UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH BLOGS

The Office of Undergraduate Research sponsors a number of grant programs, including the Circumnavigator Club Foundation’s Around-the-World Study Grant and the Undergraduate Research Grant. Some of the students on these grants end up traveling and having a variety of amazing experiences. We wanted to give some of them the opportunity to share these experiences with the broader public. It is our hope that this opportunity to blog will deepen the experiences for these students by giving them a forum for reflection; we also hope these blogs can help open the eyes of others to those reflections/experiences as well. Through these blogs, perhaps we all can enjoy the ride as much as they will.

Esquel, Trevelin: la preciosa Patagonia (an unparalleled kind of peace)

Hello there! 

I know, it’s been a while since my last post. Between being busy with work and interviews, the chaos of travel, and the rapidly approaching end of my trip, I’ve found it difficult to sit down and write a long blog entry. But I would be remiss if I didn’t get to tell you about my second stop in Argentina.

Patagonia was everything I hoped it would be, and more. Upon arriving at the Esquel airport, which is a one-room wooden building with probably five total employees, I was immediately confronted with some of the logistical troubles I knew I might find in a more remote area. There is no Uber, for example, and I almost got stuck in the airport because I didn’t have enough cash for a taxi. The town I was staying in, Trevelin, is about 45 minutes from the airport, and as small as Esquel may have seemed as I drove through, Trevelin is even smaller. It consists of one long road lined with supermarkets and the occasional restaurants, one roundabout, a school, a soccer field, and a tennis court. And that’s pretty much it. The houses are dramatically framed by the cragged peaks of the Andes no matter which direction you look; it’s so close to Chile you can probably see the border, which runs through the mountain range. Trevelin is known for its beautiful setting, of course, its distinct Welsh history (pretty rare in Latin America), and its stunning tulip fields that bloom every October. In August, however, it’s bitingly cold — it snowed the morning my plane landed — and quiet. I was probably the only tourist the week I was there, and definitely the only foreigner. For me, it was perfect. 

The view of the Andes from just outside Trevelin.

You might be able to tell from some of my last blog posts, but I have been craving time away from a fast-paced city for some a while now. I’ll admit, it isn’t always easy to get around without the infrastructure of public transportation. And almost nothing has information online — if you want to know how to get around, you have to ask. During my first few days, I felt a little stuck. But spending time in a small town where you speak the language lends the wonderful gift of building relationships with strangers: my taxi driver, the cashier at the grocery store, the waitress at the Welsh tea shop, the mother and daughter who run the travel agency. By the time I left, I was actually waving to people on the street and chatting with acquaintances on the bus. All these generous strangers helped me find my way around and gave me the confidence to approach these logistical challenges with curiosity and grace.

The view of Cerro Calfu Mahuida from the hills above Esquel.

My first excursion out of Trevelin happened almost by accident. I was trying to catch the bus to the nearby Los Alerces National Park, which suffered wildfires earlier this year, but slept in and missed it (in my defense, the bus left at 6:45 AM). Slightly deflated, I decided to take the bus to Esquel instead and figure out my day as I went. As I looked out my window at the mountains towering in the distance, I was inspired to open AllTrails on my phone and found that some beautiful hikes started not too far from town. I hiked almost 17 miles — from the bus station, up the hill to Laguna La Zeta, and back through the parks of Esquel to Laguna Willmanco. I truly don’t have words to describe how awe-inspiring the views were. Since I hadn’t expected to be hiking at all that day, I had worn boots (not my walking shoes) and my last clean pair of pants, which happened to be the slacks I usually reserve for formal interviews. However, the scenery made me pulse with adrenaline to the point that my feet didn’t even ache until I got home that night. Stunning mountains, lakes as clear as mirrors, and green-blue-grey shrubs that remind me of the textured greenery of Northern California. I’m including some pictures here, but trust me, they don’t do it justice. 

Laguna La Zeta. Look at those clouds!

Another view of Calfu Mahuida, this time from Laguna Willmanco.

The next day, I actually did make it to Los Alerces. Part of my dilemma was how best to see and learn more about the park: while there is a bus, it runs only twice a week and will only take you to one stop, and renting a taxi for the day is very expensive. I ultimately decided to take part in a group tour. Not only did it allow me to see much more of Los Alerces and learn about its history, but I was able to talk with the other Argentinians on the tour about how wildfires impact their lives. I might have been the youngest of our group by at least 40 years, but it was a joy to hike, drive, and test my Spanish nature/science vocabulary throughout the 8-hour journey through the park. We saw wild flamingos, glaciers, ancient cave paintings, waterfalls, and an emerald-green lake.

The views driving into Los Alerces NP (flamingos are hiding, but there, I promise).

Even better, my guide gave me tips on how to catch the bus the next morning to explore Cerro El Dedal, the highest peak you can climb during the winter. It’s about 7 miles round trip with over 3000ft of elevation in the first 3 miles, but oh boy, the views of the park in the morning light made it far worth the effort. My only regret was not bringing snow shoes: above the tree line, I had to dig my sneakers into the snow to make my way up the peak!

On the way up El Dedal….

…and near the summit! This panorama made my soggy shoes worth it.

I will be forever grateful for the peace this beautiful little town gave me. Not only did it surpass my already high expectations for Patagonia’s scenery, but it grew my travel confidence and helped me prove to myself that I’m more than capable of getting myself from point A to point B. These lessons have already been invaluable in Brazil, a similarly untouristy city where I don’t speak the language at all. Seeing all the natural beauty — including the miles of burnt trees — was a powerful reminder of my admiration for the people and places threatened by climate disaster. It was the ultimate adventure, and I loved every minute of it. 

Calfu Mahuida again. Can you tell I was a fan of this mountain?

Thank you, Trevelin!

Buenos Aires: tranqui, lindo, copado, etc

Saludos desde Buenos Aires!

I have to admit, arriving in my second-to-last country was pretty surreal. After one of my longest travel day(s), I was so relieved to arrive safely in Argentina that I could barely process how close I was to the end of this journey. As excited as I have been over the last few months, I’ve been anxious, too: worried that I’ll lose my bag, miss my flight, or otherwise shoot myself in the foot and somehow ruin this trip. The trek across the Atlantic was one I had been extra apprehensive about. Completing this milestone felt like a weight lifted from my shoulders; and yet, settling into my apartment in Argentina still felt bittersweet. I’m trying to keep living in the moment — no use mourning something before it’s gone! And this city has given me many ways to make the most of my time here. 

