Tuesday 26 May 2009

Casse-toi et ton système éducatif!

France, I like your: literature, your food and your architecture. You can keep your: weather (mainly aimed at Paris), your vibe, your pervy men, your 'Keep off the grass' parks, your traffic and transport in general, and your education system!

Latest news from the Sorbonne: Lectures restarted yesterday. Which I was informed of: yesterday. From my chat with my German friend Amelie, a fellow Erasmus student, over hot chocolate (yummy!) and croissants (also very yummy) this afternoon, we have established that the semester will be made up for over the next FOUR weeks (bearing in mind this semester was meant to be what, 12/13?), followed by an exam period of ONE week, in which ALL exams will be crammed in back-to-back. (Amelie worked out that, if she were to take said exams, she would have THREE in a single DAY on a Monday, from 12-2, 2-4 (yep, that's right, no break!) and 5-7pm. THEN she would have her next one on Tuesday morning!! A JOKE, I ask you..!! We both felt so fortunate that, luckily owing to our respective universities (Dresden and Manchester) being understanding about the situation we have been put in, we do not have to partake in this month of hell...and then proceeded to talk about how nothing like this would ever happen in our respective countries, lol. It's true though..! PAH..

I went to her building afterwards with her (some of her lectures have been on, so she has some essays to write at the moment), and the place was strewn with painted banners and scrawled signs with slogans like "SARKO, CASSE-TOI ET TES LOIS" - '"Sarko" (President Nicolas Sarkozy's somewhat derogatory nickname), get lost with your laws', amongst others. I read some of the literature they'd printed off from www.liberation.fr , a French newspaper which has published numerous articles on the progression of the Sorbonne strike, and vowed to read more of these later to keep abreast of the goings-on, before picking up a couple of free magazines lying around and wandering to the Jardin de Luxembourg near by. On an upside, the Palace is truly gorgeous, and the gardens looked beautiful, even in the cloudy weather we've had today following the brilliant summer weather of the weekend and the thunderous storm which abruptly drew that to a close last night; I pulled up a chair next to one of the central patches of grass with a view of the Palais and sat to read The Da Vinci Code (my latest read; I started it earlier after a good year or two of promising to start it and am loving it! Reading it in Paris makes it all the more vivid and exciting - also probably why this entry sounds a little more cogent and literary than my usual mutterings :$). Unfortunately the wind and cold drew me away from this after not very long; it was simply too cold to enjoy it! But yes, very pleasant to spend some time in the gardens and to finally see the Palace itself. It's been a really nice, relaxing, leisurely Parisian day :)

Love you all, can't believe it's my return on Sunday!! Though it is days like today that make me think I really am going to miss this place....well, some aspects of it anyway :p 

xxxxxxxxxx

Friday 22 May 2009

La France

What I will miss about Paris:

- baguettes for 38 cents
- Riz au lait a la vanille, yum!
- so many places to explore
- crepes
- waffles..
- croque monsieurs!!
- The Marais
- the beautiful streets and the quirky places to explore
- the swordfish at Barbershop
- the bountiful supply of French books at Carrefour
- French onion soup, especially at La Khedive
- French film trips in Place d'Italie
- cheap cheap cheap wine, especially Panache from Carrefour!
- just....Carrefour..!

What I will not miss:

- the pervy men who have meant I have only worn a skirt/dress once and regretted it, and have thus not since March...
- the extortionate prices for everything, especially bottles of water..!!
- the expensiveness of the Metro and being pretty far from the action
- a large number of the Parisians and the way they must have right of way on the pavement/in their cars/look down on you
- the dull dress sense here (I'm serious! I haven't seen a colour other than black, white, navy or beige for weeks!)

Paris is definitely a city of contrasts....find the areas you like and you're sorted. Luckily I have come to do that, but unfortunately they happen to be pretty far from where I'm living....also, I will definitely not miss the ridiculous Parisian public transport and its mind of its own! After this year, I don't think I will ever complain about English admin again lol, as I said when I came back from Barcelona..! I have had a great time, just unfortunate circumstances (as Manchester uni recently referred to them as in an email to us) have conspired against my plans. Oh well, an experience is an experience....

xxxxxxx

La France

Nice in a Nutshell:

- wide streets
- gorgeous sunshine/weather in general!
- uncomfy (but pretty) beach
- Place Masséna = niiiice (minus overly friendly men, urgh)
- cute French cat, cute but psycho...and also set off my allergies..
- good pharmacy with amazing miracle cream for allergies
- very expensive cafés
- awesome fountains
- Wayne's club = SO much fun..the most hilarious and fun sweatpit I have probably ever been in
- Ma Nolan's = legendary pub
- much more relaxed and chilled out than Paris, but still the occasional pervy man. 

