Saturday 21 February 2015

The Past Six Weeks

I take the train to work every Thursday and save all of my tickets so I can be reimbursed at the end of each term. It felt like I’d been back from Dusseldorf for about three days and was utterly dumbfounded when I added the last two tickets to the paper clipped stack of six weeks’ worth of teaching. I have no idea where the last term went. It’s been a whirlwind of throwing together lesson plans, reading a shedload of books and consuming a gallon or so of Loire region wine. I went to an Ed Sheeran concert in Nantes, finally got round to reading Le Petit Prince and booked all manner of exciting trips to carry me through until the end of the academic year.

When I got back to France in January I decided I needed to speak a hell of a lot more French and so we decided to start going to Café des Langues, a fortnightly gathering of internationals who want to practise their foreign languages or offer up their native tongue to other language learners. Over a few drinks we made friends with some lovely Brazilians who are studying at the university in Le Mans and have since been welcomed into their huge friend group of dozens of international students. Being a language assistant is great, but making new friends when most of the people you interact with are younger than ten can be a bit tricky. Our weekends now consist of dinner soirées, beer pong tournaments, museum trips, cinema jaunts and Cuba Libres in our beloved Mulligan’s pub with a myriad of people from all over the world, where our main mutual language is French. I’m finally making some real French progress and the headaches from entire French days are slowly becoming less debilitating. RESULT.

Anyway, the end of a term means yet another half term break (I swear I work sometimes), this time taking form in a trip to the Berlin International Film Festival with my friend Jennifer from uni and a Megabus extravaganza through Brussels, Bruges and Amsterdam with my house mate Alicia.



BERLIN
I caught a train to Paris on February 6th, stayed in Jennifer’s minuscule yet adorable Parisian flat and the following morning dragged ourselves onto the RER at an ungodly hour for our early morning flight to Berlin TXL. We spent the first day wondering around the various ticket outlets trying to get into Charlotte Rampling’s new film with Tom Courtenay, 45 Years, and eventually managed to score tickets for a 10pm showing (cue happy dance). In betwixt queuing in the rain, film programme in hand, we managed to get sehr, sehr lost on the metro, check out the Berlin Film Museum – absolutely brilliant – wander round Potsdamer Platz and see the Holocaust Memorial and Brandenburg Gate just as it was getting dark. With three hours to kill before the film screening we decided to find a bar near the cinema, a seemingly simple task, we were in Berlin for Pete’s sake. Apparently not. After about an hour of shuffling our slowly dying feet through identical, barless streets, mistaking luminous, rope light teeth as bar signs (I kid you not, German dentists could be mistaken for a night club), we finally spotted a Mexican restaurant – rum AND nachos; life was brilliant. 45 Years, when we finally got there, was a wonderful film and I’m über excited to check it out again when it’s properly released. The next day we wandered through Alexanderplatz, went to the Dom cathedral to get a gorgeous view of Berlin’s skyline and went and queued some more to try and get tickets for Christian Bale’s new film Knight of Cups.  Two hours of waiting in the cold & yet again more cries of ‘ausgebucht’. Sold out again.

But all wasn’t in vain, we’d been stood next to the Berlinale Palast and managed to spot Ian McKellen on the red carpet before the premiere of his new Sherlock Holmes film. Happy dancing all round. We also decided to get tickets on a whim for a Spanish film to make our hours of standing in the cold somewhat worthwhile. Turns out it was a documentary film about Chilean rivers or something. I have no idea. Ashamed to say I fell asleep within the first twenty minutes.

Determined to see Knight of Cups, one of the big films of the festival, we got up early on our last full day to try and get tickets for a re-screening. Naturally it was sold out again, but we were told they might find some more tickets if we were willing to wait two hours until an hour before it began. We still have no idea where exactly they were procuring seats in a sold out venue, but whatever, three hours later we were sat, ticket in hand, through a terribly disappointing 119 minutes of Christian Bale slowly spiralling out of control. Wunderbar. Next up was Ian McKellen’s Mr Holmes, which we’d thankfully managed to get tickets for online. It was utterly fantastic and I’m very glad we ended the festival on a decent film that actually had some plot (& obvs Ian McKellen – all hail).

All in all, we queued a lot, saw a lot of films and somehow managed to go to Berlin and without once properly stepping foot on Unter den Linden, but w/e. Berlin became one of my favourite cities and we missed out enough of the main sights to warrant a repeat trip. I’m already peeing with excitement.



BELGIUM
After a quick pit stop in Le Mans to quickly repack and pick up Alicia, we were soon in Porte Maillot coach park waiting for our Megabus from Paris to Brussels. We arrived at 15:00 and had a few hours to kill before we could meet our AirBNB host to dump our rucksacks in our temporary flat. After navigating ourselves with a trusty bus stop map we made our way to the Grand Place to gawp at the gorgeous buildings in the city’s main square, found the underwhelming yet hilarious Manneken Pis, walked around the cathedral and realised we’d ticked off half of our itinerary in the first 45 minutes. Excellent. Time for waffles. Also excellent. Eventually we made it to our BNB, gave our aching shoulders some light relief and struggled with wifi that only worked in the doorway to the apartment block. Perfect when all the inhabitants were coming home from work and we had a tonne of directions to research. All the apologies.

