Sunday, 8 February 2009

What killed the dinosaurs?

This weekend was quite full, with 2 days spent walking around in London with my cousin, his friends, and my housemates. I went to quite a few museums and galleries, such as the Tate Modern Art Gallery (with a gorgeous view on London from the 7th floor), the National Gallery and the National Portrait Gallery.
One of the places I hadn't been to yet in London was the Natural History Museum:

It was quite an interesting visit, very interactive and full of humour. As an example, here are some of the reasons for the extinction of dinosaurs, according to the museum:

- Because mammals ate their eggs...
- Hunted for food by aliens...
- a worrying skin complaint...
- Boredom... (Click on the image to enlarge it, it's worth it!)

- Cataracts...

- Overwhelmed by their own dung...
- Mass suicide...
- Slipped discs...

I saw the last T-Rex alive in this same museum:


One of the ugliest bridge in London in my opinion:



And to finish, a building that I liked, with a nice message:

Thursday, 5 February 2009

Snowed in... and other wintery adventures

Here is something interesting about England: snow means chaos. Well at least for London and its suburbs. It started snowing on Sunday night and kept on snowing until Monday afternoon.

The view from my window on Monday morning

There were about 5 cms of snow in my garden at 8am on Monday when I got a phone call from my colleague who informed me that the school was closed! I thought it was a joke! But no. Apparently it hadn't snowed like this since 1991 and as a result people were not equipped to deal with it. And since lots of people (teachers and kids alike) have to come a long way to go to school/work, it is easier to just give a day off to everyone^^

So, I had Monday AND Tuesday off. I found out that not only schools were closed, but buses, trams, trains and even the Tube stopped running or ran only on a very restricted service. Hilarious. Which means I was able to sleep until midday, then braved the "snow storm" to go get some food, watched my housemates built a snowman in our front garden, and mainly just chilled at home and watched series and films.

Our snowman, who had a sad short life, shot by snowballs in the prime of life by mischievous neighbours. RIP.

Last weekend I went to Plymouth as a last-minute decision to go see my friend F. It was great (despite the cold weather), we did some shopping, saw a (very depressing) exhibition on modern slavery, danced on 90s songs and practised our Spanish at a house party with lots of foreign assistants and students... We also went to see a basketball game and were a bit disturbed by the young underdressed cheerleaders but very entertained by Foxy! And the Plymouth raiders won so everyone was happy :)


A player from the "Plymouth Raiders" team whose name I forgot^^

Foxy! A real entertainer! So cute :)


Overall the weekend flew by, so did January! For the first time in my life I celebrated Chinese New Year, which was on the 26th of January, and Australia Day, which was on the same day :) I had a lovely Chinese dinner(a "steam boat") and yummy aussie desserts!

Fish balls, prawns, bean curds, baby corn, spinach... Preparing the Chinese steam boat :)

Home-made Pavlova, a delicious Australian/New-Zealandish dessert

This weekend my cousin S. is coming to visit me. I can’t wait! Then on the 11th my parents and my sister are coming for 10 days, yessss. After that a friend of mine from Lyon is coming for 4 days. And finally, the last weekend of February I will be in the Netherlands to visit two friends. So it will be a busy month! Hehehe...

Feel free to come visit! Or to give me some of your news! I have to try and send more postcards, I am terrible at keeping in touch through "snail mail" (^^), sorry!

Thursday, 15 January 2009

A few pictures to start the New Year :)

HAPPY NEW YEAR YOU ALL! BONNE ANNEE 2009!

Once again I apologize for not updating my blog more regularly... I have no excuse, it's pure laziness!
So I'll just put up a few pictures to give you an idea of what I've been up to lately. But mainly: all is well, I'm having a great time! Enjoying work, which has been a bit quiet those last 2 weeks; since the kids have exams I don't have as many hours as usual. This week I'm showing them a video of a French stand-up comedian, Florence Foresti. The sketch is called "J'aime pas les garçons" ("I don't like boys") and is quite funny in my opinion :-p You can check it out on youtube if you want. She makes lots of gestures so even if your level of French is not very high you should get the gist of it!

