Joined: 05 Oct 2006 Posts: 1535 Location: Somewhere else...not here., PA USA
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Thanked:6
I'm Back From Spain! Posted: 03-10-07 18:15pm
Okay, this is going to be long. I've got
to cover 10 days and a lifetime of
memories, so bear with me.
**edited because out band director's name
is mr slu.tter, and it changed it to mr.
highly availableter. if you see mr. highly
availableter anywhere, it means i missed
changing it. it should be slu.tter**
We left on Friday, February 23rd. After
sitting through 6 hours and 15 minutes, we
got dismissed from classes and herded into
the auditorium, where the chaperones
inspected our luggage to make sure we
brought all of the required items for
uniform and performance. Then came the two
hour bus ride. We went to Newark Liberty
International Airport, and we hit traffic,
so it ended up taking a little over two
hours to get there. Not cool, if you ask
me! Then we arrived at the airport and
unloaded ourselves and the luggage off of
the busses. Anyone whose instrument was
not taken along (like me) had to check a
box of uniforms or percussion equiptment
as our second piece of checked luggage. I
got a box of uniforms, in case anyone was
wondering.
So then it took an hour to check in and
confirm seats and go through security. We
were left with two hours to go around the
terminal and get food and last minute
items before we boarded the plane. I went
to Au Bon Pair with my roommate and a
couple other people, but we were all too
excited to eat. We stopped at Ben and
Jerry's (their Mango-Lime Sorbet is to DIE
FOR) before heading back to the gate. I
filled my water bottle and popped an
Airborne tablet in, and then turned over
my passport and boarding pass to my trip
chaperone.
After goofing around at the gate for half
an hour, we FINALLY got to board the
plane. I was in seat 25D, next to a Senior
flutist named Carol, on the other side of
Carol was a senior Euphonium named Drew,
and on the other side of the aisle from me
was the Band Clown, a Senior saxophonist
named Brian. We sat on the runway for TWO
HOURS. Our scheduled departure time was
8:10pm. We didn't take off until 10:00. So
Carol got bored. She came up with a
takeoff song, a "we're sitting on the
runway and I want to leave" song, a song
to Drew, a song to me, a song to the
plane, a song to the flight attendants, a
song to the band director, and then I
handed her my iPod and she shut up. First
she fell asleep and leaned to the left,
and was on Drew's lap. Then he pushed off
over to my lap. So then we both sat her up
and shoved our sweatshirts around her to
keep her upright.
Then we FINALLY took off. We got dinner at
around 10:30, and airline food is
definitely as bad as all of the jokes
about it say. And so began the 7 hour
flight saga. After an hour an a half of
"OHMIGOD OHMIGOD OHMIGOD WE'RE GOING TO
SPAIN!!!!!!!!" people finally started
falling asleep. I couldn't find a
comfortable position, so I was awake.
There were little TV monitors in the backs
of the headrests, so I watched CSI and
then something else...maybe Man of the
Year. Then I FINALLY fell asleep. That was
at around 1:30am home time, and 7:30am
Spain time. By the time I woke up, it was
light out, and it had been dark out when I
fell asleep. They served us breakfast (a
crossiant and fresh-ish fruit) and then
told us we had about an hour more before
we got there.
And then suddenly the flight was over and
we were getting off the plane in Madrid.
Getting through the airport was when it
really sunk in that we were in SPAIN. The
customs people didn't speak English, just
like everyone else. I used more Spanish in
the airport alone than in three years of
taking the language, I swear. It took 45
minutes to get all of our luggage and
cargo off of the carousel and out to the
busses. I was on Tour Bus #2, and that is
where the fun truly began.
We were all assigned numbers for roll call
purposes, and I was #7. But that's beside
the point. Our bus driver's name was
Miguel and he was awesome. His cell
phone's ringtone was a rooster crowing.
Miguel also didn't believe in speed
limits, even as suggestions or rules. They
were merely signs on the side of the road.
Our tour guide's name was Dania, and as
she said "The itinerary says that it
should take about one hour and a half to
get there...Miguel will have us there in
half and hour, three quarters of an hour,
tops!" Dania, like I said, was our tour
guide for the entire trip. She fluently
speaks five languages (Italian, English,
Spanish, French, and German) and was so
incredibly funny and sweet and great to be
around. Occasionally she would switch
languages for certain words but it was all
good.
