Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Washington, D.C.
After only a couple of brief weeks back home in Iowa City (mostly spent frantically planning the rest of my trip), I headed to Washington, D.C. to work at the National Museum of Natural History again to study their collection of fossil casts and Eskimo, Mongolian, and Australian Aborigine skulls. Having spent time at the NMNH in 2007, it was great to go back and see everyone at the museum again. Even better, since Kurt and Tara Lewis had recently moved there, I got to stay with some great friends during my time in the nation's capital, making my 3 weeks away from Tressa easier to handle. Thankfully, Tressa was able to come out and spend a weekend in D.C. and so we got some sight-seeing in as well as spending some quality time with Kurt, Tara, Olaiya, and Naomi. Having been to D.C. several times now, Tressa and I were less concerned with hitting the major attractions and instead focused on some of our favorite stops. Tressa, of course, had to visit the Corcoran gallery, her favorite art museum. I really wanted to see the American History Museum again since it had been recently renovated. As before, it displayed possibly my favorite historical statue: the original Washington Monument, a statue of George Washington wearing a toga. Tressa, however, was really excited about one of the new exhibits: a full scale reconstruction of Julia Child's kitchen (Tressa watches her show on PBS every Saturday morning).
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Home
Greece
Our hotel was exactly what we needed, a small relaxing place right on the Mediterranean. After enjoying a long awaited shower, Tressa and I headed out to the beach for a drink and some fresh seafood. We lounged on the beach for as long as we could, enjoying the sunset before crawling into bed to get some much needed sleep before our ridiculously early flight back to Vienna (you can read Tressa's blog to hear about this airline adventure).
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Romania
Tressa and I rolled into Bucharest, Romania on Sunday, August 23rd after enduring a grueling 19 hour train ride from Vienna. I had feared that the worst was yet to come, as I had heard some real horror stories about Bucharest hotels, but our hotel turned out to be one of the best we stayed at in Europe. It was incredibly clean, air- conditioned, had super friendly staff, and about $30 a night...it was exactly what we needed after 3 months of traveling on a shoestring. On Monday one of the staff at the the Institutul de Speologie arrived at our hotel and walked us to the institute. Erik Trinkaus had warned me that we would never find the institute on our own, and he was right, it was truly in the backstreets of Bucharest. For lunch, the guys at the institute took us to a fun local restaurant where we got to enjoy a Romanian specialty, Modovian Stew, a unique mix of unidentifiable internal organs, polenta and a fried egg. After getting over the initial idea of it, i actually found it to be really good. Back at the institute I worked with the Oase 2 cranium and Oase 1 mandible, likely the oldest H. sapiens fossils in Europe. It was just another one of those fantastically surreal experiences of working with fossils that I never thought I'd ever actually get to see. At the end of the day, the director, Dr. Silviu Constantin, walked us back to our hotel, where we spent the night anxiously watching the news (the room even came with a TV with english stations!) about the forest fires in Greece... our next destination.
Friday, September 25, 2009
Brno
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Vienna
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After spending the night in a hotel by the train station, Tressa helped me carry the equipment to the Natural History Museum. Having spent 5 weeks there in 2005, arriving at the museum felt almost like returning home, some where comfortable with people that you know. Another great benefit of arriving in Vienna was that my parents, my sister Caroline, and my aunt Sandy had arrived from Moscow to spend a week in Vienna. Getting to spend a week in Vienna with family was a lot of fun, and Tressa really appreciated the help hauling all our dirty laundry to the laundromat (by this point we were pretty tired of hand washing everything in hotel sinks). The museum staff had set Tressa and I up in the museum dormitories, which, in addition to being really inexpensive, was conveniently located just across the street from the museum. The dorm was really set up to be shared by two single people, a twin bed on each wall (think college dorms) but after we adjusted the furniture (and bought a fan) we had a pretty comfortable home for three weeks.
Since we were spending so little on housing (10 euros a night), Tressa and I were able to splurge a little on the some of Vienna's wide array of culinary delights. There was the classics, Sacher Torte and Melanges (Austrian version of a cappuccino), Lentils with bacon and bread dumplings, and there was the ethntic food; great Indian food (I can still smell the lamb korma) and then there was the sushi...
On our first Sunday we went to church and met up with Bob and Raija Lojek, who were friends of our Iowa City friends Sara and Jerry Steele when they all lived in the UK. They took us to lunch at a local Turkish restaurant and we began what would become a weekly ritual of spending the entire day together wandering around Vienna stopping here and there for something to drink or eat while enjoying some great conversation on virtually every topic under the sun.
The next Sunday Bob and Raija (who once lived in Japan) took us to a little Sushi restaurant. The sushi was great, but even better, the restaurant had a summer 1/2 off special on mixed sushi sets (10 pieces of nigiri and a maki roll for about $7). Thus, unbelievably, the cheapest food in Vienna was Sushi, and from that day on Tressa and I felt almost obligated to eat there...daily.
