Stockholm!!

Stockholm was not what I expected at all. It was a beautiful city, but much like Berlin, there were cranes all over the city which really took away from the natural beauty of the city! Our first stop was the City Hall which was neat! One of the rooms was full of golden mosaics. On one of the walls, the artists messed up so the heads of two warriors were cut off. It’s an interesting story though, the artists, after they realized their mistake, figured it would work out because the story is that those warriors were beheaded! Stockholm was pretty difficult to get around since it’s all on water. We bought a hop-on hop-off boat to get around. It was a great way to see the city at a decent price. Also, Tivoli (same park at in Copenhagen) was right on the water – part of the skyline! I didn’t go into Tivoli in Stockholm, but some of the girls on my trip did, and Jason DeRulo was playing there! He is a Top 40 artist is you don’t know who he is. I would highly recommend going to Scanson too! It is a park that has a lot of different animals, activities and food! We went there for the midsummers day festival, we made flower halos, which is a very traditional thing to do! We also saw wolverines and bears. It was a fun area to walk around. The nightlife was great! Most of the clubs were outside, so all of the pictures I have of us going out it looks like it is like 8pm instead of 2am!

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Berlin

Berlin is a beautiful city! The city is completely different from the conservative ways of Munich.
Today has been pretty tame. I was on the Bahn for about six and a half hours combined with getting an hour or two of sleep last night, I decided to head in early tonight. For those of you that personally know me, shocker I know! Not to disappoint, when I got to the hostel, I went upstairs to the Sky bar! It is a really neat bar on the seventh floor with a great view of the city. While I was about to get a drink, a girl walks up to me and she looks very familiar. Then, I turn away and she yells my name! It was a girl that I shared rooms with in Munich! We ended up drinking together and met a group of English guys that were here for a Bachelor party! They were very fun, asking us what we thought about the English without anyone getting mad. Jen, the girl I met in Munich, was like well, I think English are assholes and they always argue. I’ve never seen a group of middle age men die of laughter! Then they bought us drinks, so it was a good conversation! Then they went off to dinner and we met some guys from Ohio. Two of them were still in college. They started telling us how they don’t understand what is it like to travel. The funniest story was that the three of them were in Amsterdam and got very drunk the night before they were supped to fly to Munich. One of them went up to use the bathroom and accidentally went into a different room and passed out in the identical bed! The two other guys looked for “20 minutes” literally 20 minutes, and then left him to catch their flight! They eventually met up in Munich! Unreal. Then we started talking to a Australian and Canadian who loved Eastern Europe and they gave us multiple tips on where to go and what to do!

Adventures in Munich!

I just left Munich and I’m on the Bahn headed to Berlin! Munich was an unbelievable city full of life and culture… one of which I learned the most about while I was there. I started out my trip by meeting up with one of my teammates who I play soccer with at ASU. We ate at this nice restaurant near the center of the city and we ate authentic Bavarian food. While we were eating, I didn’t really understand what “Bavarian” meant, but I definitely learned that before I left. After hanging out with her for a little bit, walking around the city and drinking beer, I went to my hostel to settle in. In most hostels, wifi is only in the lobby area so you can meet people – which is exactly what I did! I was sitting on my phone and these two guys from Boston and a guy from Canada sat right next to me. We started talking and they invited me to go to a beer garden with them. It was a fun adventure. It was all of our first nights there so we didn’t really know where to go. We ended up walking for about an hour or so and hopped on and off a train or two! We ended up going to this nice beer garden in the English Park. It was surrounded by a lake. The restaurant part was very nice and upscale. In the back however, it was this neat area that was just full of people with pints of beer drinking on picnic tables. There were lights that lit it up like it was daytime. It was really loud and all you could hear was laughter coming from every way. The table we sat at was right on the water where we could literally touch the ducks…and there were a lot of ducks! When people would throw bread into the lake it was hilarious to watch because about 150 ducks just swam as fast as they could to that side of the beer garden. After doing that for a few hours, we went back to the hostel!

