Sunday, September 23, 2012

Buying a Bolognese Bici


             I have officially been living here for a month now! I had been toying with the idea of buying a bike since I got here 4 weeks ago, and I realized how incredibly convenient/fun/awesome it would be to bike around Italy. In Bologna one has a few options for bike purchase. One is to buy a used bike from a bike dealer, of which there are many in Bologna. These tend to run around 50-60 euro.
            The cheapest and most immediate fix is to buy a stolen bike. Bicycle theft is a serious problem in Bologna, and the city is actually sort of infamous for it. Stolen bikes run dirt-cheap, but since bicycle theft is a business here, buying a stolen bike increases greatly the chance that your bike will be stolen back from you. Also, when you go to buy a stolen bike, you can’t really tell ahead of time who you’re mixing it up with.
            Since I’m not here in Bologna permanently, and since theft is such a huge likelihood, I didn’t want to spend too much money on my bike. Despite the fact that it’s very common here, I was also a little uneasy about going with the stolen-bike option. My friend Noelle (who was also intent on owning a bike) found out from her roommate about a bike auction that occurs every year in Piazza Maggiore. The bikes are auctioned by an organization that fixes up abandoned bicycles (just like Blackstone Bikes) and sells them legally in order to combat the serious bike theft problem in Bologna.
            In this auction, though, the bike doesn’t go to the highest bidder. The bikes are sold to whoever manages to get the attention of the auctioneer. Thus, I donned my purple bath-towel as a cape and bought a pair of blue antenna-things from the one-euro store. I brought along pots and pans to make noise with, and Noelle carried a sign that said “Cerco una bici: Aiutami!” (I’m looking for a bike: help me!) Both Noelle and I were fortunate enough to be seen by the auctioneer, so we both walked away with 30-euro, legally-purchased bikes. Tomorrow after class we’re going to take the money we saved and buy some high-quality locks in the hopes that our bikes don’t become part of the theft-ring.

You can see us being crazy in this video:



Just look for the girl with the sunflowers who is jumping up and down like a mad woman. That would be Noelle.

Agriturismo, Ravenna, and other highlights

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So, it looks like I left off with the pipistrello in my last post, which was two whole weeks ago! The last two weeks have been absolutely jam-packed, so it’s going to be a struggle to get everything down in this one post, but I’ll try.

I’ll start off with Wednesday the 12th. This was an amazing day. In the morning, we had a guided tour of some specific historical sites in Bologna. My personal favorite was the Teatro Anatomico, where UniBo medical students used to watch dissections take place. The room is made entirely of wood, which we were told was because it acts as a perfume that makes the room smell better after all the dead bodies. And you thought you were going to be reading about fine wines and pasta. Don't worry, you will!

Teatro Anatomico. (Photo credit to Alexandra Utter)
           After our tour of Bologna, we participated in a little “agriturismo” (agro-tourism) courtesy of our program. They bussed us up a big hill to a beautiful vineyard with the most amazing views of the countryside.


Le ragazze di Chicago (Photo Credits top and bottom to the IU-BCSP Facebook page)

Then we had a tour of the vineyard and learned how wine was made. After that, we learned to make fresh pasta of all different types, including tortellini. I finally figured out that tortelloni and tortellini are the same thing, it’s just that tortelloni are larger. Duh!

Friday was also pretty sweet. Instead of having our normal morning Italian class, we went and had a picnic at a park on hill overlooking Bologna. It was something of a hike but the views were so worth it.

Check these out: 

Dear Mom, I had this picture taken just for you! That's Bolognese Queen Anne's lace I'm holding.

Saturday was our trip to Ravenna! Ravenna is another medieval city (like Bologna) that is about an hour away by train. It is a city of great art-historical significance, because it has a number of well-preserved early Christian mosaics and architecture of Byzantine influence. I had first learned of Ravenna way back in junior-year of high school, so it was great to get to see the stuff in person.

Also, Dante is buried in Ravenna. That's right. Dante. 





