Thursday, November 29, 2007

A Tribute to the Amsterdam Public Library

Last week, while I was visiting my parents on the East Coast, I spent a few hours browsing through the 20 pounds or so of Time, Transworld Snowboarding, and Travel and Leisure magazines that my mom conscientiously saved for me while I've been living in Europe for the past 9 months. Catching up on my US-centric news made me feel as though I had just arrived in the future via a time machine. When did Al Gore get the Nobel Prize? Who were the Jena 6? And Dog the Bounty Hunter had to apologize for using the N word? How come none of my so-called friends have kept me up-to-date with this important piece of information?

Also: buried on page 78 of Time's special issue on the Best Inventions of the Year was a blurb titled "Reinvented: The Hand Dryer". It stated simply that "[b]y forcing unheated air through a narrow gap at more than 400 mph, the energy-efficient Dyson Airblade dries hands in just 10 sec. flat". Well, finally, a piece of news that I actually knew about before the readers in America did. These are the hand dryers that can be found in the basement restroom of the main branch of the Amsterdam Public Library.

I've already been raving like a lunatic about these hand dryers to all of my friends in Amsterdam. First of all, instead of rubbing your hands under the airstream to dry them, you stick both your hands into something that resembles a toaster oven. Then, there's the noise, like the sound of a jet engine revving up for take-off. In the meantime, the skin on your hands is being subjected to g-forces from the heavy duty vacuum-cleaner-like suction, which -- thanks to Time magazine -- I now know is what it would feel like if you stuck your hands out of a car window while someone was driving the car at 400 miles per hour.

When I described this to my friend Jim, he was appalled. "I'd never do it. Don't you ever watch horror movies? What if I pulled my hands out and instead of hands, all I had left were bloody stumps?!"

It's true that I had my reservations when I first tried it. But now I'm a fan. Ordinary hand dryers seem so pathetic now next to the public library Dyson Airblades1.

In fact, ordinary libraries seem pathetic next to the Main Branch of the Amsterdam public library, which I also rave about. I'm not alone in this (although I seem to be somewhat alone with the hand dryer obsession, so far). This branch opened on 7/7/07, and I'm guessing that it is the nicest library in the world. Although I haven't been to the one in Dubai, and who knows? -- maybe that one has a monorail that takes you through the stacks.

The library was designed by the Dutch architect Jo Coenen, not to be confused with my photographer friend Jo2 who took this gorgeous photo of it that Flickr won't let me download except in thumbnail size (click on the thumbnail to be linked to a larger photo).

There are 7 floors (or 10, if you also count floors 0, 0.5, and -1; yeah, it's a European thing). On the first floor, as soon as you walk in, there's a bank of television screens. Most of the times I have been there, the screens are displaying a video of swimming dolphins. This seems to be totally unrelated to the reading of books, although dolphins are supposed to be pretty intelligent. I just read in Time magazine that they have recently been observed using sea sponges to catch fish. So maybe the point is that we can strive to be intelligent like the dolphins if we read a lot of books.

All the librarians have nicely designed uniforms. I read in the newspaper that these were controversial amongst the librarians when first introduced; I quite like them though. At least they are not ugly, and it makes it easier to identify the librarian when I have a question and he is trying to sneak off to the restroom to use the hand dryer.

There are escalators and a futuristic elevator and lots of ultra-modern chairs that look uncomfortably like plastic, but are actually soft and fun. On the top floor, there's a La Place restaurant, which serves cafeteria-style gourmet food (or gourmet-style cafeteria food, take your pick) and offers tables on the terrace, with a fabulous view overlooking central Amsterdam and the Ij river. They have 600 computers for free internet usage, a concert hall that seats 270, and "pods" for individual private study. They also have a gi-normous selection of CDs, DVDs, and computer games, which one may rent for one euro per week. Books are free and may be borrowed for 3 weeks at a time, although this is all on top of the yearly membership fee of 23.50 euro.

Hey, you gotta pay for those hand-dryers somehow.

Note: I plan to supplement this post with photos eventually, though my camera has been a serious disappointment to me lately, and I have no plans to go to the library in the next few weeks. Now that the nights are cold and dark, I am definitely less motivated to make excursions outside of my neighborhood.
1Although with a name like "Dyson Airblades", it's easy to make the mental jump to "bloody stumps". Someone in Marketing really should have thought of that.
2I think Jo's photos are brilliant. If you want to see more, click here and prepare to be AMAZED. I also have a permanent link to her Flickr photo site on my blog sidebar.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

It's not just rain...


...sometimes it's rainbows!

After leaving my apartment this morning, I stepped outside and saw this. Of course, I ran back inside to get my camera. Then I biked to the metro station in a nice light drizzle, feeling very hardcore (from biking in the rain) and warmfuzzly (from the memory of "my" rainbow) at the same time.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Snowboarding IN Amsterdam

Yes, it's actually possible. You can snowboard within the city limits at Indoor Ski & Squash Watergraafsmeer. Can you believe it took me this long to actually do it? It's only a 25 minute bike ride from my place, it cost 12 Euro to participate in an hour-long group lesson, and they supply all the gear.

But there's a catch (of course there's a catch!) The catch is...there's no snow. The "hill" is a carpeted conveyer belt that is sprayed with stuff to make it slippery.

Check out the photo. There were six of us snowboarding in this tiny space at once!

Our instructor started by putting long metal bars down, and then had 3 of us stand behind the front bar and 3 behind the back bar, all in what he called "gliding" position, as if we were pointing straight downhill. He pressed a big black button on the side and suddenly the ground started to move away underneath us.

Gradually, after we all got used to the idea that we could stand upright while the conveyer belt was running, we did exercises to learn how to slow down on the mountain. In other words, we turned the board so that it was perpendicular to the slope to simulate a heel-side stop. We did the same thing facing uphill to simulate a toe-side stop. Next we did some toe-edge and heel-edge turns, but we could only angle the board enough to move from one end of the bar to the other. Then some of us were able to let go of the bar, and do the falling leaf in place. The final part of the lesson -- strictly for those of us who already knew how to snowboard -- was to move the top bar further back and have us do linked turns from one bar down to the next.

The instructor warned us that even seasoned snowboarders would have trouble at first. He wasn't kidding. 12 of us participated altogether, and 9 were complete beginners. Even the three of us who had been snowboarding for 7 years or more fell on our knees, butts, and backs a few times.

