crude rastifarian knick-knacks for sale. You're given freedom and this is what you do? I continued on my way.


Nyhavn

   Next I trotted to Nyhavn (new harbour), it had looked cute in some pictures I saw. It was a canal with lots of wooden sailboats moored up all along it's sides, and a continuous row of little restaurant cafes lining the parallel road. I stopped here and had coffee under a heat-lamp.
   By now my feet were killing me. For the wedding we were told to wear grey chuck taylors (converse) and yellow socks. Rather than bring multiple pairs of shoes I decided to ONLY bring the chucks I had bought for the occasion. As it turns out converse have a pretty thin flat sole, and doing extensive walking on un-broken-in converse was just a terrible idea.
   I returned to the hostel and chatted with other people there most of the evening. One funny thing I learned from an Indian fellow currently attending the university at Lund, Sweden, was that "Lund" apparently means "penis" in his native punjabi, so he was very embarrassed to tell people back home where he went to school...


Nyhavn again, I really wish I'd had better lighting.

Wednesday, May 27th - got up as soon as the hostel breakfast became available at 8am. From my experience the "continental breakfast" you get on the actual continent in question (Europe) is incomparably better than the crappy "continental breakfast" you get in the US, which usually consists of a few tiny bran muffins, caustic cheap fake orange juice and nescafe. The hostel had good coffee, freshly baked bread (tasted like it might have been soda bread?), fresh jams and butters and cheeses, ham and salami, and fresh tasting orange juice.
   While I was eating it was amusing to watch on facebook as various reports came in from the other attendees of the bachelor party which would be that evening in Amsterdam. Some people were just arriving in Europe, one couple was driving from Paris, the best man apparently was ALREADY having to jump off the train to puke somewhere near Frankfurt. An auspicious beginning!


They like twisty towers apparently

   I headed to the National Museum, just a quick walk three blocks toward the center of town. Admission was free and I was engrossed in their exhibits which begin with stone age Denmark, with arrowheads, bones, a dug-out canoe that had been preserved under a bog, etc, and advance through time from there. I probably spent an hour looking at exhibits just progressing from 6000 BC to 1500 BC. This is another reason I like to travel alone, what if my travel companion did NOT feel stone age Denmark was worth hours of their time??
   The sea levels rose, and giant elk became extinct, the people turned more towards farming and the exhibits continued on into the bronze age. Swords and tools and daggers, religious emblems of the sun being pulled in a chariot. The burial of a young woman in a beaded skirt, an outfit that looked like something you'd call "unrealistically cute and stylish" if you saw it in a hollywood film.
   I learned some interesting things. Early drawings of their ships looked like they had beaked ramming prows like Greek triremes, which you definitely see no indication of in later viking longships. And I'd always been told that the vikings didn't actually wear horned helmets but there staring at me were some bronze helmets that clearly had horns. Obviously not into battle, but apparently for ceremonial purposes at least tehy were an actual thing.
   On to the iron age and a very surprising amount of Roman trade goods. You don't really think of "vikings" trading with Romans and valuing ornate Roman crafts but of course it's a thing. Copenhagen means "shopping harbor" and while the earliest evidence of habitation there specifically only got back to circa 1000, Denmark has always been in an ideal position as a center of coastal trade between northern Germany and the western coasts of Europe.
   Unfortunately I had only reached the end of the iron age exhibits, circa approximately the end of the Roman era (400ish AD), by the time (noon) I had to leave to go catch my flight (3:30pm). I didn't even get to the actual viking era! Clearly I need to go back! (also my mother ([livejournal.com profile] furzicle) informs me I need to go back because I didn't have a waffle)

   Once again it was an easy transit back to the airport (Lufthavn - air harbor), and I was off to Amsterdam! And that, of course, is another story. ;)

aggienaut: (Numbat)

Daily life in Ethiopia. View larger here. Note in particular beekeeping.
(From the Ethnological Museum)


Saturday, December 6th 2014 - My last day in Ethiopia of this trip -- I had a flight to Nairobi in the afternoon (let's say 3pm?). In the mean time I wanted to visit the Ethnological Museum, and it so happened that Addis, (one of) the cute front desk girl(s) at the Dessie hotel had the day off after working the overnight shift and volunteered to go about with me. So around 7am I got up and went down for breakfast just as she was getting off her shift. To avoid getting in trouble for undue fraternization with guests she walked down the street and I caught up with her down there, all secret like. I think it later became a non-secret so I don't think this will get her in trouble. And while I'm on the subject I just gotta say I love the whole staff of the Dessie hotel from the manager to the doorman, they were all so sincerely friendly -- the next day in Nairobi I posted on facebook that I missed the whole staff. So if you're ever in Addis Ababa...