Cannes: film stuff, ugly building, no celebs :( gorgeous weather, lovely promenade. Nice cafes behind the scenes. Exciting atmosphere :)

Monaco: Tiny and mental. So many yachts! Gorgeous place, too hilly for me to be bothered walking much though. Café de Paris = extortionate. €7 for a Coke!! gorgeous restaurants though. F1 track, very exciting, busy busy. lots of people, lots of traffic. Designer shops everywhere. clearly very wealthy. Cool :)

Monday 11 May 2009

Sorry for delay!

Hellooooo world out there!

Sorry it's taken me ages to get back on this thing, time has flown by in hindsight! Can't possibly remember everything there was to update you all on, sorry :s but will have a go at key things!

- Have recently discovered my faaaavourite parts of Paris, after much awesome exploring with Keyla, amongst others :) new favourite places are : the 4th arr. (the Marais) - vintage shops aplenty, gorgeous little winding backstreets which look beautiful in the summer shade, with Italian ice cream parlours and little bookshops galore - Place des Vosges is an amazing square to lounge in on a sunny afternoon - seems to be the place to hang out, the equivalent of College Green for the Bristolians among you! 
The Bastille is also a fave :D, a wicked market on Saturdays with loooads of arty things to admire, and a lovely stall selling beautiful silk skirts (I got mine 'student price', I was assured!) run by a legend of a Frenchman, who tolerated my indecisiveness for most of an afternoon! Also provided with commentary on the stalls by a crazy man who wanders around wearing a pair of the market's more extrovert sunglasses. Hilarious! The Indiana café/bar/resto on the corner is a favourite - happy hour from 5 til 8pm and YUMMY Mexican food (my favourite!), with a lunch offer on Mon-Fri 12-5pm, a meal and a coffee for €11. Although, I have recently discovered after trying to buy in more fully to the Parisian lifestyle, that I am not a fan of espresso - although it does give me a fun buzz for an afternoon!
Parmentier is a favourite area too - Barbershop restaurant (soo cool, vintage and chilled and awesome!) recently provided me with an AMAZING swordfish (yes, I discovered a taste for it in Corfu last September, thanks to Quinny for that one!), seriously, one of the most BEAUTIFUL things I have eaten in a very long time! €15 and I would pay that any day for it!

Soooo, in summary, have been getting out and about a lot more since Easter; other coursemates have come out of the woodwork claiming they have nothing to do either, so I've managed to rope them into exploring the city with me! And oh it has paid off :) live music, wicked people and beautiful sights, and awesome food! (Yeah, we all know I'm a bit of a gourmande...) 

Weather is pretty dull now actually :( has been since after Easter really..! Though it was warm enough yesterday that Tom, Lydia and I (my latest visitors :) ) had a nap on the grass at Trocadero under the Eiffel Tower...though we were awakened by spots of rain...humid but cloudy and threatening has been the order of the day of late. Hopefully that will perk up soon!

You may have gathered from this that there's been no progress with the strikes, aside from the fact that my coursemate emailed a group of us the other day saying she'd been emailed by a woman from Paris Uni saying they'd been putting up lecture notes online since the strikes started to tide us over, only someone had neglected to tell us this along the way..!! So I wasn't very impressed with that, as you can imagine...But oh well, that's happened now, and I have had a lot of time to myself to explore :) My friend notified Manchester Uni of this and their response was basically "Oh dear, that's a shame they didn't tell you that, but never mind, you weren't to know so it doesn't matter that you haven't done it", so at least we're off the hook for not having known.