Our first two days were spent on either a
bus or a plane. When we stopped for lunch
between Madrid and Sevilla, it was a
middle of nowhere little cafeteria thing,
and the food was actually very good. I
bought an inflatable neck rest thingy from
a vending machine, and it came out in a
little plastic ball which greatly
resembled a Pokeball (from Pokemon). My
roommate pointed this out to me, and so I
threw out my arm, ball in hand, and
yelled, "Charmander, I choose you! Why --
isn't -- anything -- happening?!...I think
Charmander may have Charbroiled
himself..." Then we had to get back on the
busses.
26 hours of travel later, we arrived at
our first hotel, Gran Hotel Solucar, in
the outskirts of Sevilla. After check-in
we had an hour until dinner, so I unpacked
some and then went to the gift shop to get
a t-shirt and postcards. The gift shop
woman asked me if I spoke Spanish, and I
took a little to long to respond, I guess,
because she muttered something how stupid
Americans were, since we only speak one
language. To that, I said “Usted
necesita saber que yo comprendo y hablo
español y yo se que usted esta diciendo
sobre nosotros.” Really bad grammar and
lack of accent marks aside, that
translates (roughly to) “You need to
know that I understand and speak Spanish
and I know what you’re saying about
us.” She was so embarrassed that she
sold me a shirt that should have cost 12
Euro for only 6 Euro. That was pretty
good.
So then came the third day of the trip,
but the first two days mushed together so
much that I think of this more as the
second day. Anyway, this takes us to
Sunday, the 25th. We had an early wake-up
call because we had to go to a town an
hour away to do a parade, a standstill,
and then a reception. The parade went
really well, and the standstill was pretty
good too. We got to play in the town
square in Ecija, and that is a place that
is normally gated off to the public. After
the standstill, the town presented all 142
band members with gift bags, and then we
walked a little while to the reception. At
first it was sort of awkward because of
the language barrier, but then a group in
the corner just started playing their
instruments, and everyone started dancing
and really having fun. Then, of course, it
ended JUST as we really started having fun
and we had to go back to the busses to go
back to Sevilla. That night we had an hour
of free time to tour the city before they
took us back to the hotel for dinner. My
tour group really didn’t go far, because
we didn’t want to get lost and not make
it back on time.
The next day, we checked out of the hotel
and loaded all of our stuff on to the
busses, and then took a bus tour of
Sevilla before we started a walking tour.
Right before the walking tour we went to a
place in Sevilla where part of the Star
Wars movie “Attack of the Clones” was
filmed, and that’s where we got into
uniform and took the official group
picture. We caused quite a stir, among
locals and tourists alike. It was around
70 degrees out, and we were standing
packed in on the stairs in polyester-wool
blend uniforms. This was the same day that
back home there was going to be a two-hour
delay for school openings due to the
amount of snow they’d gotten that night.
During the walking tour after that, we
stopped by the house that had the balcony
that inspired Rossini’s opera The Barber
of Seville. The walking tour concluded
with a tour of the cathedral in Sevilla,
before we had two hours of free time to
get lunch and shop before the 5 hour bus
ride to Granada. I got a gorgeous
porcelain doll, and then suddenly we had
to board the busses again and head for
Granada.
The ride to Granada was pretty long,
probably because I stayed awake for most
of it.
When we finally got to Granada, we checked
in to the hotel, and discovered that the
first floor of rooms was actually up three
flights of stairs. I was on the second
floor, so it was five flights. I decided
to wait for the elevator, since my
combined luggage weighed around 80lbs.
After check-in we had a little while to
wait until dinner, and so we had a
“party” in one of my friends’ rooms.
In actuality, we just waited until dinner
while talking about who knows what and
comparing souvenirs. Dinner was
uneventful, but the food was better than
that of the hotel in Sevilla. It was
actually edible, an attribute we all found
enjoyable. We had to stay in the hotel for
the rest of the night, and that night was
when part of my band uniform broke. It was
a piece known as a vestee, and the correct
use can be seen in the picture on the
bottom right (it’s gold with sequins,
but the ones we wear are silver) <img
src="http://usera.imagecave.com/thederange
drhino/icth_vestee.jpg.jpg">. The
neckstrap on mine broke, so I turned it in
to a uniform mom to be fixed before the
next day’s performance. That was
basically at 11:00, and so I had to be
back in my room for bedcheck.