Although I did not study abroad in college, the program I most seriously considered was based in Buenos Aires. I remember deciding against it in part because I didn’t think I would like this city that much — I could not have been more wrong. The first thing I noticed was how quiet it is, so quiet you can hear people talking from the other side of the street. Maybe it’s the season, but sometimes the streets feel almost jarringly empty. I have to admit, I liked it — it’s nice to be in a city without the chaotic hustle that usually accompanies one. The other observation that surprised me is how closely the architecture resembles a traditional European city: cream-colored buildings with dark accented balconies, decorative domed roofs, curved windows that felt straight out of an Art Nouveau poster. The neighborhood I am staying in, Recoleta, is particularly Parisian in character, a stylistic choice punctuated by the traditional French cemetery at its center. I spent my first day exploring the cafes and pastelerías around my apartment. I was overjoyed to find alfajores (one of my favorite cookies) in nearly every cafe and made a game of trying as many as I can before I leave Argentina. I also discovered that Argentinians have managed to one-up the French with medialunas, a pastry that resembles a croissant but with more brioche-like dough — this may be a hot take, but I couldn’t get enough of them! That afternoon, I wandered around the famous cemetery and the artist market outside, where I chatted with vendors while grabbing gifts for my family. I was a bit worried my language abilities would fail me, but it’s actually been a relief to speak in Spanish, even if I know I’m occasionally fumbling my words. I already regret not being able to stay longer in a Spanish-speaking country to keep working on my language skills. A goal for the future, I hope!

The Cementerio de la Recoleta gave me some serious déjà vu for the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, France.

 

Choripan in San Telmo. Sorry for the blurry picture, I was hungry!

On Sunday, I made my way across town to San Telmo, another neighborhood known for its weekend market and food hall. This market was several blocks long; vendor tents were broken up by tango dancers and street musicians at nearly every other. After a long morning of walking, getting a little lost on the subway, and buying some last-minute gifts, I stopped for an Argentinian street food classic: choripan! The juicy, crave-able grilled sausage is cut in half and served over French bread with a drizzle of chimichurri. Just as with Portugal, Argentinian food is rich and meat-heavy. And, like the architecture, it’s hard not to see European influences: the fan-favorite milanesa napolitana, for example, is like a chicken parm with beef. Most popular asado toppings scream French or German to me, and you can’t walk three blocks without coming across a pizza restaurant. However, I found that choripan, empanadas and the rest of the street food here have been some of my favorite meals of the trip. I’ve also been enjoying yerba mate, a bitter, highly caffeinated tea sipped leisurely from a calabash gourd and bombilla straw. On the weekends, you can see locals walking around with mate in one hand and huge Stanley mugs of hot water to refill their cups. I’ll admit, it’s an acquired taste, but the ritual of filling your calabash with loose leaves, digging a hole for the water, and carefully mixing in more tea to strengthen your drink is incredibly calming. On my walk home that afternoon, I stumbled upon a band playing “Chan Chan” by the Buena Vista Social Club (a favorite of mine); onlookers danced and sang along in the street. It was genuinely one of the best pieces of live music I’ve seen in a long time, and to me, dancing so freely with strangers is one of the purest forms of human joy. It almost brought me to tears.

After an interview and working on Monday, I decided to do a free walking tour of the famous Avenida de Mayo on Tuesday. This road runs between the main Congress building, which looks eerily like the one in D.C., to the president’s offices in the Casa Rosada (yes, like the White House, but pink). The guide was incredibly knowledgeable about the street’s famous architecture, tango bars, and political history. The walk culminated at the Plaza de Mayo, which was chock-full of important sites: across from the Casa Rosada is El Cabildo, the birthplace of the Argentinian independence movement, and the plaza itself is dotted with small paintings of white headscarves, a tribute to the Las Madres de Plaza de Mayo. During the military dictatorship that plagued this country in the 1970s-80s, tens of thousands of people were “disappeared” due to supposedly-revolutionary political activity. Most of the disappeared were students in their 20s or 30s. Las Madres protested for the safe return of their children, even though it was strictly illegal during the dictatorship, and still come to the plaza every Thursday to demand justice for their loved ones.

 According to my tour guide, the Casa Rosada was originally painted pink by mixing white paint with pig’s blood! Don’t worry, she assured us it’s just paint nowadays.

On Wednesday, I decided to continue my learning experiences from the day before with a museum day. My first stop was the Buenos Aires Museum of Latin American Art, or MALBA for short. It was smaller than I was expecting, but I had the chance to see a Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera exhibit and some famous pieces of contemporary Brazilian art. Learning about the Manifesto Antropófago and Brazilian modernist movement, especially their connection to indigeneity, was an exciting sneak peek at my next destination. I then took the bus to ESMA, an old military school transformed into a series of museums and memorials about the military dictatorship (or Dirty War). One lesson I’ve learned from traveling around the world is how little my past education has taught me about world history — I almost always have to search the internet for more context about how recent events have shaped the contemporary cultures I find myself in. But my Spanish classes have given me a surprisingly holistic understanding of the Dirty War. I remember a Northwestern professor describing the kidnappings of students from their classrooms, “just like the classroom we’re standing in,” because of their political activism. However, learning about such horrific acts of violence is infinitely more memorable when you visit the sites where they took place. As you might imagine, the “disappeared” prisoners were tortured for information about their peers and subsequently killed in ways that ensured their bodies could never be found. At ESMA, you walk through the halls where prisoners slept, were tortured, and were ultimately led to their deaths. The hardest document to read was a letter from a young pregnant woman, kept alive just long enough to give birth to her baby. As with all the young mothers that came through the facility, she was told her mother would raise her child, and wrote her instructions words of comfort; alas, all of the babies born at ESMA were secretly adopted by military officials, and most never found their way back home. Although the campus is home to several different museums, I didn’t have the stomach to visit more than one.

I’ve honestly been surprised by how openly Argentina shares this dark history. Even though these atrocities happened relatively recently, I’ve seen dozens of plaques recognizing the sites of kidnappings around Buenos Aires, and several statues dedicated to “Memoria, Verdad, y Justicia.” It seems as though the trauma of the Dirty War — and therefore, the disavowal of the state that enacted them — has been written into Argentina’s national narrative for some time. I realize that the government has changed wildly since the 1980s, as have state politics and the economy. All of those factors have surely played a role in Argentina’s reckoning with its own history. And yet, I’ve had a hard time grasping how this plays a role in contemporary national identity. It’s something I hope my interviews next week might give me a bit more insight on. 

La Boca! The most colorful street I’ve seen by far.