I fly out to Nice on Thursday evening to visit Steph for a week! Can't wait - will be really nice to explore a part of France I've never been to before; to have a change of scenery, and also to have some time with Steph :) it's been weird not seeing her at all since Barcelona, aside from our quick catch up in Manchester a few weeks ago! So I hope the weather down there is nice; I had a peek at the forecast and seems similar to here, but they do seem subject to change lately, so fingers crossed!

Have booked my Eurostar trip back to the UK once and for all, on the 31st of May! Can't quite believe it's that close to being over, in hindsight...seems to have gone so fast when I look back! Naturally am quite disappointed about the whole debacle of the Sorbonne; would have loved to have studied here, but alas. Nevertheless, it has given me the time to frolic in a gorgeous city buzzing with culture, and discover some of its more hidden delights :) when the weather's nice, obviously! Though at least there are the museums and galleries for the rainy days :) not to mention the alarmingly cheap (for Paris - and the UK, come to that!) cinema down at Place d'Italie - I had heard it rumoured, but Keyla and I checked it out in the flesh last week, and lo and behold, something to the tune of €3,60 for a young person under 26!!! Bargainous!! So that may be on the cards for tomorrow...

What else to report..? Oh, flat situation is lovely, though there have been some changes....older sister Assia and boyfriend Nej had a bit of an argument over Easter, so he no longer lives here...which is a shame cause he was a legend, but it's quite nice having a girly flat too. They've managed to rent out the spare room to Celia, a dancer from Province who moved in last week, and is really lovely :) and now younger sister Nadia has found herself a studio, so moves out sometime this week, I think..! Which will be sad, as she's really nice, and I feel like I've got closer to her the past month or so. Assia is currently on holiday in Andalusia; she took a 10 day break because she was working loads before Easter and to clear her head about recent events etc., which I think was a really good thing. So hopefully she's off enjoying herself at the mo!

Have been looking round a lot of flats more inside Paris with Keyla recently; she wants to move closer in, as she's in a little town outside Paris called Plaisir at the mo, and has finished her job out there and apparently there was nothing else to do there lol, so she wants to be nearer the action! Is proving difficult though; it's sooo hard to find a decent place in Paris. There's always something not quite right, be it the housemate, the location, a lack of internet... I hope she manages to sort something out soon. We have said to her that Nadia's room will soon be free! She is considering it, but wants to be a bit closer in if possible, which is fair enough; I would love to be too, but it's so hard to find somewhere, especially if you don't want to pay an arm and a leg for it....

Anyways, will sign off for now; long update! Will try and be a bit more regular with posts; though as I say, going away on Thursday for a week and internet may be limited, knowing what Steph's old brick of a laptop is like :p! Then have Mum coming to stay when I get back for a long weekend, then will have just under a week to occupy myself before I come back to Blighty! Crazy how time is flying! (Though I have to admit, it was my plan to be proactive this month so I didn't get bored - it has certainly paid off!) 

Love you all loads, see you soon!! Also need to update you soon on my summer plans - am hopping about the continent then too..! :p

Loads of love and hugs xxxxxxxxxxx

Tuesday 10 March 2009

Contact details at last!

Sorry for the delay everyone, finally asked my flatmate for the address of the flat! Knew most of it anyway but just wanted to check details. Here it is: 

FAMILLE AMRI (name of the family so postman knows which letterbox to put it in!) 
18, Rue de la République
93200 Saint Denis
FRANCE

Don't know what to do about my name, obviously you have to put Famille Amri on it so it gets put in the right letterbox (there are about 20 all clumped together on the wall at the bottom of the block of flats!), maybe put (Nikki Tomlinson) under it? Or on the back of the envelope? Either way I'm sure my flatmates will get the message if they open it and it says 'Nikki' and is written in English..!

Also the landline number! : 0142 43 42 02 , though you will have to put the country code on the front, which would make it 0033142 43 42 02. This will probably cost you a lot though; as I've said before, it's free for me to ring out to European landlines from this landline, so probably better to just give me your landline numbers and let me know when you're free for a chat!

Not much other news to be honest; still going to classes, keeping me nicely busy, have a presentation in the one tomorrow :s haaate presentations, trying not to build it up for myself though..! All I have to do is introduce myself, where I'm from, what I'm studying and why and say something about French culture that interests me, really. The first girl did hers today and she was really good...I just hope that doesn't overshadow me too much! Not that it counts for anything or I have to pass it at all anyway!