One main difference was, the belt didn't slow down or stop, so you never really got the feeling of how being perpendicular would actually slow you down. Also, it was very weird to be in such a constricted space with a metal bar at waist-level and two other people on either side. On a snowy hill with that kind of slope I wouldn't normally be afraid of falling, but with the conveyer belt constantly going, you had to trust the instructor to stop it before you hit the back wall.

That said, I'd say it was a fantastic way for beginners to learn the body movement required for snowboarding. It was cheap, it wasn't cold, we didn't have to drive or fly for hours to get there, and the bar was literally three steps away from the hill. And of course, this being Amsterdam, the apres-ski was especially good! We shared a few bottles of wine and pasta at an Italian restaurant in Rembrandtplein and then mega-strong cocktails upstairs at Harry's Bar. Just like after any other day on the slopes, we talked about the best falls of the day and our future snowboarding trips. We'll probably hit a few of the other indoor slopes in the Netherlands (there are 4!) within the next few months so that the beginners will have a chance to give it a try on real snow. Having never been to one of these indoor snow domes, I'm really curious about what they are like. So watch this space for more about indoor boarding in the near future...

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Giant Disco Ball from Outer Space

I feel compelled to post about my night at the Sugar Factory, a club off the Leidseplein in Amsterdam. "Interactive Disco Opera" was the collaborative masterpiece of artist Eric Staller, filmmaker Miss T, and costumer Nepco. It was described as "Fellini-esque" in the paper, so I knew it would be surreal. But since I've never seen a Fellini movie myself, I wasn't sure what to expect. I will definitely go out and rent one now.

The theme of the night seemed to be alien B-movies from the 50s. When I walked in, they were showing the short film "Strip Tease on Mars", which was basically a gorgeous woman getting naked to 50s cocktail jazz on what seemed to be a desert planet, while eyeballs attached to long antennae quivered behind every rock. This was followed by a live saw harpist playing along to a film of vinyl records hovering above the Nemo & other obvious Amsterdam landmarks, a really clever localized send-up of the horrible special effects that make B-movies so fun to watch. Along those lines, I never realized what I was missing in life until I saw a cross-eyed Godzilla melting a toy windmill with his fiery breath in the wildly exciting action-horror short "Godzilla vs. Amsterdam".

There was also the Burka Boogie Woogie Band, where women dressed in burkas played in a band, with the burkas strategically fastened so that the shapes of the trumpet, trombones, bass, and other instruments poked out from the sides. One of my favorite pieces involved 4 women just standing still on the balcony in the darkness wearing beauty parlor helmets with lights that blinked in rhythm with the music; they looked like deep sea creatures. And there was a bizarro film featuring pink plastic breasts each moving separately, and then you were gradually made to realize that each breast was actually a woman wearing a huge plastic ball and a hat resembling a nipple. The grand finale, which was truly magnificent, involved 4 beautiful women in white glittering leotards, high heels, and disco ball helmets dancing around a shivering mass of silver, which eventually jelled (to the tune of "Last Dance") into an enormous disco ball man, about 3 times my height in diameter and at various times seeming about to roll off the stage into the transfixed audience.

Now that I'm typing all of this out, I realize...well...you really had to be there. There's just no way to describe it in a coherent way. It was abso-#$%@-ing incredible. I'm so going to all of Eric Staller's future disco operas. And you should too, if he ever comes to your city.

I can also highly recommend Hans Eijkelboom's photography, which is on exhibition now at Foam. Not nearly so dramatic, but also very interesting.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

What's French for "whiplash"?

In the summer of 2005, I parted with 100,000 Northwest frequent flyer miles in order to attend McNab Snowboarding Summer Camp at Les Deux Alpes, a glacier in the French Alps. It was such a great experience that I knew I'd do it again once I moved to Europe.

I just came back from my second trip to Les Deux Alpes (and second post-McNab side trip to Lyon), and once again, thoroughly enjoyed my holiday, though it meant consuming half the box of ibuprofen I'd bought at the start. 6 days of repeatedly throwing oneself off a jump in a desperate bid to land a cool trick is a joyous yet painful experience.

Thanks to the marvelous coaches at McNab (including Jenny Jones, who might well turn up as one of the few non-American women invited to the X-Games this year), I'm now nailing frontside 180s. Sadly though I seem to have mysteriously lost my ability to perform switch 180s -- which I could do, albeit not beautifully, before this trip. There was one day where I managed three gorgeous backside 180s in a row. It's all on the McNab video; okay, so I don't have a copy of said video, but there are witnesses to back me up. I need proof, since one day later, I couldn't replicate the feat.

Again, I was hanging out with a crew of Brits & Scots, all very friendly and sweet. There were only three female campers, and two of them were there with their boyfriends. So it was perhaps a dubious honor when I won the Women's Big Air competition on the last day (similar to when I won "Best American Camper" 2 years ago, and I was the only American camper there!) The prize was a brand-new North Face jacket, so I'm not complaining.

In addition to the trick contest, on the morning of the last day, the coaches held their infamous McNab Derby. This was no ordinary speed competition. They clicked all of our boards together in a big pile, and then they faced us in a line. When Neil called "Go!", they tackled us as we dove for our boards. Then we had to race down the mountain to the train, ride the train back up, and tag one of the coaches who was wearing a bright orange jacket. I had trouble extracting my board from the pile but made a decent showing in the race portion -- despite a number of slow-moving obstacles on the hill such as the people riding the t-bar. Boarding the beginner-strewn runs with my speed-addicted skier friends at Heavenly is good training, as is weaving around trams, cars, other bikes, and tourists on my bike in Amsterdam.

On Saturday, while almost everyone else either stayed in Les 2 for another week or took a flight back home to the UK, I went to Lyon. It was my second visit there, and I really love it. It reminds me of Philadelphia, where I grew up. A small city, with acres...sorry, meters...of shops and restaurants and bars and cafes. No major tourist attractions like the Eiffel Tower or the Louvre, so it's often overlooked by tourists. I didn't have time to do the tour of the covered walkways or the silk-weavers house. I did have time to watch Die Hard 4 dubbed in French though. Um, why did the bad guys kill off all the computer geeks? Oh never mind, I'll watch it again in English some day.

I also rented an electric bike. You can turn the dial to "Off", "On", or "Eco". I never figured out what "Eco" really did. But when you clicked to "On", it felt like someone was giving you a tiny push from behind every 30 seconds or so. Fabulous for biking uphill. Not so good if you start with the "On" setting, like I did once accidentally; the bike started to go without me so I almost fell off it. Once I got the hang of it, it was no problem. I even answered my mobile phone in the middle of biking to the park and had a 5-minute conversation, during which the other bikers on the path gave me hard stares. They all had two hands firmly on both handlebars. I guess it makes more sense to do so when you have hand brakes. In the Netherlands, I could be cradling a baby in one arm and smoking a cigarette with the other and hardly anyone would notice.