On Thursday, I took another bus to La Boca, a neighborhood about 40 minutes from Recoleta. La Boca is known for being home to many of the working class (mostly European) immigrants that poured into Argentina in the early 20th century — the dockworkers painted their homes with leftover paint used for fishing boats, giving the area the bright colors it is known for today. It’s also home to La Bombonera, one of the biggest futbol stadiums in the city. I hadn’t realized it, but the Boca Juniors were playing later that evening, and the streets were swarmed with fans buying blue and yellow jerseys. La Boca was by far the most touristy part of Buenos Aires that I visited. The main road was lined with kitschy souvenir shops, tango dancers, and overpriced menus in mostly English — nonetheless, I had to admit the area had a certain amount of charm. As I was walking down El Caminito, the most famous road in the neighborhood, I ran into a group of volunteer firefighters standing beneath a statue honoring the first brigade in the country, founded in La Boca in 1884. One of my favorite parts about Argentina has been the opportunity to strike up informal conversations: they always soothe my curiosity, of course, but often inform my research, too. It was a lucky coincidence to be able to chat with the firefighters about their work in the city and forest fires in other provinces. Most of my interviews will be next week, including with some first responders, so I’m grateful for the chance to compare their experiences! 

From La Reserva, you can see the BA skyline peak above native trees, grasses, swamps, and wildlife.

On Friday, I walked around La Reserva Ecologica, a large park on the banks of the Río de la Plata. And on Saturday, my last day, I did my best to soak up my favorite parts of the city, wandering around Recoleta for one final time. I have to admit, I don’t seem to have the energy for nonstop exploring like I did in Australia and Greece. I’m also trying to conserve energy for Patagonia next week — the destination I’ve probably been looking forward to the most! Nonetheless, I feel incredibly grateful to have seen as many parts of Buenos Aires as I did. The city was surprisingly tranquil and utterly endearing. I’m sad to leave and yet incredibly excited for what’s to come. It’s a feeling I’m getting quite accustomed to. 

Next time you hear from me, I’ll be in a tiny town in the Chubut Province, a little colder and with more stories to tell. ¡Hasta luego!

Kumasi: a (tiny bit) of quiet

Hello again! 

I feel like I just finished writing about Accra, and yet here I am in an airport late at night, mentally preparing for another sequence of red eyes. So what better way to pass the time than to catch up on my time in Kumasi? 

My last blog post left off last Saturday, just as I’d crashed after the bus ride from Accra. I’d had plans to explore the greater Ashanti Region that weekend — there’s a famous butterfly sanctuary and many beautiful hiking trails — but they were thwarted when I woke up to a throbbing migraine on Sunday. Honestly, this was a serious bummer. I had really hoped to use my two free days to catch up on adventuring, but the headache left me almost completely stranded on the couch of my Airbnb. It was a prudent reminder, however, that I still need to rest. This last leg has truly shown me how exhausting it is to travel this much! And that exhaustion certainly catches up to you (at least, it does to me). Luckily, I managed to catch up on some audiobooks and a bit of work while at the apartment. And even with the migraine, I tried my best to get out of the house for smaller trips around town. 

The road to my apartment in Ahodwo, Kumasi.

Although Kumasi is still a major city, it felt much less hectic. I honestly hadn’t noticed how busy my neighborhood in Accra had felt until my first night at the Airbnb: I was very happy to leave the constant noise of voices, car horns, and rooster crows behind. The tropical green I saw on my bus rides through the Ghanaian countryside lined the road by the apartment complex. The hum of trotros and street food vendors could be heard a few streets away, but still, I welcomed the momentary quiet. On Sunday I ventured into downtown for a few hours to visit the Ashanti Cultural Center and Kejetia Market, the largest of its kind in West Africa. I was told that the city almost completely shuts down on Sundays, as most people are in church — because both markets can be pretty hectic to visit alone, I figured this might be my best opportunity. The Ashanti Cultural Center was serene, and I enjoyed watching musicians perform for a small crowd at an outdoor mass, but I wished I had been able to see Kejetia Market at its full force. I still managed to get lost inside, however, so maybe the calmer atmosphere was for the best. 

 The walkway through Kejetia Market. Someone warned me that if I took any photos of individual booths, the shop owner might make me buy something, so I was careful to be discreet!

I was staying on the outskirts of Kumasi’s Chinatown — according to someone from my hostel, the neighborhood originated from former Chinese political prisoners who immigrated to Ghana, though to be fair, I couldn’t find much online to back this up. I never would have thought that Chinese takeout could taste Ghanaian, and yet the spices in my cozy takeout meal felt distinctly similar to those I had tried in Jollof, grilled chicken, and stews over

Fufu with goat soup! Pro tip I was given: it’s considered very rude to eat with your left hand as it’s considered the “toilet hand.” Same goes for waving or accepting change.

the past week. As always, tasting the food here has been a highlight: groundnut (peanut) stew with mystery poultry, shito sauce made of peppers and fish paste, roasted plantain with lime. My favorite experience was visiting a chop bar,  a traditional cafeteria-style eatery frequented around lunchtime. The chef, an older woman on a low stool, was surrounded by several simmering pots of soup, all of which she would stir occasionally. You pick your starch (fufu for me) and your meat (goat, please) and take it to one of the long tables with plastic chairs and tablecloths. The waitress brought soap, a water pitcher, and a large bowl and helped wash my hands — this meal is best enjoyed with your fingers. Behind a woven wooden screen, you could see and hear two men pounding fufu with sticks almost as tall as they were. I could tell the people were not used to tourists at this chop bar — they asked me repeatedly if I wanted a spoon and chuckled more than once at my attempt to eat the soup with my hands — but the savory, comforting food was well worth my slight embarrassment. My only regret was not ordering tilapia. After that meal, seeing all the baby goats in the streets made me sad.

I had never had Ghanaian food before, yet many of the flavors were surprisingly familiar. I remember watching High on the Hog for a food anthropology course last fall, a Netflix series that discusses the origins of Black American cuisine — the first scene opens in the markets of Cotonou, Benin, which is closer to Accra than Ann Arbor, MI is to Chicago. The central argument of the episode was to demonstrate how various West African cuisines (including Beninese and presumably Ghanaian) are represented in Black cuisine, and therefore the broader food culture of the United States. I am no expert on food or food history, but my taste buds seemed to recognize something about the spices and rich umami flavors in the meals I ate. Reading or hearing about food anthropologies is one thing, but to have the opportunity to taste these similarities is a completely different experience of learning, knowing, understanding. Just another part of this experience to be endlessly grateful for. 

Tuesday and Wednesday were interview days. On Tuesday morning I made my way to CSIR-FORIG, Ghana’s premier forestry research institute, which is about 30 minutes outside the city. The entrance is off the major road that takes you all the way to Accra. Once I had found the right place, it was hard to believe it was a college campus at all: the handful of academic buildings were surrounded by acres of grasses, palm trees, agroforest saplings, and more. They take the whole “forest” thing pretty seriously. I have navigated more college campuses on this trip than I’d have liked, but this one might be my favorite so far. In the afternoon, I visited Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), a much larger university closer to downtown Kumasi. It was also very green, but buzzing with more signs of student life like a stadium, a more traditional quad, and its own transit system. While walking across campus after initially navigating to the wrong department building, I noticed almost all of the students were wearing some version of slacks and blue button-down shirts — I’d never seen a university with this kind of widely-used dress code, and although I had tried to be presentable, I felt suddenly markedly underdressed.  