Ruth's flying over from Sweden to visit on Friday! I can't wait! Really looking forward to a weekend of a familiar face and doing lots of fun touristy things together! As it was in Barcelona, will probably be absolutely exhausting, but it was such great fun! And will definitely make a welcome change from the boredom and sitting around I've been experiencing lately :) bring it on!

The weather's also meant to be taking a turn for the better soon, I think :) soooo excited about summer weather coming along!! Paris really does look set to be beautiful in the spring/summer. Can't wait! :D

Hope all is well with everyone, do keep me updated and write to me lots now, no more excuses hehe!

Love you all loads xxxxxxxxxx

Friday 6 March 2009

Strike Everywhere

Finally had some news from Alfonso, the Paris University Erasmus (the foreign exchange programme I'm on) co-ordinator today; I'll translate the emails for you, they speak for themselves.. :

"URGENT"

Hello,

I am writing this email to you as the University of Paris - Sorbonne has been on strike since the beginning of February on certain campuses, as well as the whole of the Sorbonne starting today. The strike will last until Tuesday the 10th, then there will be a protest on the Wednesday. The movement is highly likely to get worse. Some of you are no longer Erasmus students and have no issue with grades. Do not take any notice of this email; it is important, however, that those who do not have a record of their grades are kept up to date. None of the grades are currently registered as the teachers are on strike. As a result, it is necessary to wait until all of that (registration of grades) is finished. 
For students who have stayed on for second semester and for new students: the strike is ongoing and the Sorbonne campus is now affected. There is a chance I may no longer be able to reply to any emails, at least until next Tuesday. It is necessary to consider the possibility of returning to your home country for some students if there is a possibility of completing your second semester at your University. I am not asking anyone to go back. I think, moreover, that I should give you all of the information so that you can judge for yourselves. 

Yours sincerely,

And the second one...

"Strike at the Sorbonne"

Hello,

The Sorbonne campus is closed this morning, even if some students have managed to get in. I continue to remind you that the University has not asked anyone to return to their country. You should know nevertheless that there are strikes mostly everywhere and that the situation is getting worse. At midday yesterday, the students, the teachers and the administrators decided upon a total strike. It is up to you to decide what you should do.

Cordially,

So there we have it, ladies and gents.. I've emailed Dan Herman, the Erasmus Co-ordinator from Manchester, asking his advice on what I should do in line with my course requirements at uni (I don't want to have come out here and gone through all this to find out that what I did wasn't valid and not pass the year!). I don't think it's a question of getting a certain number of credits at Manchester Uni (i.e. you get a certain number of credits for every course you complete and pass) - I don't think our results in whatever we study out here really count for this year, as we can study pretty much whatever we like, even if it's not relevant to our degree back in the UK. However, I dare say I'm not quite licensed to hop back over the Channel to the UK, much as I would quite like to right now - this is proving very expensive (I checked my bank balance today and will most likely be scraping by until June :( ) to live out here and I'm not actually doing much productive at the moment as a result of these stupid strikes (although my grammar classes started this week and has given me something to do, albeit very easy stuff that I have done before..!). I've got a trip to Manchester planned for the end of the month, and my thoughts are if nothing has progressed positively in the way of lectures starting by then (the 27th), then I might as well bring my things back over for the Easter holidays, as I'd be coming back to the UK again 8 days after coming back from Manchester anyway, so there would be no point flying back for 8 days of nothing, only to come back to the UK again. I suspect Dan will advise me to get a job or something, however I don't know of anyone who's attempted that out here without having it organised prior to their arrival in Paris, so it could take ages to find one. Either way I think the only real requirements the Uni will have of me will be to stay in France for a certain amount of time, but I'm sure they'll agree that these circumstances were unforeseen, highly unfavourable and out of my control. So we'll see what happens...

In the meantime, I've had a nice long lie in today (my classes don't run on Fridays, however they only start at 4.30pm anyway so I generally get a lie in anyway..!), then got up and made pancakes with Pancetta and Port Salut cheese (which I love! It's the closest thing to Cheddar I've found out here! :p) and listened to a radio show on Radio 1 over the Internet :D ahhh! :)

Now I can hear some kind of small group protesting (?)/shouting outside KFC down my road lol....Seriously, all the French do is strike!!

Hope everything's well at home, Skype is always available and if people give me their landline numbers I can ring when you're free! (As I say I have LOTS of free time at the moment!) 

Love you all loads :) xxxxxxx

Monday 2 March 2009

Part 2: Paris!!

Hey hey everyone!

Weeeell, it has been a while since I've updated this! And seeing as I have nothing to do (for reasons that will be explained!), I thought what better time than now to let you all know what I'm up to? Obviously it's been a couple of months, so I'll do a quick overview:

December: 

Back in Brizzle for Christmas, reunions with Brizzle friends and family. Loved seeing everyone again, had missed you guys so much you don't understand! All the usual Christmas funtimes and traditions; perfect :)

January: 

Went up to Preston to be reunited with my gorgeous Quinny :) had our own mini Christmas with present giving and whatnot :) then we moved his stuff back to Manchester and were reunited with the boys and all our mates. Had New Year's Eve there in one of our friend's flats; Ruth even came down from Preston while she was home from Sweden for a couple of weeks for it. Was so good to see everyone again! Was also there for Quinny's 22nd on the 8th, so made the most of my free time finding him presents and the like :) Spent most of the month reacquainting myself with French by the way of novels etc; Quinny had exams for the last 2 weeks of Jan so he was hard at work revising for that; I filled my time by meeting up with much-missed friends, catching up on good old English TV and basking in the glory of my favourite (and some new faves!) Manchester haunts. Absolute bliss :)

February: 

Moved back to Brizzle where I had a whirlwind few days packing my stuff up ready for Paris; caught the Eurostar over here on the lunchtime of the 4th, arriving at Gare du Nord at about 8.10pm, met by the lovely Lucy :) who put me up in her room for a few nights while I searched for accommodation/acquainted myself with the area and uni etc. Then moved on to Alex's on the 9th, still in search of accommodation and getting desperate by this point; then very luckily for me an advert I'd put on a flatshare website got 2 phonecall replies that afternoon, suggesting I view them that evening! So we went around those, and so it was that I came across my gorgeous 2 floor apartment with 3 lovely French people; Assia, 30, who works in computer science, Neige, 27, who has just got a new job in marketing (I think), and Assia's younger sister Nadia, 28, who also has a job of some kind lol :s. They're so lovely, really nice and easy to get along with, and they often make me meals and things! It's a real kinda family atmosphere here, but with a real young fun vibe too. :)

I stayed at Alex's again that night, as the room wasn't ready for me to move into, then Assia told me the next day that their mother had sprung her surprise annual visit on them for that weekend (Valentine's)! So could I perhaps move in the week after? This was a bit unfortunate, as Alex was going back to Manchester the following Monday, and as I couldn't move in til Thursday I would be stuck with nowhere to go....so, remembering a whim I'd had of considering a spontaneous trip to see Quinny for Valentine's day, I decided to research the feasibility of said trip, and decided that there was no reason not to go :) So from the 13th to the 18th of Feb I was back in Manchester relaxing with my gorgeous boyfriend (I was not relishing the thought of being alone in Paris, renowned as the city of love, on Valentine's weekend in any case..! The amount of sickening pink and red paraphernalia adorning all the shop shelves was staggering..!) So that worked out really well :)

When I came back on the 18th I stayed at Lucy's place for the night, then left with her in the morning and went to find my uni buildings on another campus, in the vain hope that lectures would have started...The short of it is that the Paris university has been on strike since the beginning of this term, so I haven't had a single lecture yet..! I've managed to register as a student and get my student card (so I am officially a Paris student!), but no classes have been held; I think it's due to some lecturer-researcher statute which a lot of the lecturers disagreed with, so they're striking to demonstrate this. At least I found out where the buildings are, anyway..!

So I then moved into my new flat that lunchtime :) up until last Thursday I didn't have anywhere to put my clothes, but then Assia found a nice big chest of drawers that someone advertised online, and bought that for my room :) So it's much tidier now! My room here is about twice the size of my one in Barcelona, really light, and in a gorgeous apartment as I say. With fully working internet and everything!! As well as free landline calls to anywhere in Europe, which is fantastic! Must start making use of that one...