As I said in my last article I went on a school trip to Paris in December, which was really, really great. The 37 kids were nice and we did lots of fun activities, including Disneyland, going on the Eiffel tower, spending a day in a French school... I got to know the pupils and my 3 colleagues better. A very positive experience!


View of Paris from the 2nd floor of the Eiffel Tower

Apart from that, I am still exploring London and other areas in England, with my housemates or friends visiting me :)

Windsor Royal Shopping street

A shop in Windsor... How scary it is to put REAL people as models in the window of your shop?? I mean seriously


Christmas party with friends in Slough :)

A sample of the very cheesy jokes we found inside our Christmas crackers :-D

After celebrating Christmas in advance in England, with my housemates, friends, and even colleagues (we had a Christmas dinner in a Chinese restaurant^^), I went back home for the holidays.

It was good to be back in Lyon and to see my family and my friends! Even if I wasn't able to catch up with all the people I wanted to see...

My lovely sister who can't wait to open the gifts! Hihi

Ma famille :)


It was soooo cold, I had never seen the lake at the Parc de la Tête d'Or frozen before!!


Then, I went back to the UK on the 30th of December... Because the plan was to celebrate New Year's Eve with some friends who were all coming to London! Friends from Australia, France, Switzerland, Ireland, Canada... Which means we were 9 people staying at my house. It went really well! On NYE we went to a house party of a friend of a friend... Turned out that the house was a boat, on the Thames, near Tower Bridge! How COOL I know! Watching the fireworks from the boat was magic.


My view at midnight on the 31st...

The next few days went like a flash, shopping, discovering new areas of London, laughing, just being happy to be all together again.

Kingly Court, London

Carnaby Street, London


Going back to school on the 5th of January didn't mean back to doing nothing. Last weekend I had two nice day trips--in spite of the ridiculously cold weather--in Cambridge and Winchester.

With my housemates in front of the Bridge of Sighs in (freezing) Cambridge

A gate in Cambridge


At King's Cross station in London... A very emotional moment for me, a Harry Potter fan! Ahah


Studying Spanish on the train to Winchester

Admiring the wintery landscape on our way to Winchester

Having burgers with my housemates and a Japanese friend, in an American diner in Winchester^^

The famous cathedral in Winchester

For the fans, you can see the house where Jane Austen died in Winchester

After all those pictures,I'll end with one that summarizes very well my state of mind at the moment!


Hope you are all well and as excited about 2009 as I am! :)

Monday, 17 November 2008

Lazy, la-la-la-la lazy

Hey there,

Sorry for not writing for so long! In the two weeks after my trip to Edinburgh I didn't travel as much so I was waiting to have things to write and then I just got lazy^^
So I'll try to summarize the last month!

I explored some areas of London where I had never been before, like the Portobello Road Market, which is all the more famous since the movie "Notting Hill" where Hugh Grant explained his love for the little market that sells antiques, clothes, jewellery, food, and all sorts of useless crap^^ For the fans of the afore-mentioned movie who are wondering if I saw The Blue Door of The Bookshop, well... It doesn't exist anymore. I guess people got fed up of the crowds of tourists who came just to take a picture of themselves in front of Hugh Grant's bookshop :-/

I also went to the National Portait Gallery--for the second time in a month. It was worth a second visit because there was a new exhibition, plus this time I payed 9 pounds to go and see Anne Leibowitz's exhibition, which was quite intriguing. The choice of mixing personal photographs of the artist, her family and friends with photos of celebrities was a bit unsettling... All in all I think it's worth giving it a look :)

On the 14th of November we had our housewarming party, which was quite a success!

Warming up the house

My beloved housemates :-)

Apart from that, I made my students listen to a song (again I know!) but this time they had to put the lyrics in order before we could discuss the meaning of it. I chose a song called 'J'aurais bien voulu' by Babylon Circus, a ska/reggae French band from Lyon. They are quite famous in France and they're even touring internationally: I saw them at a festival in Queensland last year! The kids loved it, they said it was quite funky and funny :-p

I also went to London in the weekend with my housemate E to see a concert (The Notwist, a German band who sings in English) It was kind of pop-electro-rock, I really liked it. Plus the venue was in a very studenty area. We then went to have a drink with some Italian friends of my housemates. Overall a good night except when we had to go back home… We had to wait for an hour at the station, so we had a nap sitting down on some flat lamps to keep us warm :-D


Admiring London by night...

