Monday, July 30, 2012

Rijeka Region with Friends

A post by Alison and Laura

Laura:  We were very lucky to spend a lot of time this month with friends--in this case, the family who inspired us to come to Croatia--from our small town back in the U.S. As we noted in earlier posts, Alison joined them at their family's summer place in Baska Voda by herself, and our whole family spent the 4th of July with them at Boris's Dad's home in Zagreb.  Later in the month our friends came to visit us in Rijeka, and after that we joined them as a whole family in Baska Voda.  It was great to see Croatia from their perspective.   

Alison: Seeing Ana in Zagreb and Baska Voda was so much fun, so I was very excited to spend even more time with her.  On the day we got back from Switzerland and France, Ana and her family arrived in Rijeka.  
Looking down at our street (Laginjina) from our balcony
On the second day they were here, we went to a beach called Medveja, very close to Lovran and on the Opatija Riviera.  The beach was beautiful.  There were all of these chairs you could rent, cafes and restaurants, a whole area in the water with inflatable rafts and slides, and tons of room to swim around.  We spent the entire day there. 

Cocktails at the bar on the beach (with a Tom Cruise-in-the-movie-Cocktail-style bartender)
Laura: On other days we also showed the family parts of Rijeka and the surrounding areas that we’ve come to enjoy, such as the Korzo and Trsat Castle in Rijeka and Kastav (10 kilometers from here). 
"Our" castle, Trsat Castle in Rijeka
Trsat Castle
Trsat Castle


Drago on a canon at Trsat Castle

View of Rijeka on the way to Trsat Castle
Kim & Boris as the sun was setting in Kastav
Alison: On July 16, we went to the Brijuni Islands, off the western coast of Istria.  We separated at first.  My Mom and Kim (Ana’s Mom) went on a tour of a museum about Tito.  (I have no idea what that is, but I have to give you a clue of what my Mom’s about to talk about!)  My Dad and Boris (Ana’s Dad) took the kids, Caroline, Ana, Drago (Ana’s little brother), and me, on a golf cart trip around the island.  The island doesn’t allow cars.  Boris rented a bike and told us he would follow us, though he actually meant race us!  I laughed at a sign on the golf cart that said that the drivers had to be 18 and over considering that in America, 16 year olds can drive actual cars (though I should note that you have to be 18 to drive a car in Croatia).  But we kind of broke the rules by letting a six year old, an eight year old, and two eleven year olds (one more day until I turned eleven—I think it counts) drive.  We each had three chances to try driving for a short while.  I think Ana and I were quite nervous when Caroline was driving because all she wanted to do was go fast and she did not really know how to steer.  Luckily, everyone else was a pretty good driver.  Then, on our last five minutes of driving the golf cart, we met up with the two Moms.
Speed demon with the fastest mode of transportation on the Brijuni Islands
Laura: Kim and I had a great time at the museum devoted to Marshall Tito’s life and summer home on the Brijuni Islands.  Tito, who was prime minister and then president of Yugoslavia from the World War II era until his death in 1980, was clearly a force of nature.  Under his leadership, Yugoslavia developed its own form of socialism and was not a puppet state of the Soviet Union.  In fact, Tito, with the help of the leaders of India and Egypt, created the Non-Aligned Movement, a policy of non-alignment with the two opposing sides during the Cold War.  
Kim with Tito
Laura:  Kim and I learned that Tito generally spent six months a year on the Brijuni Islands, where he entertained the world’s leaders and famous singers and actors, collected animals from around the world (gifts from such leaders as India’s Indira Gandhi and Libya’s Moammar Kadafi), and enjoyed the beautiful natural setting.  A number of Croatians have told us that they think that in many ways, Croatians’ lives were better under Tito’s socialism (even after he died) because they had stable jobs, good salaries, and apartments provided for them.  I also learned from Boris and Kim the extent to which Tito was revered while he was president, though sometimes controversial since his death.  I found the choices that the museum made about how to portray Tito to be quite interesting.

Alison: At the end of the day, we went to a beach.  Isn’t that a surprise? (Sarcasm)  This beach is a lot different than most of the beaches we’ve seen during the summertime here—it’s quiet!  We had dinner, dessert, and a lot of salt water in our mouths after a lot of swimming. 
Croatian flag, on the boat ride back from the Brijuni Islands to the Istrian mainland

Friday, July 27, 2012

The Croatian Pace of Life

In 5 days, we'll be on a plane back to the United States, and at the moment, I'm quite sad to be leaving this place.  For awhile now, Rijeka and Croatia more broadly have been my new normal, and there's much about life here that I've really come to like.

