30.5.08

europe at last!

just as we overdosed on temples and shrines in japan and korea, over the last week it feels like all we have seen are castles and cathedrals. there was of course st basilś and the kremlinś cathedral square in moscow, followed by the church on the spilled blood and the winter palace in saint petersburg. in kyiv we ran into the saints sophia, michael and andrew, as well as the caves monastery (unfortunately we were too late to go exploring underground, indiana jones style). warsaw has also been a blur of churches and castles and little squares surround by houses painted different colours of the rainbow. as we have worked our way across, the number of icons and the use of gold gilding has diminished and pews and stained glass windows have started to appear. now, rather than experiencing the dazzling richness and beauty of god, i am contemplating the vast emptiness and silent simplicity of his house.

speaking of indiana jones, the ads for his latest adventure have been plastered across every available surface in the last four cities. either heś very popular here in europe, or george lucas is getting his moneyś worth from his marketing monkeys.

after the hermitage, i have not felt compelled to visit every museum within a ten kilometre radius - i know itś shocking! for the time being itś great just to wander around the little cobblestoned lanes and leafy courtyards and watch the endless stream of beautiful women walk past me, amidst all the glory of spring.

10.5.08

mongolia

time is such a strange creature. the last two months, when i reflect on the events of each day, feel like an eternity; and yet, it's a surprise to realise that a quarter of my year off has elapsed already. there is still so much to do and see. thinking about the immediate future is both thrilling and overwhelming. so these days i try not to brood too much, which is rather easy actually, as so much shit is happening every day, even when we're stuck on the train or in a ger camp in the middle of nowhere.

four days in mongolia is barely enough to get an appreciation of this vast, mostly empty land of rolling grassy hills and jutting jagged rocks. we spent a little time in ulaan baator, the chaotic capital in which a third of the country's people reside. next to funky modern skyscrapers still under construction are dirt tracks lined by gers. a statue of lenin leaning forward, urging the people on towards revolution, overlooking trendy boutiques of burberry, gucci and kookai. it was yet another city of contradictions, like beijing on a smaller, more human, more immediate scale. but my favourite part of the mongolian experience was in the ger camp, 70 kilometres from ub, where we went on long hikes over the hills and rocks, tasted traditional mongolian cooking, rode the small mongolian horses, watched the sunrise over distant steppes. the fresh air, open sky and expansive panoramas stangely reminded me of the western districts of victoria, of home...