Saturday, June 29, 2013

Innsbruck and Next Steps


European Homeless Cup Pictures:

Looking Forward:
Wow. Innsbruck  is beautiful. We are right in the middle of the mountains and everything here is green and vibrant. Fog hides the peaks in the early morning, but as the time hits afternoon, the snow-capped, upper-fringes of the Alps look down below.

We've made it through Munich, and now we are here in Austria for one more day. We will be heading to Italy next, though where in Italy I am not so sure. We haven't bought a train ticket yet- we will pick one up on the fly tomorrow and head to an unknown destination.

Chris and I are at that point where we have realized we need to conserve as much money as possible. Because we don't have any programs or living stays lined up in Italy, this is going to be hard. Hell, we may end up sleeping in a park again. We'll just have to play things as they go!

Current Deadlines:
July 4th- Begin staying at the community in Arcidosso, Italy
July 7th- Flight from Rome, Italy -> Bordeaux, France

For now, time to enjoy Innsbruck for the rest of today and tomorrow morning. I uploaded new pictures from Munich and from our first day here, so check those out! The video above is from part of a hike near where we are staying.

I have another post on the way soon. It is halfway written and I will probably finish it tonight or on the train tomorrow.

Hope you're having an awesome weekend.

Best,

Sam

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Rainy Day

Location Update
We’re in Munich! We arrived late last night to a hostel called “The Tent.” It has been raining all morning, but it finally stopped. Time to explore the city.

Items Lost of Discarded
Chris’s very nice (but bulky) poncho
My let’s Go: Europe travel book
A Nalgene water bottle
The cardboard Wilbur cutout L

What do People like in Budapest?
Answer: The Walking Dead

Minor Statistics [before Budapest]
Average daily walking distance: 6.5km (4 miles)
Estimate # of times public transportation* was used: 28
Locations where public transportation was used: Madrid (1), Barcelona (1), Basel (26)
# of times Ryanair was used: 3
# of times international trains were used: 2
# of times regional rails were used: 8
# of times inter-city buses were used: 5

*Public transport accounts for local buses, subways, and light rails. It does not account for regional rails or international trains

Sayonara: Saying Goodbye
Chris and I are traveling through places so quickly and meeting tons of new people along the way. We get only a glance of the entire picture. While we try to see as much of the city as possible, we always miss certain aspects that are said to be incredible. We didn’t make it to the Swiss Alps. We ran out of time and had to skip an amazing museum in Madrid. We just couldn’t find a way to slip into a kayak and paddle around the Baltic Sea.

Of course, we don’t expect to pull off the grand tour in every city we pass through. As we circumvent portions of the places we wished to see, I can’t help but think that I will visit these spots again, without a fat backpack, and take my hours and minutes slowly to really soak up what characterizes each country. For now, the amount of seconds between the handshake and goodbye-hug are too few. But, this trip isn’t a novel- it is a series of short vignettes. It is about exploring and adventuring and most importantly, leaving the lowest quantity of regrets in the tank.

This thought of goodbyes makes me contemplate lost friends and those that are drifting away. It comes across as an emotional maelstrom and I can’t say I am an expert at handling and working out my emotions. Sure, I pride myself on how I can logically and rationally process information. But when it comes to feelings, I’m out in a forest, no compass, and I can only hope to push, push, and push in the right direction. In the end, I am disappointed by my own reception to my sentiments and how I respond to them.  I find that the balance between emotional and logical evaluation is a mastery few have obtained. Those that have this balance are recipients of a trophy or reward associated with the professional control of yin and yang.

My best friend lives in Arizona. At the moment, our lives are progressing in alternate directions. We struggle to say goodbye. No matter how many times we utter the word or phrase and no matter how many different ways we say it, we find ourselves talking and laughing again in the next few weeks or months. We’ve shared a hell of a lot and we know each other too well to just disappear, and in the end I believe this is what always pulls us back. I’ve processed the situation multitudes of times with logic and emotion, but it is a battle on a mental front that never sees a winner. I find it funny that the pathways we can’t imagine meshing together continue to intertwine. Sometimes, I wonder if goodbye is the correct choice.

Instead of mourning over a complete goodbye, I would rather say “See you later.” I think this is better. Just like with the cities we pass though, I don’t want to close off the people I meet (especially those I know best) for good. I want to see them again and give them a wonderful hug. I want to hear all about how they’ve changed and listen to every new detail in their lives.

