Monday, March 7, 2016

ESN Trip: Part 3: Sevilla

So on Friday we arrived in Sevilla, but we didn't really do much. Steph and I went on a walk to buy pizza at Telepizza, which we have wanted to do basically since we got to Spain. We took the first chance we could to buy it since in Santiago we aren't going to buy it with our host moms cooking meals for us, never pass up a "free" meal (that you already paid for) is our philosophy in life. I also no longer was living on the 2 euro life after this walk, so excitement, I could eat again! Not that I haven't been eating, but my galletas only could get me so far in life ya know? Oh and in Sevilla I was rooming with Morgana and Melisa. 
So on Saturday, March 5th, the Sevilla adventure actually began. I'm pretty sure Friday night they had a big, huge party that I didn't go to because I didn't feel like buying the party pack. I mean why would I buy it when I'm not a partier ya know? Speaking of the party pack though, everyone who bought the party pack, got a condom in it (and a t-shirt that says "responsible party" on the back). The condoms were great though because they had "ooo", "ahh", or other things written on them. My favorite was "umm" because it led to great jokes such as "umm should we google how to do this", "umm wikihow to have sex". In all honesty, who puts the word "umm" on a condom? Its like you aren't even sure about what you're getting into! 
But as I was saying, the Sevilla adventure began with breakfast. It was slightly disappointing since it was a normal Spain breakfast of bread and bread and bread. There wasn't even very many types of bread, though they did have my favorite prepackaged croissant rolls that I can eat 300000000 of in one sitting (okay maybe I'm exaggerating a little bit). Once breakfast was eaten and people were awoken, we started the touring! We weren't on schedule though because of the big party the night before making other people want to sleep, but we tried to stay on schedule, mostly because I wasn't in the ESN whatsapp group that said the time was pushed back so we were ready to go at the scheduled time without knowing important, vital information! 
Photo Cred: Obviously this is an ESN photo
The start of the Sevilla Adventure Tours
So we began our adventure at this water fountain that you can't see in the above picture because we had a lot of people in our group. That's our super cool group of ESN Santiago people though, we even got a sign to proclaim we are ESN Santiago, which was very helpful since Sevilla was the party central for ESN and there were so many ESN groups. Shortly after taking the above picture we got one with ESN Uric too. The tour was cool and we got to learn a bunch of history, which I did not soak in because I was looking at cool things and not really paying attention. I'm pretty sure a lot of the history that we learned about had death in it though, because death always makes for a good story after all. 
Photo Cred: Obviously ESN
Sevilla Cathedral
The first city tour ended at the Cathedral of Sevilla, which was pretty snazzy looking. I felt like I was looking at a castle when I saw it. Sevilla was really just all around gorgeous looking. We did a lot of walking tours through Sevilla, that was basically what our whole day was, but when you think about all the cool things we saw obviously the best way to do that was walking tours. Some people went in the Cathedral, I think, but it was a long line and we chose to use our free time to do other things. One of Melisa's friends is studying in Sevilla right now and said we had to go to a certain bakery because it was probably the best bakery and our life would forever be changed. Okay I'm not really sure why we had to go, but I'm sure that's probably the reason. So the cool group, plus a lot of additions and minus Greg, went to the bakery during our hour or so of free time between walking tours. Technically it was our lunch time, so some people actually bought food. I was living on the galletas diet because I was promised Telepizza again for dinner so didn't feel like buying food for lunch when I knew I would be eating dinner later.

Photo Cred: Mildred
Ania and Carlos
So, two every important people in our cool people group, would have to be Ania and Carlos. Ania is from Poland and she didn't actually want to study medicine in Santiago, she was wanting to go to France, but it didn't work out in her favor so she is in Santiago. I personally am pretty glad it didn't work out because I wouldn't have gotten to meet her and she's awesome. The day of the Sevilla adventures was her 25th birthday, so we had a dance session/celebration in front of the cathedral after our free lunch time to celebrate her birthday. We were using the microphone that was supposed to be used during the tour for talking and information giving, which it was used for that too, for playing music from a phone so that all in our group could hear. It definitely made our ESN group the best ESN group in Sevilla, plus the fact that it was the group I was in because let's be honest, I'm biased and would say any group I was in was the best group. So Ania was super cool, I mean she still is and hopefully we will have many more meet ups to come. Then there was Carlos, the older brother I've never had. In Sevilla, okay maybe in C-town as well, Steph and I were acting very mature let me tell ya and we may have gotten told we remind him of his little sister with all our antics. So we became the little sisters to keep his homesickness that he never mentioned at bay. We are nice people like that. In C-town, he became a liar because he told us he was 19 but then later revealed he was actually 21 almost 22. Always a liar in our hearts. He's from Mexico and is studying Law at Santiago and only has 15 hours and 3 days of class a week, which Ania was very quick to mention because she has a lot more. Carlos basically said that Santiago was a vacation not schooling.  Basically throughout the whole day in Sevilla, we were yelling "besos" whenever Ania and Carlos were around each other because everyone thought they were adorable together or something, at least thats what I thought. Ania wasn't exactly happy with us for that, but we must express ourselves! But anyhoo, back to the Sevilla Adventures....

