Thursday, December 11, 2008

Party Russian Style





On a cold Wednesday night in London, to celebrate the holidays, there is no better way to do it than with a Russian themed party! Martinis were the drink of choice, Ushanka's were worn by many and acrobatic performances filled the night with awe.

Good times with some new friends in London!

Saturday, November 29, 2008

More Turkey Pics






With Simon's eclectic eye for photos, I thought I would post a few more pics from Thanksgiving dinner.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

London Thanksgiving, American Style






A Brasilian, a couple from Wales, a Brit and 3 Americans at my house = Thanksgiving in London. Things just wouldn't be the same with out Thanksgiving sooo I decided to host a dinner to celebrate! Kate and Scott came all of the way from Wales for some turkey and lots of wine! And the journey for some in London was maybe just as long with the traffic and rain.

This was a first Thanksgiving for the non-Americans so we talked about the traditions of watching football, feasting and giving thanks...oh and also the part about the English settling in the east and kicking out the Native Americans (sorry!).

Since everyone learned a bit about the American holiday I did take a few things away myself:
1. The concept of sweet side dishes like candied yams is foreign to Brits
2. Samba music is good for every occasion
3. Regardless of how full you are, you can always eat some more thanksgiving dinner

It was a great night, thank you to everyone for celebrating with me! Thanks to Simon for being photographer for the night, he got some good shots!

Saturday, November 22, 2008

What does it all mean?

Every so often I ask myself the same questions in hopes of getting closer to an answer or confirming what I have come to believe...What is the meaning of life? What is my purpose? How do I contribute to the world? Part of the answer lies on my pursuit to explore new places, understand people and different cultures. As I do this I realize how connected we have become and how small the earth really is. And its only going to get smaller. I was doing some research on the world's population and percentage of people with access to the internet and came across this video which puts things in an interesting perspective.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpEnFwiqdx8

BTW here is the latest population info as of 2008 (crazy!):

Country Population Internet Usage
Asia 3,776,181,949 15.30%
Europe 800,401,065 48.10%
Africa 955,206,348 5.30%
Americas 913,258,921 42.40%
Oceana 33,981,562 59.50%
M. East 197,090,443 21.30%

Total World Population 6,676,120,288

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

BtoB Mareting Awards: Hysterical




BtoB marketing awards + comedy + a super fun time =...I think the equation may not compute. With moderately low expectations of an awards show I attended last week in London, I was pleasantly surprised when I found myself maybe at one of the funniest events in BtoB history.
At the Emirates Stadium in London, 500+ people gathered to celebrate the great work of marketing professionals. What kept the audience from slipping into a permanent cat nap during the event was a well known comedian, Michael McIntyre. Take a peek at some of his acts (some of course you just had to be there, and others are hysterical because its so true to life in London) www.youtube.com/watch?v=Es2l4yUBY6M
With great company (new friends in the pics!, taken with my mobile btw) the glitz & glamor of a black tie event and my side ache from the laughing, this one will go down in the books as a really great time!

Monday, October 20, 2008

A Pleasant Surprise: Belgium



I have to say I was pleasantly surprised at how much I liked Belgium. It may have been my friend David, who's all knowing stories of Antwerp were better than reading any book, or the intoxicating taste of their chocolate (and beer for the beer drinkers!) or the village feel with a modern vibe. On Saturday, we spent the whole day riding around Antwerp on bikes (one of my favorite things to do) and I dont think there was one stone un-turned. We saw churches and famous small streets, the harbor (which is the 5th largest in the world) and shops, art and architecture which surrounds the city just by standing in one place and looking around. Antwerp would actually be a very cool setting for a movie, there are so many details that add up to something beautiful.
One of the very cool things going on in Antwerp right now is the Elephant Parade. Its a bit like the Cow Parade or Hearts in SF installation. The Elephant Parade is bringing awareness to the becoming-extinct Asian Elephant. The numbers are staggering -at the turn of the century there were 300,000 elephants living in Thailand, today, world wide there are only 40,000 (16,000 of which live in captivity). All around the city were life size baby elephant models painted by a wide range of artist with unique themes. If I had an extra €25,000 laying around I would definitely be at the auction in a few weeks bidding on the Tahiti elephant! www.elephantparade.be.
The other thing I came to realize this weekend is, not only do I love listening and dancing to conga drums, but I am not half bad at playing one either! We had an impromptu mini jam session and it has inspired me to want to take lessons.