            Another highlight that comes to mind is Wednesday of this past week. We didn’t have class in the morning, which meant that I got to hang out at Cindy’s apartment and watch Harry Potter dubbed in Italian on Tuesday night. In the afternoon, we went to a (truthfully, very boring) meeting for Americans studying in Bologna. After that, though, we went to the Sala Borsa library for a tour of the Sala Borsa Roman ruins.
            The Sala Borsa library is Bologna’s public library. I had gotten my library card about a week before this, but I had yet to actually set foot in the building.
            So, no big deal or anything, but the Sala Borsa library is built on top of Ancient Roman ruins. The floors on the ground floor are transparent, allowing visitors to see the ruins below their feet. You can also take a tour below ground to see the ruins up-close. 


P.S: Pictures are worth a thousand words! Here is a link to my flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/hfdavis/

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

The Pipistrello and other things that have happened recently.




            Last night was the first night that I slept in my new Bolognese apartment! I was super excited because I was kind of sick of living in the hotel and I was ready to have a place to call home. Finally having my own space also helped me deal with the reality that I’m actually going to be living here for a year. The hotel kind of felt like summer camp: just a group of rowdy Americans having a fantastic time away from home. This feels more real, more permanent.
            Ok. Before I get all deep and philosophical, on to the actual story. In the weeks preceding my move to Bologna, my mom and I battled a series of bats in our house in Rochester. Our neighbors had a colony living in their attic, so having a bat in the house became a pretty regular occurrence.
            Another important aspect to this story is that my mom and I both have a (kind of irrational) fear of bats. As my dad says, they’re just mice, but I still get pretty freaked every time I see one. It’s pretty serious. On one occasion, I drove the 20 minutes to my dad’s house at midnight to escape a bat. Another time, my mom and I slept in our living room because we were convinced that there was a bat flying around upstairs. So there you go, a full description of my chiroptophobia (fear of bats, I Wikipedia-ed it)
            In short, I spent my last two weeks at home in Rochester being freaked out that every night at dusk a bat would come swooping in. But, since I’ve had so much going on the last two weeks in Italy, I altogether forgot about the bat problem back in Rochester. It’s super hot in Bologna, so when we had our windows wide open in the apartment last night, I didn’t think twice about it. My roommates and I were just casually watching “The Big Bang Theory” on TV when Monica screamed and shouted “pipistrello!” I looked up and realized that there was a bat swooping around our kitchen/living area. After a few screams and shouts of “che schifo!” (how gross!) we all managed to shut ourselves into mine and Monica’s room.
            Once we were safe, I double-checked with my roommate what a bat is called in Italian. Yes, it’s true, the name for “bat” in Italian is “pipistrello.” This in and of itself made the situation much lighter and easier. It also made for an instant bonding experience for my new roommates and me.
            This evening my roommates came home with a candle to put in the open window. Hopefully this will work, since window screens aren’t really used here like they are in the US!
            So, I guess what I learned from this is that you really can’t escape your fears by moving across the planet. Huh.

On a lighter note, here are a few photos of the apartment like I promised! 

 Kitchen/living area.
 My bed! 
View from my bedroom window. Holla.
Shopped with my friend Jessica at IKEA. She was as enthusiastic as I was. (which was very.)

A lot else has happened. On Sunday, Noelle, Cindy and I went to a seaside town called Rimini that is about a 1.5 hour train ride from Bologna. It was beautiful, and I got to swim in the Mediterranean! Awesome. I don’t have a bucket list really, but if I did I probably would have just checked that item off of it.



 My beach reading material.
Cindy's beach reading material. Fifty Shades of Grey, in case you couldn't tell.

Friday, September 7, 2012

House-Hunting in Bologna: A Saga



            This is about to be a novel. Just so y’all are prepared.

