Just in case you are wondering if we are still alive, yes, we are. Our laptop broke some days ago and we just need to catch up with writing and translating and uploading photos, so just hold on for a couple of days more and you will have everything about the roadtrip.
Thanks for waiting!
15 julio 2011
04 julio 2011
New York State and Boston
It's been a lot of days since we last posted. We could  apologize, but we won't. Instead, we're going to tell you what we.ve  been doing.
This will not be a normal post because  for the first time we won't write about one place: we'll mix a little of  everything that's been going on during the whole week.
First  NYC 2.0. The last thing we told you was that we had just moved to a  slightly shitty place. Well, now that some days have passed and we can  put it in perspective, we've decided to change our opinion: it was not  slightly lame, it was one of the shitties hostels we've ever been to.
Why  is it so shitty? You'll wonder. Well, we could start with the kitchen,  whose size was that of a wardrobe and which was taken by THE  INHABITANTS, those beings that populated the hostel and thet worked at  it in exchange of a bed to sleep in instead of a salary. They behaved as  if they were at home since they actually were and they made the rest of  us feel like instruders who could not sit in the few existing spots  because they were already reserved for them.
Let.s  continue with the bathrooms. Are you familiar with the feeling that if  you touch the wall or curtain while showering you'll end up with three  arms? that you'll get out of the shower dirtier than you got in? that  the mold on the curtains is so developped it says hello when you get  into the shower? Well, hen you're familiar with these kind of bathrooms.
Note  to family and friends: no gene mutations had taken place so far not  until the camping episode, at leats, but that's a different story).
To  continue with our NYC happiness, we look up on the internet chep places  to go out at night and we found these place where you could sign up via  email for a one-hour long open bar so we did. At night we dressed up a  little and took the subway, but in the place where the bar should be  there was a building of condos. Nothing else to say.
However,  we found a relly cool place to go out to redeem the value of the subway  tickets (really, what's wrong with them? $2 for a one-way ticket? come  on!). Its was full of cheap bars and eateries and most of them had a  really long happy hour that could last until 2am. It was 2nd Av from St  Mark's St down and St Mar's St between 3rd and 4th Av. There was this  Irish pub where we had some beers (not from a free open bar, but ind of  cheap too) and talked to the bouncer at the door, who, surprisingly, was  Irish.
And speaking about recommendations, we have  one more even though it doen't have much to do with this: you have to  try Sam's Falafel, a food stand right next to Wall St and Trinity  Church, in a square full of food stands. The falafel is so good and not  expensive at all (all the other stands were empty, but this one had a  bunch of newyorkers in suits waiting in a line for an to give them their  falafel).
We discovered something in NYC: at  Subway, the food place, there's always a monthly special for $5 and two  people can eat with that sub cause is quite big. Eating individual small  subs is much more expensive and the size is the same (the big one is  two times a small one).
Talking about different  things, while we were in NYC gay marriage was legalized, so New York  State is the sixth state to legalize it in the US.
We  tried to go to the pride parade, but it was Boston's parade while we  were in NYC and New York City's while we were in Boston, our next stop.
Let's talk about Boston, then. It was a nice surprise for us, eve though we had bittersweet feelings at first.
On  the one hand it was raining so bad and the sidewalks in Boston are very  messy, they're full of puddles and we felt as if we were trying to  cross the Charles River. However, we had to stop twice to ask for  directions and both times, the Bostonians stopped under the rain for as  long as necessary to take out their iphones and look up in the map how  to get to the place we were asking for.
The hostel  (Hostelling International) was more or less downtown and acceptable.  Just two bad things about it: th wifi did not exist and only worked  during our last night and we did not get beds in the same room because  "there were no coed dorms", but both our dorms were coed.
Boston,  even if it doesn't have an essential monument to visit, is a very  pleasant city (and everywhere is withing walking distance, which makes  it easy to get from one place to another).
Curious  fact: it has a trail which cover all the main points of the city. It's  called "Freedom Trail" and doesn't require a map, as a double row of red  bricks guide you through the city making you feel like Dorothy  following the yellow brick road throught the city where the American  revolition started.
Essential stop: Quincy Market,  an old market (part of the Freedom Trail) now full of food places where  you can buy food from every corner of the world and take it upstairs to  the second level to eat in one of the many little tables. Prices are  quite good and you can find from lobster to pizza, Asian food or  tex-mex. Besides, if you walk through the little street where the  McDonald's is (rught in the corner with Quincy Market) you can find lots  of bars with really cheap pints (between $2 and $3).
Culinary  recommendation: Mike's Patry, an Italian place in the main street of  the North End (the Bostonian Little Italy). You'll probably start seeing  people carrying boxes from Mike's Pastry as soon as you get to Boston  and you'll see the huge line outside the store (don't worry, it moves  quickly) with lots and lots of people thinking what cannoly to order,  because they have literaly all kinds.
We also walked  around Harvard and the MIT, where, by the way, we tried to find Noam  Chomsky's office, We didn' succeed, but instead we found the MIT  Quidditch Team, which not only celebrates Hary Potter trivia and gives  prizes to the house with most points, but also has weekly Quidditch  training. To all of you who don't know, the MIT stands out for having  most of the US' (and the world's) scientific and technological geniuses  (the inventor of the Campbell's soup, among them). And we insist,  ganiuses playing Quidditch, a sport for which you need flying brooms and  alive balls.
In Havard we wanted to meet the  expectations and the intellectual level, so we spend a while playing  cards in the comfy green grass while flipping out about the dorms,  schools and libraries.
