Sunday, September 2, 2007

Things I've Forgotten along the way

** Ely Cathedral, back in the UK was shut down the week after we were there so that they could film the Other Boleyn sister, starring Eric Bana and Scarlett Johansson and Natalie Portman and due out in February. The Golden Age with Cate Blanchett and due out in Nov. has also filmed there recently.

** On the train to Prague: Ticket checkers, dressed more or less like stewardesses, stop by every once in a while to check our ticket. Then, a rather austere looking man in a police uniform with two guns comes in; D offers the man his ticket. After the man left I said to D, weren't the guns a pretty good give away that he wanted our passports and not our tickets?

** There are TV towers (like the landmark one in East Berlin) all over former communist Europe. You can watch them pop up as the train rolls through the countryside. They were built to jam the transmission of radio free Europe. Radio free Europe was originally broadcast from Berlin. The biggest TV tower in Prague was completed not long before the Czech revolution and ironically is now the home of Radio Free Europe (who had to leave Berlin becasue it was too expensive; the Czech gov't rents them space for 1 Euro/year).

** Because of security concerns luggage lockers are a thing of the past; now, you leave your bags at a left luggage counter, kind of like you would ckeck your cat or dog into a kennel for the day.

** Prague is not yet part of the EU, so they still use their own currency, rather than Euros. On the morning we were set to leave we still had about 200 Czech Crowns (about 10 dollars), so I stay with the bags and send D off to buy snacks for the train with our remaining Czech money. After all, we were to be on the train all day; we'd have to eat something. He wanders around the entire train station, surveying every little shop, trying to figure out where to spend his money. He comes back and has spent all of it but 17 crowns (less than 1 dollar) and wait did he have to show for it---?????????? A bottle of some kind of Czeck liquor. "what's this?" I ask. "I dunno," he says, but they sell it in every store, so I figured we had to have some." The worse part: he didn't even leave me enough money so I could pay to pee and I wait until the train got there. We ended up buying train snacks when we changed trains in Dresden and then could use Euros.

** We were in an Internet cafe in Berlin and D was calling ahead to make our reservations in Ramstein and some man overheard him ask for a space available room. Turns out the man and his family had recently space a'd into Germany from California and was touring Berlin and Prague like we were. So, we swapped "how we got from point A to point B" stories with him.

** D and I most certainly do not look Czech. We were never ever mistaken for locals in Prague like we were in Berlin. In Prague, however, any one over about 30 has a very beat down look to them. I saw lots of mammas on the trains with their 3-4-5 year olds, and you would of thought they were the grandmammas. Now, it's possible that becasue we never got into the work-a-day sections of Berlin, so we simply didn't see everyday folk outside of the tourist district. I've been menaing to look up what an average yearly wage is in Prague, just to see.

Hurry up and wait

Long day on Friday getting accross Germany from Prague to Kaiserslautern. It became apparent that reservations are actually only really necessary on trains headed into Berlin, and then probably only on the weekends. It was Friday afternoon when we first headed to Berlin, and it was Friday a week later when were leaving Prague. Our train was ultimately headed back to Berlin; we got off it at Dresden, but most of the seats were reserved from dresden to Berlin, but from Dresden to Hamburg (our second train's final destination) not so much. I think all the reservations (Berlin to Prague, Prague to Dresden, and Dresden to Kaiserslautern) only ended up costing 11 Euros (about 15 dollars)-- worth it, I think, for not having to worry about having to stand.

We are now waiting on a flight home. We're actually wating on a particular flight; the plane has had maintenance problems, but its home is our home and we figure it has to go there eventually, so we wait. The alternative is to fly into Delaware and then rent a car to get home. I'd rather hang out here and watch movies. without a rental car it's hard to get very far, and we've both been so tired we've been sleeping a lot, but we went to see Ratatouille last night and Stardust tonight, and I finally finished Edith Wharton's Age of Innocence that I've been carrying around with me since we left home. In fact I stopped by the terminal today and bookswapped it out for Greg Iles Turning Angel--never heard of Iles, but he seems kind of Da Vinci code-esque.