The following morning I went on a walking tour of the city. The hostel, Wombats, has a free walking tour every morning so I figured I would go on that. It lasted about five hours and boy was it worth it. It was by far the best tour I have ever been on. Not only did I learn SO MUCH about Germany, Bavaria and the Nazi Party, I met a lot of great people. While walking through the city, the tour guide would stop at certain restaurants and markets and introduce us to different types of foods. I am usually pretty picky with food but I decided I would try everything and I was pleasantly surprised. The sausages and pork were all phenomenal. There is also a drink called Mezzo Mix, which is coke mixed with orange juice. It might be my new favorite drink! It’s delicious. We learned a lot about the Nazi party and how it started. It is very different hearing the history from the perspective of a German, especially in Munich. Since Munich was the birthplace of the Nazi party and it was started for the working class people of Bavaria, the story was a little different then I have previously learned. We went to the Hofbräuhaus right in the middle of the city to have a few beers. While we were there, the tour guide started telling us how that was the building where the Nazi party was pretty much founded. Hitler would drink there and thats how the party came to be – all over beer. If that wasn’t weird enough, he told us to look at the ceiling. There were four Bavarian flags that were painted in a pin wheel like shape. He told us that they had to paint that four times over what was originally there – swatstikas. After the tour was over, the tour guide gave us the option of going on a “pub” crawl aka beer crawl. So, of course, almost everyone does it. Two hours later, we met up in the middle of the city to start drinking! We went to about six different beer gardens and drink about five different types of schnapps. It was a great way to get to know everyone! There were people from Australia, Hong Kong, China, Canada and the US. We ended at the Hofbräuhaus at the end of the night to experience a genuine Bavarian night of drinking!

The next morning I went to Dachau with some of the people I met on the previous walking tour. Dachau was the first concentration camp that the Nazi party started. They called it the “tester.” We took a train there and it didn’t really set in that we were about to go to a concentration camp. We got into Dachau and it was strange, because the city of Dachau itself, is so normal. When I pictured a concentration camp, I imagined it as distant from houses or stores….that wasn’t the case. There were houses within 1 mile in all directions of the camp. There were two main parts to the camp, the actually camp and the SS base. The public isn’t allowed to go into the SS base because ironically it is now used to train the police force for Germany. All of the major leaders of other camps, like Aushwitz, were trained at Dachau. We walked through it what we all got out of it was that if Dachau somehow failed as a camp, the Holocaust may have not happened/ definitely not at the scale it did – that’s how big of a role Dachau played. After walking through the museum and going into the actual chambers was unreal. They had some of the same fountains and beds on display. Along with that, thee were multiple pictures of the inmates that had been in the rooms we were in. Then, the most horrible part of the camp came up – the gas chambers and ovens. They were located pretty far from the rooms and kitchens. We walked in them and it was unreal. The gas chamber was just a room that looked like a bunch of people could shower in it – which was what they thought they were doing. How it worked was they would go into the “shower” and the guard would lock the doors and walk around the outside and in two little opening, he would push in a capsule of poisonous gas. The system was so thorough that when the capsule would get pushed all of the way in, the top would pop off. The job was done. 150 dead in 20 minutes. Then they went to the ovens which had one central chimney. That oven company, which made some of the most powerful ovens, was shut down in 1950. Now, the area surrounding the gas chambers and ovens is full of beautiful trees and a few different memorials. Right behind the gas chamber there is a large Jewish star.

After Dachau, we went to the BMW Museum and the Olympic stadium (1972). It was pretty neat, they had models of BMW’s from almost every year they made a vehicle. There were also new models that you could get into and if you did it in advance, test drive. The architecture of the museum was probably the coolest part to me. When you walked in, you take a very long escalator to the top, and you walk in a cork screw all the way down to the bottom and each level had different models of cars. My favorite ones to look at were the Rolls Royce models. They had up to the 2012 model.

We then headed back to the hostel to relax for a little. While I was lying down in my room, I went to grab something from my suitcase…by doing that I somehow broke my zipper. That started a journey in and of itself to find a suitcase! I find one surprisingly fast – on sale too! Anyways, right when I got back to the hostel, I went to the hostel bar and met up with all of the people I have been hanging out with the past two days. We started drinking in the bar and within about 30 minutes it was packed with people from all over the world and all different ages. A soccer team from Germany came in and that was the beginning to the best part of the night! They started to cheer so as I joke me, another American and a Scottish guy started doing a cheer of our own and then started talking with them! They are there for the weekend celebrating a great season, and boy were they celebrating! We ended up going out with them to a few bars. We ended at a club right outside of the main square of the city. It was a two story club that was playing great local music along with some great American music! One of my favorite parts of going out with people from different countries is hearing them sing American songs with their accents, it’s hilarious! After a long night out we finally made it back to the hostel where I slept for a little before getting up at 7am this morning to make my 9am Bahn train to Berlin, which is what I am on right now! Hopefully Berlin will be as great at Munich was. Germany is a beautiful country!

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Frankfurt, Germany

I’m currently in Germany right now, landed yesterday in Frankfurt! This city is beautiful, pretty much your typical European city.

I’ve had a few bumps along the way to get here starting with my flights! My flight was supposed to leave out of Phoenix at 10am on June 9th to LA. Well, last minute that flight got delayed until 6pm which meant I would miss my connecting flight. After a lot of stress, my flight finally got switched so I would fly through Philly to Frankfurt. While I got to Philly fine, my flight to Frankfurt was delayed about four hours.

