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TURKEY

Ok so ım gonna apologıze rıght off the bat because there ıs no letter ı as ın ıcıcle that ıs convenıent to use on turkısh keyboards so ı thınk they wıll all show up as a number...sorry!

We had to leave Egypt late because there were 12 ft swells ın the Medıterranean and the port was actually closed. We waıted a full day almost and then fınally left and ıt was super rocky for a that fırst nıght. The captaın kıcked ıt ınto gear and we got here on tıme. We docked ın Istanbul and spent the fırst day vısıtıng the Hagıa Sophıa- Blue Mosque- Cısten and eatıng awesome turkısh food and talkıng to locals. We walked around a bıt as well. The cıty ıs amazıng! Comıng ınto port ıs the most ıncredıble thıng. The cıty ıs on 2 contınents Europe and Asıa and we came ın through the Bosporus early ın the mornıng. We got up for sunrıse and saw the entıre cıty. There are so many mosques that are just enormous. They call to prayer 5 tımes a day from the mosques and ıt ıs so loud! In Egypt they had carpets on the sıdewalks wıth people prayıng-kında bızarre. Anyways- Istanbul was a lot of fun. Exactly what ı pıctured but a lıttle more expensıve and not many people ın the cıty speak Englısh. I feel lıke I am ın Japan agaın wıth the language barrıer.

I left that evenıng for Cappadocıa wıth 3 gırls- one of whom lıves across the hall- and my frıend Samantha. We left for the 10pm bus after a huge ıssue wıth our passports (they werent stamped so we couldnt leave ıstanbul and ıt was supposed to take 24 hours to stamp them- crazy!). We spent about 20usd for a 12 hour bus rıde. You go past Ankara- the capıtal- to Kayserı. From there we took another bus to Goreme whıch ıs my best experıence yet hands down. The story ıs that Cappadocıa ıs an area that was covered ın lava from the massıve Volcano that ıs just outsıde Goreme. It covered everythıng and created a type of soft rock that ıs easıly worn away or carved. The wınd and raın wore away the rock formatıons to create these beautıful valleys and peaks. The people carved out houses and churches and all kınds of stuff from ınsıde the caves. People stıll lıve ınsıde of them and actually our hotel ıs ınsıde one! Goreme ıs a TINy town where everyone knows everyone. The people are ıncredıble- theyre always askıng us ıf we want tea and just talkıng to us.

Yesterday was our fırst full day here. We rented ATVs for 2 hours and rode all over the area. It was amazıng!! Thıs town ıs honestly gorgeous-- ıve never seen anythıng lıke ıt! I cant even descrıbe how beautıful ıt ıs. Ive compared ıt to somethıng out of a Dr Suess book - ıts lıke a faırytale! We met a lot of locals yesterday as well and dıd a lıttle shoppıng. We had tradıtıonal turkısh food whıch ıs VERY good surprısıngly. That nıght we went to a tradıtıonal Turkısh bath whıch was well ınterestıng. There were all men operatıng ıt so ıt was a lıttle bızarre for 5 gırls but our hotel owner was there so we were safe! Thıs mornıng we got up at 5am and went for a hot aır balloon rıde! Of anyplace- ım confıdent that thıs would be the most beautıful place nı the world to go! It was expensıve but thıs ıs the trıp of a lıfetıme so we couldnt pass ıt up. We were ın the balloon for about an hour and half and they gave us champagne after. We got to see the entıre area and wed go up really hıgh and then just skım the surface of the rock formatıons. It was amazıng- very happy ı went! Today we also went wıne tastıng ın Urgup a nearby vıllage. Our new frıend also took us to see how they make handmade pottery here-- ıt was expensıve but we found some cheaper pots to buy! I had to buy thıck socks and scarves and wınter stuff because ıt ıs FREEZING here! There ıs some snow on the ground ın places but the sun ıs stıll warm. It was strange to adjust because we laıd out ın the sun on the day of the Suez ın Egypt and three days later we are wearıng all our warm clothes. Plus ı realızed today how much of a dumb packer ı am. I dıdnt even thınk that ıt would get cold so I have to look ınto buyıng more sweaters and maybe even some boots!

Tonıght we have plans to go to a Turkısh Nıght-- they have whırlıng dervıshes and belly dancıng and other kınds of turkısh cultural thıgns! Our local frıends ınvıted us and they plan on takıng us to the pubs afterwards. The people here are so genuıne and very frıendly! We came at a very good tıme as well. November ıs the end of the tourıst season so we practıcally have the town to ourselves. Its fantastıc- I cant ımagıne beıng here wıth hundreds of other travelers. Tomorrow we are goıng on a tour of the underground cıtıes and the valleys. Its a full day but we are very excıted. Tomorrow nıght we wıll get back on a bus to head back to Istanbul. We have one day there untıl we leave and then ıts 2 more days on the shıp and we arrıve ın Croatıa.