One of the things I appreciate most about life in Croatia is the pace.  I remember that after we were here for perhaps a few weeks, my colleague Darko asked me how I cope with the pace of life in America.  I literally didn't know what he was asking.  Now I understand.  The pace of life is so much slower here.  There's less rushing around and less hectic scheduling.  People take time with one another--in a whole variety of settings, but certainly the cafes are the best example of this.  There's no need for a slow food movement in Croatia (though one may be here) because it seems that everyone here takes a slow, local approach to food.  The dinners we've had in our new Croatian friends' homes have been wonderful--fresh, slow, delicious, designed to maximize the pleasure of getting together with friends and savoring the moment (not to mention the excellent food, brandy, and wine!). 

The approach to work also seems very different from what I've experienced in the U.S.  I suspect that my academic colleagues here would meet or exceed the expectations of the standards at the best universities in the States.  They're intellectual, very well-published (for non-academics out there reading this, that's what often matters in a university setting), and devoted to their subject matter.  But when they get together, especially in social settings, these professors like to talk about their lives outside of work.  And they don't seem to do what I think many academics (and perhaps many professionals?) in the U.S. do:  pretend that they're working all of the time.  In fact, they seem to value actively, and talk about the fact that they value actively, having full lives--spending time with family, going to the beach, doing whatever it is they like to do and being with whomever they love.

I'm probably romanticizing a lot about life here.  Certainly, I haven't experienced the pace in the way a Croatian professor would.  I'm a guest, so I didn't have to serve on committees or get involved in the messiness of university life.  (In fact, I had the luxury of finding some of the messiness to be interesting.)  And I'm sure there's a lot I didn't understand about what was going on around me because of the language and cultural barriers.  In general, the fact that I was here temporarily and predisposed to find the good in this place, both due to my temperament and short-term status, meant that I could avoid some of the bad.  

I also realize that there are down sides to this pace.  Based on my experience, some things here can be inefficient by American standards.  Croatians also spend a lot more time waiting on line than Americans do.  In addition, bureaucracy and a poor economy, which in my mind are connected with the pace of life here, seem to leave some Croatians resigned to the current state of affairs and their own inability to effect change.  This seems in stark contrast to the American "can-do" attitude (which, I think, can sometimes lead Americans to assume that they can do more than they can).

I don't think I ever stopped noticing these things, and I certainly got frustrated with some of them.  But on the whole, I came to accept the down sides because of the good that came with them.  

Back in our hometown in the States, J.D. and I have tried very hard to lead balanced lives.  With two full-time jobs/ careers, two kids, and extended family, friends, and a community we're devoted to (the things that a lot of people try to balance), we have chosen, and continue to actively choose, to live in a rural area that many see as far off the beaten path in America, in part because the pace of life has seemed more sane to us there than in many other places.  But I've come to think of our rural village as life in the fast lane compared to Croatia.  I like what I see as the human pace of Croatia living.

I hope that when I return to the States, I take some of Croatia with me.


Laura 

Speaking Croatian

Earlier this week, I noticed how much my Croatian has improved. This was my conversation with a waiter at a cafe when I was buying ice cream:

Waiter: Dobar dan! (Good day)
Alison: Jedan limun (one lemon)
A: Koliko? (how much?)
W: Deset kuna (10 kuna)
A: Hvala! (thank you)
W: Bok bok (bye bye)

Ok, it's not amazing, but it's not like I'm horrible! I also took a Spanish lesson online, but I'm not good. Para los hispanohablantes: Querido ir a la casa!

Alison

Thursday, July 26, 2012

A Little Texas In Croatia

Texas didn't play a large part in our lives until we moved to Rijeka. Here we've had 2 sets of friends from Texas.

The first is Erin, a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant, whom I met last summer at the pre-Fulbright orientation in Washington, DC. She moved here in September and was very helpful to us before we even arrived. Once we got here, Erin taught us about many aspects of living in Rijeka, served as my teaching assistant at the university, found us Greta, the girls' homeschooling tutor and now our friend, and told us about TRY Theatre, the English language theater company in which Alison participated. We're grateful to Erin and wish her well as she begins law school!

