Sunday, February 19, 2012

Haircuts

A haircut costs at least 11 Euros each. An electric hair trimmer costs 9.90 Euros each.

Before

An hour later.

Took only 10 min to trim one head. Not bad...looks good too...

Both at one years old. Left: Nicholas. Right: Gregory when he was one years old.
Compared to Nicholas now, he was smaller (lighter) but much more mischevious (as you can tell from the face).

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Vienna

Vienna is like Berlin to me - huge, buildings with a particular style (Baroque?), large "gates" with roman columns and large sculptures everywhere.


While I enjoy visiting churches and seeing how it looks like from the inside, and that there are beautiful churches here, I haven't fallen in love with Vienna the way I had with many other European cities. Maybe because it's so big and I find it hard to enjoy the "journey" while stressed with trying to "conquer" as many sites as possible. I like cities where I could see everything in a or two day so that I could take my time to spend more quality time on each site, visit musuems, dine well and interact with people. In such large cities, I often leave feeling "incomplete" because I could not "complete" all that I want to see without sacrificing time for dining and interactions. For instance, I had not seen Klimt's collection at the musuem. Only many posters reminding me to go to the musuem to see it.

From Top Left: Stephansdom (St Stephen's Cathedrale), inside, pillar, inside St Michael.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Sofia

Sofia is charming. Although people in Bulgaria are reputed to have income levels similar to their neighours in Romania, Sofia looks much more developed in terms of infrastructure and feels dynamic while comfortable to live in. Dining out is ridiculously inexpensive too. Near the city centre, I had a wonderful risotto with veal and some specialty mushrooms, a soup, and a cappucino in a pleasant restaurant for only 7 Euros. Compared to what I had in Bucharest, it was half the price with double the quality!

From top left: The huge St.Alexander Nevski cathedral, entrance, inside
From bottom let: The extremely small Boyana church, since the 14th century and its inside.

From top left: Banya Bashi Mosque, its insides, statue of Sofia, museum, and opera house.
From bottom left: Sofia Synagogue (One of the largest synagogues in Europe) and its insides

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Freezing in Bucharest

Was in Bucharest the week when the crazy snow storms hit. Romania, Bulgaria, Poland and Ukraine were badly hit. Fortunately, I was in Bucharest a day after the closure of the roads due to snow blocks.

Romania is a country with much natural resources. However, many of their residents do not feel that they are rich. Reminds me much of Indonesia. Even the products in grocery stores are more similar to those in Jakarta than those in other European countries.

Here, we have the Parliament Palace, entirely built by Romanians with all materials from Romania (woods, marbles, stones, crystals, etc). A place built by a previous communist dictator who was subsequently removed and executed. Could just imagine his access to resources.
Huge and empty place now where halls and rooms are rented out for functions and event. Bottom left shows a motif on tiles that is commonly repeated and is the layout of the entire palace.


Throughout Bucharest, there are many other sites that look Russian.
For instance, the top left building looks like one of the Seven Sisters (see Moscow Oct 11) and the one in Poland (see Poland Dec 11). Then there is an arc d'triomphe too. Bottom right is the statue of the first person in Europe (and Romanian) who designed the engine of jet plane. The airport is also named after him (Henri Coandă)

Then, there are some impressive churches. In the evening, I had chanced upon a nice looking church with a "friendly" man beckoning me in. It had a glass wall fronting it, hence, I was unsure if it was a church or a restaurant. A gentlemen was also going in and translated that it was a Eastern Orthodox Church.
Interesting. What is Eastern Orthodox Church? Just like those in Russia, the insides are usually dark. There are paintings of numerous saints and the place will be heavily incensed. Each service holds only tens of people, which has a small seat that is against a wall. However, in the picture, we see a large one with a gold altar, probably because it's one of the larger/central/more important ones. Compared to a Catholic or Christian church that is often bright and accomodates hundreds in a service, an Easter Orthodox one is very "temple-like". I read it up and found that they also consider themselves a "Catholic" (Universal) Church. In fact, all were the same church until the 11th Century when the Roman Catholic Church broke away(East West Schism) and the Protestants from the Roman Catholic Church in the 16th Century.

Birthdays

Both Nicholas and Gregory have their birthdays in Feb, 4 days apart. Makes more sense to have one celebration for both (that was the plan!).

But poor Nic was sick on his birthday on Tues.
(Nic with runny nose)

So we went out on Saturday. It was rather warm (light snow only)
(Greg outside house)

To Alster Lake, which was frozen,
(Greg is unhappy to be out, as usual)

Along with the hundreds of thousands of Hamburger.
(on the frozen lake)

Then we went to search for a birthday gift at the mall
(Greg in mask. Finally, he chose a telescope instead of a pirate sword, a lego set, a starwars light sabre and a remote control car)

And evening celebrations with junk foods.
(Amazing how much fries he can eat!)

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Shopping in Dubai

Dubai is much bigger than I thought. On the map, it looked like a few sections with many sites within the same areas. But I had not seen the scale! Hence, it could be pretty far from one site to another. Fortunately, there are inexpensive cabs and easy to use subways.


In the middle of the desert what else can one expect? Just lots of sand!
From top left: In the desert and doing sand dune bashing. Terrible experience. Worse than sea-sickness. Another case of "pay money to torture oneself"; Gregory on bike; so dry that a ship is stranded on land? (no, that's part of Dubai Museum); Gregory at beach (no photos allowed); dinner in bedouin tent in middle of desert.


Of course, there are lots of man-made stuff:
From top left:
Iconic building (didn't go in, must make dining appointment in advance); tallest building in the world (didn't go in too, must take shutter bus); inside a mall next to our hotel; Gold Souk; Dubai Creek; Ski slopes in the mall!; Inside Mall of Emirates; Nicholas loves spicy foods.

Back to the main topic - Shopping. Pretty amazing. Some bargains we had:
An italian made leather jacket for ladies - USD25
A motorbike leather jacket for men - USD60
A 16 megapixel camera with 4gb sdcard and HD video - USD90
A 7" made in china tablet - USD90
A branded laptop trolley bag - USD55
etc, etc from sales at boutiques, malls, factory outlets.....

Really the best shopping we had come across. Unfortunately (no, fortunately), Dubai is not nearer.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Updates

New designs for the new year.

Feedback is that less and less has been written (true, I had been lazy) and that I could have used more words.

Then, while I had been fortunate to travel frequently and photos were nice, there were few descriptions and comments.

Finally, posts were infrequent and there were little motivations to check frequently. Perhaps, there could be hints of upcoming posts to look forward to.

So coming up next week: Shopping in Dubai (UAE), freezing in Bucharest (Romania) and worshipping in Sofia (Bulgaria).