But then again, maybe the loss (or breaking of) that connection is why goodbyes are so hard?

Jack: Making Friends
The first hostel that Chris and I stayed at in Stockholm was called 2Kronor. We made it there a little after 17:00, checked in, and fell into the nice comfortable catch of the bunk beds in the dorm room. It was a wonderful change from the previous night, which I spent awkwardly sleeping against the side of a chain-link fence in a park.

Shortly after we settled, a guy who had been staying at the hostel for a few days already walked in. Around the same height as me, wavy blond/brown hair, good shape, wearing a blue jacket. We shook hands and said our hellos. His name was Jack. He was 22 and had just graduated from a school near Orlando, Florida, but his hometown was just outside of Boston, Massachusetts. I have to say, it was great to see an American, especially a friendly one.

We grabbed dinner at a restaurant that was approximately thirty feet from our hostel- they had a special where you could get a burger, fries, and a beer for under 90 SEK. Our other dorm mate, a scientific, tall and skinny blond dude from Estonia, joined us too. His name was Ott (pronounced: Oh-ight). I felt a little bad for Ott though, as he couldn’t keep up with our conversation. We talked about a bunch of American things (like Jimmy  Kimmel and the NBA Playoffs) and while I did my best to fill Ott in on what he didn’t understand, I could tell he was out of place. After dinner, he hung out with us a short while longer before heading back to the hostel to retire.

Jack, Chris, and I went on to explore the city and we ended up at this new microbrewery, Brew Dog. I have a coaster from the place, it’s pretty sweet.

We sat next to a pair of Sweden guys who were big on skiing and laughing. Ultra-friendly and welcoming, they immediately began conversing and joking around with us. One looked incredibly similar to Gerard Butler (even his hand motions and the way he leaned his elbow on the table).

Anyway, we eventually glanced at the menu. It was an in-your-face kind of thing, with sentences challenging your manhood, saying that you wouldn’t dare drink specific kinds of beers because they would be “too tough for you.” The place was a little expensive, though, so Jack, Chris, and I opted to each buy a single drink before heading out.

We read the menu as if it was a textbook and finally selected our beverages. We found these brews that were insanely high proof (34% and 42%) but really small quantity (5 centiliters). One was called the Tactical Nuclear Penguin and to be honest, I can’t recall the other one’s name. It was something feisty and related to a bird like a crow or falcon, I think. We drank the brews, as slow as you could for that volume, and all made quirky faces at the strength and flavor of the liquid. The Swedish Gerard Butler ordered a burger, which looked immensely tasty, but we left before he could remark on how delicious it was.

For the rest of the night, we hung out with Jack. It was a good change of pace for the two of us and he had his own wild stories to contrast ours. Jack is heading home soon, but before that he is doing one last tour the Netherlands. Best of luck in the future, and safe travels to the man from Boston.

Peace!


Sam

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Howdy! (travel update)

Update on Travel Status:
Everything has been running smoothly so far. Chris and I have traveled through Madrid, Barcelona, Bergamo, Milan, Basel, Olten, Skavsta, Stockholm, and Budapest.

Tomorrow morning (04:00) we will take a cab to the Budapest airport and leave on yet another Ryanair flight. We will travel to Milan (Bergamo Airport) and from there take a bus to the central train station. We will take a train to Verona, where we will stop for 3-4 hours to get a super-quick tour of the city, and then another train from Verona to Munich. If all goes well, we should be in Munich by 22:25, where we will then make our way to a hostel called "The Tent." We will be in Munich until the 28th, at which point we will depart for Innsbruck, Austria!

Also, I uploaded a ton of pictures! Hopefully Chris or I can do a video soon. We've been in crowded dorms or rooms with very thin-walls, so it has been difficult to find a good place to make one. I have some more Blog posts written, too, which I will post in the next few days. I just didn't want to post them all at once and throw out a ton of reading!

We are both well and healthy, though a little sweaty here in Budapest.

Cheers!

Sam


Sublime Stockholm


Track Record for Songs Stuck in my Head
1) "Get Lucky" - Daft Punk
2) "Santeria" - Sublime
3) "Broken Heart" - Motion City Soundtrack
4) "Power Glove" - Knife Party
5) "I'm Shipping up to Boston" - Dropkick Murphys
6) "The Compromise" - The Format

We go about our days without cell phones or mp3 players. Occasionally, we hear music on the radio or from the speakers of a passing car, or the rare moments that we have a secure WiFi and are able to plug into a power source. Songs get catchy, and they stick into the folds of my brain. These are a few of the songs that have got stuck on repeat over the past few weeks.