The forests of FORIG

Wednesday required another trip to CSIR-FORIG and some time spent in the afternoon packing for the next travel day. I have to admit, I’m getting pretty tired of meticulously cramming my life down into my suitcase every week or so. But luckily, my next several turnarounds will not be as fast. On Thursday, I woke up early in the morning to catch the STC bus down to Accra, took a taxi to the airport, and waited many, many hours for my flight to Rome. After a brief pitstop there, I will fly 14-ish hours to Buenos Aires. Although these travel days are uniquely exhausting, I remind myself that they are always followed by new waves of awe at being in a new country, and ultimately gratitude for the magnitude of this experience. I am incredibly excited to visit Argentina and the Patagonia! The journey is always worth it in the end, even if my tired brain has trouble remembering. 

See you in the Western Hemisphere!

Accra, Cape Coast: an ode to just figuring it out

Hello! Sorry for the longer period of silence — as I said, my internet connection has been hit-or-miss here. I’m writing this post from my Airbnb couch in Kumasi, enjoying the luxury of ceiling fans and Wifi. But I can’t skip telling you about my week in Accra!

I’ll be the first to admit that my transition to life here was slower than in other countries. I think it’s a combination of things: missing my people a little extra, feeling burnt out from the logistics and sleepless nights of travel, and growing accustomed to a culture more different than Australia and Europe had been compared to home. But now that I’ve found my footing, I’m already sad to be leaving so soon. 

My hostel was located in the Kokomlemle neighborhood of Accra, about an hour-long walk from the city center. Unfortunately, I quickly learned that these roads are not nearly as walkable as any of my previous stops — the driving is pretty chaotic, and walking through the city often means crossing major highways without crosswalks. However, I was able to enjoy shorter walks near my hostel. While most major roads are paved, they are lined with dirt paths filled with small shops and street vendors roasting goat and tilapia over open fires. Small goats, most of them babies, and families of chickens run through the road, zig-zagging between children’s feet as they play games. Huge cattle with long curved horns and thick, camel-like humps (called Gudalis according to Google) are tied up to troughs and fences along the street. The houses are painted deep reds and browns or bright yellows and blues, and almost every structure has one or two people sitting on the front stoop. There are older boys playing soccer on a red dirt field with makeshift goals; you can hear them cheer into the late evening. I can hear neighbors greeting each other as they pass on the street, and many wave hello to me, too. I wish I had been able to take more photos, but this photo taken from the balcony of my hostel will have to do!

The view from the balcony of my hostel room.

As always, one of my favorite things in Accra has been the wildlife. As the sun sets, you can see silhouettes of bats in the sky above you. Lizards skitter across the gravel, some the size of my forearm, others the size of my pinky. Birds of all sizes — brown dove-like ones, big black crows with vests of white feathers — perch on balconies. On Wednesday, I visited Legon Botanical Gardens near the University of Ghana, where trees near the small lake are filled with small white egrets, like ornaments on an overstuffed Christmas tree. My biggest regret already is not having the time to travel up north to Tamale and Mole National Park, where you can see elephants, lions, and hyenas. Next time!

From the canopy walk at Legon Botanical Gardens — bird tree not pictured!!

The biggest adjustment in Accra was probably getting around. Unlike in the last several cities I’ve visited, where public transit systems are consistent and easily accessible, transportation in Ghana relies heavily on taxis and trotros, which are usually small vans that pick you up at major stations. Everything (including Uber fares) must be paid in cash, and there is almost no information on mid-length travel options online, so you just kind of have to ask around. As someone who likes to plan ahead, this was giving me a healthy dose of anxiety. My biggest concern was making the trip to Kumasi on Saturday, the second largest city here and my second stop in Ghana. I had read somewhere that you can buy tickets online, but I realized Tuesday night that you need a Ghanaian phone number to use the bus company’s website. By Wednesday morning, I had a pit in my stomach, unsure of what I would do. 

But that morning at breakfast, as if by fate, I met another girl my age who had just taken the same bus down from Kumasi. She had been doing her own research there for the past three months. Not only did she have advice on how to find the bus stop, but she gave me countless tips on navigating the city itself, from the best restaurants to taxi etiquette. Later that afternoon we went to the cultural center in Accra, a market where many vendors make wooden masks and other trinkets in front of you. She helped me haggle down gifts for my family to reasonable prices, taught me to say please and thank you in Twi, and how to tell the difference between traditional Ashanti masks and those imported from Nigeria. Seeing someone navigate the situations that had intimidated me with such ease was a huge boost of confidence. In Australia and Europe, I found that the hostel social culture of bar crawls and beer pong was pretty incompatible with my work schedule. But it was nice to have a chance to exchange travel stories and feel better prepared for the rest of my time in Ghana. 

The next day, I decided to test out my newfound confidence. Cape Coast is one of the more popular day trips out of Accra and a town on my bucket list, but I had no real idea how to get there. You can pay about $200 for a guided tour, or maybe convince a taxi driver from Accra to be your driver for the day, but both options seemed costly. When I asked one of the women who worked at the hostel, she told me to go to Kaneshei Station. Simple enough, I thought. But as my Bolt driver pulled up to the GPS location, I realized it was a huge market along the side of a six-lane highway — there were probably hundreds of buses that could take all across Ghana. Luckily, he pointed me to the right trotro stop, where I paid 80GH (about 5 dollars) to board a three-row minivan. The bus was surprisingly spacious, fitting three people per row with room to spare. We only had to wait about 30 minutes before starting the drive. August is the peak wet season here in Ghana, which means the palms and tall grasses are stunningly, lusciously green. After being in the city, seeing the deep, rolling tropical forests was comforting and surreal. The only downside of the drive was that the roads were littered with potholes and were unpaved in many sections. The fact that it was rainy didn’t help. But our driver traversed the mud with an unmistakable ease; I bet he could do it with his eyes closed. 

 When we arrived a couple of hours later, a nice woman at the trotro station helped me find a taxi to take me to Cape Coast Castle. Visiting this place — a dungeon where the British kept enslaved people before their passage across the Atlantic — was the main reason why I had made the trek from Accra. I have tried my best to engage and learn about the history of each country I visit this summer; to skip Cape Coast, especially as a white American, would have felt very wrong. The entry ticket includes a guided tour of the dungeons, a trip upstairs through the Brit’s sleeping quarters, and a walk towards the harbor through “The Gate of No Return.” I won’t write much about the dungeons themselves except that whatever I had braced myself for, it was unimaginably worse. It was nauseating just to stand on the castle grounds. It’s one thing to read history books or even personal narratives of such atrocities, but seeing and feeling the evidence with my own eyes is an experience I will never forget. 