So fast forward to me arriving yesterday. I got to Frankfurt safe and sound, but my luggage didn’t. It is now June 11th at 7:30pm and my bag is still not here! On top of that, the airlines don’t know where my bag is and I leave for Munich tomorrow! Let’s hope my bag makes it here tonight!!!

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UPDATE:

My bag arrived yesterday night! Now I’m eating breakfast before heading to Munich!

In The News!!!

After completing my journey to all seven continents, some news organizations picked up my story and wrote about it! Thanks to all of the news organizations I have worked with and the reporters I’ve talked with. They have all been great!

ABCNews.com:

http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/lifestyle/2013/01/penguin-highway-video-captured-by-21-year-old-traveler/

Yahoo News UK:

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/penguin-follows-road-in-snow-antarctica-melissa-brennan-video-124030372.html#1yRnuKc

Right This Minute, ABC 15:

http://www.rightthisminute.com/video/penguin-highways-and-more-adventures

Huffington Post UK:

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/01/31/penguin-highway-video_n_2590504.html

Repubblica TV:

http://video.repubblica.it/natura/pinguini-a-un-bivio-le-riprese-in-antartide/119039?video

Good:

http://www.good.is/posts/intermission-the-penguin-rush-hour

CBS:
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504784_162-57569000-10391705/penguin-highway-in-antarctica-is-the-cutest-traffic-jam-ever/

Antarctica!!!

Antarctica was such an adventure. I really didn’t know what was in store for me when I got on the ship in Ushuaia but it was more then I could have ever imagined.

I went kayaking about 12 miles a day, hiking on various islands and did the ultimate challenge that you can possibly do in the Antarctic.. THE POLAR PLUGE!!!! I met some amazing people on the ship and had a wonderful time. Here are some pictures!

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I also made this little penguin movie while at a landing…enjoy!

 

Viviendo la vida en Argentina!!!

My first day in Argentina has been a lot of fun! It started off with a few bumps but has been incredible. My flight landed last night around 9:30pm after circling above the city for about a half hour due to thunder. When we landed, we couldn’t get off of the plane because the walk way died and couldn’t lift to the plane doors. That took about an hour. Thinking it couldn’t get any worse, all of our luggage was “trapped” on the plane. The airline wouldn’t allow workers to bus the bags from the plane to the baggage claim. After about two hours the bags finally came. Then I had to figure out how I was supposed to get to my hostel. At this point it was around midnight and pouring rain but I finally got a cab…soon to realize that he didn’t speak any English. I kept on pointing to the address to the hostel that I had written down just to make sure he understood. The third time I asked him (about 20 minutes into the drive) he said no. Let the freaking out begin. It all ended up okay but I was getting nervous.

After that I got to the hostel. At first I couldn’t find it because it is on the 6th floor of a walk up building that has an elevator in it that I couldn’t really figure out how to use (don’t worry I eventually figured it out). Then I got in and was told to go into the empty bed of a 6 person room… well, long story short I got a tap on my arm to a girl that was confused why I was sleeping in her bed…. I thought it was the open bed. She was really cool though, I moved and we laughed about it this morning.

I got up and went to breakfast where I met an American, two Germans and a Brit. They all planned to walk around the city, visiting a Japanese garden, a cemetery and eat authentic Argentinian pizza! So I tagged along with them and had a great time. After we ate I decided to separate and do some exploring on my own. I walked through downtown where I got caught in the middle of a political protest. It was really cool but I couldn’t figure out what was going on.. there were cars with huge horns all over them and kids with loud drums. I was walking back toward the hostel and I asked this girl if she spoke English. Turns out she went to college in NYC and we walked down one of the main roads talking about how she wants to move back to the US. After that I came back to the hostel, where I am at now, to chill before the night begins. There will be a BBQ and Tango show at the hostel! Pretty much everyone who is staying here will be going, it should be fun!

I am flying out of Buenos Aires tomorrow and heading down to Ushuaia!

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19 Days Until I Head To My Final Continent

In exactly 19 days from today I will be heading to Antarctica, my final continent!!!

I will be flying into Ushuaia, Argentina. I’ll have a full day there to enjoy the city which I will be navigating myself. After I embark on the ship I will be sailing through the Beagle Channel and the Drake Passage. From there I will be viewing the most unique wildlife in the world through the Antarctic Peninsula and the South Shetland Islands. Next I’ll go through penguin colonies at the Polar Circle Crossing and continue around the Arctic circle. During this experience I will go camping and kayaking!