Stockholm Life
It was incredibly peaceful in Sweden. As I walked around the streets, I felt safe. The sun doesn’t leave during the summer time, but it does take breaks to hide behind rain clouds. Saturday afternoon, Chris and I checked out of the City Backpackers Hostel and headed for a park. We didn’t get as much sleep as we wanted due to some unruly and boisterous German fellows, so a nap on the cool, shaded grass sounded quite nice.

The park was set up fantastically. On the east side, a putting course for golfers lies in the shadows of a grove of tall trees. Just south of it, a large field with several soccer goals was packed with people and families, kicking around the ball, playing pick-up games, or with packs of kiddos battling it out in leagues. On the sides in the open grass, tons of people sat and soaked up the sunshine. West of the soccer field was a sloping hill that lead to a playground (complete with trampolines and a climbing wall).

The hill seemed to be the popular spot, and I could see why. You lie down, watch the clouds or the games on the field below, and breathe in the clean Stockholm air.

It reminded me of those pictures in history books and retro-clips of America after World War II. The typical family value is ever-present with smiling portraits and barbeques outdoors. The sun is always bright, kids are battling it out in football games in the streets, and the steel-shells of cars in the 50s roll by happy neighborhoods. Overall, I think the best way to say it is a “Golden Age” of sorts. Stockholm, at least to me, felt like a city in its prime. Friendliness aplenty and fresh, summer weather.

I am Not Heisenberg!

We stayed in a twelve bed dorm Friday night. The past few times Chris and I have done this, most of the beds have been empty. Here, at the City Backpackers Hostel, all the beds were full. There were these eight guys from Germany, all about partying, loving America, and Jim Bean Whiskey. One of them had a low, flat brimmed hat that was a dark tan color. At a point in the night, he reached that level of drunkenness to where he began to say very silly things and lock-in on certain phrases. Breaking Bad was mentioned and then he slung his hat on my head. For the rest of the time they were in the room, he kept repeating the phrase, “I am not Heisenberg! I am not Heisenberg!” in his German accent. It was great.

Patrick

Contrasting the loungers and the relaxers are the homeless and the job seekers. One could easily hangout at the park and miss them- they are hard to see behind the veil of sunshine and picnic time. There is a group of men, five or so, that does laps around the park with garbage bags and raggedy clothing. Their mission is to collect cans to make an income so they can buy food. It’s positive that they clean up the park but it is also sad to see them struggle.

I was curious about it, so I walked over to a dark-skinned man in a tan coat and politely asked him about his background and past life. His name was Patrick and he was from Italy. He had a stable job there for a long time, but when the economy started to decline he lost his job. He’s been on the road for seven years now in multiple countries, just trying to find something stable and make a living. Patrick said that he had been in Stockholm for a little less than two weeks.

For sleep, Patrick, as well as several of the other guys that pick up the cans in the park, rests at the central train station during the later parts of the day. He said it is a safe place to crash, but they can only stay there until midnight or so. Afterward, they are kicked out of the station and have to either find a place to stay on the streets or get back to looking for aluminum and recyclables.

Patrick seemed like such a nice guy. He spoke great English and also Italian and was quick to smile and shake my hand. I wished him the best of luck in finding a job here in Stockholm and continued on my path.

See ya,

Sam

Friday, June 14, 2013

Interactions (round 1)!


Notice!
I posted a bunch of photos from Basel, Switzerland in the Pictures section. Check them out!

Conversions
100 USD =
647 SEK
75 EURO
93 CHF

Interactions (round 1)!
When you’re traveling you tend to meet people. You stay in dinky hostels or rent rooms for cheap. You sit next to different men and women during flights and you bump into hundreds of fresh faces and pubs and on the streets. Sometimes it is just a quick conversation followed by parting ways. Yet, at other moments, meeting someone new can mean a lot more. Chris and I have been on our adventure for just over twenty days now and we’ve met many great people. I’d like to thank and point out a few of them, especially those that provided some great memories.