Photo Cred: Mildred
Cynthia, Ania, and I outside the Cathedral
Photo Cred: Carlos, who stole my camera
The "To Die For" Bakery


Photo Cred: Mildred
So many horses

Photo Cred: Mildred
Carlos and Steph being weird


Photo Cred: Mildred
The Metro line that was basically a sidewalk
Photo Cred: Mildred
Sevilla
In the area of Sevilla we were in for our lunch break, there were millions (yes exaggerating again) of horses. Horses, horses, horses, all ready to pull you around Sevilla and show off the sites. Of course we didn't use the horses for such purposes, but it was an option. Before our lunch break during our walking tour, we did come across a protest and let me tell you it was the silentest protest I ever did see. I'm not sure what exactly they were protesting but it had something to do with interpreters for the hearing impaired. People were walking around carrying signs (the cardboard kind) and doing signs to talk about it (not the cardboard kind but the hand kind). I don't speak sign language though so I didn't understand, I obviously needed an interpreter. The protest was happening on the metro line, which there is a picture above to show. We quite literally just were walking around on the line like it was a sidewalk. During the protest the line was shutdown but after lunch it was back up and running whenever the metro was trying to get through it would just honk at people to get off the tracks and continue on its merry way. 
During lunch we had a nice break in some plaza where Carlos and Steph were being weird, though we were always weird when Carlos was around because siblings no matter how unrelated are weird together. It was a pretty cool plaza, with a statue of a horse and rider in the middle and then the ground had different pictures made from rocks to try and figure out what they were.
After our lunch free time break we took another tour where we needed up in Plaza de Espana or whatever, which let me tell you is a pretty plaza and pictures do not do it justice. I can try though! I'm not really sure what the point of the Plaza was, but there were lots of places with signs to show different places in Spain so it was literally a Plaza to celebrate different Spain locations in my opinion, but I have no clue what the actual point of it was or if it was even to do any celebrating at all. 
Photo Cred: Mildred
Plaza de Espana 

Photo Cred: Mildred
Plaza de Espana with a random stranger in the picture

Photo Cred: Mildred
Plaza de Espana

Photo Cred: Mildred
Plaza de Espana
Photo Cred: Mildred
Plaza de Espana
The Plaza de Espana was gorgeous and definitely worth all the walking around we did. It was also where I decided how truly awesome the group I went on this trip was because one of the "venders" tried to get Timothy to buy something from her and as he was walking over to the stuff she was selling, a bunch of different people in the group grabbed him and made him walk away telling him it wasn't a safe idea at all. We've been warned a lot to ignore the women trying to "sell" or "give gifts" to you on the streets because they are going to try and steal from you somehow so it was nice seeing that everyone in the group had our backs if we tried to do something that wasn't a bright idea.
The picture that I have here with a random stranger in it is only making the blog because it was the perfect shot and then the stranger got in the picture without warning me, so I took another but it wasn't as good as the one he's in so I have settled with this random guy being my favorite random stranger of the trip, not that I have any other good pictures of random strangers because he's the only one that got in the way.

After Plaza de Espana, we walked through an area of ceramics. There obviously was a lot of ceramic work in this area, which really everywhere in Sevilla I think had a lot of ceramics going on, but this road we walked down was all about that life. It was just wide enough for a car to drive down with two people walking on opposite sides of the road, not as narrow as some of the roads we saw, but the tour guide pointed this out for some reason so I will too.
Photo Cred: Mildred
Ceramics
So one of the buildings we stopped at on this road is pictured above. You can't really see all the details in the picture and it doesn't do it justice at all. The tour guide made us find the date the ceramic building was made, which actually took awhile because it was "hidden" within the ceramics. Its between the large two windows at the top on opposite sides of the small two windows at the top in case you wanted to know where the year was. Obviously hard to explain where they are. After our walk down the ceramic road we headed back to the hotel and that was the end of our walking tours. Steph and I went and bought dinner, which ended up not being telepizza. We had guac and chips instead along with raspberries and apple juice boxes. It was a good dinner but gave me some wicked acid reflex so that was a pleasant experience.
There was another super huge party for the party pack people that night and I'm sure that everyone had fun during the party. Then at 11 o'clock on Sunday, March 6th, we packed up the bus and began our journey back to Santiago. I tempted fate and challenged my car sickness to a duel, which I sorely lost and was not pleased with losing at all. I had to finish my book that I had started reading the night before though! I was in suspense and car sickness was not going to hold me back! I got super car sick though and felt like puking, which is great because I don't normally feel like puking when I get car sick. Then today, March 7th, I still feel pretty car sick and couldn't move for awhile because of it. It was a great feeling let me tell you. 

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