I'm staying at the Kinlay House Hostel in Galway City Centre. Barnacles beats Kinlay in 1) room size and 2) room/hallways/bathroom scent. Our room smells somewhat of a gym locker room. But, I'm sitting in a cozy lounge right now, enjoying a cup of tea, and listening to the Beatles being played over the stereo system. Kinlay wins in overall common-area atmosphere. I'm in the middle of job-searching and flat-searching. I missed our complementary breakfast (consists of toast AND cereal - Barnacles only offered toast, one point Kinlay) by five minutes. I'd like to write more, but I also want to update you all with some photos, which is no easy task. So, without further ado, here are the latest scenes from Matt's year abroad ...
The grounds of Trinity College.
Trinity College.
The view from the cappuccino bar that I posted from earlier last week. The red window/door above the blue awning to the right is the window from my Barnacles hostel room. The door was open without a screen for the three nights we were in Dublin, and there were no bugs in our room. Pretty amazing.
Dublin.
The Department of the Taoiseach. The Taoiseach is the Irish Prime Minister.We had pints last night with two guys from Australia who we roomed with two nights ago. Great Aussies (said with a Z apparently, not an S). Much of our conversation was spent inquiring about life in Australia ... and their inquiring about life in the states. I was shocked to see how much of our American television and music is sent to Australia. One of the guys had a far better understanding of popular American tv shows than I did. They both were about a year out of college and up and decided to quit their jobs and spent four or five months traveling Europe. Why not now?
The job search shouldn't be to difficult. Flat searching, on the other hand, may prove to be a painful procedure. Most places for rent are listed in a weekly publication, The Galway Advertiser. It comes out every Wednesday at 12pm. Flat searchers (many from one of Galway's three or four colleges) line up early for a copy and leave the line already on their cell phones.
Brain and I will be with them tomorrow.
5 comments:
Once again - a special talent for sharing your experience. One of the most interesting and rewarding experiences in traveling are the people you meet along the way. Suggetion...take photos of them it helps to remember them and the time shareed.
glad to hear your enjoyed the beamish. did you gank the glass?
I want to be where you are! The pictures are incredible and I can imagine they do not give the experience you are have justice.
I am also relieved to find that you and Brian are getting a variety of the nutritional necessities required for living a quality life :) Good luck with the home hunt tomorrow and take care!
Nice job with the photos! The countryside looks spectacular and I wish I could go. That looks like one gross vegetable concoction. Do they have ramen noodles? Do you even have access to a microwave?
bk. no glass ganking. i don't want to end up in an irish jail!
phil. yes, i have access to a microwave! i actually haven't seen ramen. as expensive as everything is here, they'd probably run EUR4.00! I hope all is well at the tfund.
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