Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Day 143: Looking Back at Europe, and Forward to Asia

So, last night in Europe. Since I have a day left on my train pass I had considered taking the train to Lillehammer to check out the town and do some hiking, but it's a 2.5 ride each way and I decided that I didn't really want to spend 5 hours on a train with all the plane sitting coming up. Instead I walked around for the morning and spent the afternoon around the hostel, just sitting out in the grass and talking to people and playing a bit of frisbee golf on the course outside. Frisbee golf, for those of you not cool enough to be aware of it, is basically exactly what it sounds like. You have targets, and from a set starting position you need to get the frisbee into the target with as few throws as possible - just like golf. I didn't have my camera with me today, but here's a picture from yesterday to give you the idea.


Since my day was pretty uneventful, I'll instead talk about some more general things regarding my trip. In many ways, Europe, for me, was about history, while Asia will more be about culture. That's not to say Europe doesn't have interesting culture, or Asia interesting history, but European culture is a lot closer to North America, and Asian history isn't something I grew up studying and so it's less meaningful to me. After 4.5 months of travelling, here's what my TripAdvisor app on Facebook looks like:


It's a pretty good first pass, but there were a lot of things I couldn't fit in as well. Even among other backpackers travelling around Europe my trip gives me a bit of extra cred because of the length (and how little I'm carrying) but more than once people said it was a bit sad because I'd see everything and have nothing to come back for. Seriously?? First of all, most of the places I visited I'd happily return to, and I was mostly just seeing a city or two, leaving huge areas totally unexplored. My biggest regret is that I didn't get more hiking and nature in. There are just so many famous, important cities in Europe that I didn't want to miss, and it's a lot of extra effort to plan going to some remote area for hiking than to get to a major city and find accomodations there. I think Asia will be a lot better for this sort of thing, since I'm seeing fewer countries and spending more time in each I'll have more chance to get away to some nature - plus I'm doing a few tours that are specifically structured to get out away from the cities. Here is a list of some of the places I missed in Europe that I most want to come back for (seriously people, if somebody is going, let me know - I'll find a way to make it work!):
1) Southern Italy (Naples, Pompeii, Sicily)
2) Croatia (Dubrovnik, Split, Plitvice Lakes)
3) Slovenia (Ljuljana, Bled Lake)
4) Western Russia (Moscow, St. Petersburg)
5) Baltic / Eastern Europe (Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine)
6) Southern France + Barcelona
7) Bosnia (Sarajevo)
8) Fjords of Western Norway
9) More Greek Islands (Crete, in particular)
10) Southern / Central Germany (Cologne, Frankfurt, Munich, and some of the famous Bavarian castles)


I've had a few people ask about the status of my visas in Asia, and I'll explain the current situation a little. My hope was to get the visas in some country in Europe - but that was simply impossible. After dozens of emails to different consulates, embassies and 3rd party visa companies, my only choices seem to be going to Bangkok, going to Hong Kong or flying home to Canada. All of those options are headaches, since all my plane tickets were booked and cannot be cancelled or skipped, and both Hong Kong and Bangkok were after the countries I needed the visas for. I figured out a way to get to Hong Kong for 14 days before those countries for as little extra cost and hassle as possible, but obviously those 14 days have to come out of somewhere else, so unfortunately Taiwan has been mostly dropped. I still have to go to Taiwan (can't miss the flights I booked, remember) but now it's for 2 nights, and really only one full day instead of the original 10. The other days are coming from South Korea, but I'll still have 2 weeks there, so I'm not as upset about that.
Assuming the emails I've received are correct, and the paper work I do is correct, it takes up to 5 working days for each visa, although I might be able to accelerate that with an extra fee. It should be doable in 14 days, but obviously I'll feel a lot better once that entire episode is done with. I'm getting the China visa first, since that's the more important one for me. If something goes wrong and it takes longer, I'll have another chance to get the India one later on.

5 comments:

Linda said...

It's been fascinating for us following your European journey and we look forward to the Asian leg. So where are you flying to first?

iphynx said...

Japan first, thought everybody knew that already.

Jess said...

Gonzalo's cousin Ari moved to Bangkok recently, so if you need anything when you get there I'm sure she'd be happy to help.

Katie said...

Hong Kong is actually really cool. I was there in 2007 and just loved it. If you need any recommendations for things to do or anything, let me know--my aunt and uncle live there and know it pretty well so I can ask them. (Also, you can go see the Giant Buddha.) :) Glad to see the European leg of the trip went well. It's pretty likely that I'll be back in France next year and traveling to southern France. Not sure when you'll be looking to travel next, but I'll keep you updated on my plans. :)

iphynx said...

Great to hear from you Katie :) I caught up on the rest of your travels (I'm a bit sad I missed visiting the Juliet place - it looks really cool), but I notice you didn't continue on with NY as stated! I hope you're having a good time back at home and not missing France too much. Keep in touch (either through here or on facebook or something) and maybe our paths shall cross again.