I am gettıng anxıous to come home and see everyone! I have so many pıctures and so much to tell everyone. Ive seen some of the most beautıful places ın the world and ım excıted for you all to see them as well! Im sorry I havent been able to send postcards recently theyre on theır way ı promıse! Some of thse countrıes requıre 2 stamps a postcard whıch can be very expensıve.

Posted by katfish 9:30 AM Comments (0)

more ındıa

Sorry I have been so horrible with updating you on my adventures lately. Internet minutes are starting to get very expensive. Not only that, but there has been so much to see and talk about that I couldn't possibly put it all in an email.

Burma has been my favorite port so far. Everything about that place was beautiful, well, except for the government situation. India was the next port that I've yet to talk about. It was one of my least favorite. It was SO dirty and by that I mean literally garbage in piles on every street, in every alley and in every yard. There were hundreds of people lying on the streets because they had no where else to go. They were friendly when you met someone other than a rickshaw driver but they were horrible. Every single one of them is trying to rip you off. Unlike all the other countries, there was a specific market almost set up for tourists to pay the "American price" which is something so exaggerated. A friend of mine went to a shop with an Indian woman who asked the price for the scarf. He said 70 rupees. When she asked the real price, he said 10. So clearly, we were overcharged for eveyrthing. The rickshaw drivers were horrible. Theyd take you all over town before taking you where you asked. There were crowds everywhere because India is so overpopulated. I dont think it helped that I only got to see Chennai and a few surrounding cities. I would never like to go back to Chennai but I would like to see other parts of India. The last night we went to a Dalit village which is for the untouchables and that was absolutely amazing! For the first time in India the people didn't want anything from us...except for us to take their pictures! And we sure did! I also got Henna in India which I was very excited about. No nose piercing even though everyone in India has them done!

Right now I am in Egypt which is a pretty cool place. We went on a SAS trip to Cairo and got to see the Sphinx and the Pyramids. It was pretty amazing. We got to ride around the desert on a camel too! We ate dinner on a boat on the nile and stayed in an amazing hotel! We then got on the ship to cross the Suez canal and the staff served us steak for the first time on the ship! Today we are in Alexandria doing some sightseeing. This is a very nice city-- right on the MediterraneanSea! Tomorrow is our last day in Egypt. Then we will have 2 days on the ship until we reach Turkey. I bought my head scarf today in preparation for that!

Posted by katfish 9:26 AM Comments (0)

tıııny bıt of Indıa and Egypt

India was um, different. It was really dirty and the people were all trying to take advantage of us and there wasn't much to do in Chennai. It wasn't my favorite place by any means but im glad I got to see it. Actually, I went to an orphanage in Chennai which was amazing. The last 2 days I was in a Dalit Village which was the best experience ibe had on this entire trip. We got off the ship in this tiny little village. Everyone that lived there was on the main street absolutely screaming for us, cheering and dancing and shaking our hands. They were awesome and SO excited. All they wanted from us the entire time we were there was to shake our hands and to take pictures of them. It was so fun—we played games with the kids and they put on a big show for us. We slept on a cement roof on horrible thin mats but it was amazing. We got to tour their huts and see how they live and meet a bunch of people. They were so excited—I guess sas tries to go to a different village every year so they've never had this in their village before. It was absolutely amazing—we taught the little kids hokey pokey and they sang songs for us. It was really awesome. That was the only saving grace for India bc the rest of the country wasn't great.

In Egypt, we wont get there for awhile, but when we do I have a 3 days trip with sas in Cairo and then after that we are looking to fo a little indy travel. I don't think im gonna get back on the ship to go through the canal…im not sure that it would be worth giving up a day in Egypt? People are either doing luxor or mt Sinai so we'll see. Either way, I plan on being very very safe.

For now we have 10 long days on the ship but we had sealympics which is like sports day, we had our sea social, we have a Halloween dance and a crew talent show. So theres a lot going on to keep us from being bored.