Lenin
For most hostels we’ve passed through, the reception desk has been hosted by a young guy or gal at all hours of the day and night. The hostel hosts take shifts, of course, and they appear to be from wild and unique backgrounds- each with his or her own story to tell. Lenin dates back to the first city we visited: Madrid. During our last night there, I was up very late on the computer in the lobby of the hostel. Lenin was browsing Facebook or some other time-slaying website behind the main desk, twiddling his fingers and doing his best to stay awake. He turns to me and starts talking. It took me a minute at the time, but I soon realized he was telling me a story.

We sat and talked like that for a bit in the lobby as I did my best to scan CouchSurfing for a possible host in Barcelona or any of the other future cities. Life. Relationships. Philosophy. He was patient with my Spanish, too, and when I wasn’t feeling up to the challenge of a sentence we swapped back to English.
Lenin was the first really kind guy behind a reception desk at a hostel that we met- the first that openly wanted to chat about anything and everything.

Sebastian
Barcelona was a pilgrimage of sorts. Chris and I stayed in three different locations in three nights, the third being a tiny room rented out through AirBnB. Cheap, near the beach, and with three random roommates. These roommates, of course, actually lived in the rowhouse.

One of them was named Sebastian. Tall, bigger guy, Sebastian wore glasses and had short black hair. He was the kind of person that looked like he could be a bouncer for a night club, if, and only if, he could make a mean-looking grimace or snarl twist across his face. I don’t think Sebastian could. Instead, he was slow-speaking and sympathetic.

Sebastian was up for talking about anything I asked him. Again, as with Lenin, I did my best to speak in Spanish. Sebastian actually would correct or instruct me to use different vocabulary, too. I know when I was telling him about how I wanted to work as a surgeon in a trauma center, he told me how to say “surgeon” in Spanish. My, I tripped over that word so many times. It is simple, looking at it, but my tongue coils around the up/down bend of its vocality- “cirujano.” I could say the word on its own, but the second I put it into a sentence I lost control of my vocal chords.

Sebastian was also keen with his advice, like an older brother looking out for a younger brother. He had much more experience than Chris and I. Listening to him in the living room of that rustic flat was tranquil and relaxing. The man knew how to spin his diction in just the right way to get the point across. Admirable.

Eva
Also in Barcelona, I met an ex-Homeless World Cup coordinator named Eva. She gave me directions to meet outside an Apple Store in the middle of the city. I left early, knowing I’d get lost, got lost, and made it on time. After a handshake and a smile, we headed west down a main road in search of a restaurant for a quick coffee.

Our search for the restaurant we wanted wasn’t fruitful, and instead we ended up walking five or six blocks. We pulled off to the next shop we could see, a nice little place with outdoor seating and green and white umbrellas to keep the Spanish sun off our backs. We got a pair of coffees and started talking.

When I think of a coffee convo, I think of a thirty minute chat. Nothing too deep or too vast, just a centralized talk about a certain subject. Eva, however, was so easy to talk with, and we sat there at that little table for nearly two hours. Wow.

But I didn’t want a short conversation. Hearing about Eva’s work in and around Barcelona, and then her experience with the HWC was fascinating. She helped coordinate the World Cup in Rio as well as underneath the Eiffel Tower in Paris. She stepped down from the job to work closer to Barcelona, but she certainly enjoyed her time with the program.


What was most important about talking with Eva was the timing. This was still very early in the trip and I had no contact yet with live personnel from the Homeless World Cup or other organizations in Europe. Eva got me more excited about the work I planned to do in the next few countries. She got my hopes up for the program and made me want to go talk with people and players and hear their stories. I walked back to the place in Barcelona we were staying with a skip in my step. I was stoked to move on, to learn more, to see more, and to progress the journey.

Juan
Eva directed me to Juan, who has been working with the Arrels organization. Juan is brilliant. He gave me a brief history and tour of the building where the program is held. It was incredibly impressive and organized. They work with what, in a way, could be described as those that are chronically homeless. In order for to be assisted by Arrels, one needs to be on the streets for a time period greater than five years. That’s a long time- and I could tell by walking through the facility- that the people that were there had been through some stuff.

Arrels is really useful and beneficial. Not only do they provide shoes, bags, storage, classes, showers, bathrooms, advice, and temporary shelter (during the day- not nights) for the homeless, but they also do their best to chart Barcelona and evaluate where people sleep and how many reside on the streets.

One of the frequenters of Arrels is a man who used to be a comic strip artist. He’s been on the streets for over fifteen years now and he produces a series of graphic novels about his time on the road. His name is Miguel Fuster. Here are some links to check out his work:


To a Google Chat Buddy
I really appreciate being able to talk with you on and off these past few days. It’s been nice to clear my head and laugh, and perfect for sitting down late at night before heading to sleep. Thanks for being there and being awesome!

Short Quips
My laptop charger is a fire hazard and one day the laptop may just explode. When I’m sitting, writing like this, the charger heats up at a rapid rate. I don’t think the heat has a breaking point. For example, at this moment, I can’t even touch it. It’s made of lava or hellfire or something crazy! Good news is, when you’re cold it makes quite the hand warmer.

Sleeping on a Soccer Field
A couple days ago Chris and I spent our first night on the streets. We arrived in Stockholm just after midnight by bus and set off to grab food and search for some kind of shelter. This was actually the first time we tried Burger King, too. I must say- the Angry Chicken Sandwich is one mean, delicious meal (especially after over twelve hours of travel).

With food in our bellies,  we set off in Stockholm. We were surprised at the quantity of people out on the streets on a weekday, but it was nice to have the yawping company of hooligans and bar-goers. After two hours of walking and searching for a sheltered park, we came across a school with a soccer field that was all fenced in besides on small break in the gate that was the entrance. We’d been on the move for so long that we were ready to call it quits. The grass, or artificial turf, in this case, was wet, so we put our backpacks on the side of the field. I zipped my jacket up, leaned my bag against the chain fence, and sat down just enough so that I could lean my head on the top of my pack. Chris did likewise. I was out in minutes, my bum on cold concrete, birds laughing and scavenging, and the wind rustling. We got a solid hour and a half of sleep or so before moving on to our next day.
The Jura! A hike in Basel, Switz.
Current Status
We’re both good and safe for the moment. We’re staying at the City Backpackers Hostel in Stockholm, Sweden, and are thankful to have a roof and a bed. It’s hard to book a place short notice in the city. I’m going to sign off for now and grab a quick hour of sleep, I’m still fairly beat.

Next post will be about soccer- errr futbol. There was a big tournament this past weekend in Basel, Switzerland, and Chris and I both played! Heck yeah.

Cheers,

Sam

Friday, June 7, 2013

Hay Fever and Summersaults in Life


Hay Fever and Summersaults in Life
Note: More pictures uploaded! Check them out in the "Pictures" tab.

Mucus and clogged noses. Yuck. The source- Switzerland’s lush green countryside and wicked variety of plant life. I would like to think that if someone very large and mighty took the country of Switzerland between their thumb and forefinger and condensed it into a crayon shape, Crayola would have but one name to call it: Vibrant Verde. Chris and I, being from Arizona and all, aren’t used to this quantity of living herbs. We’ve both had fairly severe reactions to it. I’m just getting over mine, and Chris is just getting through his. We’re told it is a case of Hay Fever, also known as allergic rhinitis.

We didn’t expect to get sick this early. It is kind of cheating, since it is allergies, but then again, it is still the body being unable to handle a certain situation (whether it is pollen, a virus, or bacteria). Hopefully this is all we get of the sickness. We are lucky it is now, though. The place we are staying is very nice, warm, and incredibly friendly.
The attic where Chris and I sleep! His bed is around the corner.
Chris and I will be in Basel, Switzerland until next Wednesday (June 12th) at which point we embark for Sweden. Our time here is long compared to the days we spent in Madrid, Barcelona, and Milan, and we are doing our best to take advantage of the opportunity to explore such a picturesque location. Still, I find myself lying in the attic where we stay and thinking about the world, my life, and life back home. It’s calm and rhythmic, back on the mattress with Explosions in the Sky jetting from my netbook’s speakers. My mind is one to wander and at times like these it tends to wander most.

But, it wanders in a wild and brilliant way.

Yesterday, I came across a tennis club. It has about eight courts, each one of them clay. Some are outdoors and some indoors. I walked into one of the buildings that contained a single court, my black and red hiking shoes gripping into that classic, burnt-orange hue of the clay. I was elated. I felt like a kid stepping onto a baseball field in a stadium for the first time. I ran side to side along the baseline, abruptly stopping at each corner and stepping into an imaginary, down-the-line forehand and backhand.