Thank you David for your hospitality and looking forward to another trip to Antwerp!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Sunny Weekend in Wales!


Sunny in Wales? It was this weekend! I must have brought the sunny California weather with me because it was perfect. My friends Kate and Scott (who I met in Sardinia!) were so sweet to invite me to visit them in Cardiff. Like much of the UK, I was impressed with the historic architecture. Life in Wales is nice and slow...with just the right amount of things to do.
With a combination of luck and Scott's sly tactics, on Saturday night we were able to see Othello, the opera, for free, in their re-built, beautiful national theater. Very cool opera if you haven't seen it.
The one thing many of you probably know about Wales, that I didn't, is it was a massive coal mining area, so of course we had to check out the Big Pit, the National Mining Museum of Wales. This bit of my entry is sad but I must share it with you. Going to the Big Pit and learning more about the coal mining industry 1. immediately gave me a sense of appreciation for the men, women, children and animals who have worked and many died in mines and 2. gave me an overwhelming feeling of sadness...sadness for the original working practices and conditions in which people and animals worked.
We were lowered 300 feet below ground level into one of the largest working mines up until the 80's. All of our battery operated devises were taken from us as the dry packed batteries when mixed with ethanol cause explosions.
Before mine workers became unionized in the 40's, the way it worked was the men, women and children (from 5 years old!) would work in the mines 12 hours a day, 6 days a week and for no money. They were given tokens which could be traded for shelter, food, clothes and candles...all provided by the mine owners so it was priced to keep people in this vicious cycle of working. Miners would have to buy their own candles (before lanterns) for light. Today there are helmet lights, but if you didn't have light, it is literally PITCH DARK (the guide made us all turn off our lights and it is scary...no moon light, no stars, just dark). A 5 year old child's job was to open and close doors and if their parents couldn't afford to by them a candle they would work in the dark, pitch black darkness. They would tie a string to their wrist and the other end to the door so they could find their way. The horses that worked in the mines were taken from the mountain tops and put underground for 50 weeks a year, 24 hours a day, with absolutely no sunlight. If horses became blind, which may times they did after 5 years of work, the animals were destroyed. There were evacuation plans in case something went wrong, however many times the accidents were lethal and happened swiftly (ie. explosions). Also, if you got hurt, its not like there were medical staff there to give you aid. The comradery of the miners wouldn't heal wounds but would enable people to live and die with dignity.
After banning together and creating essentially a union, the conditions and practices improved greatly. Child labor laws were put in place, animal rights were implemented and fair wages were given. Experiences like this continually remind me that I am so fortunate. We are all human and we all live together so be mindful of consumption. Educate yourself so you aren't ignorantly buying products that support exploitation. And not to judge people, while many of us work hard, we are where we are because of people who sacrificed everything.

On a happy note, there is lots of fun to be had in Wales and I thank Kate and Scott for hosting me! Cant wait to see you soon!

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Kew Botanical Gardens




On a perfect fall day in London, 70 degrees and sunny, I took a stroll to a place where the air is fresh and the exotic plants are plentiful. Kew Bontanical Gardens. One of my favorite orchids, neomarica lutea native of Brazil, was in the greenhouse which had flowers and plants from all over the world. I climbed up the 50 ft Treetop walkway...lets just say, I am glad it wasn't a windy day. By chance, I saw a peacock prance across the park, maybe in hopes of avoiding the paparazzi.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Monaco and Cannes




My friend Laetitia, who lives in London now, is from Monaco and just so happens to have a quaint flat 10 mins from the beach in Monaco...so guess where I was this weekend? The ritzy beach village was packed with wealthy Europeans and more insanely wealthy Europeans with their Aston Martins and multi-million euro villas. Not to be forgotten are the super friendly Monagasques...money or no money, the people are very down to earth and care about each other.
Saturday we spent the morning shopping in Cannes where the fashion is ultra chic mets park avenue conservative. After picking up a few items I headed down to the beach to take in the sun and beautiful view. The architecture has lots of classic Mediterranean facades with balconies but is also very modern. The interior design is contemporary modern, everything is chic and has clean lines. When you are there, you just want to stay forever.