            To explain: The exchange program that I’m in Bologna with requires that we live with Italian students in order to have an authentic Italian university experience. This aspect of the program is one of the reasons it stood out to me amongst all the other UChicago study abroad programs in the first place. UniBo doesn’t have dorms or a housing system like American schools do, so all the students live in apartments.
            Had I stayed in Chicago, I would have moved out of my beloved house (Breck shout-out!) and into an apartment for my 3rd year. However, it’s not exactly the same as finding an apartment would have been back in Hyde Park. At UChicago, I would have gotten together with a group of friends and we would have looked for an empty apartment all together. In Bologna, we instead had to find a group of already existing roommates already all settled in an apartment. The whole process was centered on whether or not a group of Italians wanted you to live with them. Thus, with each apartment I saw, I became less focused on the location and dishwashers and laundry and more on the roommates. My hotel roommate Jackie categorized apartment hunting with job interviews: essentially you are trying to impress your potential roommates like you would a potential employer.
            The process started last Tuesday, when we had a meeting about housing with BCSP. Before coming to Bologna, I was a little worried that being with the BCSP would be too much structure, but man was I glad I had them during the apartment search. Our resident director peoples basically supplied us with a ton of insider tips and experience that made the process a lot easier and faster than it would have been had I done it alone. After the meeting, we pretty much immediately started making phone calls. Calling strangers doesn’t make me very nervous anymore (thank you, UChicago Telefund) but I didn’t take into account how much more difficult it is to understand a different language over the phone. After about 4 or 5 incredibly confusing calls I miraculously stumbled into my first appointment, which was to occur the following afternoon with a student named Vincenzo. 
This is an example of an "annunci." I spent a lot of time pulling numbers off of these during my search. The word "Erasmus" is synonymous with a foreign or exchange student.
 
            I ended up really liking the first place, but I decided to wait and see a few more before telling Vincenzo I was interested. The next two were okay, but I still liked Vincenzo’s the best so I followed protocol and called him back. During the tour/interview I had explained in rather poor Italian that I didn’t know anyone in Bologna so I was looking for friends as well as roommates. Desperate, right? Apparently he understood me though, because he invited me to get drinks with him and his friends last Saturday. They were all super nice and we had a great time.
            You might think now that this story ends with me living in Vincenzo’s apartment. His apartment had two beds in a “doppia,” and as it turned out, he was interested in filling both at once. Noelle and I considered living there together, but in the end we decided that we didn’t want be tempted into cheating on speaking only Italian. So, I didn’t get the first place. After last weekend, I kicked it into high gear and started seeing 4, 5, sometimes 6 places in a day. It was lots more walking that I’ve ever done, and I got myself some pretty hardcore blisters in the process. There were definitely advantages to the process though. I learned how to ride the bus, which apparently all these rural Indiana University kids are afraid to do, so I felt pretty hip. Also, it’s definitely true that you learn the geography of a city really fast when you have to walk clear across it a few times per day.
            Our hotel reservation is up tomorrow (Saturday) so when I still didn’t have a place on Thursday morning I was getting pretty stressed out. One of the toughest aspects of the whole process was that it occupied my thoughts and the conversations that I had with other students from BCSP constantly. For a few days there, it felt like I couldn’t escape the stress of apartment hunting, whether it was mine or someone else’s. I had an enormous streak of bad luck, and in three days of near constant searching I only saw one place I liked, which ended up being taken first by another student.
            Finally, on Thursday evening, when I was starting to get seriously worried that I would be homeless in a foreign country in a matter of hours, I had an interview (let’s call it like it is) that went really well. There were three girls living in the apartment, and I met two of them. They were really nice and calm, and so I told them on the spot that I was interested. Later that night, I had to work on a group presentation with some other BCSP students (by the way, our classes started this week! Somehow that ended up on a back burner) so I went the grocery store with my friend Molly to get some salami (no, not bologna) and cheese to snack on while we worked. At the store, I got a text that from my future roommate, Monica, that said “noi farebbe piacere averti come conquillina” which basically means “we’d love to have you as a roommate!” Then Molly bought me a Kinder Bueno bar to celebrate.
            So, starting Monday, I’m living with three girls named Monica, Elisa, and Giorgia. The apartment is awesome. It’s in an attic so it’s tiny, but it has a cool loft space that serves as one of the bedrooms, and great views of the red roofs from the windows. It’ll be about a 20-minute walk to most of my classes, and I’m planning to buy a used bike. I’ll post pictures of the apartment sometime next week!

 A nice arial shot of my new hood.


            P.S. I apologize if the written English in this blog is of a rather low quality. It's really difficult to switch between languages, and I've noticed that sometimes I have actual trouble coming up with simple English words. I'm not making this up...the other Americans here have reported similar side effects of bilingualism! 
           
           P.P.S. The craziest thing happened this week. Noelle and I ran into (here in Bologna) another student from our UChicago Italian class named Antonio. We had no idea he was planning to be in Bologna this summer. Wednesday night we went out to a bar with BCSP peeps and there he was, sitting at the table next to us! Small world!