Next on the agenda was a train ride to Bruges where we befriended a crazy German (?) man who repeatedly asked the same question about the towel situation in hostels about 8 times. Too early for your nonsense, leave us alone crazy man. Kthxbye. The weather was pretty decent so we were able to enjoy a long day wandering around the city, ogling at pretty buildings and canals and lusting after waffle stands. Willing to go to ridiculous lengths for a city view, we I thought it’d be a good idea to climb the Belfry in the main square, so 366 steps we dizzily dragged ourselves onto the observation level of the tower and ogled some more at Bruges’s pretty rooftops and tried our best to not be in the back of some French lady’s utterly pointless video while we slowly keeled over, panting to death. Note to self, stop being a wimp. Later, we visited the chocolate museum, because Belgium, and were thoroughly amused by the excessive use of Playmobil and terrifying wax works (I have no idea either). It was a bit naff – understatement - but it was warm and had welcoming trays of free samples (yay for poorness).

On Saturday, we tracked down all the places we’d missed in Brussels, including the Atonium, Royal Palace, the BELvue museum of Belgium, Coudenberg and the museum of musical instruments, before settling down in a bar for some well-earned Belgian beers. Not too shabby.

Brussels
Bruges
Bruges
Brussels

AMSTERDAM
Sunday morning found us back on the Megabus on our way to Amsterdam, a beautiful city with far too many human beings and seemingly even more bikes. I’m still not entirely sure what I thought of Amsterdam. It’s a stunning city with a fascinating history, excellent food – everyone needs bitterballen and poffertjes in their life – some world class museums and obviously all the taboo tourist traps that have become synonymous with the Dutch capital for all who wish to partake. It’s a wonderful place but something just felt a bit off.  

After dumping our bags in our hostel, we didn’t really have a plan so decided to walk through the Museumplein and up the Prinsengracht canal to find the Anne Frank House. On our way, we found the Fault in our Stars bench (because book nerds), I added to the hundreds of messages by carving my name (because Nerdfighter) and shamelessly corrected someone’s French grammar (because lame nerd). We strolled along the canal and checked out a few hipsterry antique and clothes shops before eventually finding Prinsengracht 263, AKA the Anne Frank House. The queue was absolutely enormous so we decided to return early the next morning and went and found somewhere to eat. We made it back at 8:30am the following day and already found a sizeable queue snaking along the side of the building. Ridiculous. But we joined the end and shivered for about two hours until we finally made it through the doors and into the museum. The house’s history certainly resonates through the building with short excerpts from the diary printed on the walls and at Otto Frank’s request, is now devoid of any furniture to represent the emptiness left after the Holocaust. It’s a haunting place but an absolute must-visit.

After filling up on bitterballen we headed out on a free walking tour which took us around the city centre, old town, Jordaan neighbourhood and the Red Light District. It was still relatively early in the evening so this hedonistic playground was still quite tame with only a small number of occupied windows, one of which by a woman playing Candy Crush on her iPad. Whatever floats your boat. One of the coffee shops in the area – famous for selling all manner of substances definitely stronger than coffee – was blaring out Roxanne by The Police. The irony.

Tuesday was our last day in Amsterdam and the last day of our February travels. We started early with a 9am slot at the Van Gogh museum, celebrated Pancake Day with Dutch bacon pancakes and wandered through Vondel Park. In the late afternoon we headed over to Body Worlds, a human preservation/plastination museum and the strangest and most surreal place I’ve ever visited. The building is full of over 200 ‘anatomical specimens’ of preserved human bodies. Absolutely mental. It could be an unsettling place but once I stopped thinking ZOMG THS WAS A REAL PERSON WITH A HOUSE AND A JOB AND PROBABLY A PET CAT it became quite interesting. Body Worlds is a fascinating museum and if anything, it made me want to run everywhere and only eat lettuce and kale for the rest of my life. I’m definitely glad we went, even if I do see a spine every time I go to sleep. Grim.

At 21:30 we picked up our bags from the hostel and made our way to the Megabus pick up spot in a coach park just outside the city. We were due to leave at 23:00, arriving in Paris at 6:00 the following morning, where we’d catch the train back to Le Mans at 7:00. Unfortunately, Megabus had other ideas and decided to turn up just before 1am. How kind. There’s nothing like shivering in a car park for two hours while an operator in Glasgow informs you she’s not quite sure when the bus is due to arrive while sporadically making you listen to diabolical hold music to make you absolutely love life. But we made it home eventually, albeit five hours later than expected. Damn you Megabus. I hope at some point in my life I’ll be able to visit other countries without using terrible coaches and staying in nasty hostels with a back pack filled with packets of ramen noodles and bags of sawdust masquerading as cereal bars. But whatever, it’ll certainly do for now.

Miles out. X