Erin in front of the Faculty of Philosophy building
(This is our office building.  Faculty of Philosophy = all of the departments of humanities and social sciences.)
The second is a family whose temporary stay in Rijeka was almost the same period as ours. They were here because Chris was doing business in Rijeka. One of my colleagues, Irena, introduced us; her husband is a close business colleague of Chris's, and Irena thought that the kids in our families especially would appreciate meeting other American kids in a similar situation. Irena was right. The three Texas kids and the two upstate New York kids enjoyed time together at the Kantrida beach, on playgrounds, scootering on the Korzo, eating many a sladoled (ice cream) at what became their cafe, and having their first sleepover in Croatia. We're thankful to have met Jace, Avery, and Reid--and their parents Ana and Chris!


Reid, Avery, Jace, Alison, & Caroline on their scooters in the Korzo
Laura

Alison's Birthday

I was born on July 17, 2001.  My birthday here was probably the smallest party I've ever had, besides when I was a baby. Though its smallness seems like it wasn't fun, it was. I was kind of dreading my birthday here, but after I knew Ana was going to be here, it seemed better.

The day started with waking up (isn't that surprising). Ana came over for an hour and we played on my iPod and Kindle Fire. Then when Ana went back to her parents, I told my dad that I was bored. So he let me play Sims 3, but surprise! It was the Sims 3 Showtime, an add-on to my game! I LOVE it!!!!!! I created a singer Sims named Allie Parker. Then Ana came over and we played on a different family that we made earlier in the week. Once Ana's parents and brother Drago arrived, it was time for cake!

My parents wouldn't show me the cake, thinking I would "like" the surprise. I'm not a big surprise person, especially with food because I like to pick it out myself. After awhile they showed it to me. It was pretty cool! It had some chocolate which I didn't like so much, but most of it was good. I do really appreciate the thought that went behind this cake.  Plus the cake had my dream house on it! Isn't it pretty?

Then we opened presents. I got a scarf that I wanted. It's pink and green! I love it so much.  It's my new favorite scarf (and I have a least 15 scarves). I also got the Sims 3 Showtime, like I mentioned above. The best present of all from my parents was.......drum roll.........redecorating my room back at home! Thank you Mom and Dad! I'm so excited! Drago gave me beautiful white and purple flowers and a gift card to one of my favorite stores in Rijeka! Thanks Drago! Ana gave me the coolest barrette ever--a big one! I love it way too much! She also got me crackle (a kind of nail polish), which I've been wanting forever! Thanks Ana! Caroline likes to give me her stuff as gifts at the last minute, so I got a cool ball of hers that I like, and perfume (which wasn't hers) that I've been wanting! I love it! Thank you sis!

Later that day we went to Kantrida beach.
Kantrida beach in the city of Rijeka
We got ice cream, swam, and had a great time. Soon after, everyone had to convince the two moms to let us go to the pool. It took awhile, but we eventually got to the pool.  Toward the end of the day, all of the kids watched the rest of the movie we had been watching earlier.
Drago, Ana, Alison, Caroline


Alison

France

A post by Alison, Caroline, and Laura

Laura:  We took a beautiful drive from Bern to the Burgundy region of France.  We stayed in a wonderful house in a tiny village called Voutenay.  The village is in a great location--out in the countryside, near several pretty towns with medieval architecture, and perhaps a 100 steps to walk to a train that goes to Paris. 

Laura:  Here are a few photos of us exploring Avallon and Vezelay, places near Voutenay.  In medieval times, Christians made pilgrimages from all over the world to go to Vezelay.  The medieval basilica there is up a steep hill.
Alison, J.D., & Caroline outside the Eglise St. Lazare in Avallon



On the way to the basilica in Vezelay

Basilique Sainte-Marie-Madeleine in Vezelay
On the road near the basilica in Vezelay
Alison:  The next day we took the train to Paris.  The ride was 2 1/2 hours long.  We found the train to be very clean and nice, unlike some other public transportation.
Caroline, Laura, & Alison on the train from Voutenay to Paris
Laura:  We only had a little more than six hours in Paris, but we made the most of our time there.  Our first stop was the place the girls most wanted to go.


Alison:  The Eiffel Tower was well...stunning!  It took awhile to get to the famous structure, with stops to eat and to get sweatshirts (it was pretty cold, and we didn't even think to bring them--we haven't needed sweatshirts for a long time in Croatia!), but it was all worth it!  You could see such detail in the landmark that you wouldn't notice in a picture.

Looking into the tower after climbing the steps to the 1st floor
Caroline:  The view was amazing.  It was also fun getting a little souvenir afterward!  Climbing the steps took forever.  I wish we went to the very top of the Eiffel Tower, but we didn't.

Alison:  True, we didn't go to the top, but the view was pretty enough from the second floor.  In all, there are 750 steps to the second level!