The view from Cape Coast Castle. The docks that once harbored slave ships are now home to colorful wooden fishing boats.

By the time the tour was over, it was around 2 pm, which meant it was about time to find my way back to Accra. The biggest fear I had about coming out to Cape Coast was that it is notoriously hard to find a car back; the later you wait, the worse it gets. I took a taxi back to the bus station, where I thought I would ask around until I found a trotro going back the way I came. It turns out this was a lot harder than I’d thought — each person I asked would point me to someone else, who would tell me they didn’t know but their other friend might, and so on. I finally stuffed myself into a trotro an hour later, this one much more crowded than the shuttle that morning. I bought some plantain chips on the side of the road and settled in for the ride home. 

It turns out this ride was about twice as long as the drive to Cape Coast. First, the trotro got a flat tire (which the driver expertly fixed with all of us still sitting inside) and then a piece of the bottom started scraping the road. The trotros are not really known for their modernity, or safety for that matter. When we reached the suburbs of Greater Accra, the mud from earlier proved to be a much greater obstacle, effectively bottlenecking the heavy traffic into one lane of passible road. When I finally reached my hostel, it was almost 8 pm. I was starving, exhausted, but very proud of myself. Never in a million years would I have had the guts or know-how to transit-hop my way to a city several hours away in a foreign country. I am a pretty shy person and have always struggled with asking for help — I proved to myself that I could find my way around, but the importance of relying on others along the way. 

Thanks to my renewed travel confidence, and the rest day I took on Friday, the trip to Kumasi was a piece of cake. The STC buses are far nicer than the comparable Greyhounds in the US, and obviously a step up from trotros, so I was able to sit in relative comfort on the trip up north. I reached my Airbnb at about 3 pm, only seven(ish) hours after leaving Accra. Not too bad at all!

A picture from the pit stop between Accra and Kumasi, taken on my digital camera. Look how green!

My next update will be about my time in Kumasi, which has been wonderful so far. Thanks for reading all the way through another long blog post — it’s been a lot of fun to document my time in this way. See you soon!

Coimbra, Nazaré, Accra, and the in between: halfway!

[Note: I have pretty iffy access to WiFi here, so I couldn’t post this until today! Just bear with me and pretend it’s yesterday.]

Hello from Accra!

Today is Monday, July 29, the official halfway point of my trip. It’s pretty surreal to think about. On the one hand, I already feel like quite the weary traveler — I’m going to do that all again?!? — and yet I also feel like I’m just getting started. I can still remember the nerves I felt when boarding my flight to Australia, the cloud of uncertainty and apprehensive excitement that felt almost physical. It’s easy to see how far I’ve come when comparing that to my travel day yesterday, which included three trains and two planes over 24 hours. I’m very thankful that most of that anxiety has worn off because I honestly don’t think I could have made it through something like that back in June. Not to say yesterday was particularly easy — I am SICK of red eyes (probably adding to the weariness). But at least I’m confident enough to get through it despite the exhaustion.

After writing my last post, I realized I’m a bit behind on actual travel stories. And what better time to catch up than while waiting to check into my hostel!

The streets of Agueda, Portugal. Beautiful even in the 96-degree heat

My parents and I took several mini-trips through central/northern Portugal last week. On the way down to Coimbra, we stopped in Mealhada for traditional suckling pigs, served with potato chips, salads, oranges, and sparkling wine. While the town looked small, the restaurant seemed like it could hold at least 50 parties. White tablecloths were covered in a sheet of paper — for all its elegance, they knew you wanted to get your hands dirty. And we did. I seriously think my two-ish weeks in Portugal have canceled out my more than six years of vegetarianism. We also stopped in Agueda, an eclectic town known for the umbrella art installations above its main alleyways, casting colorful shadows across the cobblestone. We might have stayed longer except for the extreme heat beating down on us. It was almost as bad as it had been in Greece — still, very much worth the stop. 

The day we went to Pedrógão Grande was even hotter, a whopping 104 degrees. On the way down, we stopped in the Roman ruins in Conimbriga, which was beautiful despite the weather. The intricate tile work reminded me that this architectural motif has ancient roots, even as we saw it across every Portuguese town we stopped in. The highlight of the ruins was the recovered floors covered in mosaics depicting detailed faces, geometric designs, and scenes from Roman myths. The center of the ruins even had a fountain sprouting with deep purple irises. They, however, were also wilting in the heat.

Nazaré!

My favorite trip was our drive to Nazaré. It’s a beach town almost closer to Lisbon than it is to Coimbra, known as the home to the biggest surfing waves on the planet. It wasn’t the season for the 90-foot waves that surfers from around the world travel to try their luck at, but even so, they were some of the tallest I’d ever seen with my own eyes. The best views are from the Nazaré lighthouse, which sits atop a dramatic cliff. The hike up was well worth it — I will never get over how beautiful these Portuguese beach towns look from above, mosaics of white and orange tiles beside the bright green sea. For lunch, we stopped at a popular seafood restaurant called A Tasquinha. Even though the sign in the window said “full”, the host squeezed everyone who waited into one of many cramped tables, again covered in white paper covers. He seemed to know many of the families that came in, and mentioned that another waiter was his son — when we asked the younger man if it was a family business, he said, “sometimes too much so.” My favorite dish here was the grilled sardines. I had finally mastered the art of splitting them down the middle, extracting the light meat and crispy skin, and pushing the remaining skeleton and guts to the side of my plate.  They are served with olive oil, which seems simple enough, but their freshness makes them borderline addicting. I could probably eat a dozen in one sitting.

Coimbra itself was also wonderful — if I thought Porto was underrated, Coimbra was even more so. In between interviews, I explored the university grounds, botanical gardens, and city square. At night, the downtown is filled with performers singing and students drinking wine from outdoor cafes. You can hear a new song with every block you walk down. It makes the city feel rich with culture and yet not too touristy — it is a college town, after all. My parents and I were particularly impressed by the university chorus, which performed rich, almost angelic renditions of fado (traditional Portuguese music) in the hauntingly beautiful streetlight.

A view of Coimbra from the hill up to the university, taken during one of my days off.

I will miss this cozy nook in central Portugal. And, although I’m happy to keep exploring on my own, I am already missing the company of my parents. We parted ways several days ago after many assurances that I was — and will be — completely fine for the next leg of my journey. I will be the first to admit that I sometimes tell my parents things to help ease their nerves (as every hyper-independent child surely must). But I genuinely believe that I will be more than fine. I am incredibly excited for the travels to come! It’s even more true than ever.