Posted by katfish 9:25 AM Comments (0)

Classes

Before I left home I heard a lot of comments like “booze-cruise” in regards to the Semester at Sea trip. I’ve been anxious to dispel all the rumors for some time. Going to school on a ship is absolutely incredible. I wake up every morning in the middle of a deep blue ocean. I sit outside on the deck for meals and I watch the sunset every night. It is the most incredible location to be in. The fact that this is my campus is still hard to grasp. While I can lay out on deck between classes, I do have to actually go to classes. I take 4 courses, 1 of which the entire ship takes. My other three classes take attendance every single day so skipping isnt easy. I have less class days and therefore much less work than I would have at home however, on top of the work we have, we are also traveling the world. In addition, we don’t get weekends off to catch up. Every day on the ship is a weekday and even after 5 days of endless, tiring travel, we come back without a day to catch up. We get back on the ship on Saturday and Sunday morning there is already readings and papers due. So as far as the rumors go about this being a semester off from school, I can assure you that it isn’t. While it isn't as challenging academically as Syracuse is, I'm still going to school.

The beauty of it is that while I’m enrolled in courses and doing plenty of reading, the lessons that I am learning in country far exceed anything I could ever learn from a textbook.

Posted by katfish 8:38 AM Comments (0)

It's a country, not a war.

Saigon, Vietnam!

We only had two days on the ship and then we docked in Saigon, Vietnam. Vietnam was pretty much the best place on earth which is surprising because it too is quite a dump. At night when we'd walk the streets there were cockroaches and huge rats and garbage everywhere. The city itself wasn't anything special but what made me enjoy it was the people. Everyone there was so friendly. They would ALL yell hello to us as we'd pass or offer a smile. No one here was really trying to rip you off either like we found in China (at the great wall some woman tried to get my friend James to pay $5USD for a bottle of water). It was just such a comfortable, fun environment that you couldn't help but love it.

The first day we arrived I didn't get up to see us dock which I should have! We docked early and I was exhausted. We got off the ship and immediately there were a couple stands where people were seling things, not surprisingly. After walking a little further there is a circle of men in purple shirts with motor bikes all trying to offer you a taxi! There was a big group of us and we werent sure where we were going so we decided to walk. (I wish we had taken those motorbikes earlier cuz those were fun!) We went to this place to get our dresses made. It was really expensive. I got one dress made there that I ended up being satisfied with. On the way to lunch I actually stopped at a smaller tailor and got a dress made for $30 which I ended up liking a lot better than the other one! But oh well, as was my justification for the rest of the money i spent, they need it more than I do really. That day we did a lot of shopping at the markets and I bought a ton of cool stuff. We also ate lunch at this small place and I tried my first coconut! It wasn't nearly as good as I expected. We also ate some kind of soup with unrecognizable objects in it.

We walked around a lot and just saw as much of the city as we could.

The middle three days I spent on the Mekong River Delta. Its this huge river that runs through Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam and a few other places and the delta is in Southern Vietnam. It was about a 3 hours ride which was long but interesting. There were so many dogs here which we haven't seen in the last 3 ports. Everyone has them as pets but most of them look like a combination of two dogs that shouldn't breed. When we got to the delta we spent a lot of time on boats in the rivers. The Delta is one big river and all its tributaries. It was straight out of national geographic how these people live. They all have boats because that's the only way to get from island to island or across the "Street" which is all river. They have houses on stilts on the edge of the water. I wouldn't really call them houses. They are more like huts made of any type of scrap material they could find. They have makeshift fishing nets to catch dinner. They wash their laundry in the river and hang it up to dry. Their huts don't have doors on the front and they have minimal furniture. They are usually just one big room and when you drive by, people are just lying on the tile floors. Many people here don't wear shoes either. It is all so primitive. I really did not imagine that people live this way. But it was also very bizarre because there are internet café's even on the delta and there were a couple houses we walked by that had televisions.

The first night in the delta we stayed at this Inn on the water and we laid around in hammocks listening to traditional Vietnamese music. We ate fabulous food and slept under mosquito nets and showered in freezing cold showers. It was so humbling to see all of the things that these people didn't have and yet they were so happy. People here have such terrible living conditions but nobody starves. Vietnam has so many resources that their problems are not hunger which is a beautiful thing. They don't have much else but they are truly so happy. It is amazing to think how many things I have at home that I don't NEED.

While we were at the delta some of the other things we saw were how coconut candy is made, how they make bricks, we drank snake wine (snake bodies and a dead crow that is marinated in alcohol—terrible tasting), saw them making rice paper and went to an orphanage. We also woke up early and saw the floating markets. These big boats fill up on produce and then ride down and dock in the river. The little boats come and float up next to the big boats and buy their supplies. Some farmers send someone down for days until all their produce is sold. It was so neat to see because it was so different than us getting in our cars an going to the grocery store.

I had such an incredible time in Vietnam. I only got to share here some of the experiences I had. I wish I could tell you everything! Maybe when I get home, haha.

Posted by katfish 5:13 PM Comments (0)

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