The week after that we had a week's holiday anyway; apparently it's the traditional time of year when the French go skiing for a week, so it's pretty much granted as a week off school and uni and some jobs (kinda like a half term I guess). Soooo for that week, safe in the knowledge I would indeed have no lectures regardless, I pretty much slept, bummed around and settled into my new surroundings. I met up with my coursemate Keyla one day, who's working as a teaching assistant in a village called Plaisir outside of Paris, and we wandered about seeing what we could find; we found a very ornate bridge, the Invalides hotel with the Army Museum and Napoleon's tomb inside it, then we wandered in the other direction and found the Grand Palais exhibition hall, then made our way through the Tuilerie gardens to the Louvre. We were aiming to find the Galeries LaFayette (massive shopping centre, like Selfridges or maybe posher..), which we eventually did, and indulged in some expensive cakes and drinks on the top floor with a (rather grey on that day) view of the Eiffel Tower :) the architecture in that shopping centre is gorgeous!! I took Quinny in there just to see it lol. We amused ourselves looking at the toys and French music tastes for a bit, and perused some expensive clothes, then decided H&M was more our price range, so toddled over to that, then followed that up with a gorgeous (and very reasonable!) dinner of steak and chips and peppercorn sauce at a nearby cafe. I was soo full, yet when I returned home Assia and Neige practically ordered me to eat with them (I had a small plate..!) and we then watched a (very sad!) Manga film with French subtitles (getting in some practice!) Twas an awesome day :)

For the rest of the week I amused myself by sleeping, making pancakes and watching films lol, and going to a British-style live Indie music night on the Wednesday with Zara and co. (which was cool, though €5 for half a pint of Stella is not ideal..! I reeeally miss English prices!) then Quinny arrived on Thursday :D! Began our sightseeing straight away with a trip to the Arc de Triomphe, visiting the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and going inside and up the Arc itself, for a (rather foggy again) view of central Paris; wincing at the kamikaze traffic on the Point d'Etoile...We then meandered in the direction of the senataph and the Tuilerie gardens again, where I picked up a Nutella crepe on the way (I'm price-comparing on this one at the moment; this was €3, which considering the touristy area I found it in, was not bad at all!) and Quinny had his quintessential holiday hot dog :D we wandered through the gardens, bemused by tourists and random sculptures alike, then arrived at the Louvre pyramid. The place is truly massive! We were originally planning to go either on Friday night between 6 and 10pm (when it's free in for under 25s!) or on Sunday the 1st (it's free for anyone on the first Sunday of the month!) when a random man walked past us with 2 tickets and just handed them to us saying, "Here, take them"..! We were quite unsure about this but thought it would be worth a try; they were worth €9, were full day tickets and didn't seem validated in any way; sure enough, we got in without a problem! The famous Quinny discount which I'm always talking about coming into play again...

We browsed the museum for a couple of hours, taking in the Mona Lisa and the Venus de Milo, as well as various Egyptian artefacts and statues of Marcus Aurelius etc, then pottered off in search of the Parisian Hard Rock Café! (Yes, it has become tradition!) Found it and had a gorgeous Hard Rock burger, never disappoints! After a gorgeous and definitely filling meal we made our way back to my flat, where my flatmates and a group of their friends were sitting around with wine and chatting with music (as is the way in my flat - can you see why I love the atmosphere!) so we joined in for a bit of Anglo-French socialising :) 

The next day we met up with Lucy for lunch, to chat about her final day of work in France and see her off before she moved back to the UK for a month this weekend before heading on to Buenos Aires..! Had a marvellously cheap panini (from a stall outside the steak cafe, incidentally! Clearly a gem of an area, that one!) and sat on the steps outside the Opera eating them and talking. Mmmm :) We then went to the Galleries LaFayette, to show Quinny the architecture, and the model planes in the toy section...hehe. Then we pottered along to Notre Dame, had the classic tourist photos outside it and had a look inside too, then explored the Latin Quarter and the Pompidou centre (though we didn't pay to go to the museum bit as were feeling the pinch a bit by this point!). We watched a legend of a man do a 'speed-painting' of Barack Obama on a spinning canvas outside the Pompidou centre in the space of under 5 minutes (it was amazing!) For tea we found a nice (and relatively inexpensive) restaurant near St Michel, where I had my first French onion soup (it was AMAZING! - with baguette and melted cheese in it - definitely a favourite!) and we both had boeuf bourgignon (we were on the look out for French food - also very good!) On the way home we decided to stop off at the Stade de France in the hope of finding some rugby tickets for the France v. Wales Six Nations match (the stade is the metro stop before mine, so about a 15 minute walk away!); we were so lucky to come across a poor old French man outside the stadium trying to sell on 3 tickets because his friends couldn't make it; worth €73 and in prime position in the lower stand, he was selling them on for €50, so thinking this was a chance we would clearly never see again, we jumped on board! Shame that Wales lost, but the match was brilliant and the atmosphere too! Am really getting into live sport this year :D