   First Addis and I walked around the area for awhile. The African Union (AU) headquarters was near there so we walked over there. I think I wanted to check something online but I didn't have a data plan in Ethiopia so I needed to find wi-fi. And just outside the AU building there were a number of youths on their phones using the AU wifi. Addis asked them what the password was and they told me it was "we are all African!" or something like that. Very fitting for the AU, though I'm not sure I qualified to say the magic password ;D Anyway, so step one, not even 8am and I was hacking into international organization's networks! [note to CIA: "hacked" is a bit hyperbole I just used their wifi to check my email please don't drone strike me! hides under desk for twenty minutes]



   From there we got a taxi to the ethnological museum. The museum is housed in one of Haile Selassie's palaces and is in the middle of the main Addis Ababa University campus, surrounded by beautiful gardens. Reviews online had pretty much unanimously said Ethnological Museum was much better than the National Museum and it didn't disappoint!
   There were a great many cultural artifacts and displays with everything from information and artifacts from the monarchy to displays about tribal customs related to marriage and agriculture and everything in between. There was a room dedicated to traditiponal musical instruments, with many examples. And art of course. We were also able to see Haile Selassie's bathroom. Exciting!
   Interesting fact, so Haile Selassie was the last emperor of Ethiopia, I think possibly the last actual de fact emperor on Earth (I think Japan has one with no power at all? Haile Salassie was in fact the head of state), and was a fairly enlightened one at that (National Geographic 1965: "[Ethiopia is] nominally a constitutional monarchy; in fact it is a benevolent autocracy."), though there were certainly some gripes about the feudal system. His title of Ras Tafari basically means Duke (Ras) of the house of Tafari, his position before he was Negusa Negast (King of Kings (Negus = king), ie emperor) and gives rise to the "rastafarian" movement because they worship him as a god. Anyway Haile Selassie, Ethiopian history and Ethiopian royal titles (dejazmach = count) are all fascinating so if you want to read more I suggest you just go to his wikipedia page (:
   In 1975 the communist regime known as The Derg overthrew the monarchy and Haile Salassie died in prison, officially from medical complications, but his doctor denies there were any medical complications...
   Also, I think he looks a great deal like modern comedian and actor Steve Carell:


As dressed in his capacity as university president.

   Anyway the museum was great as museums go. So in summary, I recommend you (a) visit Ethiopia; (b) stay in the Dessie Hotel; (c) eat at the Jewel of India restaurant in Addis even though yes that's a different country's food; and (d) go to the Ethnological Museum.



   During the Italian occupation of Ethiopia during the 30s the Italians built this staircase with one step for every year of Musolini's power. The Ethiopians then topped it with a triumphant Lion of Judah, a symbol of Ethiopia, to be snarky. (:

   From there Addis and I went to a restaurant in another hotel for Italian food, which was very good. And then it was off to the airport!


Nairobi
   In Nairobi I discovered that my Kenyan visa had been voided by visiting Ethiopia. There followed several hours of airport hell where I couldn't get through passport control, I couldn't get a new visa because I didn't have money, and the one ATM that was there wasn't working. The passport control officers (sitting in their office with their feet on the desks cavalierly) kept telling me I needed to talk to customer service and the customer service girl (young, attractive, "librarian glasses," sitting at her desk texting) kept telling me no it was the responsibilty of the passport control officers to get me through.
   Finally I was able to convince the customer service girl to come with me to the passport control office and argue with them in person, which she did. As a result of that she walked with me through passport control to visit an ATM there, all the while explaining that it's really not her job and that she wasn't trying to inconvenience ME she was just trying to force passport control to do their job.
   Finally getting through there I found the driver from the hotel (Kahama, where I'd stayed before, not the best but I couldnt' find anything that looked likely to be better), who had practically given up on me ever coming out.
   Checked in to the hotel and a later went out with my friend Grace to a nightclub in Nairobi. This was another fun cultural experience, though it wasn't much different from a nightclub in the states, I'd imagine, but it was kind of novel being the only foreigner in this happening local place late at night.


Sunday, December 7th 2014
   Last day in Africa of this 40 day trip! On my first day over a month prior I remember just trying to get my bearings in Nairobi and plan out how to see some major tourist sites. On this last day I woke up trying to figure out how I could manage to see as many of my friends on this last day as possible!
   Went to lunch at a pizza place with my friend Wairimu (graduate student specializing in supply chains, which I think is real neat), and then met with my friend Claire at the Thorn Tree Cafe. THE Thorn Tree Cafe. If you happen to be a Lonely Planet type person you'll recognize the name of the Lonely Planet Forums is "the Thorn Tree" -- it's named after this cafe.

   And then that evening I caught a flight to Zurich! A few hours layover in the Zurich airport, during which I had occasion to use the compass I'd been carrying around the whole trip for the first time. And I was off back to California!


And here's an outtake:

I apologize for the off-center-ness, when someone else takes the picture what can you do

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