Caroline:  Wow!

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Switzerland with Our Aunt

A post by Alison, Caroline, and Laura

Laura: My aunt lives in Bern, the capital of Switzerland, and ever since we knew we would be living in Europe, J.D. and I had hoped that we could visit her.  SkyWork Airlines made it very easy for us to do this.  To our surprise, our tiny airport outside of Rijeka (on the island of Krk)--which has one to five flights a day over the summer--has a direct flight to Bern via SkyWork.  We couldn't miss the opportunity.

Alison:  SkyWork Airlines is seriously the best airline I've ever flown on.  It gives you free meals, unlike airlines in the U.S., and they are good meals.  The best part about this airline is that they give you fully loaded iPads with apps, music, and more to use for the duration of the flight.  The view was nice as well.

Alison:  I had never met Aunt Roberta before because I'd never been to Europe.  It felt like meeting a long-lost relative who I had heard about before.  Aunt Roberta and I had a lot in common that was soon to be discovered.  Not long after we arrived, she gave us a tour of downtown Bern.
Caroline, Roberta, and Alison in Bern
Laura:  My aunt has lived in Bern since 1969, and she's a wonderful tour guide of her city and the region.  We really appreciated all she did to show us a good time.  Bern is a small city with a lot going on--great architecture, clock towers, fountains, public transportation, restaurants, and bars.
Medieval clock tower in Bern (it includes an astronomical clock)


One of the many water fountains in Bern
Bears in Bear Park; Bern and bears have gone together since medieval times 
Caroline running through the fountains in front of the Federal Palace in Bern
In addition to Bern, Roberta also took our family to Grindelwald, a village in the Alps, along with Interlaken and the Emmenthal region (home of delicious Emmenthaler cheese).


Alison: The Alps are finally a place we've been to that people from the U.S. know about.  O.K., we've been to other places that Americans know about, but the Alps are famous world-wide, unlike some other places we've been.  I wish we had gone high enough to touch the snow because I miss my snow!     

Caroline: At one of the stops on the gondola ride up the mountain, there was a great playground.  It had ropes to climb on.  When you get to the top of the slide, there's a special window that gives you amazing views of the mountains.  There are also two restaurant/cafes there.  

J.D. at a cafe in the Alps 
When we went back down the mountain, we walked a good part of the way.  The walk was pretty, but it was long. 


Alison: I absolutely agree with Caroline.  The walk was kind of long, and since I hadn't fully broken into my sneakers yet, I got a lot of blisters.  But enough about that.  I'm sure you don't care, but I bet you do care about the views we saw on the way up and down.


Laura & Alison (with Aunt Roberta's scarf) on the gondola ride at Grindelwald
The snow-covered Alps 
Laura: As we went through the Swiss countryside, J.D. and I noted how manicured and green it was.  Not a piece of grass looked out of place!  I greatly enjoyed the beauty of the Swiss countryside, yet my new normal is the much wilder, more arid Croatian countryside, so the differences really stood out to me.

Alison and Caroline:  On our last day in Switzerland, we met some of our cousins (our Aunt Roberta's son, daughter-in-law, and their kids), and we had a lot of fun with them.

Alison: I really enjoyed having a girl cousin, even it's a more distant cousin.  Joel and Zoe are 2 1/2 year old twins who are both extremely adorable.

Caroline: I like that I have boy first cousins.  I agree with Alison that Joel and Zoe are really cute.  It's fun to have cousins who are younger than me because out of all of my first cousins, I'm the youngest.

Alison & Zoe
Caroline & Joel
Alison: One night when my parents went out on a date and Caroline was asleep, I really got to talk with Aunt Roberta about a lot of things, and that's when I realized how much we had in common (like a love of scarves and Mac computers).  I enjoyed talking with her a lot.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

July 4th Zagreb-style

A post by Alison and Laura

Alison: I'll start because I was in Zagreb first.  Ana and I didn't want to wait that long to get to Zagreb from Baska Voda, so we took the bus there.  It was a six hour bus ride (including stops).  After Ana's uncle picked us up, Ana showed me their apartment and Zagreb itself.  I've been to Zagreb before, but never for this long.  Ana and I did normal stuff like watching TV and playing on my iPod for the next few days.  She also took me to a big mall called Avenue Mall.