Lyon has a great bike path along the Rhone River, with floating beer gardens along the way, and a giant park that compares favorably with Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. The park has a little zoo, so I'd turn the corner on my bike and suddenly be within a few hundred meters of some elephants, lions, or a giraffe. There's also a beautiful Vieux Ville, with quaint narrow staircases going up into the hills. And while most people are willing to speak English, they were also willing to speak French, if it looked like I wanted to speak it -- and even if I spoke it badly. A nice change from Amsterdam, where I'm thrilled if I can convince a shopkeeper to speak to me in Dutch for 2 minutes. My French improved by miles...oops, I mean kilometers...in just one day. Though I have to admit, I had a 15-minute conversation with my taxi driver during which I was convinced I understood everything he was telling me about his mother, only to find out that the whole time he wasn't talking about his mother at all, but the mayor of the city. In other words, "le maire" and not "la mere".

Oh. Merde.

Monday, July 02, 2007

"ick ben moo"

That's how you say "I'm tired" in Dutch. So what do the cows say then? The cows say "booooo". I also found out that a Dutch pig is a "big".

Whores are "hoeren", to rent something is "huuren", and to hear something is "hooren". So you have to be careful when you say: "Yeah, I hear that". If you're a man and you mispronounce "ja hoor" (which is actually a very common way of voicing agreement here in Holland), then you just might get pushed into the nearest canal.

Speaking of canals, to the Dutch, the Panama Canal is still a canal. But a canal in Amsterdam is actually a "gracht". You might also have a favorite "kanal" on television. And did you hear the one about the tourist who accidentally dropped his camera into one of Amsterdam's (famously dirty) canals? When he was finally able to fish his camera back out, the film was already developed.

Barumpdum.

Just a sampling of the many random things I learned last week at "the nuns course": the famous language school in the southern part of the Netherlands, which was founded by the Sisters of the Holy Order of St. Augustine. When my company first told me that they were sending me there, I pictured sleeping on a bare cot with a wooden cross hanging above it, stoically surviving on a diet of bread and water, moving silently through open courtyards, and studying rigorously from morning until night.

The only thing I got right was the last. It was indeed 5 days of intensive Dutch language learning, but we slept at a luxe hotel nearby, and every morning a bus picked us up at 8am and dropped us off at a modern new building with a very corporate feel. During our frequent coffee breaks, we were offered cappucinos, espressos, and fancy tea. During our afternoon snack breaks, the spreads included such delicacies as steak tartare and salmon mousse.

We had classes all day from 8:25am (the Dutch would literally say: "5 minutes before half 9 in the morning") until 7:15pm, at which point we were served a fabulous 3-course gourmet dinner accompanied by excellent wine until the bus returned to pick us up at 9pm. Back at the hotel, most of us would gather at the hotel bar and talk until after midnight.

While Americans were the biggest group, there were still only 5 of us learning Dutch. The rest were from: India, Taiwan, Germany, Finland, Libya, Sweden, Romania, Kyrgyzstan (okay, I'll admit I had to wikipedia that one), Chile, Uruguay, Australia, the UK, Scotland, and South Africa. There was also a large contingent of Dutchies learning Italian, French, Spanish, and German.

One of the Dutch guys who joined us a few times at the bar was a dairy engineer trainer. He asked me whether I knew that California had recently surpassed Wisconsin in the production of cheese. I told him that I didn't know that. "Well..." he said, "Wisconsin knows".

So how much Dutch did I actually learn? A lot. But still not enough. It's still a struggle to form sentences. I only started learning past tense on the last day, and my vocabulary is very limited. And I still don't get word order at all. Last night (back in Amsterdam), I tried to carry on an entire conversation in English, but using the Dutch word order. I was only able to handle about 5 minutes. I want Dutch really to learn but think I that explode my head will if it I try it too long to do. My friend claims that the language was invented by Yoda.

By the way, in Dutch, I could never say "my friend" unless I meant by that "my boyfriend". If I said "me and my 5 friends", I'd be admitting to leading quite a promiscuous lifestyle. I have to remember to say instead: "a friend" or "some friends".

Well it's now 8 minutes before half eleven at night (that is, 10:22pm), and I'm getting moo-er by the minute. Goodbye for now and "slaap lekker!"

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Ooh Naked People!

I didn't hear about this until after it happened. Not that I'd get up early to get my picture taken naked in a parking garage.

Check out more photos and a press release here and video here

And if you want to be immortalized as a work of art and you're not shy like me, you can sign up to be part of future Spencer Tunick events here.

I wish I could title this post "Only in Amsterdam", but it looks like Mr. Tunick has already been to Bruges, London, Lyon, Melbourne, Montreal, Sao Paulo, Newcastle/Gateshead, Vienna, Barcelona, New York City, and Mexico City (where he somehow persuaded 18,000 Mexicans to voluntarily strip in exchange for nothing but a signed photo).

He hasn't hit San Francisco yet though. I figure it's only a matter of time. However, given that saran-wrapped nudists running in Bay to Breakers is ho-hum now, maybe no one would blink an eye at 5000 naked people blanketing the Golden Gate Bridge.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Purchases


I bought a omafiets (grandma's bike) and slaapbanken (sleeper couch) right before my mom's visit.

The bike has no gears and no hand brakes; you brake by cycling backwards -- a very weird concept, but surprisingly not that hard to ingrain. I bought the bike from a legitimate dealer, used, for 119 euro. I also bought two heavy-duty bike locks for 65 euro. I could have bought a bike from a junkie for 10 euro, but I decided that at least my first few bike purchases should not support the bike thief industry. People tell me that I might change my mind after I've had my bike stolen more than 4 times though.

Last week I biked to and from work for the first time. It took me 45 minutes vs. about 35 via public transport. The bike paths are great. I hardly have to cross any streets and my route is mostly along the Amstel River. I won't be truly Dutch until I can do it in a skirt and high heels, in the rain, balancing my umbrella in one hand and talking on my cell phone with the other.

Did I mention that no one wears a helmet here? And they would definitely laugh and point if you wore black cycling shorts with butt pads. I've seen people cycling with a friend sitting side saddle on the back tire, or a rolled up rug on the front handlebars, or a bass violin strapped to the back. Today I saw a guy slowly biking with three beautiful dogs leashed to his wrist and trotting along beside him. One of these days, I'm going to spend the whole day sipping coffee and just photographing the bicyclists as they ride by.

As for the couch, it's comfortable. Come visit!

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Another Sort of Stereotype

Two things I neglected to mention in my last post about Austria:

1) When I entered the country, the train conductor asked for my passport and flipped through it. She also asked me if the snowboard above me on the luggage rack was mine. I said yes it was. She looked at the snowboard and then she looked at my Amsterdam work visa (inside my passport). Then she asked whether I smoked. I said no I didn't. "Do you smoke other things?" Hmmm...what "other things" might she be talking about? She didn't believe me, I could tell. The combination of snowboarder AND living in Amsterdam is just too evocative. This blog should really be about reviewing the coffee shops, shouldn't it?

2) It dumped the night before I arrived in Innsbruck, so there was 2 feet of fresh on Stubai Glacier -- and hardly anyone else interested in it.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Racism in Austria

At first I wasn't sure if it was real. Maybe I was just reacting to a cultural tendency not to smile or laugh. After all, you can't expect everyone to be like Californians who smile at everyone and everything. Then it morphed into more of an instinct, a feeling of being unwelcome. But then after two incidents with the old lady cashier at Stubai glacier (the first was when I said "Hallo" and got the complete silent treatment, she just waited until I saw the price on the cash register. The second time, there were other people around, so she said the price, but then became very impatient when I was hunting around for exact change -- and glaringly dropped the change into my tray), something clicked and I realized that I was (and had been for days) experiencing racism in a very institutionalized non-overt form. The only other time in my life that I've ever experienced the same sort of racism was in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Don't get me wrong. I've experienced overt racism before, and that's not fun either. But at least then it is very obvious that it's racism. This type of racism is much more uncomfortable because it is subtler. It is a lack of eye contact, or a mocking tone of voice, or a rolling of the eyes. At first, you doubt yourself. You wonder if you did or said something culturally offensive. And also because you doubt yourself, you don't react as quickly. You spend precious minutes going over the conversation in your head, trying to puzzle it out, and by the time you realize what it was, the person is gone or the moment is over and you would look silly trying to respond.

It wasn't just the cashier. It was also several of the ticket salespeople at the main railroad station in Innsbruck, the woman at the hotel counter, one of the waiters in the hotel restaurant. The latter actually said to me that Chinese eat in the other room and pointed to a side room away from the main part of the restaurant. I told him that I wasn't Chinese; I was American. This confused him. Of course I was Chinese. To him, it was like an elephant claiming to be a bear. I think he finally gave up because I was obviously stupid, and he said I could sit here, there, wherever I wanted. I was too stunned to confront him on the real question, which was "why do the Chinese have to eat in the other room?"

My experience was validated after I got back from my 9-hour train ride last night. I googled "racism" and "Austria" and got a number of hits. These are the most interesting of those:

Extremist Groups in Austria
Racism on "Wife Swap"

Clearly, the blacks, Muslims, and Jews who have immigrated to Austria have it even worse. The Japanese and Indian tourists who arrive by busloads in Innsbruck are tolerated because they spend a lot of money there, but I'm pretty sure that after they leave they are talked about derisively.

I will probably never return to Austria, which is a shame because the town was lovely and a few people were extraordinarily kind. For example, the harmonica player who had invited my mother to Austria picked her up and dropped her off every day from her hotel 20 minutes away in order to give her free harmonica lessons. Then he and his wife drove her to Innsbruck and gave her VIP tickets to the music festival where he had been invited as a judge. They were both warm and friendly to us throughout the weekend.

Another consolation of all this is that on the train ride back, I had the thought that I really couldn't wait to get home -- and for the first time, I felt that "home" meant Amsterdam. Today I reveled in smiling shopkeepers and public transportation employees and didn't mind the rain one bit!

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Uitje




"Uitje" literally means "little out" in Dutch, or in other words, "an outing". Every year the head of our site plans an all-employee team building day. It's always a surprise. In previous years, they drummed, painted, did a scavenger hunt in the center of Amsterdam, and went to a shooting range.

This year, we all piled into a bus and ended up at a charming cottage restaurant in the woods. From there, we biked to the beach and built a bridge made out of bamboo rods and rubber bands. Then we split up into groups to learn how to power kite and compete with each other in sand sculpture building, volleyball, shotputting, and javelin throwing. I don't think this is really a "Dutch" thing. But I just find the photos kind of funny. So these are the sports alternatives I have available to me here in Holland! You know, I could possibly get into the power kiting. Once I've mastered that, I'll only be 4000 US dollars away from a kite boarding kit and the opportunity to injure myself on the water instead of snow.

Oh and I'll go ahead and answer the inevitable question now: sorry to disappoint, but there are no photos are available of me in the blue space suit.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Scary Bridge Crossing at Keukenhof

Click on the photo
to view the web album.
My mom was just here visiting for 4 days (my first US visitor!) and on Saturday we took the train to Keukenhof, which is a huge flower-themed park in Lisse. It was much more fun than I expected. I thought we were just going to see some pretty flowers, but the park designers were creative. There's a windmill, funky sculptures, a giant chessboard, a kickass English garden maze, a petting zoo, and all kinds of other good family fun. We took about a hundred photos between the two of us, but my favorites are of each of us taking turns to cross a roller-coaster shaped bridge over a pond. Hmm...Mom's probably not going to like that I posted these on my blog!

Oh yeah, there were pretty flowers too -- so I threw in some photos of these at the end, in case anyone wants new wallpaper for their laptop.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Go Orange!

click photo to view web album
Queens Day is off the hook! (yo...)

I spent the morning shopping (city turns into a giant flea market because sales permit requirements are temporarily suspended), the afternoon dancing (city also turns into a giant club, with a new DJ around every corner, and quite a few in the boat parade as well), and a lazy hour with my feet dangling over a bridge watching all the boats passing underneath.

I couldn't believe all the great stuff I bought for cheap -- including my entire Queens Day outfit, orange pants, orange t-shirt, and orange high-top sneakers with fur lining (3 Euro or about US $3.50 total, sorry no photo of the complete look!).

It was a fantastic day, especially since my apartment is a block away from a major Q-Day location and I could go back home whenever I needed to drop off purchases or use the loo. But now as I type this, I am looking out the window at some poor guy with his head in his hands, suffering from what is widely known as Amsterdamage.

I feel for you man...

Sunday, April 29, 2007

"The Little Devils"

click on photo to view web album
Les Diablerets, or "The Little Devils", seems like a classic Swiss alpine village. It is French-speaking and earns most of its income via summer and winter tourists who come to downhill ski and snowboard, hike, cross-country ski, parasail, canyoneer, rock climb, "mudbike", and otherwise test their health insurance policies. The little devils appear everywhere, including the Cafe LeCroix, whose logo is a little red devil with big boobs and which advertises a special kids menu for the customers' own "diablerets".

I spend my only full day in the village shopping its two open sports stores, then walking 20 minutes along the river down to Vers L'Eglise ("Towards the Church"). I like this name, especially after I arrive and find that the church is one of only 4 buildings in the village (the rest of the village are houses scattered on the mountain above). I also like the name of the town where I change trains for Geneva. It is called "Aigle", or "Eagle".

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Glacier 3000

Today I took the bus to...(to be said in a booming voice) Glacier 3000 (cue loud echo, cue soundtrack from 2001: A Space Odyssey). Glacier 3000 is well obviously...a glacier...in Switzerland. Perhaps the 3000 refers to meters? Anyway, every time I hear the name, I think of a glacier in the future, where all the snowboards are powered by little jet engines or maybe the glacier is virtually created and we ride it via stereoscopic head set and wired jumpsuit (since that seems to be the direction the world is heading, see Gore AL, Inconvenient Truth).

Actually there is a very fast cable car to the halfway point, and then another slightly-less-fast cable car to the summit. But then -- ugh -- you have to take a long catwalk to the bottom of what the Brits call a drag lift, and what we Yanks once called a T-bar. I say "once" because I'm not sure T-bars even exist in America anymore. Ha, maybe they should call it "Glacier 1970" instead.

I think I drove the old liftie a little bit crazy because I had such a hard time with the lift. He had to keep helping me pull the T-bar down (it's attached to something like a bungee cord that snaps up as soon as you let go of it). For most of the morning, it wasn't too crowded and I was boarding the lift alone. Then once when someone tried to get on the lift with me, I managed to get on it myself, but left the other guy behind, thus messing up the whole line because there were two waiting just behind him and you can't fit three on these things unless you have very advanced T-bar skills. Je suis desolee!

The next time there were two of us on the T-bar, the liftie broke protocol and offered the guy his end of the bar first because he clearly identified me as a T-bar idiot. Now with 2 of us on the bar, we got to ride up for 10 minutes, with our crotches and faces only inches apart. It is a strangely intimate contraption.

Later in the day, I tried to ask the liftie if the time on the clock was correct because it said 4pm, and I had to catch the bus at 5pm. "Le temps, c'est correct?" I repeated it more than once because I thought he just didn't hear me. But this really seemed to confuse the hell out of him. I realized later that I had been asking him whether the WEATHER was correct, not the time. Oops.

Though the lift experience was not ideal, the park was. It had three distinct lines of jumps including one line with my-size jumps, the sun was out, and the snow was nice and slushy. I spent all day there and would definitely consider going back -- perhaps with a bit more French under my belt first.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Jen discovers that fondue is not an entrée, and that entrées are not main courses

Click on photo to find out where the Swiss buy their tampons!
Montreux

It happened on Day 2 of my conference in scenic Montreux, Switzerland. After we piled into a two-car rack railway train up to Les Rochers-de-Naye, with gorgeous views of Lake Geneva, the woods, and the still snow-covered Swiss alps. We were served wine and beer on the way up. At the top, we were served a salad, followed by the best cheese fondue I've ever tasted, though the only item offered to dip in it was bread.

I was having a hilarious conversation with my neighbor, who was a French doctor who happened to switch to IT at his hospital in the middle of Paris. He was describing his "Viet Cong tactics" for persuading his colleagues at the hospital to adopt global data standards for clinical data (what the conference was all about). French government workers are notorious for hating change. His first battle involved getting his colleagues to name their files in a more logical way (e.g., instead of "final.doc" and "final_2.doc", investigator-name_date.doc) This took one year, and climaxed with his creating a bot to send 75 email messages a day to those who violated the policy. And now his biggest opponent has become a supporter of the new filename system!

Oh, but I've now seriously diverged from my story, which isn't really a story -- more like a revelation. It turns out that the fondue was the main meal. But I didn't know this until the dessert came, so basically I ate one slice of bread with cheese for dinner!

By the way, later during the conference I noticed that what the French call "entrées" are what Americans call "appetizers". What we call "entrées", they call "les plats principals" or they list them under food type (e.g., "Viandes"). Of course, this makes perfect sense when you translate the word; I had just never thought about it before. I wonder if it has to do with the American preference for huge portions. In other words, at some point some American must have said "You call that a main course? Ha! To us that's just an entrée!"

Sunday, April 22, 2007

I amsterdam, what about you?

The tourist bureau here has a new advertising campaign (well, new since I was last here, more than 5 years ago) based on the slogan "I amsterdam", where the "I" and the "am" of "Amsterdam" are always shown in red, and the rest is always shown in white.

So I wonder what it means "to amsterdam". Perhaps I was amsterdamming today, as I took the tram over to the other side of town to look at a bike (it was too tall). Or maybe I was amsterdamming when I stopped for cheap Indonesian food in de Pijp (pronounced "de Pipe" -- it's in between the neighborhoods de Bong and de Joint). Was I amsterdamming when I took a nap on the grass in the Museumplein, surrounded by other nappers, tourists, football...er...soccer players, volleyball players, a bunch of guys having a loud conversation in Italian, and a couple making out like they were on the couch in their living room?

Speaking of which, I have begun my hunt for a sleeper sofa.

And a cleaning lady my landlord recommended came by this morning to discuss a regular schedule and prices. I think my jaw dropped when she told me the cost. 10 Euro per hour. She is going to come by every 2 weeks.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Bjork



I'm going to see Bjork! In July! In Amsterdam!

Sunday, April 15, 2007

A Classic Bike Through the Tulip Fields

Leiden to Lisse

If you click on the photo, it will take you to a Picasa web album.

Excellent weather, excellent company! And the biking was brilliant. The bike only had three gears and most of the time, I stayed in 3rd. Never thought someone who loves the mountains as much as I do would see any advantage to all this flatness. Now I understand why you can bike without a helmet, in a skirt and high heels.

And I am starting to collect countries (via new acquaintances) the way my brothers and I used to "collect" states (via license plates) when I was a kid. This group was from Australia, New Zealand, Spain, the UK, Scotland, Italy, Singapore, the Netherlands, Canada, and Germany. There was one other American. I love it!

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Terrible Sex

Today I roller-bladed along the Amstel River with some new friends from MeetIn Amsterdam. They are from Estonia, Germany, India, and the UK. I learned that the word for "cheers" in Estonian is "terviseks". Or you can say "terrible sex" and that works just as well.

"terrible sex!"
In the evening, I went to a dinner with a lot of French people (plus one Italian guy who is moving to French Congo in a few months). At this dinner, I discovered that I have forgotten all of the French I learned in high school. C'est la vie...

Friday, April 13, 2007

Art, ruins, and rhubarb crumble

We got April 9 off for Easter so I figured it was a good time to visit a friend in Bristol.

I hatched a clever plan to fly into London first and see some sights there, then take a train out to Bristol and fly back from Bristol. I didn't think Bristol had much to offer tourists, but I was utterly wrong about that. It also turned out to be quite expensive and inconvenient to add the London leg, although I enjoyed myself immensely while I was there.

First stop after arriving in London Saturday morning: the Tate Modern.

Click on the photo for more
about Carsten Höller

The ultra-modern metal slides winding all over the atrium were designed by Carsten Höller, are made of plastic and aluminum, and reminded me of scenes from the movie Brazil. They are also possibly the reason there were busloads of children running and screaming all over the place. The place was a mob scene. I decided to skip waiting in line for tickets for the longest slide, but right before I had to catch my train to Bristol, I tried the 1st floor slide. Then I wished I HAD waited for the long slide!

The other exhibit I went nuts over was a huge collection of work by Amrita Sher-Gil, an incredible female Indian artist who died at age 28 (click elephants for more about Sher-Gil).

Of course, the web doesn't do it justice. I was totally mesmerized by both her life and her art. She was beautiful, independent, and talented. I wish she had lived longer; she was already producing masterpieces at age 20. Who knows what she could have done with another 30 years!

I managed to secure a sunset ride on the London Eye (by reserving my spot a week in advance), though my camera battery died just before I stepped into the bubble car.

Then I hopped a bus to Bristol to see my friend Clare.

Clare and her family live in a lovely home with a nice view of Bristol, and I was lucky that it happened to be a gorgeous sunny weekend. So we spent most of it outside seeing the sights, which are best described as charming and quaint. And I mean that with no negative connotation at all!

We walked up the stairs of two different little stone towers on tops of hills, one of which had a camera obscura and the other of which had a stone balcony and looked just like the tower where Rapunzel let down her golden hair. We had drinks on more than one outdoor terrace, rode an old choo-choo a few blocks along the river for 50 pence, wandered around a gallery with really disturbing art, admired a Banksy (click here for more about Banksy), and bought some books (English-language books are at least double the price in Amsterdam). Then we went back to Clare's for a home-cooked meal.

At some point during the day, perhaps after I sampled some rhubarb and custard ice cream and pronounced it delicious, it came out that I wasn't quite sure what rhubarb was, even though I *think* I may have had rhubarb pie once or twice in my life. It turns out that Clare's dad grows bushels of rhubarb on his "allotment", which is kind of like a community garden in the States but with much stronger traditional associations. Anyway, Clare decided that I must have rhubarb crumble with clotted cream that very evening -- which I did and it was good.

Angels climbing Jacob's Ladder,
detail from main cathedral in Bath.
Check out that third angel!

The last day of my visit to the UK, we did a day trip to the Roman bath ruins in Bath, watched a puppet show, ate Sally Lunn buns, and sipped tea inside a fine establishment (white table cloths, string quartet) while just outside our window we could see 2 male street performers in nothing but tiger-striped thongs forming themselves into human sculptures. I wish I had had the presence of mind to snap a photo.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Chinatown

Until yesterday, I'd never heard of a Chinatown in Amsterdam.

Then my coworkers took the Americans there for dinner and what a revelation! I love Chinatown (which incidentally, should really be called "Chinastreet"). It's small but oh so cute. And I just got a great half-hour massage there for 20 Euro. These Chinese massages are way different from Swedish. Besides actual massaging, there's also a lot of slapping and pounding and shaking involved, even some pinching. Wacky yet somehow effective. I'm definitely going for a full hour next time.

And to continue my obsession with menu English and weird food here: a few doors down, the section of the menu subtitled "Vegetarian" listed dishes with translations "vegetables with pork", "vegetables with beef", "vegetables with fish", "vegetables with duck", etc. Well you get the picture. Of the 15 or so dishes listed, only one was truly vegetarian! It was "vegetables with tofu".

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

All-American

Today at the local sandwich shop, I noticed that the special was "broodjes filet americain" for 3,50 euro. I figured what the hell, I'm an American so I'm sure I'll like it. I was imagining it would be a hamburger patty or something with velveeta. Instead I got a french bread roll with a rusty-orange colored goop inside. I've seen the same sandwich before in my office cafeteria but have been afraid to try it. The texture of the goop is not unlike diarrhea. I couldn't guess what it was, even after I had eaten the whole thing and liked it. And I certainly have never seen it in the good ole U.S. of A!

I asked my coworkers about "filet americain" later, and they told me it was pureed raw meat. None of them knew what gave it that weird orange color though. Maybe paprika? Wikipedia says that it's especially popular in Belgium, France, and Switzerland.

Perhaps it's called filet americain because the burnt orange color is like a sunburned American tourist? Any other theories?

Last week, a work colleague came to visit and ordered a "Hamburger American". This was the largest burger he had ever seen, and when he took the top bun off, he found a fried egg underneath it.

Then yesterday at work, someone told me that I dress very European. I said "how's that?" "Well" she said, "you don't wear your trousers up to here". She indicated somewhat around chest level.

I have to conclude that Europeans have some funny ideas about Americans. They're right about Bush though.

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Chicken farts and other surreal moments

All of the following things happened today...

I could not bring myself to order the Surinamese sandwich with the filling which was translated into English on the menu as "chicken flatulence".

Coming home from the public library, suddenly the sun came out from behind a cloud and illuminated a little plastic bag on the ground, marked with a picture of a leaf with five fronds and full of a pungent green herb.

I went to an Israeli avant-garde dance performance and was mooned three times by Israeli avant-garde dancers.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Buon giorno (and arrivaderci) Italia!

Today we are taking a quick little drive over to Courmayeur in Italy via the Tunnel du Mont-Blanc.
The tunnel in itself is an adventure. It's almost 7 miles long. One-way tolls for cars are about 32 Euro (US $42.80). Trucks pay over $200 Euro. It saves that much time. So we get from the motel to the resort in about 15 minutes and from France to Italy in about 10.

Wow, I love listening to Italians speak. Even "Informazione" sounds romantic. I am tempted to scrap Dutch and study Italian instead. The "g" sound in Dutch is about the least attractive sound I've ever heard in my life (sorry Dutchies!)

