One month to go

When I tell people that I’m going travelling with my brother, I expect one of two reactions: either encouraging head-nods and general enthusiasm, usually accompanied by sighs of “isn’t that nice that you two get along so well!”; or, more commonly, the person I’m talking to will look as if they are about to vomit. “I can’t think of anything worse.”

In just under a month’s time we’ll be heading to Southeast Asia. Matt’s just got into his uni of choice for 2013, and I graduated with a First having been chained to a library computer for the better part of a year. We’ve both wanted to take gap years for a while, so why not together? We’ll save money, visit the parts of the world we both want to see, and have a laugh- fortunately we get on quite well.

Having said that, the reactions are understandable- the thought of spending seven-odd months in the company of a sibling is enough to make anyone nauseous. Will those things that I find hilarious about my brother turn out to be headache-inducingly irritating? Will I inevitably lapse into the role of older sister, organising everything and enjoying nothing?

I have no idea how it’ll pan out. The gap year guidebooks don’t generally include a section on ‘travelling with siblings’…

4 Comments

Filed under Home Life

Year Abroad- the accommodation headache

à louer: boîte à chaussures

It’s about that time when students across the country are gearing themselves up to head abroad for the coming academic year. Job placements and teaching assistantships are being secured, meetings attended and university handouts devoured, and “essential” country-specific wardrobe additions purchased. (One does not simply embark on a year abroad without a new handbag.)

However advanced the stages of preparation, there is one organisational nightmare causing headaches for students nationwide: accommodation. Apart from those blessed few handed over the keys to their new apartment or student room by their employer or university, the rest of us have to struggle with the pressure of finding a roof over our heads in a far-flung land whilst sitting, almost powerless, at home.

Short of actually flying over to Salzburg and Paris before moving there last year, I pretty much tried everything to sort out my accom in advance. You can imagine my frustration when most of the replies I received from flat-sharing websites were from absolute weirdos (“couple seeks young girl to share bed”; “Spare room available on the condition that you let me rub your feet whenever I want… for a reflexology course.” I’m sure.)

In the end I booked a week’s stay in a Salzburg hostel and took the plunge, and once I was actually in the city it became much more straightforward to set up house. After getting to know the network of teaching assistants in the area I became great friends with another girl in the same situation, and we quickly moved into a flat with an obsessive compulsive landlady with a fear of garlic who was writing a self-help book. But that’s a blog post for another time. I did the same thing in Paris, and even though nearly everyone had been helpfully warning me about the lack of accommodation there, I found a multitude of ads on the American Church noticeboard and in the FUSAC magazine’s apartment pages, and managed to secure a room in a student flatshare on my first day. The next six months were spent living in relative harmony with four foreign students, two English girls who became my best friends, and another completely erratic landlady who slept in the corridor and sang naked around the house – again, another time.

Despite the initial gut-wrenching panic everything worked out well, the landladies provided classic anecdotes and once the organisational headache was over I could get on with enjoying the best year of my life. If you’re heading abroad next year and are losing sleep over accommodation, my advice is this: keep calm. Get to know as many people in the area as you can and ask them to keep their eyes open for rooms to rent. Have a look at the links below, especially Couchsurfing, for possibilities. And even though it has the potential to get expensive the ‘Metro Journal hostel plunge’™ is always an option. Good luck!

Useful Sites

YoHo Salzburg – my favourite Salzburg hostel. Great party atmosphere with a bar doing drinks deals and cheap food, dorms are clean and comfortable, and a daily showing of the Sound of Music. Need I say more?

Couchsurfing – a great resource and free to use. As well as looking for couches if you need to stay somewhere, try searching for language exchanges and weekly Stammtische in your area as they’re a great way to meet people and improve your speaking skills.

EasyWG and Appartager – not a roaring success for me but worth a try! Free to upload a profile but costs a bit to be able to contact people. Stay clear of shared beds and foot fetishes.

I found that FUSAC, a magazine aimed at Anglophones in Paris, and daily ads on the noticeboard outside the American Church were the best places to look for flats. Be prepared to spend most of your wages on a shoebox – lots of postcards, photographs and a thick duvet are essential for Paris living!


Leave a Comment

Filed under Year Abroad

Welcome

When I decided to start a blog about travel, fashion, food, and life as a language student, I turned to my comedian friend Dave for name inspiration. The name has to be short and interesting, I said, as well as original. I felt his creativity would prove invaluable in this dilemma. After 5 minutes of thought he replied with the following names:

1. Raand ‘an’ abaat (pun on the london way of saying round about)
2. or Round ‘n’ about
3. Jusqu’ici [up to now]
4. Steh auf – es gibt viel zu sehen [Get up – there’s lots to see]
5. Auf dem Weg [on the road]
6. Pour la route [for the road]
7. Café et autres choses [café and other things]
8. On my way
9. Sausage.
10. pants, passports ‘n’ peas
11. planes, pants ‘n’ peas
12. peas.

Although I appreciated the alliterative brilliance of ‘planes, pants ‘n’ peas’, or indeed the insightful simplicity of ‘Peas’ as a blog name, in the end I went for Metro Journal.

Throughout my time spent abroad last year in Austria and France I kept a journal – the paradox of course being that when you actually have interesting things to say you’re always too busy to write anything in it. So I would often write on my metro ride to work every morning in Paris, usually trying to strike the perfect balance between scribbling down the local tips and recommendations I amassed and not trying not to look like a maniac with bits of scrap paper flying everywhere.

This, then, is Metro Journal, and I will be writing about all sorts- the Year Abroad, life with graduation looming, and things I love and want to share. Post your comments, I’d love to hear from you!

Bisous,

Katie

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized