"You know more of a road by having traveled it than by all the conjectures and descriptions in the world." - William Hazlitt

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Od(y)essa!


**It has slipped my mind if I have made it clear in past posts my reasons for this next section of my travels - the post-Turkey experience. I feel like I have alluded to it in the past but not actually explained myself and why I’m not going straight home now that my semester is over.
In short, whilst I was in Kiev in January, I drunkenly asked Peter and Vova (two of the three owners of Why Not? Hostel in Kiev) for a job. I knew that Euro would be going on this summer, and I figured they would be extra busy and need some extra help. Besides the obvious reason why I would prefer to work in Kiev rather than the US, my semester in Istanbul was to end several weeks after most American internships and summer jobs start. So my job options for the summer were limited at best.
Later, when I saw Peter in Georgia, I asked again. Being Peter, he gave me some runaround answer, but gave me hope at the same time. I eagerly awaited his final decision, which he insisted would need to be made after he had another talk with Vova. Shortly before I went to Krakow, Peter told me I could come work for them for Euro. Vova confirmed this decision in Stróźe. So, having secured a job that would pay me a living Ukrainian wage (next to nothing in the US, but enough to get by in Kiev), I planned to keep moving in Europe, instead of returning home. And since I had wanted to go to Odessa in January (and convinced not to by Peter, who insisted it was a summer city), I figured now, the summer, was as good a time as any to go take a gander at the southern Ukrainian city.**
***
I only spent a few days in Odessa, but I could have spent the whole summer. The city is not much to look at, but the beaches, the girls, and the nightlife are well worth the buildings’ mediocre facades.
Backing up a bit, though. First we need to get into (the) Ukraine itself.
I didn’t sleep my last night in Turkey. I went to the beach party on the Black Sea on Boğaziçi’s beachside campus, and when I got home, I spent the rest of the evening packing. My flight was at 9:30am, so there was no point in trying to sleep.
So I drunkenly (and, eventually, hungover-ly) packed up my tiny cell of a room and prepared to get a move on. I had said almost all my goodbyes to various friends I’ve made over the last few months, so all I had to worry about was saying goodbye to Turkey itself. That sounded really cheesy, but I don’t know a better way to write that.
I arrived at Ataturk with the huge backpack that I had arrived in this past January, my blue daypack/school bag, and a gigantic suitcase I had bought with Richardson and Lindsey a few days prior to carry all the souvenirs I’ve picked up over the last few months. I hadn’t expected to stay in Europe after Istanbul, so I had started accumulating - I had stepped out of backpacker mode.
I had to pay fees for the extra bag. It was expensive, but not exorbitant. They made me go from the ticket desk to a payment station with AeroSvit, Ukraine’s national airline, pay the money for my extra overweight bag and bring it back to the desk for my ticket.
At border control, the guard was asking me various questions in Turkish. He asked me, among others, where I went to school here. I told him Boğaziçi. He said he had also attended Boğaziçi. I’m not sure if that’s a commentary on the quality of the school, but it was a cool coincidence.
I took my time inside the airport. The plane wasn’t to depart for a while after I arrived, so I wasn’t too worried about missing it. Until I was in the bathroom and heard them call a final boarding call for my flight. I ran outside, stole one of those little push carts for pushing around carry-on luggage, and sprinted down towards my gate.
I approached the conveyor belts - the people-movers. It was decision time. I was staring at something that would make me go faster, but they had bars in front of the entrance to prevent carts from coming through. But I didn’t want to give up my cart. So I attempted to get on with the cart.
It fit perfectly. The cart squeezed past the two posts at the start of the people mover with maybe an inch to spare. I sprinted down the track, slowing down at the end where I would --
Find myself on the ground, covered in my carry-on luggage. My cart’s wheels had had an issue with the slight uphill that was the end of the track, and I had been thrown over it, and off of the belt. Fortunately, the rakı I had bought was ok, and I was relatively unscarred, physically at least. Oh, and it turns out the announcement for my flight was a first call, not a last call.
The plane was a breeze. Landed on time at 11 in Odessa - I slept the whole hour and a half.
Last time I arrived in the bread basket of Europe, it was on a train from Belarus with Jonas. The guards at the border were unaware that, as of a few months prior to our arrival, American’s did not need a visa to enter Ukraine for less than 30 days. This time was a little different. For one, I arrived by plane, not train. Additionally, UEFA Euro 2012 had begun just a few days prior and, since it is hosted this year by Poland and Ukraine, the border guards were a little more friendly and a little less, well, Ukrainian in their bureaucratic dealings.
That’s not to say I wasn’t stopped or profiled. No, I was pulled aside upon the in-country security check and asked to open my bags. This is not an easy task when you’re carrying approximately 70kg of bags whilst attempting to call yourself a “backpacker.”
Despite the relative friendliness of the border guards, the questions I was asked were quite, well, specific to the problems and issues of Ukraine.
“Are you married? Are you in a relationship? Did you bring any jewelry?”
My friend Amelia from Kiev often says, to paraphrase poorly, ‘nobody comes into Ukraine as a sex tourist, they just leave as one.’ Ukraine has major issues with the fact that their female population is so darn attractive and their male population is a bunch of ugly drunks. It might seem that I’m exaggerating, but when you see 7 men out of 10 stumbling down the street at 10:30 on an average morning, you begin to realize the severity of this issue.
Fortunately I wasn’t planning on seeking out my wife in Ukraine (though it wouldn’t be a bad place to look), but I was carrying two hookahs, two backgammon boards, turkish spices, a rug, several bottles of alcohol, a bunch of school books and an unreasonable amount of luggage. No worries, though, I made it through.
With sweat dripping from places I didn’t know could sweat in the absurd heat that is the combination of Ukraine in summer and the weight of the world on my back, I went outside to find a taxi.
The hostel I had booked told me the ride from the airport should be no more than 50UAH (5 Euro, $6.25). Of course, it’s not easy to A) negotiate in a language you don’t speak, B) have leverage when you’re toppling over in the sweltering sun. Nevertheless, I got a guy down to 60 with a little hydration left in me, and we went off to his car. He even offered to carry my bag for me! That is, the small blue bag that only holds a laptop and some plugs. I was left to drag the giant suitcase, my backpack, and the rakı to his car which was, by the way, a Lada, world-renowned for it’s terrible safety record and horrible construction.
It was a safe enough drive though, squished into the tiny excuse for a vehicle and surrounded by the drivers various religious icons. The only casualty was the side handle of my crappy Turkish suitcase, which snapped off when I tried to put it in the car. It was OK, though, because as of then I still had one handle on the top and the bar that would allow you to pull it on its wheels, which had already begun to splay under the great weight it was bearing.
I arrived at the Babushka Grand Hostel a little after noon. My bags were splayed on the street. I got buzzed in the first door, and dragged my bags in, one at a time, inside. Then again, one at a time, one flight upstairs to the hostel.
I got some weird looks for arriving in Odessa with 2 oversized monsters, but it was all good. The Babushka Grand itself was more than accommodating. The hostel is a converted apartment, and consists of a large living room/common room, a 10-bed dormitory, a private room or two, and a kitchen. It’s a very nice place, and the people there were equally nice.
Shortly after arrival and check-in, I met George, from London, Ben, from Brisbane, and John, the owner, from San Francisco. I also spent some time talking with two brazilian guys, one of whom turned out to be a big sleezebag. More on that in a little bit.
George and Ben and I spent a while talking, but before long I convinced them to join me at the beach, which we trekked down to after the mega-heat of the noon-time sun subsided a little bit.
It was only a 10 or 15 minute walk to the beach, and the last part was a huge set of stairs going down to the water.
The beach was crowded, but beautiful. And not just the Ukrainian women. The water, too, was inviting (though not terribly warm, or warm at all), and everyone was either eating, drinking, or smoking, while tanning. After a little lying in the sun, I convinced George to join me for a swim. Having been on the other side of the Black Sea earlier that same day, I felt it necessary to dip my feet again. This time, though, I completely submerged myself and took in the frigid water with open arms. I surveyed the beach, and it really started to feel like I was out of Turkey for real.
George went back to the hostel after the beach, but Ben and I went to the train station. He wanted to say goodbye to a friend he had made a few days earlier. Her name is Alexandra (aka Alex, aka Sasha).