Until next time!

Coimbra, Pedrógão Grande: the paradox of eucalyptus

In my last post, I wrote about how parts of Porto reminded me of my home in Northern California. It turns out that those glimpses of home really weren’t that hard to find. It averaged about 75 degrees at day and cooled to the low 60s at night — like a perfect day in San Francisco. The breeze along the coast is crisp and cold, like Ocean Beach, and the waves were just as ready-made for surfing. And, just like my neighborhood in Berkeley, the air smells like eucalyptus. 

I knew Portugal had more eucalyptus trees (at least proportionally) than anywhere else in the EU. It was one of the reasons I chose it as a stop on this journey. And yet, the sheer number of eucalyptus groves we passed on the drive through the northern Portuguese countryside was shocking. The trees’ thin, tall, top-heavy shape made them easily recognizable from the highway — the forests were far too thick to see through and plentiful to count. The further into central Portugal we drove, the more this proved to be true. It, too, reminded me of road trips through Northern California, with rolling hills covered in deep green forest as far as your eyes could see. But, unlike even California, almost every tree was a eucalyptus. They were often coupled with pine trees, which grew just underneath their canopies.

Eucalypts are widely known as one of the most fire-prone tree species. Their oily leaves and light, papery bark are as good as kindling. They’re also particularly good at blowing in the wind, helping fires cross fuel breaks easily. It’s non-native and fast-growing in Mediterranean climates; a native, well-managed grove might benefit from low-intensity burns, but these forests can otherwise turn average forest fires into megafire disasters. The City of Berkeley has spent tens of thousands of dollars trying to remove eucalyptus from my neighborhood at home. But here, tall, mature trees are punctuated by smaller, lighter green, young eucalyptus. These trees are actually an important part of the economy here — because the soil is not nutrient-dense enough for most lots of traditional agriculture, companies rely on these fast-growing trees to create paper paste. While some of the groves seem natural enough, you can actually see the manufactured rows of eucalyptus as you drive by, almost like giant vineyards. 

On Tuesday, we drove 30 minutes south to visit Pedrógão Grande, an area impacted by two of the deadliest fires in recent Portuguese history. In June 2017, over 60 people died after being told to evacuate due to fire risk, most of whom were burned while sitting in traffic on the one main road out of town. While many houses and businesses were destroyed, only one or two people actually died at home. Less than five months later, a fire spread in a very nearby area, and almost 50 more died, most of whom had stayed home. This story of paradoxical tragedy was one of many that inspired this research project, but a tale that has always stuck in my head as particularly haunting.

I find I have mixed feelings about visiting the sites of these fires. So many of my activities blur the line between leisure and work, and it’s a bit sickening to think of visiting the site of so much death as some kind of tourist. I remind myself that I really am here for research, but still. There’s a memorial on the side of the highway where the worst of the deaths happened in that first fire: a huge brutalist-style fountain and a set of plaques with the names of the deceased. It’s covered in stones, cards, and flowers, a mix of fresh, dried, and plastic. Just seven years ago, this forest was completely blackened by fire. You can still see signs of it, a burned tree stump here and there. But the scorch marks are greatly outnumbered by a brand new grove of eucalyptus, planted in vineyard-style rows, so tall it is hard to believe they are less than a decade old. 

The eucalyptus trees near Pedrógão Grande. Note the uniform gap in between rows, as well as the burnt stump in the bottom left.

The fact that this town has been purposely repopulated with the very trees that fueled such a devastating fire disaster just a few years ago probably sounds insane. When one of my interviewees explained it to me, I certainly thought it was crazy. But planting more eucalyptus over burn areas is actually very common in Portugal. From the car window, I saw several forests that had clearly burned much more recently than Pedrógão Grande covered in miniature trees with those characteristically light green leaves. As experts explained to me, eucalyptus is too important to the economy (and at this point too plentiful) to do away with. Because of the changing climate and historical forestry patterns, native forests are too slow-growing. And, to make matters worse, about 97% of Portugal’s forests are divided into small, private plots, many owned by city dwellers or even dead people. It is nearly impossible to do prescribed burns or otherwise take preventative measures against wildfires on a large scale. 

The eucalyptus groves across Portugal likely seem benign to most. For locals, they probably just seem like trees. But for me, their story accumulates to prove that wildfire disasters are far from “natural”. They are driven by a variety of factors: social, economic, cultural, political. As I was planning this project, I was worried that comparing the causes and responses to fire across different contexts would prove futile in generating effective solutions — ultimately, every fire is so specific to its region, country, ecology, etc. But my conversations with experts have encouraged me — when creating disaster response programs, they often look at examples set by other countries for how they can improve. I might not be the one to come up with all the answers, almost certainly not on this trip, but it’s nonetheless energizing to be learning so much about this topic every day. My interviews and field trips make me excited to see the final product of all this work. 

Porto: pretty perfeito

Hello from Portugal!

While I didn’t expect this week to be that busy, it clearly ran away from me a bit, as this blog post is a bit late. I’m counting that as a testament to how amazing this country has been! It sounds silly in retrospect, as Porto is obviously a popular tourist destination, but I did not expect to like this city as much as I did. It is small, relatively quiet, yet the more you explore the more you seem to find.

Last Wednesday started slowly, as I had arrived at about 3:00 AM the morning before. But I’ve never been one to sleep in when staying in a hostel, so when I couldn’t fall back asleep, I decided to book an impromptu walking tour to help get acquainted with the area. Porto is known for its free walking tours— I was impressed by how many people showed up at the starting point, the Avenida dos Aliados. We stopped at churches, train stations, bakeries (the pastel de nata were a crowd favorite), and even an oddly extravagant McDonald’s before ending our walk by the Douro River. The highlight for me was the view from the Luís I Bridge, which looks out onto most of Porto, the neighboring Vila Nova de Gaia, and down the winding Douro valley. From afar, the whole city shrinks to a mosaic of orange tiled roofs spreading towards the sea. I liked the view so much, in fact, that I came back later that evening to see the city glow orange and pink in the setting sunlight. There’s an incredibly popular park on the southern side of the bridge, in Gaia, where huge crowds gather to see the sunset with picnic blankets and Port wine. It reminded me of Mission Dolores Park in San Francisco: the hill, the live music (a cover band playing Weezers), the young people haggling for craft beer sold out of coolers. It made me a little nostalgic, to be sure, but more reassured to have found this slice of home in Portugal.

The view from Luis I Bridge as the sun begins to set.