The next morning, we had a bus tour of
Granada which concluded at La Alhambra, a
13th or 14th century Arabic/Muslim city
contained inside the palace’s walls. The
guided tour was two hours long, and our
tour guide, Maria Lourdes, was quite
possibly one of the funniest people I’ve
ever met. La Alhambra, being an 800 year
old structure, has roads that are
basically all rocks or cobblestones. I had
a difficult time, like most in our group,
negotiating these areas in my sneakers.
Maria Lourdes did the entire tour in
3-inch heels. She was also walking
backwards and telling us the most random
stories about other groups. I have no
doubt that she’ll be telling stories
about us, considering we were all wearing
the same bright blue tour jackets and
acting generally stupid because we
weren’t quite awake.
After that, we got back on the busses.
This is when my now fixed vestee was
returned to me. My bus buddy for the day
was Brian, our percussion instructor.
He’s 21 and graduated from my high
school in ’03, and he’s more of a
student than a chaperone, but he’s a
great percussionist and a great teacher.
So, my vestee was on my lap, and he took
it from me and wrapped it around his head.
He went, “I want to propose a change to
the uniforms. I think we’d look better
if we wore the vestees like bandanas,”
as seen in this picture <img
src="http://usera.imagecave.com/thederange
drhino/icth_DSCN1595.JPG.jpg">.
Needless to say, that idea was vetoed.
We were driven back into the center of the
town after that. Then we were given three
hours of free time to shop and get lunch
before we had to be back at the hotel to
get into uniform for a performance that
night.
Granada is a beautiful place, and I loved
walking around and being able to see
everything. Shopping wasn’t bad either,
and I got some good stuff. Then we had to
get back to the hotel in order to get into
our uniforms for a performance at a music
conservatory.
The performance went incredibly well. It
was also the first time we got to use the
rented instruments, which was exciting
because one of the keyboards was a 5 ½
octave Honduran Rosewood Marimba, which is
truly any mallet percussionist’s dream.
It doesn’t get any better than Honduran
Rosewood. After that, Symphonic band had a
rehearsal with the conservatory students,
so the rest of us were taken to the top of
a mountain for a walking tour. That was a
45 minute bus ride, and then we were
dropped off in a high-traffic, low-light
area of the town. We walked down the
mountain for half an hour, got nowhere,
and then turned around and walked back up.
After that was a reception with the
anti-social conservatory students and the
most disgusting food I’ve ever had. That
was supposed to be our dinner, but the
chaperones realized that no one ate any of
it, so they ordered pizza back at the
hotel.
The next day, we drove for an hour to a
beach town south of Granada. We took a
walking tour, and then went down to the
ocean. I took off my socks and shoes and
ran into the Mediterranean, decided it was
cold, and ran back out. We had time for
lunch, and then we boarded the busses back
to Granada. When we got back, we had some
free time in Granada, but February 28th is
a holiday in Andalucia, the part of Spain
we were in, so nothing was open. So, we
wandered up the street for 40 minutes, and
then went back to the hotel and hung out
in various people’s rooms until it was
time go get changed to go to a Symphonic
concert. That was a long concert if you
ask me. We were only there for three
hours. Then came another “reception,”
but this time it was more of a
basement/balcony gathering where we were
given sandwiches and bottled water.
The next day, we had to check out to leave
for Madrid. We stopped in Cordoba on the
way, and when we were walking around, a
guy walked out of a store, and all of
these teenage girls started screaming and
crying and taking pictures with him. I
took a picture OF him, and then asked our
guides and drivers who he was, but no one
knew. So we just call him “Famous Guy”
and it’s still a mystery. Then we got
back on the bus and drove for a few more
hours to Madrid.
Madrid was not my favorite place. It’s
the largest city in Spain, and I really
did not like the urban feel. We checked in
to the hotel, which was pretty pathetic,
and then waited around until dinner. I
checked out the hotel gift shops after
dinner and picked up a pretty awesome
track jacket that says Madrid on the back
for 15 Euro.
The next day, we took a guided tour of
Madrid, and we were dropped off at the
Prado Museum. This was the part I was
looking forward to most, because I am
doing my graduation project on two
paintings in the Prado. Seeing them in
person was incredible, and I am so glad I
got the chance to do so.
The other interesting painting at the
Prado was “The Garden of Earthly
Delights,” which was described by Mr.
Slu.tter, our band director, as being
“very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very drug-induced,” and by Mrs.
Short, my principal, as being “like Dr.
