For Thanksgiving we decided to go to Madrid. "We" being my flatmates (Hannah, Kathy, Marti, and Clara) as well as our friends Ali, Alice, and Alison (apparently these names were popular the year we were born). We left Wednesday afternoon at about 4:50 and after a three or four hour flight, we got to Madrid at about 9. On the plane for some reason they had me down as needing a kosher meal, which everyone except the flight attendants found hilarious. It was delicious and included apple sauce, which was wonderful. It took us a while to check in, and we ended up going to bed pretty early because traveling really tires me out at least. A note about where we were staying. It was in an excellent location, very close to everything. The Plaza Mayor just a few blocks away in one direction, and the Prado not that much further in the other direction. The rooms that we stayed in though, was a shared room of 14. Staying with 10 people you don't know is an experience. They were nice for the most part (in fact we made a friend from New Zealand who was in our room!) but 14 people is a lot, and when people snore it makes it difficult for people (like me) to sleep. We got breakfast at the hostel though on the plus side!
Thursday morning we decided to go visit the Palacio Real (the Royal Palace). Unfortunately, we could not take photos inside of the palace. It was really a shame because the palace was such a cool place. Every room was distinct and exquisite. I'm sure that just the carpet in each room cost more than all four years of my college education put together. And there were quite a few rooms. The Palace was first lived in by King Carlos III, and he had a room for everything. Including the room that he would eat lunch in. Why you would waste a whole room just to be used to eat lunch in is beyond me, but that room I'm pretty sure is about the size of our apartment. After we left the Palacio Real we went to get a lunch of Churros con chocolate which is basically a huge plate full of churros and a mug of melted chocolate. We poured powered sugar on them and dipped them in the chocolate. It was delicious, but afterward, I'm pretty sure that everyone had a stomach ache. W

e walked around a bit after that and found this little market that sold interesting foods. It was a little overpriced, but all the food that we had there was delicious. After the market, we went to go find the soccer stadiums and see if there were any games in the next few days that we could go to. First we went to the Athletico Madrid stadium, there was a game on Saturday night, but they weren't selling tickets yet though, so we left and went to the Real Madrid stadium (Real here means Royal, not like the actual Madrid team). If anyone knows anything about Spanish soccer you would know that the Real Madrid team is the bigger team that the superstars are on. They did not have a game coming up, except the game versus Barcelona, which would not only be huge and therefore expensive, but it was also on Monday night, 2 nights after we would leave (update: Real Madrid lost 5-0). We checked out the store and some of the girls I was with were fans, so they bought stuff. We headed back to the hostel, noticing on the way that there was a flyer from TGIFridays that they were having a Thanksgiving dinner. A couple of us got really excited. When we got back to the hostel it was naptime, or for me, resear

ching where we could have a Thanksgiving dinner. When I was looking up things, somehow I found a thread on like Yahoo Answers in which someone was criticizing people who were looking for Thanksgiving dinners in countries that are not the United States.
As a sidenote/tirade, I think that is a bit unfair. We have been out of the countries for months and are getting to that point where we are getting ready to go home, and this meal is usually spent with family. I understand kinda where they are coming from, but every once in a while one just needs a little bit of comfort, especially for a holiday that usually is steeped in family tradition, and knowing that everyone we love is together, we wanted to feel still apart of that tradition, and even though we were in Spain, we would be there for several more days, in which we would have plenty of time to eat traditional Spanish food.
Tirade over. Clara and I decided to go to find a TGIFridays to find some pumpkin pie and possibly some turkey. We had a lovely walk around Madrid on our way to find one. We wandered all over the city and got to know charming side-streets (in other words, we had no idea where we were going). We eventually found the restaurant, but there was a half hour wait, and the turkey looked kinda gross, so we asked if they could just give us some pumpkin pie to go. No go. So we headed up the street and found a KFC where we had chicken and pretended it was turkey, and some mashed potatoes. For desert, we got Ben and Jerry's ice cream. It was delicious. We went back to the hostel, watched a movie, and went to bed.
Friday morning we woke up, had breakfast, and headed to the Prado. The Prado, for all who don't know, is a huge art museum that houses several famous pieces of artwork. We saw some Goya art, including a piece that we have seen in like every class here of Kronos eating his children. It was lovely. After several wonderful hours we left and found this really good restaurant that served sandwiches for super cheap. After this delicious lunch we went to the hostel to drop off our shopping bags and look up directions to a cable-car that Kathy had heard about from a friend who is studying abroad in Madrid. We found out where it is, and we went. Unfortunately, by the time we