This world is extraordinarily small. Apparently, after I left Peter, Lidka, Vova, and the rest of the people at the party outside Krakow, those three began their trek back to Kiev. On the bus L’viv they met a guy named Ben, from Brisbane, with whom they became friendly. Ben would go on to Kiev to spend some time at Why Not? Hostel, where I would start work in a few days. While in L’viv, however, he met Sasha, who lives in Kiev. She followed shortly after Ben’s departure to Kiev, and spent some time hanging out with Peter and the rest at Why Not.
As luck would have it, Ben and Sasha’s paths would cross again, in Odessa, when they both headed down there for different reasons. Sasha and my paths would cross again, too, because she would come by the hostel in Kiev many times over the next month.
This is where I met her, though, at the train station, where the first thing she said to either of us was, “Ben, can you bring my bag onto the train for me?” She is a modern Ukrainian princess. Men should be doing everything for her because she’s beautiful and she’s a woman. That’s all there is to it, for her. Ben, of course, obliged, and brought her bags on the train for her. Sasha was working for Euro 2012, where she would, as a friend would later put it, “stand around and watch the men do all the actual work,” but she made good money regardless. Sasha is a perfect example of one of the more prevalent cultural differences between Ukraine and most western countries. Chivalry doesn’t have to be dead, but at least in the West our women are a little less, well, princessy.
Ben and I walked back to the hostel then. I took a shower and we headed out for the evening. We got a couple cans of this stuff called Alco Energy, an alcoholic energy drink, to keep me awake as my many hours of wakefulness increased steadily. Ben and I also tried to find George at the hostel and then at a couple of places he might be, but couldn’t. We had dinner at a place called Captain Morgan instead of searching more. I had a bacon-wrapped steak. It felt good for bacon to be available again.
We went back to the hostel briefly, when we found out that John and a bunch of other people had gone to Captain Morgan’s for drinks! We turned on our heels and followed, but couldn’t find them there. We called John and found they were two blocks back toward the hostel.
Frustrated, I cracked open an Alco Energy and Ben and I, along with the two Brazilian sleezebags from the hostel, walked towards the new bar.
I had barely downed a quarter of my drink when we were stopped on the corner of Вулиця Єврейська and Вулиця Катерининська by two police officers. They informed me, one poorly-pronounced word at a time, that I was not supposed to have an open container on the street. They told the Brazilian guys and Ben to go home. The Brazilians left, but Ben stuck by me.
“You. No Alcohol.” They insisted.
“Ok, I’ll throw it out.” I moved to toss the can.
“Нет, Нет!” They wouldn’t let me throw it out. “Three days. Jail.”
This didn’t seem right, but I am well aware about how little power I have in the Ukraine and how much of a hell these guys could make my life. That’s not to say I submitted, though. I kept on insisting that I should just throw it out and walk away. Until they broke out the handcuffs, at which point Ben and I decided we should just go with them.
Ben and I walked with these officers a little ways down Вулиця Єврейська. They fumbled with a piece of paper and handed it to me, pointing at the bottom paragraph, it read, in essence:
“You are being detained under the Ukrainian constitution for violating the constitution. You have the right to know what you are being charged with. You have the right to see a judge regarding your charges. You have a right to appeal the charges and defend yourself in court.”
But this is Ukraine, and I realistically had none of these rights with a couple of cops on the streets of Odessa. Fortunately, I never had to find out what a Ukrainian police station looked like. One of the cops started whispering to the other one, and Ben and I turned to each other and realized what was about to happen.
“B-R-I-B-E?” I asked Ben, wary of the police officer’s English skills, but not their spelling skills.
“Definitely,” Ben responded.
The policemen separated at this point. One stood on the street, presumably watching for potential spoilers of their fun. The other dragged Ben, me, and my alcohol into a dark alleyway, where he proceeded to write on a sheet of paper: “30$.”
“I have no dollars, only Hryvna.” I responded, which was true.
“Ok, ok ok.” He said. A new number was written on the paper. “400Грн.” This didn’t seem right. The exchange rate is 8-1 for the dollar, 10-1 for the Euro. He had upped the bribe to 40€! I refused. I offered him 50 UAH. Yes, I began to haggle for my right to stay out of jail.
Ben helped me out a lot. He would pull his wallet out, making a whole show of handing over small amounts of cash. The officer kept saying “No money! No money!” in an attempt to make it seem to any potential eavesdroppers that he wasn’t taking a bribe. Ben kept his wallet out regardless.
In an intimidation move, right after the price dropped to 300UAH, the policeman asked for our names. I gladly gave mine to him, as did Ben, since all he asked for was a first name, and not an ID or anything. He can have my first name all he wants. He can’t do anything with it.
We kept knocking the price down, arguing for my freedom. Two girls walked by us on their way out of the alleyway. The cop, frustrated by our lack of ability to communicate, actually asked these girls if they spoke English, to see if they could help him get his bribe! They ignored him, preferring to not involve themselves in illegal police matters. They even yelled back, “No!” (Not ‘Нет’) When he pressed them for their English skills. Ben and I got the joke, I don’t think the cop did.
We ended up settling on 200UAH to keep me out of jail for three days. That’s about $25, and still exorbitant given the average cost of a bribe for the cops if you speak the language is 50UAH. But I got to keep my alcohol, and was even able to fold up the money in my hand and pass it over in a surreptitious handshake to the cop, which made me feel like I was in some sort of terrible spy movie.
On the way out of the alleyway, the policeman kept covering the authoritative epilets on his shoulders and insisted, “No police. No police.” As in, ‘we were never here.’ Sure, cop, sure you weren’t.
We did meet up with the people from the hostel after that, including the Brazilians, who had made it clear to the others that I was being arrested. John had a good laugh at my expense, having been in the same situation before. I just wanted a beer at that point.
I had my beer, Ben’s treat, and then we all headed towards True Man, a bar that John recommended.
True Man was a great place. It was on the 3rd and 4th floors of a building at Пушкuнская 75 (75a Pushkinskaya), seemingly far from many other bars. But inside was my kind of pub. The first level was just a bar, with tables and bartenders. The second was a dance floor. But the music was all 50s and 60s dance music, and thus classy as hell with actual dancing (as opposed to the poor excuse for dancing that more closely resembles a mating ritual one finds at most clubs these days).
From downstairs, there were two TVs that streamed video from the upstairs dance floor. It was on those that Ben and George and I watched one of the Brazilian guys, who doesn’t drink (which I only mention because, while its admirable for most people who choose not to drink to do so, he very clearly does it to have the upper hand at a bar, not for any noble reason), work his way through the dance floor in a borderline disturbing display of Brazilian macho-ness. He would later boast about his triumphs on the dance floor, but we had watched them, and they looked more like a jaguar hunting antelope. Sure, the antelope can run and even fight back briefly, but the jaguar is sober, adept at questionable Latin-American dancing maneuvers, and more persistent, until the antelope gives up for a minute before running downstairs to find her friends.
Ok, so it’s not a perfect metaphor.
We all had some fun at the bar, downed too many drinks (with the exception of that one Brazilian guy), and headed back to the Babushka Grand around 4am.
***
On the morning of June 10 we woke up and found that John was planning some sort of BBQ at a new hostel he was opening near the beach and Arcadia (a place for tons of clubs along the beach on the outskirts of town). We decided to go.
The hostel is in the middle of nowhere, also known as a residential neighborhood, but there was a tiny and sunny back yard, good chicken on the grill, and we got a look at the type of work one has to put into creating a hostel from scratch. It was really interesting.
Ben and I didn’t stay long. We wanted to do a walking tour at 4. Ben had met a cute girl at the bar the night before who said she did walking tours and would be at the top of the Potemkin Steps at 4, so we went to see if she’d be there, and at the very least see the city a little bit.
It was a less-than mediocre tour, and the girl was not the same as the night before. But there were only three of us on the tour itself, so it was intimate enough that we had some fun with it. It was just Ben and I, and Lindsey, whom we met there.
The tour lasted an hour. We saw some cool stuff, like the Opera House, a huge statue to Catherine the Great, the Steps of Odessa (AKA the Potemkin Steps, from the famous propaganda film Battleship Potemkin), and a middle-school symphony in a park, though the last item on that list was just good luck, because we passed it on the way to the tour offices, where the tour ended and we were awkwardly made to write messages about how much we loved the tour for their cork board.
Lindsey, Ben and I went to Пузата Хата for lunch, a cafeteria-style chain of Ukrainian food that was one of Jonas and my favorite places to eat while in Kiev in January, do the prices and the proximity to the hostel. I had beef with cheese and chicken Kiev.
The three of us went to get some shisha at a place called Shisha. We had a delicious combination of lemon and honey flavored tobacco smoked through milk.
I love Odessa, but I was eager to get to Kiev. I ran at 7:44 to get to the train station, leaving the two behind them.
I found the station, and inquired about their last train to Kiev of the night, 9:19. There was a single ticket left, and I bought it, for 85UAH (a little over $10.50). I texted Ben to hurry back to the hostel so he could help me with my bags, as he had offered to do.

I ran back to the hostel and frantically packed up my stuff. Ben got lost trying to find the hostel again, and arrived at the hostel at 8:55. We waved down a cab, negotiated quickly for 25UAH to get my bags to the train (it was only a few blocks, but my god my crap was heavy). We made it with 10 minutes to spare.
I boarded the train, with Ben’s help got my bags into the various compartments we could find for them, and stepped outside with him. We said our goodbyes, and I got back into the cattle car that would be my home for the next 17 hours.
The train left on time. The train car itself was not the usual second class cabin with 4 beds and a door. The entire car was filled with beds. Two bunks on either side of each section, and two more that lined the opposite window along the aisle. All-in-all, there must have been over 50 or 60 people in train car 15 (of 16). I had seat 17, a bottom bunk.
The top bunk was occupied by two cute Ukrainian university students. Ben made some crass comments about getting to know them on the train, but over the next 17 hours I did get to know them, through a Russian drunkard named Коля.
Коля (Kolya), short for Nicholai, sat down next to me within a few minutes of leaving. “America. Russia. Friends.” He kept on saying.
Having no English skills of his own, he used the girls above us as translators. He brought me beer, and we sat and talked about everything from the Soviet Union and why I think it collapsed to the fact that Коля thinks the girls should marry me and move out of Ukraine for the better opportunity. The girls, Оля and Люба, had no interest in leaving Ukraine. They are among the class of Ukrainians who believe in the opportunities presented by a fledgling democracy and want to work to better their lives at home, not run to another country to live more comfortably.
Kоля hates vodka, but I broke out the Zubrowka and, while complaining how much he hated it, the two of us killed the bottle.
I had more fun talking with the girls than with the drunk. Both study in Kiev. Oля is studying Economics and Люба is studying Japanese. They were very nice, and towards the end of my month in Kiev, I would spend quite a bit of time with Оля, and quite a bit of money, as per Ukrainian courting customs.
***
Upon our arrival in Kiev, on the morning of June 11, we all went our separate ways. I managed to rip apart the second handle to my giant bag while dragging it up the stairs from the platform to the station, and would have to life it step by step with my foot to get it to the top. The plastic p.o.s. was really falling apart on me.
I negotiated for a cab outside. From experience, I knew that I shouldn’t have to pay more than 30UAH for a cab, but I was once again at a disadvantage for negotiations, and ended up settling for 40UAH. But it was money well spent, because due to the hostel’s proximity to the Olympic Stadium, whose surrounding area was closed off for the game that night, Ukraine v. Sweden, the taxi couldn’t find a way through. I spent an hour in the cab, driving around Kiev, trying to find a way to Саксаганского 30. The closest he could get me was 2 blocks away, in the end, but I had a fun hour, rocking out to classic rock radio and relaxing from my sweaty endeavor to get my bags out of the train station.
My bag almost fell apart on the last leg of my journey to Why Not? Kiev. The bit of plastic that is meant to let me drag the bag on the wheels was giving, but I pushed it to its limits and got it to the door.
As soon as I walked inside, I was greeted by Nina, who had arrived a few days earlier. I moved my crap in and placed some in the common room, some into the basement, and took a much-deserved shower.
I had my first meal in Kiev at Капо Ді Монте, the pizza and sushi place across the street that was the first meal I had had in Kiev in January as well. Then some relaxation, then sushi with the whole hostel gang for dinner. Amelia, Vova, Peter, Nina and I had a fantastic meal on a large sushi boat. It cost 600 UAH for the 5 of us. Cheap for sushi, but not as cheap as the winter, because the go-to sushi place in the winter had closed right before Euro, possibly because of the mafia (either connections to or pressure from, we’re not sure). They had had a perpetual two-for-one deal at that place, which does not seem like a viable price point, but I digress.
We went to the Fanzone that evening to watch the Sweden v. Ukraine game. The Fanzone is a cordoned off section of the main street in Kiev, Khryshatik (Хришатик, I believe), that leads up to Independence Square. It’s lined with massive TVs and stands selling cheap beer for people to gather and drink and watch the games of Euro 2012, every night there is a game, which is every night from June 8-July 1, excluding a few rest days between rounds. Kiev itself would play host to 5 games. 3 regular round games, all of them with Sweden (luck of the draw), against Ukraine, England, and France, respectively. They would also host a quarterfinal match and then the final match itself.
Ukraine won, 2-1 against Sweden, with a Swedish goal at 52’ and Ukrainian goals at 55’ and 62’. The crowd went insane. It was quite a good welcome back to Kiev evening, and the kickoff to a great month.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Final Days


The last few weeks I spent in Istanbul did not entirely consist of study and testing. It's not like I'm at Wash U -- I'm studying abroad, which means parties in the evenings and hangovers in the morning (granted, that can be life at Wash U as well). It means explorations in the afternoons and delicious food at all times of day. I am going to jump around a bit, but hopefully this particular post will have some semblance of logic regardless.
Additionally, as my semester ended a lot later than those in America, I actually had an exorbitant number of visitors come through in the last several days. Only one of my later visitors was actually coming just for the purposes of seeing me, but the happy accident of my time in Istanbul coinciding with their respective days in town was a welcome thing.
For visitors, the day after my parents left on May 14, Professor Konig flew to town. Professor Konig is a professor I've taken a few classes with at Wash U, and is currently my major advisor. He was in town for a vacation with his wife and two colleagues. Unfortunately, try as we might, the first three days he was in Turkey, which he spent in Istanbul, I was too busy to meet him (dealing with my Alexander the Great paper so I could go to Krakow without worrying about it), and when he was back on the 23rd for a day before heading home he had managed to contract some sort of bug, and was unable to meet.
But not all was lost. Three days later, May 26, my friend from school Kimmy came by with her friend and Wash U roommate, Moira. They were visiting from Spain and France, respectively, having each finished their study abroad programs. I spent a few days hanging out with them, though their visit overlapped with finals, I tried to make time. They left on the 29th, the same day Susanna arrived.
Susanna is an old Interlocken friend, whom I have kept sporadic contact with over the years. Facebook alerted me to her imminent arrival, a three week trip to Istanbul. I tried to find time to meet her, but keeping in touch once she had arrived proved difficult, and unfortunately we did not manage to meet up.
On May 31, the same day as my last final exam, Michelle and Hannah flew in, neighbors of mine from Pequot Trail. They were using Istanbul as their kickoff city for a grand European tour that would take them to Copenhagen before flying home. At the time of this writing I believe they are Croatia, or maybe Montenegro. I left my Alexander final and went directly to the airport to pick them up.
Each of the above people (those of whom I actually managed to see) I took on a whirlwind tour of the city, to the main attractions and the lesser-known ones, and of course to the best food in the city. With Michelle and Hannah, I decided it was time to go on a little adventure I had been wanting to do for a while, so I took them to Bursa. More on that in a bit.
Leading up to and during finals week, there were several fun and exciting events that took place. I went out to dinner with Steffen, a German friend from somewhere about 2 hours from Berlin. We had a big dinner party up in Sariyer, a neighborhood even farther up the Bosporus than Rumeli. A preset menu had been negotiated, making the dinner of balık (fish), mezeler (appetizers), şarap (wine), and rakı (rakı), only about $15 per person. It was really a delicious and wondrous time.
On Saturday, May 26, the Duke in Istanbul program paid for we humble students to go on a Bosporus boat party. Everything was included, including all-you-can-drink alcoholic beverages - something we, especially I, took full advantage of. We were upgraded on our boat, and the 19 students plus 4 real adults were dwarfed on the ship designed to accommodate about 100 people, maybe more. It was a three hour event, with a full dinner to kick it all off. After the boat party, everyone went to Ortaköy to keep it going, I went to Taksim to meet Kimmy.
On May 31 there was a gigantic anti-violence in Syria, pro-Palestine, anti-Israel protest in Taksim square. I stumbled upon it after leaving Hannah and Michelle at their hostel (the Mystic Simurgh) when they arrived and just wanted to sleep off the Jetlag.
On June 1 I convinced Michelle and Hannah to leave the city they had just arrived in behind them, and to join me on a much longed-for day trip to Bursa, an old Ottoman capital and one of the closest non-Istanbul cities on the Anatolian side of Turkey.
To get there involved a 7:30am ferry from Yenikapi, near Aksaray on the far side of the Golden Horn. It meant I would get up at 5am, catch the first tram from Kabataş at 6:15am (I was the only person on the tram, a feat unheard of in Istanbul, ever), and wait for the girls at Aksaray. I waited for a while, for two different trams. I was about to give up and call them (for a major fee) to see where they were when they arrived on the third tram.
We got a cab (because we didn't realize how close it was) to Yenikapi. It was only 5TL or so. We cut the long lines at the feribot terminal and got on our ship with a few minutes to spare. It was a two hour trip, arriving around 9:30 on the other side of the Marmara Sea.
The subsequent bus ride to Bursa took about 45 or 50 minutes, standing the whole way. But no worries, because we had a Lonely Planet guide that Ben (from my program and from Wilton) had loaned me, and thus a map of and suggestions of things to do in Bursa.
Our first major stop was Kebapçı İskender, famed inventor of the İskender Kebabı. For those following at home, İskender is the heavenly combination of lamb meat off a spit laid on top of bread cubes, all of which has been doused in a red sauce. Bits of each ingredient are scooped together and a little cold yoghurt is dolloped on top, which infuses the mouth with some of the most incredible taste as of yet known to man.
The home of this delicacy, named after Alexander the Great, was not a disappointment. It was an experience rivaling, in different ways, Kebap Osman's İskender in Sultanahmet's Sirkeci.
Next we found our way to a nearby historical museum of Bursa, which boasted examples (purely in Turkish) of crafts and goods created and manufactured in this historical (and present day) manufacturing city. This included everything from cars to shoes, from textiles to metals.
A short walk would bring us to one of the big bazaars in the city, which borders the other big bazaar. We went through both. It wasn't nearly as touristy as the Grand Bazaar, but the selection was much more catered to someone who lives in the area, not someone just passing through. This meant shoes and shirts galore, and not a single major souvenir outlet.
We wandered for a bit, finding the old city walls, the gates to the old fortress, and the tombs.
The first tomb was for Orhan Gazi. It was much less fanciful than the second, which I'll get to in a second. Orhan Gazi was the Augustus Caesar of the Ottoman Empire. He was the son of Osman Bey, a man who united the tribes that would form the Ottoman Empire (a name derived from a bastardization of the name Osman). It was after Osman Bey's death that the new leader, his son Orhan Gazi, declared himself the first Sultan of the empire named for his father. Much like Augustus Caesar became the first true emperor after the death of Julius Caesar. Anyways, the tomb was a fenced off coffin with a triangular prism lid, draped in a simple green cloth. On the edge of the coffin, Orhan's gigantic turban is posted for all to see. The rest of the ornate building, complete with fanciful moldings and curtains, held smaller coffins, probably of the family, concubines, close servants, maybe even pets or children (some of the coffins were very small). It was a very somber place.
The second tomb was, predictably, that of Osman Bey himself. Living 1257-1326, he was the son of Ertuğrul Gazi and grandson of Süleyman Şah, who came to Anatolia as Bey of the Kayı tribe and drowned as he was crossing the Euphrates. In 1299 Osman Bey founded and developed a new state, which would be known in the future as the Ottoman Empire. Osman Bey was buried, according to his wishes, in a Byzantine Monastery dedicated to the Prophet Elijah, which in Ottoman Sources is referred to as "The Silver Kümbet." The Monastery was damaged by fire in 1801 and completely destroyed in 1855, and the current octagonal structure that surrounds him was built to replace it. Osman Bey's coffin is laced with fine mother of pearl. Several of his sons (one of whom was named Aladdin!) were buried with him, much in the same way as with Orhan Gazi. In fact, the interior layout is identical, except Osman Bey's turban is smaller and the coffin more ornate.
There's a clock tower near the tombs, built in 1905 and renovated a few times since, that sits next to a huge lookout point over the city. Apparently, residents of Bursa who watch the Simpsons often refer to the town as Springfield, because of the twin smokestacks in the back of the city skyline.
Michelle, Hannah and I next explored a few mosques. First, the main one in town, which has historical value that has escaped me. If I had to guess, it's the first mosque to have a truly Ottoman style. It also forwent the single large dome in favor of many small domes. And the walls are covered in Ottoman calligraphy that form beautiful imagery, or at least as close to it as Islam will allow.
Next we went to the Yeşil Camii, built between 1412 and 1419. Inside, we met a man who had been in charge of recent renovations. The mosque had only opened up to the public again a few weeks earlier, and it was as vibrant a place to be as it must have been when it was first opened in the early 15th century. It was quite amazing. But this mosque was more than a place for prayer. It was also a place for administrative things, including a courtroom and judge's chambers. There is a fountain in the building, which was used not for decoration or cleaning, but to drown out a judge's deliberations while they discussed cases.
After this we headed back to Istanbul. It was about 4, and we wanted to catch the 5pm train. We went to the nearest metro, where we found a fun farmer's market, then caught the train to the water. It didn't go all the way, we had to take a marshrutka from there.
But we didn't even get the right marshrutka! We ended up in the wrong part of town, at the wrong ferry. So we got a taxi to the right one.
Fortunately for us, the ferry didn't actually leave until six or so. We had been walking all day, so when we finally got tickets and boarded, we all fell asleep until we arrived in Istanbul around 8. 
The next few days I took Michelle and Hannah around, spending the evenings with them and my Boğaziçi friends, drinking and merrymaking.
Isabelle, Savannah, Emily and I went on one last excursion on July 3 to Rumeli Hisarı. We went to our last Balkan music night on June 7.
On June 5, I went for a swim with Kate, Sarah, Emily, Rhys, Jake, Savannah, and Katrin (a friend of Leslie and Bernie's [from the weekend in Tbilisi] whom I met when they visited Istanbul last month) in the Bosporus! It was so damned cold, but we swam around for a while, fighting the current. At one point, an American professor who was going for his daily exercise by swimming in the same spot, took Katrin and Savannah and I upstream a little ways (towards the Black Sea), where we jumped in from about 10 feet up and surfed the tide back to where we started. It was a ton of fun.
Later that day, my roommate from Wash U, Michael, and his girlfriend Lindsey arrived. They were coming in from Berlin on a whirlwind tour of that city, Istanbul, London and Marrakech. They were also there for my last few days in Turkey.
Once again, we went to all the major sites. I took them souvenir shopping, something I hadn't done yet. I got, amongst other things, two nargile, a giant suitcase to carry all my new crap, spices, and some chachkas. Quite fun.
I also took them to the end of year festivities, like a night we went to Anjelique, one of three superclubs in Istanbul. It was fun, but not my type of place. Michael and Lindsey didn't care for it either.
Michael and Lindsey left on the morning of the 8th. I spent all day packing.
The night of the 8th was the last party of the semester, up at Boğaziçi's Black Sea campus. They have a private beach up there, and we took a bus all the way up there in a packed drunken party. I hadn't finished packing, and my flight was for the morning, but no worries! It was my last night!
Most of my remaining friends (who had been slowly disappearing over the past several days/weeks) were up there. It was a ton of fun, on a beautiful spot. Also, I got to dip my feet in the Black Sea after midnight on the morning of June 9. Just a few hours later that day, I would be on the north shore of the Black Sea, in Odessa, doing the same thing, but out of Turkey for good.
Until the next time.