Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Weekend Adventures

I’m sorry for my blogging absence, it’s been a very busy last few weeks!  Two weekends ago I needed to renew my visa, which means leaving the country for neighboring Georgia.  Why must it be Georgia, you say?  Well, the borders with Turkey to the east and Azerbaijan to the west are both currently closed (more on that in a bit), and my American passport won’t help me get into neighboring Iran to the south.  So that leaves Georgia!  It just so happened to also be a four day weekend so my friends and I had a spontaneous adventure to the Black Sea and the city of Batumi.  (I’ve been four months without an ocean so the withdrawals were beginning.)  Here are a few of the highlights:

  Of three nights away, two were spent in a moving vehicle (bus and train).  Everyone should at least take one overnight bus trip during their life.  It’s serious character building.

  My mom taught me from a young age that free stuff is great.  This inspired us to sneak ourselves into a tourism conference at the Sheraton, Batumi.  The man dishing out coffee samples knew we were frauds so he made us pay, but we did manage to score some awesome free food samples. 

  We scaled an old Roman fortress.

And I posed with the weapons.

  I got my feet wet in a new body of water!

 •  We took part in the age old tradition of the Tbilisi sulfur baths.  This experience involved getting naked, soaking in the scalding hot water while enjoying the rotten egg aroma.  Then we got scrubbed down by an old Georgian woman.  My skin has never been so soft.

Then last weekend I went on a four day trip with Birthright to Nagorno-Karabakh, or Artsakh, as Armenia calls it.  If you plug Nagorno-Karabakh Republic into Google Maps you’ll be taken to the western part of Azerbaijan, but after years of war in the early ‘90s, Armenia now claims the territory as its own.  The war is the reason for the current border closures with Azerbaijan and Turkey.  At present, a ceasefire signed in 1994 rules the region, but all peace talks in the last 20 years have thus far failed.  Today both sides play the waiting game and it’s difficult to imagine them reaching a compromise in the near future.  I’ve had my own established opinions of the conflict, but it was an important experience to visit the region myself, interact with people who had fought in the war, see the destruction which took place, and walk in the trenches (literally).  I can’t say that my opinions have changed, but I feel I have a better idea of where Armenians’ motivations and views stem from, which feels good.  Here are some other highlights from the weekend:

  Did you know?  Armenia is home to the world’s longest reversible aerial tramway.  Now there’s an important fact!  But really, this cable car is an incredible feat of engineering (thank you, Switzerland) which allows for year-round access to Tatev Monastery.  I’ve seen my fair share of monasteries in Armenia, but this was by far the most impressive!  Perched amongst the mountains it’s easy to think that when the monastery was originally established in the 9th century the builders felt closest to God at this location.


  I almost lost my Red Sox hat.  Twice.  Both times I was reunited with this prized possession by my friend’s dad who had come along on the trip.  I had found peace in knowing that Red Sox Nation had made it to an unrecognized republic, but it certainly was good to get it back.

  I almost had a panic attack on the shakiest shaky bridge ever!

  I was short enough that I could stand up straight while walk through the trenches on the Armenian front line without the fear that an Azerbaijani sniper would see my head over the top.  I spied through a tiny crack past no man’s land to the other side.  (Birthright has a longstanding relationship with the military in Artsakh to allow us to visit the front lines.  Sorry, no pictures allowed.)


It’s certainly been an eventful last few weeks.  Last week I finished work at AUA because the semester is over and there are no longer students to tutor.  So now I’m splitting my time between AEN and another environmental organization, FPWC (Fund for the Protection of Wildlife and Cultural Assets).  They’ll be a test on these acronyms upon my return!

Contrary to what these pictures might show, I do have more than one pair of pants...

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