Seuss…but the porno version…” That
was an odd experience, to say the lease.
The artist seemed to be a fan of
bestiality, bright colors, and nudity.
After that, we had free time in the city.
I walked around with two of the girls in
my section, and we got horribly lost. We
stopped at a supermarket, where I bought a
watermelon.
On the band trip to California three years
ago, they dropped the students off at a
strip mall with a supermarket once they
left the airport. My friends Rosanna and
Lauren (who graduated last year) bought a
watermelon at the supermarket, not
realizing that they had nothing to cut it
with. It sat in their mini-fridge for a
few days, and then it fell out and
cracked. Someone got the idea to draw Mr.
Slu.tter’s face on it, so they did, and
presented it to him. There’s a picture
somewhere of him with the original
Slu.ttermelon. Lauren and Rosanna made me
promise that we would do that this trip.
So we did. I bought the watermelon and we
turned it into a Slu.ttermelon back at the
hotel. We gave it to Mr. Slu.tter, took a
few more pictures, and then went back to
our rooms to get ready for another
performance.
We performed in a park in the city at the
request of the Madrid City
Administration’s Department of Youth.
The set-up and break-down of the pit
instruments took longer than the actual
performance, but we still had fun. After
that we went back to the hotel for dinner,
and then a bit of free time before
bedcheck.
On Saturday, March 3rd, we went to Toledo,
which is about an hour out of Madrid. We
had a guided tour of Toledo, an hour of
free time to do lunch and maybe a little
bit of shopping, and then a performance.
We had free time again after that, but the
area of town we were restricted to really
had no shopping. So my friends and I sat
on a bench and made idiots of ourselves.
Then we watched the drum major fall into a
massive fountain. That was pretty much the
highlight of the day to that point.
When we boarded the busses again, we
headed back to Madrid for our farewell
dinner, which was actually a Flamenco
show. That was so much fun, and an awesome
way to say goodbye to Spain. We convinced
Mr. Schram, our Dean of Students, and Mr.
Slu.tter, to dance with the pros up
onstage. That made for some of the best
video footage I’ve ever taken. We went
back to the hotel to finish packing, and
then got to do some last minute souvenir
shopping before a meeting where the
schedule for leaving was outlined.
On Sunday the 4th we had an extra-early
wakeup, and we checked out of the hotel
before breakfast started. I took a picture
with our bus driver, Miguel, because
he’s the coolest guy on the planet, and
the with our tour guides, Dania and Saria.
By then I was crying, and so were Dania
and Saria. It’s crazy how attached you
can become to people in 10 days. Then we
got on the busses to head to the airport,
and the same procedure as before, as far
as luggage was concerned, took place. I,
once again, also had to check an
overweight box of uniforms.
We had about 45 minutes to check out the
duty-free shops before boarding once we
made it through security. At the security
check, they made me open my bag and show
them the doll I was bringing as carryon,
because apparently on the x-ray screen it
looked suspiciously like a baby. Yes,
ladies, I am a baby carryon smuggler.
Once we boarded the plane it really
started to hit us that we were leaving.
None of us wanted to, because we were
having such and incredible time.
Then we had an 8hr flight home. For some
reason, it felt way shorter than the 7hr
flight there. I watched one episode of
each of the CSI franchises, and then
Employee of the Month, and then I did some
homework, and then suddenly we had landed.
It took an hour to get everyone through
Customs after baggage claim, and I got
detained because I brought food into the
country. Ferrero Rocher chocolates from
the duty-free shop in Madrid. They
inspected them and let me through.
We waited for the busses for half an hour,
and then waited on the busses for another
45 minutes before we finally started
heading home. When we finally got back to
the school I was crying again because I
didn’t want the trip to be over. I got
my stuff, moved in my box of uniforms, and
then my mom picked me up and took me
home.
We got to the house at around 6:30. I
unpacked souvenirs for my family and
neighbors, and then my mom put my clothes
in the wash. I went upstairs to get
changed, and never came back down. I slept
from 6:30pm to 3:00am, because my body was
still on Spain time, so it felt like it
was already 12:30am. When I woke up at
3:00, I was like “this isn’t going to
work…” so I went back to sleep, and
woke up again at 6:30.
And so began my normal school and home
life. And so ended the trip. I already
miss it. I want to go back to Spain.
Who’s with me?