Waiting for the Notwist concert to begin... This photo is for my sister xxxx

The week after I showed my students an article about Nicolas Sarkozy and Carla Bruni that had been written a year ago when they had just started going out. I was reassured to see that all my students except one knew who Sarkozy and Bruni were. We were able to talk about the 'gossipy' side of British culture and the fact that politics are more and more linked to fame and celebrity, in England and in France...

On the Thursday 27th of November it was my birthday, so before I went to bed on the Wednesday night at midnight my housemates knocked on my door and gave me a chocolate cake and a card!! How nice! I felt very lucky at that moment and went to bed with a smile on my face :-)

Yummm cake!

The next day I went to have some cocktails with my housemate K in Windsor, and then E and her cooked a delicious veggie gratin for me and even sticked a candle in it!

Cocktail time!

How cool are those hats hey?

And on the Fri night, we had a big 80s birthday party, it was a lot of fun!

Those vintage bubblegum machines are fascinating

All in 80s mode... ahahaha

The following Sunday night I went to London to go a Thanksgiving dinner organized by an American friend. There were quite a lot of people: Australians, Americans, Canadians, Lituanians, Swedish… And two British people. For a lot of us it was the first time we were celebrating Thanksgiving. Everyone had brought one thing, such as cornbread, cranberry sauce, salad, apple sauce, rice, stuffing, etc. We ate all of these as side dishes with the turkey that our friend had spent the afternoon cooking. Even I ate some and as a vegetarian I loved it! It was a lovely evening and I was glad to be part of it.


I went home quite early because the next morning I had to get up at 5am to leave for a school trip to… Paris! More in the next article... ;-)

Monday, 10 November 2008

A Scottish weekend


The Edinburgh castle

Last Thursday, I took the train in the afternoon to Edinburgh, Scotland. After a 4-hour trip I met up with F, my friend from Plymouth who had a 2-day training session there. I was quite impressed when I arrived and saw the castle sitting on a hill overlooking the city and many dark, old buildings… I dropped off my bag in a backpacker near the station and met up with an American friend of ours who studies in Edinburgh. We ate the most delicious Indian food! Then we went to a pub to have a drink with some Australian friends from London who were also visiting Edinburgh. I tasted one of the local beers (Caledonian) and it was not very tasty.


Edinburgh Old Town

On Fri I walked a bit in the Old Town, admiring the old buildings, the little dark streets, the touristy shops selling kilts, rugby shirts and cashmere scarves and playing recording of bagpipes. Then I decided to go to the nearby National Park and climb the mountain to go sit on Arthur's Seat, which is the highest point in the area. Once arrived on top, I had the most gorgeous view on the city and the sea. I sat down there for more than 30 mins, so impressed by the landscape… I was so happy it was sunny, I could see so far away!

View of Edinburgh from Arthur's Seat

Then I went down and decided to go to this bagel place my Lonely Planet guide recommended: Elephants and Bagels. It was near the university, so full of students. The food was yummy and the decorations very cute so if you ever go to Edinburgh you should totally check it out!

Cute drawings in "Elephants and Bagels"

My American friend joined me there and we went to have a walk in the Princes Street gardens, a park just under the castle. Needless to say, the park was lovely :-)

Princes Street Gardens

After a dinner in a pub with my friends I went to a Australian bar with F. We were overjoyed when we saw they had our favourite Australian beers that we couldn't find in France (or only in rare occasions and it cost us an arm), namely, Coopers Pale Ale, Coopers Sparkling (from South Australia) and James Boags (Tasmanian beer)!! The pub had big maps of different regions of Australia so that customers could pin the city they were from. Judging by the number of pins, there were a lot of aussies visiting Edinburgh!

Aussie beer anyone?

After the pub we went to an indie-rock music night in a club and had a really good time. It was kind of hard to get up the next morning, but we were excited about visiting the interior of the castle! It was quite expensive: no student discount so 10 pounds per person, with 3 pounds extra for the audioguide :-/ The visit was interesting, since the Edinburgh castle is quite different from the Windsor castle: it's darker, with a prison and lots of exhibits about war and weaponry. We had a good view from the city as well.