We take a series of gondolas, "bubble cars", and chair lifts and then finally, the Arp gondola. You can ride the Arp to the summit to take in the view, but you can only ride down if you are with a guide.

The whole crew at the summit
(assuming that Dan is reflected in Johnny's sunglasses)

We traverse, ride a wide open bowl that must be heaven on a powder day (but is more like purgatory today -- eh), pick our way down in a steep couloir that is mostly avalanche debris and ice, and then skateboard for at least a mile on a flat road to the lodge.

After lunch, Joe and I decide to split off from the rest of the group. Too much combat zone, not enough surfing, for our tastes. We dump all of our gear off and spend the rest of the day on-piste.

After 4 straight days of hauling a huge kit on your back while boarding, it feels marvelous to ride light again.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

One heli of a day

click photo to view web album

My first heli ride ever!

The intro to backcountry and the backcountry freeride groups were combined together, so there was 12 of us plus three guides. We drove about 2 hours to Switzerland to the heli pad. There was a single heli transporting us, and only 4 could fit in a heli, so the heli had to make 4 separate trips to get us all to the drop zone.

The first scary thing that happened: when we were already way up in the air, the passenger door opened. Luckily Johnny grabbed it right away and shut it, then gave a little shrug to our helicopter driver. Oops!

Second scary thing: When the last heli arrived, and its passengers were getting out, 2 of them were crouched low, but definitely headed up the hill towards us even though the heli hadn't taken off yet. Apparently, they hadn't been given any instructions by the guide who was now too busy securing their gear to notice them, and the sound of the motor running was too loud for them to hear us yelling at them to stop. Someone standing next to me was becoming increasingly emotional and started screaming "you morons! you complete idiots! you're going to get your f#$@ing head taken off!" You could see this really confused look on Ed's face; for all he knew, we were yelling at him to come closer. Finally, one of the guides ran towards the heli waving his arms and the guys got the message.

For those of you who might ever ride a helicopter in the future: if you're not landing on something you know is flat, like the roof of a building, don't walk away from the heli even if you are crouching low. It's especially hard to detect contour in snow.

I think Ed was having a run of bad luck because shortly after the helicopter incident, he and Tim collided and Tim's pack smacked Ed in the eye. Well, at least we were told to leave our crampons at home today!

Johnny had warned us a day ahead that the Pin was likely to be tracked and also that we'd have to climb ladders at some point. The latter warning persuaded Joe to stay home; he has a strong fear of heights. We did climb some ladders, but Johnny was wrong about the tracks. The whole day was virtually trackless, and it was amazing. Even though it hadn't snowed for days, the snow was in great shape.

At the end of the day, we have some drinks at a local bar, which unfortunately would only accept paper euros (no coins) so we all ended up overpaying. Then back in France, after quick showers, my group goes into town for some celebratory curry with some friends of Ed and Joe (apparently, "going out for some curry" is the thing to do in the UK; one would never say "let's go out for Indian food"). It's hilarious to see the reactions of Ed's friends when they see his purple eye.

Incidentally, the heli was a great bargain. For 130 Euro ($178.86 US), we got one all-day heli ride plus the services of three guides.

From the Midday Needle to the Sea of Ice

click on photo to view web album
This is one of the classic backcountry rides in Chamonix, comparable to doing Half Dome in Yosemite.

We started off the day by riding the gondola up to the L'Aguille du Midi, which is about 12,600 feet above sea level. Then we immediately put crampons on our feet, strapped our boards to our packs, and were roped together by Johnny so that we could inch slowly down a steep ridge with about 30 others who arrived on the same gondola.

We rode a bit and then stopped. The moment I had been dreading. More hiking! We put on snowshoes, and this time, we were all roped together. This, I hated more than anything. Roped together with 5 guys who were all taller and fitter than me. For the most part, I was breaking my own trail. Instead of being able to step in their snowshoe tracks, I was forced to walk 3 steps for their every 2 at a much faster pace than I'm used to.

Johnny's a nice guy, but calling him "impatient" would almost be an understatement. There is no resting when he's leading, and everyone is marching too fast to chat. When you break for lunch or the bathroom, you know that you can't be dilly-dallying; you have to be very efficient. Because the second you finish your sandwich, he'll be clicking into his skis, and you'll be thinking wistfully of the dessert that you didn't have time to eat.

So basically, within a short amount of time, the rope between Ed and me became very taut and the rope between Simon and me became very slack. In fact, poor Ed was practically dragging me up the hill half the time. I thought maybe I'd end up pulling him off his feet. But he's a big gentle guy and didn't complain once about it. I was so frustrated with the pace that by the time we had our lunch break, I could barely speak. I just ate and plotted ways I could drop out of this course and join the Technical Clinic instead.

We boarded down into the Mer de Glace, which is a large valley with a glacier creeping through it. This was the first time I have ever seen a glacier outside of a photo. It's weird how man-made objects usually have to be symmetrical and perfect to be considered attractive. A glacier *should* by all criteria be considered ugly. It's rough and random, not to mention the color of Windex and toilet bowl cleaner. Yet somehow, it was staggeringly beautiful.

We stopped to take photos, then continued along an ice bridge (huge crevasses along either side), twisted and turned around a lot of rocks, and ended up at one of the major tourist attractions in Chamonix for those who neither ski nor board...the Ice Caves. These are man-made caves, drilled into the glacier. One of the caves contained life-size wax figures of mountaineers in various tableux. It also featured a room where you can have your picture taken with a wax Saint-Bernard, who has the stereotypical barrel affixed to his collar.

Because there was no longer enough snow to ski out of the valley, we ended the day by hiking up a long wooden staircase attached to the cliff walls. As we went up, we had to steer around tourists in jeans and sweatshirts and their passels of kids strolling down to view the caves. At the top, we waited in line for a cable car that took us to the train station. From there, we took a train back to the hotel for a well-deserved beer and a rest in front of the telly to watch a rugby game. The Brits had to interpret of course, especially as much of rugby consists of players throwing the ball backwards.

Sunday, March 11, 2007

A humble start

that's me holding up the line
At 8:45 I am downstairs lining up to get my lunch, my lift pass, and my gear: a backpack, a pair of evil-looking crampons, red plastic snowshoes, a shovel with detachable handle, collapsible ski poles, Ortovox transceiver, and climbing harness with a short rope and carabiner attached.