I asked Lavinia, our current and amazing host, about the tennis club and she gave me some shocking information. This, the neighborhood I am in now, is where Roger Federer first began playing tennis! Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat! The clay courts I found are where he practiced daily. I think I’m still in a little bit of a stunned state. So cool. I’m going back to the courts later today to get some pictures, and maybe, I can figure out a way to play a quick game or hit some serves there.
Federer in Basel near one of the bridges on the Rhine
There are many people I want to thank so far on our trip, and I think the next post will be dedicated to them. The good-natured hosts at the hostels we have stayed at, Sebastian, Eva, Juan, Matteo, Lavinia, and all those from the Homeless World Cup program that have reached out to me. You guys have made this trip fantastic so far, and I know that without you, Chris and I would just be two dudes from Arizona wandering aimlessly from city to city. You guys have made this trip into an experience, and I know that each day that continues will make it even more memorable.

See ya later.

-Sam



Monday, June 3, 2013

Karate Chop Extreme!


Waiting on Opinions
In the past post, I was little rough on Barcelona. I had yet to see Las Ramblas or the museums, or even some of the prettiest neighborhoods and downtown areas. But after walking kilometer after kilometer and touring nearly the entire place on foot over the past few days, I can safely say that I shouldn’t judge a place so quickly.

Barcelona is packed with character- and by that, I mean the people and the infrastructure. The turning point for my mind and opinion occurred during a walk through the tree-lined, tourist-filled Las Ramblas to a giant, fresh market called LaBoqueria. Here, Catalan architecture reigns supreme and thin alleyways stretch and bend in ways that could get anyone lost in a series of shops and houses. It is dark and mysterious, a wild milieu of stone.

Here, I let myself get lost- flowing with the mixes of grays and browns, pressing against the waves of people and keeping my eyes opened for the infamous pickpockets. Las Ramblas allowed me to feel and understand the city of Barcelona. This was key to taking my mind away from the negative and into the positive. It let me see the picturesque and splendid sense of personality that I had previously blocked from my vision.

The Rooms of Barcelona
In Barcelona, we stayed in three different locations. The first was a twenty-euro-a-night hostel, situated just north of Barceloneta station. It was nice, but cost a little more than our budget allows for. We ditched it and moved to a place three-and-a-half kilometers northeast.

This place was called UrbanyHostel. For only twelve euros each, it gave us small beds and access to a gym. It was towering and modern. The gym pass was nice, but overall we hoped to get out and find a place with character.  In our next location, back in the heart of Barceloneta, we did.
Small room rented via Airbnb
Through the use of the online website, Airbnb.com, we rented a room in one of the oldest of Barceloneta’s row homes. It cost us a whopping twenty-three dollars (not euros) for two nights. Sure, we had to share a bed and we lacked WiFi, but character streamed through the dusty stone walls and steps of the building. It was actually so old that it was about to be torn down and renovated- it was beginning to become unsafe. Our “roommates”, two people that had lived in Barcelona for the past ten years, said they only had three days left before the reconstruction began.

Rest in Peace, Joe Cool
Chris has an alternate identity. It is a man composed of all that is suave, built to relax, built to be smooth. Almost an enigma, this character is marked by sunglasses and sunshine. Inspired by the famous version of Snoopy from the Charlie Brown comics, Chris masks himself with shades and follows the same name- Joe Cool. In Barcelona, our third place of stay was a small room in one of the oldest buildings in a series  of row homes in Barceloneta, a neighborhood on the beach. It used to be a port, but a while back, the city filled it with sand and extended the docks. Back in the older days of Barcelona, the poor lived on the beach. The water was polluted, and the state of life wasn’t as good. With the clean-up, though, things have been reversed- now the tourists and hotels line the waters and the homeless and poor manage their days in the grime of the concrete jungle.

Our room was a five minute walk from the beach. Midway was a market and several bakeries and vegetable stores. Since we didn’t have WiFi in the room, we had to find the nearest place with free access. Where was it? Five feet from the crashing waves of the ocean. Chris and I would make plenty of trips to and from the sand, and there Joe Cool was at his prime. Chris enjoyed throwing on his sunglasses and lying in the sand. It was by the ocean that Joe Cool lived. His persona became a reference point as we toured the city.

Yet, our departure from Barcelona was hectic. We attended a Knife Party concert where the doors opened at midnight. We left the show halfway through, and by then it was already 03:00. Getting back to our place we had pre-packed our things- but there was one important item we forgot: the sunglasses. Chris was able to transform into Joe Cool with those shades. Without them, Joe Cool was gone. Dead. Never to return unless purchased at a vendor. So, as we said goodbye to Spain and to Barcelona, we said goodbye to our good friend and master of the chill. Maybe it wasn’t his time. I don’t know. Either way, there is one phrase to say.