Zorba Dancing - New World Record



I am officially a world record holder in the category of Greek Zorba dancing! No joke! We beat the current world record with 1,600 people dancing at the same time for 5 minutes while I was in Rhodes. The tension was high, but laughter was in the air the night of the event. We were all bused to an outdoor track where we got in lines, arms linked, and after 45 mins of practice we completed 5 mins of dancing as our official submission to the world record committee. We were video taped so judges could analyze the footage to ensure proper execution. The next morning, it was announced...we had won the world record! Hoopa!

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Word Up to the UAE!






My very good friend Rania, has just moved to Dubai...wish she moved to London, but its one more place I get to visit! We were both in Rhodes last week and had so much fun among the mass of familiar and unfamiliar faces. I met the peeps from the Dubai office, Joanne is lovely!, who should have been fasting, but the Greek food was just too good to pass up. (Plus, I learned that you can make up the days you didn't fast, on other days, for Ramadan. Only if you are traveling, health reasons, etc).
Rhodes was amazing, we ate at the Alexis in Old Town and took a stroll through the streets where the signature items for sale are sponges, jewelery and sandals.
Hope to see you soon in Dubai!

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

On the road to Rhodes!



The great thing about working in Europe, is that sometimes I get to have meetings in places like Rhodes, Greece. And if you can travel with some fun people, the amount of hysterical moments multiply greatly. On the heels of work, I stayed the weekend in Rhodes only to find myself not wanting to leave the amazing Tsambika beach or the melt-in-your-chair-because-the-food-is-so-yummy food. We stayed in the north east part of the island in Kalithea. We were just 10 mins away from Old Town where the restaurants are plentiful and the club beats keep you up all night. I can't wait to go back!

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Notting Hill Carnival


The pictures I took at this weekend's Carnival in Notting Hill just do not do the event justice. If you add together the SF Carnival, Bay to Breakers and the Rose Bowl we may get close to how many people were in the streets dancing and partying! Also, my pictures of the 2 ton trucks with hundreds of speakers strapped on all sides can not translate the thumping volume of the music. You could almost hear the carnival from inside the tube.
Notting Hill used to be an area where many immigrant people, mainly Caribbeans and Africans found a home when settling in London. Today Notting Hill is a Million Pound for a tiny flat or 10 Million Pounds for a mansion, area. (Yup and if you do the conversion into Dollars, that's one pricey area!)
I went both days...just couldn't get enough!

Sunday, August 24, 2008

29 Again!


Nicole was in town long enough to celebrate my second 29th birthday! A few of my new friends, Nicole and myself ended up at Asia de Cuba, which is now my new favorite place! Miso Black Cod, Plantain Rice with Avocado Salsa, Ahi Tuna with black beans and jalapeño...it was perfecto.

With 2 weeks of no work, my lungs full of Grecian air, and my summer time birthday behind me, how does a girl go back to an office with urgent requests and tps reports?

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Brazil in London


With the Brazil Carnival in London going on this weekend, it was only fitting Nicole and I check out Guanabara, a Brazilian bar in London. Nicole took her very first samba lesson!

Monday, August 18, 2008

Island Hopping in Greece




The long awaited and much anticipated trip to Greece with Nicole finally happened!



The minute after arriving at my flat, (after a 13 hour connecting flight a taxi ride), Nicole and I spent hours catching up on all the gossip; girls got priorities!

A hop, skip, and jump away the next morning, we arrived in the amazing island of Santorini. What makes Santorini so beautiful is the volcanic eruption left a crescent shape island with steep cliffs (caldera) dropping to the turquoise water. All of the hotels are literally inset into the cliffs so there is nothing blocking your view. We stayed in an area called Imerovigli, which we thought was the best place we could have picked....not too busy, super fantastic view and right in the middle.
We celebrated Hans' birthday (Nicole's long time college friend who we were able to meet up with) in Oia at a restaurant built the same year Hans was born...he thought it was fate.
Each day we walked along the cliffs to different towns, ate more Greek salads to hold us over for the next year and watched the sun set into the water. 6 amazing days in Santorini was way too short. Next, we headed to Naxos. Much different island as we arrived at our hotel on the beach (Santorini only has one small beach with tiny black rocks). We biked around the quaint town and spent a couple of lazy days on the beach (under the umbrella...Greek sun is hot!)
Mykonos reminded me of Venice; the water almost enveloping the island reaching practically the door front of the restaurants. The highlight of Mykonos were the maze of streets with shops and dance music to lure you in.
To end our trip we said farewell aboard a gigantic ferry (more than 200 cars drove on to make their way to Athens as well!) and spent the 4 hour journey watching the Olympic games (didn't know speed walking was an Olympic sport...)