There is of course, no shortage of fun things to do in Vienna. In addition to being where I worked, the Natural History Museum in Vienna is one of our favorite museums. Opened in the late 1800's, the museum exhibits a huge collection of virtually everything found in nature.
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We're also big fans of the two Habsburg palaces: Schoenbrunn (summer palace) and the Hofburg (Winter palace). One of my favorite things about the Hofburg is that they've excavated part of one of the nearby squares to show the 5th century roman ruins that most of Vienna is built right on top of.
Saturday, September 5, 2009
Berlin
On Sunday, we walked around some of Berlin's most famous attractions such as the The Reichstag (German Parliament), the Brandenburger Tor, and Potzdamer Platz (where some of the original Berlin Wall still stands). We also visited the Gemaldegalerie, one of Europe's best Art museums, which houses Caravaggio's Amor Vincit Omnia, one of Tressa's favorite peices. Personally, I prefered the museum's extensive collection of Dutch paintings by artists such as Rembrandt, Steen and Van Dyke.
Finally, on Monday, we went back to Charlottenburg and the Museum für Vor- und Frühgeschichte to study the Combe Capelle cranium. This cranium was lost after WWII and only recently rediscovered, so not a lot of current researchers have had the opportunity to work with the original specimen. Unfortunately, since Tressa and I had to catch a noon train to Vienna, I only got to spend a couple of hours with the specimen before having to leave for the train station.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Florence & Sienna
Getting to Sienna on Wednesday turned out to be a real adventure. Since I hadn’t finished with the Romito material on Tuesday, I had planned to return to the museum in Florence at around 8 am, measure the one remaining skull, and then pack up and catch an 11 am train to Sienna. This seemed like a pretty good plan on Tuesday night, as it saved me having to haul all my equipment across Florence to our hotel. It still seemed like a pretty good plan when I got up on Wednesday morning and had a great stress-free breakfast at our “way-to-nice for the money we’re paying” hotel. It did not, however, seem like such a good plan when I got completely lost in the backstreets of Florence with a really crappy map. So… I finally get to the museum around 9:30 am (yeah, I was really lost) with about one hour before I have to leave to get to the train station. I measure the skull, pack up, and at around 10:30 am ask the staff to call me a cab. The cab arrives almost immediately and I’m thinking “I’ve got this in the bag” (it’s about a 5 minute cab ride to the train station). What I didn’t realize was that the museum was on a really long one-way street, and it just happened to be trash day in Florence… and wouldn’t you know it, my cab is right behind the garbage truck, which is making stops about every 50 feet or so to pick up the trash. So after a mind (and budget) blowing 25 minute cab ride, I arrive at the train station with 5 minutes to spare, make a mad dash to the platform and get myself and my equipment on the train just as the doors are closing. So, at this point I’m thinking that the worst is over, it’s all down hill form here… Wrong. I had planned on getting lunch at the Florence train station and eating on the train, but due to the mad scramble, I had to wait until I got to Sienna at around 2:00pm. Turns out the Sienna train station is not full of restaurants like the Florence train station, and I end up with a nutritious lunch consisting of a Snickers and a Coke from the station gift shop. So after “lunch” I grab a cab because I need to get to the museum as fast as possible to have enough time to study the Paglicci 25 specimen.
It is at this point that I truly realize what a fool I was for scheduling stops in Italian cities in July, which is tourist season, other wise known as Hell on Earth. So my taxi driver is driving down these little back streets in Sienna which are about 6 feet wide and absolutely packed with tourists. None of which, apparently, realize that streets are where cars drive, because they are just milling around as if they own the place, and if a car wants to get by, well, they can just wait for them to take their family portrait in the middle of the street. Well, my cabbie completely loses it, and starts screaming and cussing at these morons as we slowly make our way through this town that doesn’t appear to have changed much since the Renaissance. After about 20 minutes I start to wonder if this guy actually knows what he’s doing because we seem to be turning left at every intersection, and don’t appear to be going in any real obvious direction. I can’t really voice any of my concerns however, partly because I don’t speak Italian, but mainly because of the ceaseless stream of obscenities he’s still spewing. Anyways, all of a sudden he hits the brakes, points to a door, and says “OK”. The door has a sign saying” Università degli Studi di Siena” on the door and I’m finally there.
The rest of the day was really great though. The institute staff were really friendly and really, really interested in my work. Several of the people working there were my age and they wanted to know all about where all my research had taken me and where I had left to go. It took my about an hour to finish studying the specimen, which seems like a ridiculously small amount of time compared to how much trouble it took to get there. Luckily, after explaining how I needed to take a train back to Florence, the director, Prof. Ronchitelli, tells me that that she actually lives in Florence, and that’s she’ll be happy just to drive me back to my hotel. Which she does, and for which I’m sure she has no idea how grateful I truly am.