~Nat
|
AyaMiyaki
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 01 Jun 2006 Posts: 7986 Location: Floating on a cloud, United States
Thanks: 116
Thanked:8
Posted: 03-10-07 18:39pm
I'm so glad you made it back safely, .nat!
Your trip sounds like it was amazing.
Kudos to you for being able to remember so
many details! Everytime I take a trip it
all becomes one big blur.
I had to look up that painting. It was...
interesting.
welcome back to the states!
|
amino65
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 10 Apr 2006 Posts: 261
Thanks: 7
Thanked:2
Posted: 03-10-07 18:40pm
lol I'm sorry but I couldn't read all
that! but from the looks
of it, you had quite a time
did you guys win any awards? I only got a
little less than 1/2 way through.
and lol at mr. slu-tter.
I'm glad you had an amazing time, makes me
wish I was still in my high school
marching band, but I definately don't miss
lugging around all and every percussion
instrument everywhere .
|
Sandbox Party
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 25 Jul 2006 Posts: 7276
Posted: 03-10-07 18:42pm
thats like, a huuuge menage-a-trois lol.
girl im glad you had fun! Yay for natalie!
|
tdr
Supporter
Joined: 05 Oct 2006 Posts: 1535 Location: Somewhere else...not here., PA USA
Thanks: 5
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Posted: 03-10-07 18:46pm
shasta205
wrote:
did you guys win any awards? I only got a
little less than 1/2 way through.
It was just a performance tour, not a
competition tour, so we didn't have any
awards to win. International recognition?
Yes (sort of...they hung posters
advertising our performances EVERYWHERE).
Awards? No. The show didn't translate as
well as we'd hoped. People still enjoyed
it, but the specific reasons the songs we
played were chosen ended up being a lost
cause.
|
amino65
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 10 Apr 2006 Posts: 261
Thanks: 7
Thanked:2
Posted: 03-10-07 18:50pm
ehhh that's ok, if it wasn't a competition
then it's not like you lost points for
general effect or something. People losing
the message of the music does suck, but
the music is still fun to perform I'll
bet. And yeah, sometimes recognition is
almost more worth it than the awards, like
when we went to wgi, that was fun to be
around bands all over the world.
|
tdr
Supporter
Joined: 05 Oct 2006 Posts: 1535 Location: Somewhere else...not here., PA USA
Thanks: 5
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Posted: 03-10-07 18:53pm
It was definitely still fun to perform. We
had a 5 1/2 octave .Honduran .Rosewood
marimba...I actually screamed when .I saw
it. That made the whole trip worth it.
Then, of course, when we came home and .I
had to play on our crappy fiberglass
marimba when less than 48 hrs before .i'd
been playing on .rosewood, .i was a little
less than pleased.
|
HcoBrunette06
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 06 Dec 2005 Posts: 8004 Location: Missouri, United States
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Posted: 03-10-07 19:35pm
welcome back! i'm so glad you had fun!!!
that's funny that you remembered all those
details, like who was sitting next to you,
it's definitely a good idea to write every
little detail that you can remember down.
That's what I did when I came home from
maine, i wrote down everything in order
that i could remember, including what we
wore, what we said (that i could remember)
and what we ate lol i love vacation, but
coming home after is usually depressing.
|
Bridget
Moderator
Joined: 27 Jan 2006 Posts: 10756 Location: the land of sheer exhaustion,
Thanks: 52
Thanked:34
Posted: 03-10-07 19:41pm
wow, that was wicked long. i tried to read
it all but ended up skimming the last
1/4.
sounds like you had a great time! what a
great opportunity for you.
one of my friends lived in granada for a
year and now she's obsessed with it. i saw
some pics and it's a gorgeous place.
|
tdr
Supporter
Joined: 05 Oct 2006 Posts: 1535 Location: Somewhere else...not here., PA USA
Thanks: 5
Thanked:6
Posted: 03-10-07 19:59pm
http://www.dropshots.c
om/thederangedrhino
All of my pictures from .Spain are there,
in case anyone is bored enough to skim
through them.
And my absolute favorite place out of
everywhere we went was .Granada. I'd like
to become a .Spanish teacher, and so
.Spain was a great experience for me. But
now .i'm looking almost exclusively into
schools that have an exchange/abroad study
program with the .University of
.Granada...I loved it there and would love
to study there. there's no way to learn a
language better than immersion...even my
.spanish teacher said my .spanish had
improved markedly after only 10 days!
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