Thursday, August 7, 2008

Trip to Amsterdam


Caitlin and I arrived in Caitlin late Monday night. We stayed at The Crooked House (above), a great little hostel in the southern canal area. Tuesday we wandered around the city and met up with my friend Laura from Stanford. On Wednesday we went to The Rijksmusem--the building itself is a piece of art. It was built by Pierre Cuypers, who also has exhibits in the museum. Most of the museum is actually under construction right now, but they moved the masterpieces to the section that is open. They have a great Rembrandt section--the most famous piece is below:


Wednesday evening we went to the Anne Frank museum, which was very sad and moving. I had been unable to see it my first time to Amsterdam and was glad to see it this trip.

On Thursday we went to the Van Gogh museum, which has over 200 paintings from the short-lived artist's life.

Next in our trip is a one day stop in London, before heading back to the States on Sunday.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Our trip to Prague


We arrived in Prague on Friday morning after a 4am flight from Athens, and were very happy to find out that our hotel room was ready when we arrived. After a morning nap, we went out to discover what Prague is all about--cheap beer and food :) We had a delicious roasted chicken leg and a 0.5 liter of Hoegaarden (yes, I realize its not Czech, but it is one of my favorite beers) for less than $10 each. We were then off to the castle (see picture above), walking across the famous Charles Bridge into the Little Quarter. The castle is one of the largest in all of Europe, and also the best preserved because it avoided Nazi bombs during WWII. While the views outside are spectacular, the tour probably isn't worth the price of admission--it was only a couple of rooms and nothing to special. After a delicious dinner and 2 liters of beer for less than $15, we wandered the streets of Prague and headed home for a good nights rest.

The next day we did some shopping and sight-seeing in the Old Town, starting at the Old Town Square and off to the Havelska Market before seeing the Museum of Communism. Old Town Square is the location of the Jan Hus Memorial, as well as Tyn Church and the Astronomical Clock (see the pictures below for more detail).

The communist museum was very interesting, as it outlined the 40 year history of Soviet rule over Czechoslovakia until the Velvet Revolution in 1989. The Soviet propaganda posters were probably the most alarming artifacts in the museum, and the video at the end of the Communist Party riot police beating students (including women) that were non-violently protesting. As an aside, the museum is located above a McDonalds and next to a casino--talk about a change from 20 years ago.

On Sunday we spent the afternoon at the Jewish Museum. The museum is located in the Josefov (Jewish) quarter, and has many sites. The first we visited was the highly emotional Pinkas Synagogue, which contains the names of the approximately 80,000 Czech Jews who were sent from here to the gas chambers at Auschwitz. On the second floor the Terezin Children's Art Exhibit displays the drawings of the the almost 10,000 children imprisoned at the Terezin Concentration Camp. Only a few hundred of these children survived the holocaust.

After walking through the Old Jewish Cemetery (the only burial grounds allowed for Czech Jews from 1439 to 1787), we entered the Maisel Synagogue, which was contained many Jewish history exhibitions. This was actually the place where all Jewish artifacts were stored during WWII, as the captive leaders of the Terezin Ghetto convinced Hitler to create a "Museum of the Extinct Jewish Race." Quite an emotional afternoon.


Statue on the Charles Bridge


Memorial of Jan Hus, overlooking the Tyn Church in Old Town Square. Hus was burned for condemning the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church (100 years before Martin Luther)


The 15th century Astronomical Church strikes at the top of the hour


Four statues surround the clock. A figure staring into a mirror represents vanity, a Jewish moneylender is greed, a Turk playing the mandolin stands for hedonism. All are reminded by death that these are only worldly goals. When death tips his hourglass, the 12 apostles pass by the window above, the rooster crows and the hour is rung.


Beautiful Art Nouveau building in Old Town Square


And here are a few more fun pictures :)

An And1 slam dunk contest in Wencelas Square


The signs on the bathroom doors


Caitlin amazed at the size of her $3 beer at our first lunch

Friday, August 1, 2008

Wine tasting in Santorini

Today we went wine tasting in Santorini with our friends Rob and Hannah from DC. Our hotel manager recommended that we check out Santos winery and Antoniou. After a few wrong turns, we made it to the ridiculous views from Santo Wines (see below).

Rob, Hannah and Caitlin at Santo Wines


At Santos we tried 6 wines (starting from right)

  1. Assyrtico—a very nice, dry white wine which wasn’t too bitter or too sweet. My personal favorite.
  2. Nykteni—this wine was ok; Rob and Hannah liked it more than the first
  3. Ageni rose—a semi-dry rose wine that was one of our favorites
  4. Voudomato—we found that the red wines from Santorini were not very good—this was definitely the worst
  5. Imiglinos—a very sweet white wine; Caitlin didn’t care much for it but I thought it was good
  6. Vinsanto—Santorini is famous for its unfortified dessert wine. It tastes very similar to port, and is made by drying white grapes out in the sun for 2 week

After a 20 min tour of the winery facilities, we headed off to Antoniou, a cute little winery with three tastings (white, red, vinsanto) for 5 euro.

View from Antoniou patio


We finished the wine tour by driving to the Santorini Wine Museum. For 6 euro per person, we got a tape recorded tour of the museum as well as 3 tastings. The museum is extremely cheesy—it felt like a guided walk through a 1950s carnival ride (see video below). It was interesting to learn that the island used very old-fashioned wine making methods because there was no electricity until 1970.



For dinner that night we drove out to the last taverna before the lighthouse in Akrotiri—our hotel manager Kostas recommended it as a great place to get fresh, cheap fish. He was definitely right—we had two lobster and a cod-like fish for 28 euro. Our waitress took us to the back of the restaurant to choose our fish (see mine below). Her father catches the fish that day and prepares it himself. No question this was one of my favorite meals in Greece.