After returning from Sienna, we said good-bye to Mel and Joe on Thursday morning as they left for Naples, and spent the day sight-seeing in Florence while waiting for our night train to take us to Berlin. This was my one real sight-seeing day in Florence, but Tressa (who spent a semester in Florence in College) made sure that I got to see the major interests such as the Ponte Vecchio, the Piti Palace, the Boboli Gardens, the “piggy” market, and the Piazza Vecchio.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Ventimiglia
On Monday, the four of us took a (truly awful) train to the great little town of Ventimiglia on the Italian Riviera, where I studied the Barma Grande crania. While I didn’t get to spend much time enjoying the incredibly beautiful Mediterranean beaches, Tressa, Mel, and Joe rented a seaside umbrella and laid-out to soak up the rays. I on the other hand spent pretty much the whole day trying to figure out where the museum was (it’s not actually in Ventimiglia), communicating with museum staff in broken French, measuring the crania, and attempting to find a taxi to avoid having to haul my equipment the 8 km back to the train station on foot (it was “tres chaud” that day).
The Barma Grande crania
After finally getting the whole taxi thing sorted out, we all spent a little time on the beach, and then ate dinner at a little seaside restaurant. Tressa and I split a terrific “frutti di mare” pizza covered in mussels, clams, calamari, and all sorts of other great seafood.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Genoa
Even though Genoa is not really a tourist town, there was still plenty of things to see there. We climbed Genoa’s famous lighthouse which was close to our hotel, we walked through the “old town” and found Christopher Columbus’ house (actually a replica since Napoleon blew up the original), saw several beautiful cathedrals, basilicas and palaces, we ate great Italian food on the harbor, and visited the marina after sunset.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Paris.
We didn't get so spend nearly enough time in Paris. We got to stay near the Institut de Paleotologie Humaine on the the trendy Avenue des Gobelins, and had a lot fun, but the ridiculous Italian trains required that we cut our stay n Paris a day short (the only available train to Genoa was early Friday morning). Regardless, we had a lot of fun. I spent most of my time at the Institute, where I got to hang out with Amelie Vialet (IPH), Jean-Luc Voisin (IPH), and and Jim Ahern (U. Wyoming). Tressa on the other hand got to see the Museum D'Orsay, St. Michel Basilica, and Notre Dame Cathedral. We did, of course, make it out to the Eiffel Tower for a night of fun on the Seine.
Friday, July 17, 2009
The Netherlands
now); I remebered that our pet hampster "hampy" was buried in the flower bed in the backyard; I remembered trapping mice in the shed with my dad; I remembered falling into the pond across the street while trying to catch frogs, getting out covered in pond scum, then stepping on a rust nail, letting go of my bike in pain which then proceeded to roll into the pond, having to go backing into the water to retreive the bike, hopping on one foot back to the house looking for comfort from my mother only to be told that I couldn't come into the house covered in pond scum and bleeding frot he foot, being forced to strip down to my whitey-tighties on the front porch to be hosed down with an ice cold garden hose, and then finally having to go to the doctor to get a tetanus shot...good memories. But seriously, I do have a lot a great memories from Wassenaar. Somehow I managed to remember the location of a great little pancake house a few blocks from my house where Tressa and I ended up having lunch (we shared a classic dutch strawberry and cream pancake). We managed to find the main walking steet in Wassenaar near the town's windmill. We found the old bakery where we would go as kids to get little almond cakes and fruit-covered custard tarts (I don't care what anyone says, nobody makes pasteries better than the Dutch!). We found the old toy store where I bought my weight in Transformers action figures as a kid (ironically enough, they are now selling them again becuase of the new movies...I'm expecting a Thundercats movie ASAP!). We had a great time in Wassenaar, and I was really glad that Tressa finally got to see where I grew up.
On Monday, we took the bus from Leiderdorp to Leiden so I could work at the Naturalis Museum. The Naturalis Museum houses all of the archaeological and paleoanthropological material excavated by the illustrious Eugene Dubois (The first professional paleoanthropologist and discoverer of H. erectus). I was there to specifically study the terminal Pleistocene Wadjak 1 and 2 specimens. As Tressa and I were walking to the museum, out of the corner of my eye, I caught sight of two other people wheeling equipment towards the museum, it was none other than Matt Tocheri (who I had just seen in Belgium 3 weeks earlier) and Bill Jungers who were there to study some neolithic H. sapiens remains from Java as part of their ongoing research on Flores. After lunch, the curator, Rainer van Zelst, took as all into the museum to see the exhibits. The highlight of the museum for any paleoanthropologist is the Trinil skullcap and femur which are on public display when not being studied by visiting researchers. Other interesting exhibits included the world oldest rock (3.8 billion years old), A fantastic skeleton of a mammoth, and a skeleton of a dwarfed elephant.