 Even though I spent my gap year in Providence, Rhode Island (home to one of the larger Portuguese diasporas in the US), Portuguese food has never been on my radar. I had thought almost nothing of it before stepping onto that airplane from Athens, could not have named even one

I got this francesinha from Cafe Santiago, a neighborhood lunch spot recommended to me by my tour guide.

traditional dish, and might not have really called it a “cuisine” before this trip. But, to my surprise, it’s kind of great. Yes, it’s a HUGE amount of meat — I had a burger where the bun was seasoned with little bacon bits instead of sesame seeds. But I can’t help but appreciate its hearty, greasy warmth. My first real meal was a francesinha: a sandwich on thick white bread filled with a veal steak, bacon, and Portuguese sausage, covered with melted cheese and a fried egg, smothered in gravy, served in a bowl of fries. I think I actually broke a sweat trying to finish it. Other highlights have been cured chorizo and local Estrela cheese from Mercado do Bolhão and a cachorrinho (Portuguese hot dog) from a diner called Gazela (of Anthony Bourdain fame). 

For seafood, Porto locals will tell you to go to the nearby seaside town of Matosinhos, where the streets are filled with the smoke of fresh fish being grilled outside. My parents came to visit me this week to help celebrate my birthday (a very special treat) and on Saturday we went to Tito II, a local restaurant where the chef catches the fish himself. We ordered fresh-grilled sardines and traditional seafood stew, filled with whole shrimp, mussels, a crab belly, and partially cooked rice cooked in a rich seafood stock. The highlight of the meal was the whole dourado, so fresh that our waiter came to show us the fish’s teeth and fins before they cooked it. It was salty, crunchy from the skin and open flames, yet melted in your mouth as you chewed. I still think the fish in Greece was fresher, but this local specialty was pretty hard to beat. 

The tile bank! The wooden drawers, organized by both color and style, each have a handful of identical tiles to match the ones displayed in front.

Some other highlights of the last week include a walk through the Jardins do Palácio de Cristal where peacocks are just as common as the pigeons, and a walk through a Baroque-style church, complete with Catholic relics and a look into the priest’s quarters. But honestly, nothing compared to just walking through the city. Anyone who has seen pictures of Porto knows the city for its intricate hand-painted tiles: they give each building its own character. I love exploring a place that has devoted so much time and effort to such detailed beauty. At the Museum of Porto, we learned that they keep a bank of the most common tile designs for residents to repair damaged buildings and maintain this history. My mom and I agreed that they should have banks like these everywhere! And, if I’m putting my research hat on, it demonstrates a certain level of commitment to community — at least when it concerns cultural or historic buildings.

On Sunday, I turned 22! This summer has been so surreal and spectacular that planning one special day honestly felt redundant. But I celebrated with one of my favorite things: my dad and I rented bikes and went down the coast toward a small town called Espinho. If you know me, you know I love a good bike ride, and much of that love was born out of riding along the San Francisco Bay with my dad. This ride, although longer and windier, felt almost identical to those trips along the California coast. We stopped at a beautiful seaside chapel and a restaurant along the beach where you could watch families sunbathing and surfing as you ate. In the afternoon, we all went to try some Port wine at one of the famous wineries in Vila Nova de Gaia. I am extremely grateful to have celebrated with loved ones in such a beautiful city. Birthdays are always a time for reflection for me, and reflecting on this summer has been nothing short of profound. I’ve already grown so much both personally and academically, and I’m not even halfway done! I am endlessly grateful for all the people who have made this possible and my support system back home — missing them is the only downside. But I’m excited for all the joy and adventures this next year will bring. 

Capela do Senhor da Pedra, a chapel nestled along the coast south of Porto.

My next post will be a dispatch from Coimbra and much more research-focused (I have at least eight interviews here in Portugal!). I’m definitely hoping to return here someday, as five days was not nearly enough. But for now, so long Porto!

Athens, Mati: a little field trip

Hello from the Athens airport! I’m heading to Porto tonight but arrived painfully early to catch up on work. The past few days have been a bit quieter than my first week in Greece, yet full of research opportunities that more than made up for my slower start. 

On Saturday, I made the trip out to Mati, a beachside suburb of Athens. Although it’s only a 45-minute drive from the city center, I had to spend 45 minutes on the train, an hour on the bus, and walk along the side of a highway for 30 minutes to reach town. If you’ve ever been to Athens, you know that the city is filled with near-identical white apartment buildings. All multi-story and crammed together, with uniform balconies that almost make them look like huge dressers. Here, only a few multistory buildings punctuated rows of houses with lavish gates and big yards, even some with green lawns (I literally cannot imagine how much water that must take). It is notably wealthier than the city, and residents seem older on average. The exceptions were the families and other young(er) people staying at the several hotels along the beachfront. 

 

The Mati beachfront

While Mati is certainly charming, I wasn’t really there as a tourist. In 2018, almost six years ago to the day, this town suffered the second deadliest fire event in the 21st century. Two coincident, fast-moving fires engulfed Mati and nearby houses. For a variety of reasons (reasons that are central to my being here in the first place), residents didn’t know what to do; most tried to drive away or run into the sea. 103 people died, many having drowned or burned during their attempt to escape. 

When designing this research project, I selected countries with a major fire in the past seven-ish years. The idea was to see how communities reacted to that one event, and transitively, how it had impacted disaster management on a regional or national level. However, my conversations in Australia showed me that the event I had focused on, the 2019-2020 Black Summer fires, wasn’t as individually impactful as I had assumed. My interviews in Greece told me the opposite. When I asked about wildfires, almost every interviewee brought up Mati on their own and cited it as a major political event. One even told me it was one of the two deciding factors in the 2019 elections, which resulted in a party switch (although to be fair, other people I talked to would probably disagree).  News stories called it “biblical” and “a living hell.” The trials to hold officials accountable for these deaths are ongoing. 

In Australia, it was much harder to get to the areas burned in the Black Summer fires, especially without a car — plus, my interviews told me that other observation sites might be more fruitful. But every conversation I’ve had here, whether formal or informal, suggested that Mati was a core piece in the puzzle of how Greeks understand (and protect themselves against) fire disaster. This field trip would help me contextualize their stories about the event itself and see what recovery looks like several years down the road. 

 

A path leading up to the ocean. Gorgeous!

Luckily, my visit did help visualize some of the common threads that came up in interviews. For example, several people told me that part of the reason the fire had been so deadly was that many of the buildings in Mati (like those in Athens and other parts of Greece) had been designed and built without permits, which made evacuation much more challenging. The image most kept pointing to was how close the buildings were to the water: “If you see a house where you can go out the front door and step into the sea after five steps, that’s illegal.”  And it’s true; even the big hotel buildings seemed very close to the ocean. Interviewees also described Mati as a “resort” town where many Athenians go to get away for the weekend or longer holidays — this proximity, too, added to the disaster’s shock value. I’m glad I got to see the hotels for myself because they’re smaller than what I’d think of as a resort. But I did see their point. Wildfires are “supposed” to happen in small, remote areas near the forested mountains or islands of Greece. A disaster in this wealthier beachside vacation town — especially one that carried such viscerally tragic stories — was bound to be more personally and politically evocative. 

