Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

9.01.2010

istanbul street smarts



my entire istanbul experience was about as traditional as a pork chop in a mosque. i barely glimpsed the hagia sofia, spent about an hour in the grand bazaar, and turned down a boatride on the golden horn. istanbul is one of those cities where you can just walk and walk for hours without even entering a building and you still learn so much about the city, its history, people, and culture. i have so many stories to tell, but i figured we could start with a few basic observations:






the street economy was alive and well in istanbul. various goods and services were available in carts, baskets, out of windows, from hands young and old. you name it, they've got it and it's definitely for sale. get something weighed by the guy on the sidewalk sitting next to a scale; fruits and veggies by the kilo (obvi!); pocket tissues from grandmas sitting on crates in doorways; don't miss the guy with the cactus garden cart; kids selling spirograph sets complete with neon demos (got some!); dudes weaving through traffic with bouquets of roses, ice cream, newspapers. bubble machines. tea. corn on the cob. bouncy balls. chestnuts. oysters. umbrellas, if it's raining or not! enormous flower arrangements. watermelons branded with the vendor's phone number (in case you need to call!). round, seed-coated simit bread....







the way people moved in the city was also like nothing i'd ever seen before. traffic is a daily nuisance (and nice contributor to the appalling pollution!) and pedestrians are required to dodge vehicles constantly. people dart across train tracks, wait on freeway banks for buses, and cram into street and subway cars. bicycles are rarities, especially due to the hills that rival even the steepest in san francisco. the whole city is jam-packed!!! i've never been on a more crowded street in my life than on istiklal, the permanently populated promenade on the european side. being around so many people makes you constantly aware of your space, or lack there-of. but at the same time you feel almost empowered by your ability to walk anywhere, crossing streets youd never imagine crossing in places you never thought you could be, avoiding your rational fears of speeding cars and adapting to the pace of the city.






despite the 13 million (according to wikipedia) people and probably 12 million cats (OMG! soooo many cats!) the city was remarkably clean and functioning. it was chaotic and stressful to be in, but somehow quite organized. unlike athens, which seemed about to tip over at any moment, istanbul was a well-oiled machine- a bit complicated at moments, but certain in its past and future. the constant building and construction throughout the city, including giant sky-scrapers, is a sign of the continued push for modernity despite the anchors in religion and deep-rooted tradition......

8.22.2010

"we've just set foot in asia"



from syros i took a day-tripper ferry to kusadasi in southern turkey. a quite obviously american couple disembarked before me and i overheard the man say, "well, this is it! we've just set foot in asia!" pretty awesome!!!

the journey to istanbul was long, exhausting, EXCITING. my overnight bus didn't leave until around 10pm, so i decided to trek to the roman ruins of ephesus to explore. ended up being picked up along the road by a sweet, generous family from macedonia. they took me along to the top of the mountain, where mary (you know, jesus' mother) was supposedly born. people lit candles, filled up water bottles and drank from the "holy" well, wrote wishes on tissues and tied them to the wall. it's always strange coming to religious mecca sites, but this was very serene and quite beautiful. until you get to the gift shop where they hit you up for your cash in exchange for any and every item in the shape of or plastered with mary's silhouette. trpe and his family, ana and jovana, were great companions and dropped me at the entrance to the ruins on their way down the mountain.





i wandered around alone amongst the collapsed columns of the roman empire's second largest city (behind rome!) but had to take cover from the rain under an ancient arch. another girl was stuck under another structure about 15 yards away from me, and we kept calling out to each other through the rain. when the sun finally came out, we made a break for it and explored the covered section of the ruins together (little did we know...could have just hung out in there for 45 minutes). i cant remember her name but she was from the netherlands and was traveling alone, as well. thanks for hanging out! another stranger proved to be a great companion.






the overnight bus from kusadasi was dreadful- a pudgy girl drooled and snored on me throughout the entire night; the day after tomorrow was dubbed over in turkish; the in-seat radio had sean paul's album in it's entirety on rotation. but hey, they served ice cream! we stopped at weird rest-stops throughout the night and i putzed around taking photos. at dawn, the bus pulled onto a ferry with several other buses. a girl's puppy peed and pooped on the deck. everyone was smoking around the barrels of gasoline and drinking tea in the fog. onward to istanbul.......


8.05.2010

road rage



nico and i have been on the road for almost a week now, making our way through the american southwest, camping, sightseeing, taking photos of roadside oddities, changing lanes, and marveling at the outrageously huge amounts of SPACE out here! we're in taos, new mexico right now and were forced by raging thunderstorms to get a room at the adobe sun lodge motel. our only chance to check email, charge phones and camera batteries, and UPDATE OUR IPODS!!! jesus, i didn't think we'd get sick of the eagles this quickly! (nico did.) here are our picks for top cruising tunes:

NICO'S PLAYLIST:



REBECCA'S PLAYLIST:



and for some reason, this song keeps following us:

7.27.2010

go big or go home


world's largest pisatchio! in alamogordo, new mexico

nico and i are leaving saturday for a BIG TRIP in the wild wild west....down south to joshua tree, across arizona, curling up through new mexico to boulder for haley & eitan's wedding, then back through utah and nevada and finally back to san francisco. we've been planning out the trip, camping sites, roadside attractions, etc etc, and have been coming across a lot of BIG THINGS. here are some that we may come across...and a few others that i will see someday. god, i love a road trip!


world's largest tortoise! in joshua tree, california


world's largest kachina doll AND sundial! both in carefree, arizona
that's gotta be some kind of record!!!


world's largest paper cup! in riverside, california


world's largest boneshaker! in calhan, colorado


world's largest buffalo! in jamestown, north dakota


world's largest baked potato! in blackfoot, idaho
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