Monday, August 25, 2014

Eating and Being Eaten in France and Spain

On Monday, August 18th, we journeyed across the Italian border into my favorite country, ever:

               FFFFRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
                                                                                                NNNNNNNNNNNNNNCE.

If France were a man, I would marry him.

If France were a weather pattern, it would be 75 degrees and sunny with rainbows every day.

If France were a type of food, it would be the best organic pistachio ice cream made from free-range cows ever tasted.

Jessica: “If France were a fruit, it would be the apple of my eye.”

Anyways.

I don’t quite understand why I love France so much. I just do. I just love it – the food, the people, the culture, the countryside, the rich history, the language. To those who don’t know, I have been studying French now for eight years, and last year I interned in the French Alps through a cultural immersion program offered by my university. It was during those six weeks in July and August that I decided to change my French minor to a major. Now, here I am, about to study in the country for an entire academic year.

Clearly, I am addicted.

Jessica and I began our French travels in the beautiful, beach-y tourist trap that is Nice. We tanned, swam, ate goat cheese and baguette, and drank wine while watching the sun set on the horizon.

"Nice is sooo nice."
The tankini goddess.

Big sunglasses are all the thing now, right??
Baguette, wine, and cheese on the shore. 
C'est la vie. 
From Nice, we traveled along the coast to the ocean city of Marseille. Originally, we were expecting to stay in Marseille for three days, continue to darken our tans and watch beautiful European men emerge out of the water in tight black swim trunks. Evidently, however, the Fates had a different plan for us. While this plan did not include beaches, a clean hostel within walking distance of the shoreline, and fabulous seafood, it did include bed bugs, a completely imaginary hostel that has the incredibly ability to disappear whenever it hears that Dani and Jessica are coming to visit, and the Ghetto.

The only picture I got of Marseille... from the train station.
Now, we don’t know when Jessica was first bitten by bed bugs, but we can basically assume that they kept her company in her bed in Florence just a few days previous to our voyage to Marseille (luckily, I was able to evade the buggers until we got to Barcelona about a week later – now we both are covered in enormously angry, red, itchy spots. More on this later). Nevertheless, it was around the time that our travel plans went to hell in France that her bites began itching with a vengeance.

We exited the train station as per usual – both of us hungry, hot, and Jessica itchy – and immediately jumped on the metro to get off at the designated stop indicated in our hostel booking. Ten minutes later, we left the metro to discover that we were not only hell and back from the beach, but also leagues away from Marseille’s city center. We emerged into a new land, a land of graffiti, dirty condoms stuck on the road, creepy street side markets, rundown apartment buildings, noisy highways, and very, very questionable individuals. Only slightly disheartened at this point, we followed our handy-dandy MapQuest directions uphill, backpacks pressing down upon us and the sun a constant reminder of our close proximity to the Equator.

Twenty minutes later, after finally reaching the little blue “you have arrived” dot mocking us on Jessica’s iPhone… we had not arrived.

The hostel was nowhere to be found.

It literally did not exist.

Hopelessly and entirely disheartened, we wandered up and down the road, desperately searching for the hostel…to no avail. I don’t know how long it took us to turn around and head back down the hill, but a quick conversation with a local confirmed what we believed all along: that the hostel was an invisible hoax, taunting us with its previous lies of shelter and comfort.

Sad, dejected little cartoon characters once more, we made the long trek back down the hill, miserably piled ourselves into the metro, and unhappily returned to the train station. It was there where we realized that our hostel booking in Marseille had been mysteriously cancelled and the hostel itself had completely vanished from the hostel booking website.

WHAT.

Less than an hour later, we had booked a private hotel room in an air-conditioned, three-star hotel in the heart of Aix-en-Provence and were on the first train out of Marseille we could find.

Tuesday, August 19th

Tuesday through Friday was spent primarily eating.

Quiche made with goat cheese and honey, paired with un café.
Le Fondant au Chocolat.
And the classic Tarte Tatin.
Other activities included watching and making fun of Twilight, as well as a hike in the mountains of the Concours.

Have you ever seen water so blue?

Also, posing on one of many of the city’s fountains.


 Also, sleeping.
It's the inside that counts, right?
Looking back on it, our disastrous change of plans in Marseille was a happy accident. We had a great, relaxing time in Aix-en-Provence, with only one problem – Jessica’s skin was still erupting with red, angry spots. Itchy and grumpy, she thought she was just having an allergic reaction.

Then, we got to Barcelona, and realized that we were being eaten alive.

Friday, August 22nd

What a first night in Barcelona. We both had really wanted to go out dancing for a long while now, so we said, “Where’s better to party than Barcelona!?”

So, we headed out the door… and it immediately started pouring cats and dogs.



Smiling through the sudden downpour!
Running through puddles and getting soaked to the bone, we made our slow way to the club, running from awning to awning and laughing the whole way. We arrived at the club to find that the dance floor wasn’t even open – at 11! Little did we know, at the time, that Spanish people don’t actually go out until two o’clock in the morning. After much Sangria, sitting, and talking with our new friends Chloe and Simon, the dance floor finally opened up and we fulfilled our legs’ needs to jam.

The next morning, the spots came. They started on my right foot, but as the day went on, they began appearing up both my legs, on my arms, and my back. That evening, I realized what was happening: we were being attacked in our sleep. Our previous theories about allergic reactions or contagious skin diseases evaporated – all that was left was our horrified recognition that our beds were infested with blood-sucking parasites.

Bed bugs are a traveler’s nightmare. Nocturnal, they only become active at night. While you’re sleeping, they bite you, releasing a chemical that makes you unaware that you are even being bitten. Sucking your blood, they often leave linear trails of “breakfast, lunch, and dinner” bites along your skin… or, in my case, many of them can sit in one concentrated area on your skin and attack you at once, creating an angry, red cluster of bumps instead of a trail. They get in your clothes, your bag, and accompany you wherever you go if you’re not careful enough to eradicate their spread. Jessica must have had them in her bed in Florence… then, we had them in both our beds in Barcelona. I was able to find one early this morning before it quickly escaped into the darkness of the bed folds once more.

We tried to spend the rest of our time in Barcelona the best we could, eating many tapas, taking part in a walking tour of the city, and seeing the Sagrada Familia. We thought staying busy would keep our mind off the nasty bites.

Tapas are basically mini meals that you can mix and match. 

Yay Spain! 
Sooo weird. It's almost as if there was an original church, but that church started growing rock fungus all over itself.  

Thanks to Gaudi for this amazing piece of art!



But....

Jessica’s purse was then stolen. Luckily, her passport and Eurail pass were not in it, but she lost two credit cards and her driver’s license, as well as 50 euro.

And our bites continue to get more and more itchy as time passes.

At this point in time, we are both very uncomfortable and a little low from the most recent theft. This week has been pretty hard for both us, but we are trying to keep our spirits high as we make our way through Madrid to our final travel destination: Paris. Traveling is certainly fun, but life tends to throw its curveballs at you no matter where you are in the world. I know we will get through this, but cross your fingers that our bites heal properly and that no more robbery or bed bugs will be in our future. Until then, we must carry on!!!

With that, I leave you another Lord of the Rings reference. 


Love,

D


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