Rest in peace, Joe Cool.

The Good, The Bad, The Ryanair
Chris and I found out what we suspected- with a $20 flight comes the criminal act of fees and consequences. Ryanair’s favorite torture device is a cage built with metal piping to the exact dimensions of their baggage restriction.  Days before your flight, the emails begin to come: “Make sure you bags fit our standards”, “Don’t go over the limit”, “No more than ten kilograms” If you break the rule, you pay up to ninety euros.

Yikes.

Here is the issue: Chris has a very tall bag. It doesn’t weigh a lot, but it could probably join the NBA. When it came our turn to place our bags in the torture chamber, mine fit, but very snuggly. I was waved off. Chris placed his pack inside, and it slid into the metal rungs easily. We thought we were good.

Nope.

The attendant, hovering nearby, bent down with her clipboard pressed to her chest. She eyed the top of the red fabric, stood back up, and said, “No.” with the sternness of the Soup Nazi.

“Why?”

“It is five centimeters too tall. Go to the desk and pay.”

“Can’t you let us by? Five centimeters isn’t that much.”

“It is over,” She pointed to the measuring device. “So you have to pay.”

Chris, understandably frustrated, took his bag out of the rungs and onto the ground. I walked over and told him we had to do it. Not pay- but bend the bag. Since we have large packs, they have aluminum supports through the back. They run all the way to the top of Chris’s pack, so even though his pack isn’t stuffed to the brim, he can’t prevent the height issue due to the immobile structuring. Instead, he had to kneel, grip the bag in his hands, and bend it back.

With the aluminum mangled, he shoved the backpack into the device yet again. I put my hand over the top of it, making it clear that it fit the requirement, and, rudely, stared at the attendant and stated, “Cool, it fits. Let’s go, Chris.”

No fees, but a bent pack. Luckily we could press it back into place. The bad thing is, we will probably have to do this for every Ryanair flight.

Job Life of the Working Class: The Eyes of One that Searches
People in Spain and Italy are suffering from unemployment. Construction layoffs and ruptured housing bubbles splintered the working class, throwing populations into the confusing mesh of the homeless categorization. En-route to Domodossola, a man with a dirty backpack, black slacks, and a button up with a royal crest stitched on the chest sat juxtaposing us.

“So tough to get a job in these countries,” He said, scratching his arm. “You guys looking for work, too?”

“No, no,” I responded, “We’re just travelers wandering around Europe.”

“Ah, so you got the money then?” He smiled, rubbing his fingers together, back and forth. Chris and I laughed and quickly assured him that we were the opposite, that we were students on a budget’s budget.

“What kind of work are you looking for?”

“Anything.  You know, cleaning, cooking, building. I’ll do anything.”

“Just something stable then.”

“You got it. This,” He grabbed his backpack and we noticed he had a brown sleeping bag next to it. He opened it up, pointed inside. “It’s my home. I got nothing more. Now, since I can’t find a job in Italy, I’m going to Switzerland to try my luck here.”

Shortly after, he got up and left. His stop was soon and he waited by the door. I watched as he departed, home on his shoulder, sleeping bag underneath his arm, surprised, yet not shocked at the measure he needed to go to for a consistent income.

The Swiss Alps: Mountains, Trees, and the Abundance of Green
A border passes before you can blink. It’s there then gone. After all, it is only a line drawn on a map- it isn’t like someone marked it with a the same kind of paint runner they use to make the markings on a football field.  As we traveled by train from Italy, which was already vibrant with trees, we hit the forests and the rising mounds of earth that mark the entrance to Switzerland. We had an “Amazing Race” kind of moment in Domodossola, where we had eight minutes to buy another set of tickets and find our train. It was a sprint-fest of stairs and people-dodging, but, with a solid thirty seconds, Chris and I made it, shirts slightly damp with sweat. As we crossed the border into Switzerland I jammed out to The Black Keys album, El Camiino, and the snow caps of the Alps stared down at us. Soon, the scenery disappeared, replaced with a tunnel and the feeling of building pressure in our ears.

No words really can describe the ride through the mountains and fog. I think Hemmingway tried in AFarewell to Arms, but really, not even a picture can show the sight. The mountains, the trees, the cities, towns, and rivers all have an aura. It is magical.







Sam