Next day, the 28th, was a  milestone in our trip. we met Chuso and from then on we've always been  together. Chuso, short for Massachuso, is a white Hyundai Accent whose  name comes from the place his plate was created. He his a little  conceited and asthmatic (he suffocates when running uphill), but he is  just right for this trip, as his plate says "The Spirit of America" and  he has a huge trunk in which everything fits.
We  left Boston to go to Salem, the place of the big whitch hunt, but when  we got to park the car we were already so disappointed that we decided  to leave and go straight to Galway, where Nuria's American family waited  for us (and saying family is not too much, sices, as usual, they  treated us as if we were their actual children).
We  changed the plan and, instead of staying just one night and leaving the  next day to New England, decided to stay three days enjoying the family  life in the countryside. And we could not be happies that we changed our  plans. There are not enought thanks in the world to thank them for how  they have treated us and we just hope they visit Spain soon so that we  can do the same.
Culinary suggestions: Raindancer,  Barb's typical American breakfast, Rod's steak and white gravy,  absolutely EVERYTHING that comes out of the back yard (well, everything  but the garden snaked that chased us) and probably everything they had  prepared if we had stayed longer.
W take this  opportunity to wish a nice trip to Barb (who is moving to Colorado right  now), to tell Joy that we can send her the recipe for salmorejo if she  wants us to and to tell Becca and Rod and we'd like to get photos of the  new horse.
The stories about our first campings and  about us crossing the border for the first time will be in the next  post. We stop here to walk around Quebec city for the very first time.
(Miguel just about to be run over) 
(Awesome cupcakes in Quincy Market) 
(Quincy Market from the outside) 
(Moustache March Nuria) 
(Boston from the MIT, in Cambridge) 
(Barb, Nuria and Becca at Raindancer) 
(Rod playing with Bailey) 
(Becca next to the barn in the back yard) 
 (Miguel, Nuria, Beca, Bailey, Rond and Yankee)
30 junio 2011
New York, New York
Note:We wrote this a while ago (a week or so) but we haven't had a chance to upload it until now. We'll be writing again very soon (maybe today). Enjoy!
In our fourth night in NYC we hace finally decided to tell you what we've been up to lately.
We've spent the first three nights at the Crter Hotel, in Times Square (not close to or nearby, but in Times Square). It's quite decadent and it's seems like it's been taken straight out of an adventure movie full of policemen chasing the bad guys ecause of the long corridors, old sheets and fitted carpet. Anyways, it's worth the price if you think about the location. But don't expect daily sheet/towel changes or room service, not even a mirror in the bathroom (!!!).
In this case, as we're spending many days here and the city is widely known, were not telling what we've done but just giving some advice and elling weird stuff that has happened to us.
You know people from NYC are knwn for their loving to eat out, right? (Like Carrie Bradshaw had a kitchen at home but never used it). Well, it's true, they always eat out and there's a reason for that: getting food at a supermarket is way more expensive than getting it at a restaurant (a package of bread and meat for sandwiched can add up to $8 and eating out can cost $5). And that happens all day long, from the morning coffee and bagel stands to the night greek and arab food stands and including the thousand and one McDonald's, Subways, etc.
As a result, it's almost impossible to see someone in the street who is not carrying a cup of coffee/smoothie/ice cream/sandwich/bagel/muffin/paper bag with food inside.
Another weird thing is the Chinese expansion through NYC: not only Chinatown is Chinatown, now Little Italy, Nolita, the Soho and Tribeca are also Chinatown and we can only see the original signs and the little village feeling in the narrow streets of the original neighborhoods.
By the way, the names of the neighborhoods, for those of you who don't know, have a cool origin: SoHo stands for South of Houston St., Nolita is what there is North of Little Italy and Tribeca is the Triangle Below Canal St.
Yesterday we went to Broolyn: we crossed the river through the Brooklyn Bridge and walked around for a little, we bought some food in a not-so-expensive supermarket and we ate it in Brooklyn Bridge Park.
We wanted to eat in a park in front of the supermarket, which seemed nice at first. And we say at first cause after that we realized there were a lot of NYPD cameras around it and NYPD signs and there were several policemen around the park at the door of some stores and the pople looked really weird when you looked at them closely so we diceded to go have lunch somewhere else. This somewhere else turned out to be Brooklyn Bridge Park, which is a really nice park righ next to the Hudson River from which you can see Manhattan and the bridge. There were kids playing with their feet in the water, a couple of Asian newlyweds taking pics at the beach. There was also a family of orthodox jewish who would not take off the thick tights of their little girls for them to put their feet into the water (their put them in the water anyways).
Curious fact: in NYC tha Starbucks and McDonald's have wifi without a password wich can be used even if you are quite far from them. There's also free wifi in public places such as Times Square.
And last but not least some recommendations for those of you who are planning on visiting NYC:
–                   Eileen's, in 17 Cleveland Place. Kenmare St. wth Centre St. (Little Italy). It has the best cheesecake in NYC and it's cheapper than some other places that claim to have the best one. There's no restroom and there are only a couple of tables. It's also really small and not very easy to find.
–                   Big Daddy's, it's an American lunch and dining place. The hamburgers are soooo good, but there's also sandwiches, mac and cheese and smoothies (the Oreo smoothie is the best we've ever tried).
–                   The prices of the food from the street food stands can change a lot from one another, it's good to walk around for a while and compare the prices before choosing one.
We just moved today to a quite weird hostel in the Upper East Side, so we'll tell about it in the next post.
(The Flatiron Building) 
(Brooklyn Bridge)
(Restaurant tables where the skating rink is during the winter)
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