By later in the week, I realize that just about everywhere we go in Chamonix, this is the basic kit that everyone carries -- and many people carry more. It is not uncommon to go the bar apres-ski and see 3/4 of the clientele still wearing their transceivers with the lights still blinking (you know, just in case the bar gets avalanched). I also learn at some point that locals in Chamonix typically consider themselves rock climbers and mountaineers first. The skiing is something they just do in the winter to keep themselves busy. Deaths are really common here; over 100 a year. There are so many dangers that it is always recommended that you go with a guide when riding even a little bit off-piste. Besides the already mentioned avalanches, there are collapsing seracs, crevasses hidden under thin ice or a crust of snow, falling rocks, and sometimes bad weather. At least we didn't have the worry about the last danger; it was sunny and warm all week.

But I am getting ahead of myself. It's still Day 1. And I have not a clue what I'm doing.

We get a quick lesson in donning the transceivers and making sure they were transmitting. Then we pile into the vans and are off to Le Tour. The rest of the day is all a bit blurry.

Let's see...there was my first button lift ride: where you have to put this plastic disk attached to a long metal pole between your legs and then it drags you up the hill. It took me three tries to get myself moving on the lift; for the third try, the lift operator came out of the booth to help me. Merci beaucoup, cute French liftie!

There was a long mostly uphill walk in snowshoes, when I first remembered thinking "I'm not sure if I'm going to survive this week." It was also the tenth time I remember thinking "I'm not sure if I'm going to survive this week." I've had way too many weeks of no gym membership and being pampered with home-cooked feasts at my sister-in-law's house.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

From 'Dam to Cham

After 2 hard weeks of work in Amsterdam, I'm ready for a vacation!

Ha. Actually I had signed up for this McNab Snowboarding course back in November, when I had heard that there were only a few places left, and when I had thought I would be arriving in Amsterdam on January 9 (instead of 6 weeks later, due to working permit snafus). It's a week-long course held in Chamonix, with the same outfit who runs the freestyle camp I took 2 years ago in Les Deux Alpes.

Anyway, lugged my board bag & backpack a few blocks to Central Station, then hopped a train to Schipol airport. Wow, the train station is directly underneath Schipol. You get off the train and go up the escalator and hello!, you're right there in the terminal already.

It's a mere one hour flight to Geneva but it is at least an hour before I get out of customs and find my shuttle driver. Then we wait another 1.5 hours for other passengers to arrive and drive an hour to the motel. Hmm...perhaps I should have taken the train direct!

Arrived too late to really see the town or mountains, but just in time for dinner. I meet 3 other McNabbers.

Dick is a game warden and married, but one of his relationship quirks is that he and his wife never take vacations together. Apparently, they get along better that way. He's taking the Backcountry Freeride course, which is considered level 2, the course you would take if you survived Intro to Backcountry, which is what I am signed up for.

Joe is in Cham for the entire season, honing his skillz. I am jealous. I would almost certainly have been doing the same thing in Tahoe, if I hadn't decided to go to Amsterdam instead. Then again, if that were the case, I wouldn't be experiencing Cham in all its glam and glory. We find out that we'll be in the Intro course together.

Kat is my roommate for the week and a journalist with a ski and snowboard magazine in the UK. She was there to write an article about her course, the Technical Clinic. So that means that her course is paid by the magazine. I also find out later that all of gear and clothes are on loan to her from various snowboarding companies. Nice life!

After dinner, we separate by course and meet the people we are going to be snowboarding with for the next 5 days. There are only 5 other people in my group and they are all very fit-looking guys. Everyone has at least some of their own gear already, except for me. I am a bit nervous about this. Hey I thought it was an intro class! We agree to meet in the lobby at 8:45am, and everyone goes off right to bed. I can already tell that this is going to be nothing like the easygoing freestyle camp.

Monday, March 05, 2007

Amsterdam is wet





Photos from my temporary residence at 118 Singel, clockwise from left: kitchen, living room, bedroom, looking down the stairs from the bedroom

The place I'm staying is very Dutch. Usually when I'm indoors in the US, I don't have a sense of geographical location because I could really be anyplace. But my place is right on one of the canals. There are three tall glass windows in the living room, so I have a great view of other old Amsterdam buildings and the water, which they light up at night and it is gorgeous. The stairs are narrow and tight. I still get vertigo climbing up and down to my bedroom.

I just found a permanent place, which only took one day -- and really I'm not sure if I could have afforded to spend any more time than that to look. It's nice and modern, smaller than my old place, mostly furnished and in an ideal location. If I look out the front windows to one side I see a canal, to the other side, the tram stop. Across the street is a gym (but I hear memberships are really expensive compared to the US). I'm a few blocks from the train stop that will take me to work in about 15 minutes. And also a few blocks north of Albert Cuypmarkt, which is the main open-air market here for produce & cheap clothes/jewelry/etc. I probably won't move though for at least 2 weeks. The contract still has to be negotiated and I'm off to Chamonix on Saturday.

Work has been absolutely crazy because there's only one guy who's been handling everything. Two of us have to be trained. But he's too busy to train us properly. His girlfriend is due in a few weeks, at which point he will take 2 weeks off, and I'm just crossing my fingers that the baby will not arrive early. In the meantime, I'm having to come up with contingency plans for everything that might happen while I am gone next week, and then while he is gone as well. I am also gone next week for full two days to give some presentations at workshops. These should go well. But basically what I'm trying to say is that I haven't had much time to breathe.

I've picked up a few Dutch words here and there, but I feel kind of dumb using them when really and truly EVERYONE here speaks English. Even then guys who come around at night to clean out the wastebaskets. My favorite word so far is "prima". It means pretty much better than okay. As in when you arrive at the mountain on a Wednesday morning after it's been snowing all night and hardly anyone's there and all you see is untracked snow. That's when you say "prima!" But it may just be an Italian word that the Dutch happen to use a lot, I'm not sure. In June, the company is planning to send us Americans to a full-week intensive Dutch course at a convent in the south of Holland. So we will be studying Dutch 10 hours a day with the nuns. Hallelujah!

The relocation process over all has been very rocky at best, with lots of misunderstandings and delays, paperwork getting lost, and that kind of thing. And my god, it rains a LOT here. I really need a much sturdier umbrella. I have one somewhere, but it still needs to clear customs! But I have to say that my coworkers and direct reports have been absolutely fantastic so far. And this weekend I'll be heading to Cham for a full week of backcountry boarding with the Brits. That should be a jolly good adventure...

As soon as I get back to Amsterdam and am moved in, I'll be shopping around for a nice sofa bed so I can accomodate some visitors (hint, hint) Hope everyone's doing well. I heard about the epic pow...yeah...I knew that would happen as soon as I left town!