Saturday was a gooorgeous day, the best I've seen since I arrived, so we decided to take a trip to the Eiffel Tower, and at least see it in all its glory, if not go up it, which we did :) Around a 45 minute wait, which went surprisingly quickly, and a trip to the 2nd floor while we were waiting for the top floor to free up a bit - then some stunning views from the top, especially of the Seine bathed in sunshine. Beautiful :) we wandered around the area a bit, in search of food mostly, but to no avail; that area is soo expensive, for future reference! We eventually hopped back on the metro to my area, where we stocked up on wine and a few snacks for the night ahead - my flatmates had some friends visiting as well, so we'd decided to do a big dinner and invite people round, so Alex joined us later too :) Plenty of wine, good conversation and good food was had :) some people chose to go out later, though we decided against it as we were truly skint by this point..! A wicked night though :) Shortly after the turn of midnight, when everyone had left, Quinny surprised me with an anniversary present - some gorgeous white gold earrings - which I had completely not been expecting, especially as he usually can't bear to keep a secret, he just ends up telling me he's got me a surprise! It was so thoughtful and sweet :) 

Yesterday was Quinny's and my year anniversary :) We took a trip to the Sacré Coeur :) I'd never been there before, and as of yesterday I would say it's probably my favourite place in Paris, in the style of Parc Guell in Barcelona - so calm, convivial and peaceful - there was a Spanish guitarist up there playing well known songs to a large group of people gathered on the steps who were joining in singing and clapping :) it was sooo cool. We stayed and listened and sang along for a while, before heading inside the cathedral. It was gorgeous, and there was a real serene, quite surreal feeling about it - Quinny remarked on it too. After that we ventured to the pretty seedy district of the Moulin Rouge for the all-important tourist photo, though didn't wander about there for too long as the area, as I say, isn't the most appealing...Eventually for tea we made our way to the good old steak cafe :D where I had my usual starter of tomato salad and main of steak, chips and peppercorn sauce :D definitely a fave, that one. We made a trip around the city, seeing the Arc de Triomphe all lit up after sundown, walked along the Seine at night, in the glow of all the lights, and even managed to catch the Eiffel Tower on the hour, when it's not only lit up in gold but also sparkles with another set of silver lights for 5 dazzling minutes. It was so special :) We shared a chocolate waffle (hehe yes, I ate like a princess this weekend!!) and went and ate it on the steps of the Trocadéro overlooking the Seine and the Tower. Such a special evening :) 

I waved Quinny off this morning on his way back to Manchester to hit the books again; beginning to wonder when I'll do the same myself! There were some sort of classes scheduled to start this week, though I think I may go to the one on Thursday to fit in better with my timetable (though I still can't really tell if my timetable will end up like that, as I haven't been able to go to any of the classes to see if I like them..!). So today has been a day of sleep and recuperation from the very busy, very awesome weekend :) Lovely Assia and Nadia made me some lunch, which was really nice; was very grateful for being taken care of for a bit, if I'm honest. It's quite a confusing situation, being out here just sort of waiting for someone to tell you there are finally classes for you to go to; I'm starting to get used to this life of having my time to myself, yet I feel like I can't really settle into it or I'll find it hard to adapt when lectures do kick in! But for the time being, I'm in a lovely flat, with lovely people, and it's all very chilled and nice :) now all that remains is for you lot to come and visit me! 

Keep me posted on what's going on in Blighty, as per always I miss it so! 

Love you all oodles :) xxxxxxxx