View of Edinburgh from the castle


Enough with the bagpipes!

We then went to a pub to taste some local food, so I was brave and had some vegetarian haggis with neeps and tatties (turnip puree and mashed potatoes). It was actually quite good, spicy and salty. The rest of the afternoon was spent in museums like the National Gallery and the City Art Centre to check out some Scottish paintings, some of which were remarkable. We also went to an exhibition on space, with Star Wars figurines, miniature robots, space Barbies and Kens, fun facts, and most of all, clothes you could try on like the costume of Buzz Lightyear from Toy Story (Buzz L’Eclair in French), Walle’s head or space outfits… With my friend F we tried on everything (well, not everything, since the clothes were made for kids, we couldn’t fit in some of them^^) and the guy in charge of the exhibition was laughing in a corner, hihi.

I know, I'm such a kid^^

In the evening F and I took the train to Newcastle Gateshead on the North East coast of England, about 1h30 from Edinburgh, to visit a friend from France who's been living there for the past 3 years. Apparently Newcastle's reputation is that of a party town, with plenty of bars and clubs to stay out until late... Which is exactly what we've done :-p
The next morning I managed to get up to go have a look at Newcastle's quayside with all the bridges crossing the river. One of them, the Millenium Bridge, is very modern and impressive; when boats need to go under it, the two parts of the bridge close as if it was the lid of an eye.

Newcastle

The Millenium Bridge and the Baltic museum in Newcastle

More bridges in Newcastle

I had enough time to go to the Baltic, a big industrial building which is now the contemporary arts museum. From the 5th floor I had an amazing view of the city (but unfortunately no photos were allowed) and I also saw several intriguing exhibits, such as one by Steve Mc Queen where you enter a huge room, plunged in darkness, and once your eyes get used to it, you can see that there are lots of mirrors where you can see yours and the other visitors' shadows, while little lights are projected on the walls and thumping and thundering noises fill the room and make children cry^^

After a brief walk I took the train back home. Strange experience to take the train for long trips like that, because people actually get drunk in the train! Indeed, it is illegal in England to drink on public transports such as buses and metros, but is legal in trains. So between Edinburgh and Newcastle, about a dozen of 20-something-year olds drunk at least 5 beers each (in only 90 mins!) and were being totally ignorant of the fact that they were travelling in a quiet coach. On my way back, this time 4 50-year old women were boozing on cheap wine and chuckling between two pretzels. I’ve got to say, and sorry for those who will think I'm being conservative or stuck-up, but I found that a bit disturbing that people were getting wasted in the train like that :-/
Anyway after a long trip I arrived home around 11pm, utterly exhausted! Luckily I had prepared my lessons for this week. I showed my students a video of French boys dancing tecktonik, this dance that became very popular last year among teenagers in France. For those who wouldn't have heard of it, it's quite funny to watch, here is the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYaZYmTwOxA

I showed my students a couple of articles explaining this trend and I was surprised to see how tolerant they were. I mean I'm pretty sure that French students would have burst out laughing in the first few seconds of the video, seeing the clothes the dancers were wearing and their weird disarticulated moves. But my students were watching attentively, and said things like it's very different from what we see in England, it's interesting, asking me if I knew some dance moves (God, no!!!), etc. My first student on Monday morning asked me out of the blue if I was going to come back next year, because she gets on with me and understands me well! So cute! I said I didn't know yet but that it was good that they changed assistants every year or every other year, it makes things more challenging and they can hear different accents and way of speaking.

Today I taught my primary school kids how to count, and when we started some games to check if they had understood and memorized the numbers, I realized they were confused between 2 and 12, which are ‘deux’ and ‘douze’ in French. Apparently they can’t hear the difference between the two sounds… Anyway it’s just one of the many examples to illustrate that I’m learning more everyday from my experience as an assistant and I’m glad I made this choice. Overall I had an awesome weekend and an interesting beginning of the week, even if I desperately need some sleep! ^^ Hope you are all well, drop me a line when you have the time :-)