Many laughs and good times we will never forget!

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Ciao Sardinia!




If you haven't been to Sardinia, go immediately! It is a gorgeous, magical place with turquoise water and wind smoothed rocky mountain terrain. The scenery can only be truly appreciated with your own eyes. We stayed in a charming hotel, absolutely recommend Borgo Antico Hotel in San Pantaleo (see 'Lovely Links' for detail).

Upon arrival, first things first - head straight to the beach. We found a small beach on Costa Smeralda to start the relaxation (pic of me at that beach). With nothing but time, the next day we drove along the north east coast of Sardinia stopping at small beaches to take in more of the Sardinian sun. We had heard much about Porto Cervo and decided to check it out on Friday night. You know the show 'cribs'... ya, if there was an equivalent for a yatchs this would be the place. Multi-Million dollar yatchs lined the marina and once docked you could shop at Gucci, Prada or one of the many super high end shops, 'til about 1 am when the shops close. Fur is in this season in Italy btw. Saturday we wanted to go a bit more low key so we took a boating trip for the day and sailed around the small islands just north of Sardinia (you could see Corsica from the boat!) We left from the Porto Rotondo and headed for Santo Stefano (pic of island city). We then stopped at Capera and took a dip in the sea and enjoyed some beach time, and then did the same with La Maddalena and around Capo Testa. The it was back on the boat to head around the islands to the famous Pink Beach. It is closed to people, but you can see it from the boat. Literally the sand is pink. It has a certain rock that gives the pink hue to the sand. Again, something you just have to see with your own eyes.

Italy = amazing food (I think this is a given). Another reason to stay at Borgo Antico was the wine and cheese bar around the corner. They serve cheese on top of thin flat bread with figs and honey (for free) along with your wine (pay for the wine). I think we got lucky because there was a live band playing for several hours into the night and a woman singing in songs in Portuguese & Italian (fed my obsession with Brazil). She sang Girl from Ipanema...I was in heaven.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Inside Wembley Stadium



Holds 90,000 people, is the largest fully covered stadium (electric roof that takes 45 mins to close), the grass is mowed every day and takes 8 hours with hand mowers....yes I took the tour. We didn't see an event, just there for a work thing, but I am looking forward to seeing a football game or concert there soon. On the tour we did get to see the locker rooms where the athletes get ready...too bad it wasn't game day!

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Germany for the weekend


Beer steins filled to the top with best in the world beer + huge rugby players + Berlin nightlife = The Germany we usually think of.

4 hour dinners with friends + Kölner Dom + Spa day & shopping = my weekend in Germany :)
My favorite new friend Anastassia (and Ralph, Podgy & Flo too) was so amazing to invite me to her fabulous flat outside of Cologne. Danke!

Saturday, June 21, 2008

A Day In Brighton



Brighton is a sleepy, yet happening area along the water, about 1 hour south of London's center. It resembles Santa Cruz, California with the chill vibe and calm waters. Along "The Lanes" there are shops, restaurants and lots of street venders selling everything from vinyl records to shoes. A 10 minute walk gets you to the water where there are pebbles instead of sand, but lots of people happy to lay and sunbathe. You'll be entertained but the bongo drums and random artists singing and playing their guitars. Fun day!

Monday, June 16, 2008

Espanol

He tenido mi primer clase de español. Estoy estudiando español para poder vivir en un país donde lo hablen. Deseame suerte!
Ok so I had a bit of help with this but I am studying!

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Salsa!


Karine visited me in London! and of course we had to go salsa dancing. There is tons of dancing here, mostly during the week nights, but we did find a place near Tottenham Court. 4 and a 1/2 hours later, as the place was closing, we still wanted to keep going. Super fun night!