arrived it was closed. We walked a couple blocks down to an Egyptian temple that the Egyptian government moved to Spain to thank them for something that they did once. So, there is just an Egyptian temple in the middle of Madrid. It was really cool. We could go inside of it and take pictures and touch the wall inscriptions. It was awesome. We got there around sunset, which is the time that all the guide books say to go. The sun was setting over a valley and we could see the Palacio Real and it was beautiful. We headed back to the hostel and met up with the rest of the group as we had split up because going around with 8 or 9 girls is kinda too big of a group. We went out for dinner at around 8:30, and it was lovely and a lengthy affair. By the time we got back it was getting late, so Clara and I watched Monsters Inc and fell asleep.
The next morning Clara, Kathy, and I had planned out hour for hour what we would be doing and surprisingly we stayed exactly on time and had a wonderful day. We woke up and by 10 we were at the Reina Sofia which is the biggest modern art museum in Madrid. We saw lots of Picasso and Dali. It was so cool to see some of the work that I have only seen in pictures my whole life. For example, we saw that really famous Picasso, the one that shows the Spanish Civil war and it's impacts with people cut in half, women crying, and half a cow. You would know what I'm talking about if you saw it. After we left the Reina Sofia we went to the Naval museum to meet up with the rest of the group. Mom had recommended this museum highly and so I decided to check it out, and the rest of the group decided that it sounded like the most interesting museum in Madrid.

It was pretty interesting. I don't know that much about the Spanish Navy, so it was kinda difficult to understand who all the men in the paintings were, but I still really enjoyed the museum. It was very well done. We spent about an hour there in total, which still kept us exactly on our schedule. Everyone had finished at the museum by the time Kathy, Clara, and I got there, so they went to lunch. We decided that we would meet them at the Crystal Palace that is in the middle of Retiro Park, which was only a couple blocks from the museum. On the way there we passed beautiful sights such as a lake that people we paddling in. I feel this is an appropriate time to mention the weather. The weather was... colder than Athens. That isn't saying much, as Athens still gets up to 75 everyday. I am glad I brought my coat and my hat to Madrid because it was cold. It felt like fall, and going through the park, it really felt like Thanksgiving. We found the Crystal Palace was easy to find, and there wasn't much to see. It was beautiful, but there was nothing inside and it was kinda just a conservatory. So we finished with that pretty quickly and were waiting for the others and we noticed another palace looking thing not that far from the Crystal Palace, so we decided to check it out. It was an exhibition of photos that a man took of birds. It was really well done. I know it sounds like "Oh. Birds... cool." But I can't even describe what this guy did. We like somehow had two separate focuses in the photos, the bird,

and usually something in the distance like mountains. Like I said, I can't even describe it. We left the exhibition, but there was still no sign of them, so we called them and they hadn't even gotten their check for their lunch, so they told us just to go on without them. We walked to a metro station and came across a bakery that we picked our lunch up at. It was good. We then took the metro to the cable-car that we couldn't get to the day before. Success this time! We bought a round trip ticket and enjoyed the view. The cable-car went over a park and you could see mountains in the distance as well as the old city of Madrid. It was really nice. There was a commentary but it was in Spanish, so we didn't pay attention. When we reached the other side we told them that we wanted a round trip, and we didn't want to get out. Kathy handed the attendant a receipt to a ham sandwich, to the hilarity of all. We went back the way we came, and this time the commentary was in English. It was super bizarre. It must have been aimed at children as it was completely in the first person. We enjoyed the ride and the commentary, and then took a metro back to the center of town to do some souvenir shopping, which we had neglected the whole trip, and as we were leaving early the next morning, we did our needed shopping, and more, and went back through the plaza Mayor and saw the Christmas village all lit up at night with Christmas lights. It was lovely. One may think that this is the end of my day. Not at all. At 8, we went to dinner at a pretty nice restaurant for Hannah's birthday. The food was really good and pretty cheap, especially because it was a Tapas, but the waiter that we had was not very nice. Moving on, the food was cheap! Hannah, Kathy, and I split 5 appetizers for dinner and we each had to pay only $7.60. That included desert as well! After we finished up dinner and figured out the bill we had yet another thing to do that evening even though by this time it was after 10. We were going to a Spanish soccer game! We went to the above stated Athletico Madrid game. They were facing Espanol. They lost. It was fun to be there though and see how seriously everyone took it. I guess it is pretty comparable to how seriously I take baseball. It was fun. I stayed warm as I had 5 long sleeved shirts, sweaters, and jackets on, as well as a hat. Everyone else by the time we left were Popsicles, but I was fine. Also, unfortunately, my camera battery died at this point so no more pictures after this point. We got back to the hostel at 12:30 and were the first people back in out 14 person room, so we finished Monster's Inc and fell asleep before anyone got back.
The next morning our plane left at 11:40. Even though we would have to leave the hostel at about 9 in order to get to the airport on time Kathy, Ali, and I decided to go to a flea market that we have heard lots of good things about that opened at 8:30 and we figured that if we left it at 9, we could still get to the airport on time. The flea market was interesting. It reminded me of the flea market that we went to last summer in Okoboji, only since this one was just opening, it was smaller, and nothing interesting had been brought out yet. It was still worth going to, because I figure that if I didn't go I would forever regret not checking it out. We went back to the hostel to gran our bags and made our way to the airport. We got to the airport at 11 and the line for security was huge. We were sweating a little bit, so after security we ran all the way to our gate as walking it would take 10 minutes. By the time we got there... they weren't even loading. Then I felt like a jerk for pushing past all those people on the moving sidewalk. Oops! We got on the plane, I got my kosher meal, and we got back to Athens just as the sun was setting. Overall, a very good trip.
Sorry this post was so long! There was just so much to write about!