Laura:  A few days after Alison arrived in Zagreb, the rest of our family, along with Mary, Rick, and Douglass, joined her.  So at that point, we had three families from our small rural place in upstate New York gathering together in the capital of Croatia.  It was really fun to see Zagreb with Ana's parents, Kim and Boris.  Boris grew up in Zagreb, and Kim has spent significant time there since the early 1990s.  The six adults celebrated the 4th of July with a great tour of the city from Boris.     
Boris, Kim, Laura, J.D., Rick, and Mary at the Zagreb Cathedral
St. Mark's Church, Zagreb
Alison: Also on the 4th of July, all three families went to Bundek Park.  We played on the playground for awhile and then went over to a cafe and got ice cream.  
Ana and Alison at Bundek Park
Then we went to a swimming hole, but we forgot swimwear!  So we swam in our clothes in the warm water.  Both Drago (Ana's younger brother) and Douglass took pleasure in putting mud in my hair while we were swimming.  We had a lot of fun!
Alison, Douglass, Drago, Caroline, and Ana at Bundek Park

Sunday, July 15, 2012

More visitors

A post by Laura

Our good friends Mary, Rick, and Douglass came to visit us a few weeks ago.  We had a lot of fun with them.  As we found with our other visitors, it was great to see Croatia through their eyes.
Mary, Douglass, and Rick in Rovinj
It was in the mid-90s and sunny every day our friends were here, so we spent most of our time at the beach and in the water.  We went to a few places we've been to before, but not fully explored, including more of the island of Krk, the Opatija Riviera, and Rovinj.
Douglass and Caroline in Rovinj
A trampoline with a view of the Adriatic (Rovinj)


We especially enjoyed climbing to the top of the bell tower by Saint Euphemia's Church in Rovinj.  The tower's rickety wooden steps (don't look down!) led us to a great view of the city.  And Mary dazzled us with her knowledge of Saint Euphemia!  

On our friends' last night in Rijeka, we had a surprise visit from Adam, a Fulbrighter to Rijeka last year, and Darko, the head of the university's International Relations Office.  Adam and his wife Julie and their kids lived in our apartment last year, and they've been very helpful to us.  Drago mi je, Adam!

Especially now that we've been in Croatia for a number of months, having visitors has helped us to see how much we've figured out about living here.  That took awhile.  In fact, J.D. and I have noted to one another that it's too bad that we're leaving so soon now that we finally understand more about how to do this!  

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Alison's Scrapbook from Baska Voda

A post by Alison

When I first saw my friend Ana, I was so excited.  Though I hadn't really been lonely here in Croatia, I think I have been in need of some more friends (and no, Mom, the 13-15 year olds from my theatre class do not count).  So yeah, as I was saying, it was like a shock.  After a little bit of driving to get to Baska Voda (which is about 4 hours south of where we live in Rijeka), we just got settled down in Ana's family's house.  Her uncle and her grandfather were there, and while her uncle speaks English very well, I certainly heard a lot of Croatian on this trip.

On the first day, Ana showed me around, and we went to the beach.  Ana's family has an alligator flotation device that we called Mr. Ally (named after me).  We swam for a few hours until about 8:30 at night.

The next few days went on in the same pattern.  That's not a bad thing, of course, because I had a lot of fun. We went for ice cream almost every day, swam almost every day, and had a few accidents happen.  The accident part wasn't that fun though (more on all of that in a moment).

Does this picture creep you out a little bit?  Let me explain.
One day life did not go so well for Ana's family.  We started by going to a fancy hotel pool, but before then, Drago, Ana's younger brother, broke his swimming mask and it shattered into a million pieces.  Then, Ana said, "This is probably going to be the worst thing that happens today."  Well, Ana, you were kind of wrong.  After we went to the pool, we noticed some blood, and we wondered whose it was, and it turned out that it was from one of Ana's older brothers, Marko, who cut his foot on something that we never discovered.  He went to the hospital and got stitches immediately.  Also, something much more mild happened to me, as I tripped over an umbrella pole and almost fell two times.

So what does this have to do with the picture above?  Well, there was a lady who knew Ana's great-grandmother, I think, and she was so nice that she gave the family the beach house.  But for some reason, she has cursed us!  (I said that with a very dramatic voice!)

Now for more fun stuff....Ana showed me both beaches (the left and the right).  We swam a lot.  Actually, we really didn't swim.  We laid on Mr. Ally and talked about the Sims 3 (simulation game) family that we were going to make later in the week.  When we did swim though, we jumped off the pier, saw fish, and together got in one of those big balls (like the one my sister and I went inside in Aquaworld in Budapest) and then got tossed into the ocean waves.  I really appreciate Ana's family for making all of the fun stuff happen.


We had so much fun considering some of the bad luck the family had.