Two neighboring houses in Mati. Clearly a lot more done to renovate one compared to the other.

I also wanted to see how much progress the recovery projects had made in the past six years. I’ve seen dozens of photos of Mati in the days following the fire: the empty, blackened cars and structures make the town look haunted. But I had no idea what to expect after this many years. Walking through the residential neighborhoods, most houses showed little signs that there had ever been a fire. But every five or six buildings there would be an empty plot with scorch marks, if not a hollowed structure waiting to be revived. Many yards had blackened stumps hiding beside the otherwise green, curated landscaping. It begged the question: why was one family’s house rebuilt while their neighbors’ weren’t? And whose responsibility was it? I’m hoping further reading and interviews might give me some answers. 

I also noticed sticks, leaves, and other yard rubbish piled high next to residential garbage dumpsters. My guess is that they are evidence of a policy one expert had mentioned in an interview, where residents are required to clean a perimeter around their houses to create a kind of fuel break for a potential wildfire. Although the policy isn’t new, it’s been much more strictly enforced in recent years, and you can get fined or otherwise penalized for failing to comply. The streets are far too dense to do this kind of thing in Athens, but seeing such adherence to the policy in Mati tells me that the consequences of ignoring it feel more tangible. It’s also a visual reminder of an apparent motif of local fire management here: residents are responsible for the safety of their houses, loved ones, and communities. At least, they’re made to believe they are. The actual effectiveness of these perimeters is debatable, as they are often small enough for a major fire to jump over anyway. But placing this physical, mental, and ultimately financial onus on residents undoubtedly sends a message about their role with respect to the fire disasters that threaten their livelihoods. 

A (blurry, very sorry) photo of the organic waste piled along the road.

The next day involved less adventuring, as my trek to Mati had tuckered me out. But I did go on a tour focused on the social and political history of Greece. So many of my interviews involved discussions of Greek politics, and I am pretty lousy at feigning any knowledge on the subject — I thought it would be a great opportunity to gain more context for my research and to hear what non-expert locals had to say about fires. And it was! (It was also a lot of fun.)

I went on a little too long about Mati (sorry) so I’ll just give you a couple of my favorite tidbits: 

  • Politics in Greece seem to align on a more West vs Anti-West spectrum than in the US. For example, the more establishment party recently legalized same-sex marriage, but the communists were against it. Whaaaat? The tour guide said it’s because LGBTQ rights are seen as a Western phenomenon and the communists are pointedly anti-West. I’m blaming homonationalism. 
  • There is no separation between church and state, to the point that the ministry of education and religion are the same thing. Apparently, to be anti-Greek Orthodox Church is to be anti-Greek. But, our guide said, the priests can be bribed with salary increases or threats to their tax-exempt status. The church is the single biggest landowner in the country — they own, and therefore have exemptions on, everything from resorts on the Athens Riviera to gay clubs (I know right). 
  • There’s a neighborhood, Exarcheia, that’s internationally known as a historical center of anarchism and political activism. Its reputation was born in the 1970s when students at a nearby university occupied a building to protest their authoritarian government and were killed by the military-grade tanks called to disperse them. Today, the activism in the neighborhood is in part focused on preventing the gentrification driven by AirBNB and plans to build a new metro station. Police were completely banned in Exarcheia from 2015 to 2019 (a product of the debt crisis and resulting protests), which is what allowed the political community to flourish. Now, it’s almost impossible to walk through the streets without seeing a squadron of police equipped with full riot gear — presumably protecting the construction of the subway. 

While I thoroughly enjoyed my time in Greece, I am happy to be moving on to my next location. I’m starting a new phase of my trip today — these next few weeks will be filled with more travel, less touristy places, and will overall lack the consistency I was getting used to in Sydney and Athens. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a bit anxious. But for now, my excitement is far stronger than my nerves. See you in Porto!

Athens: HOT yet so very cool

Hello again from Athens! Long time no blog. Honestly, the days have been flying by here — I didn’t realize it had been a week since my last post until just a few hours ago. But I’ll do my best to make up for it now. It has been a very busy week: because most of my interviews happened to be scheduled for the end of my time here, I’ve been able to take full advantage of the many (MANY) tourist attractions Athens has to offer while doing my best to make observations that will aid my research.

The (slightly sad) cactuses on the Lycabettus hillside.

The first observation is that it is hot. Duh. Almost everyone I told about this trip warned me about how hot Greece is in July, and to be fair, I have been checking the weather near-religiously in all my destinations for weeks. But while I knew it would rarely dip below 95 degrees while I was in Athens, I was not prepared for what such heat would feel like for days on end, nor how it would seem to put a trance on the city itself. It’s so hot that the candle sitting on my balcony melted completely after only two hours in the sunlight. Even the night is so hot that I can leave soaking wet clothes outside at midnight and they’ll be dry before I wake up. It’s also dry, so dry that the cactuses, such as these ones on the sides of Lycabettus Hill, have shriveled with thirst. The wind is almost hotter than the air itself. In Sydney, I was averaging almost 20,000 steps a day, but that goal has proved completely untenable here; walking only a couple blocks in the late afternoon leaves me craving a nap.

I don’t say all this to be overdramatic, but rather to emphasize how perfect the conditions are for wildfire. Locals have told me that this dry heat is emblematic of the weather they have had all year. And, as one of my interviewees pointed out, heat like this builds. The longer residents (particularly those without consistent shelter, the elderly, or otherwise at-risk people) must endure such high temperatures, the more likely it is to induce a health crisis. Likewise, the drier and hotter a spring season is, the more likely it is to bring wildfires in the summer. Athens has seen hotter days in July but my interviewees tell me that this sustained heat is not normal. One scientist used it as proof of a changing climate: it’s getting hotter and “you can feel it.” Uncoincidentally, there are currently several wildfires raging across Greece, including one close enough to Athens that I received an emergency alert on my phone about it. While this will undoubtedly prove valuable to my research, and the opportunity to visit a site post-fire would otherwise be very rare, I have a hard time getting excited about something that comes at the cost of so many people’s well-being.

Street art in Exarcheia, a neighborhood known for its counter-culture history.

Another very obvious observation about Athens is the street art. Murals and posters cover every inch of available wall space, and then some, on nearly all the buildings under two stories tall. Honestly, it makes me wish I could read Greek, as the Google Translate image capture feature does not do very well with graffiti print. But the stuff that I can read is nearly all anti-establishment messaging: ANTIFA, ACAB, the anarchist A, etc. For me, it is a reminder that Greece has a very specific political and economic history that starkly contrasts the tourist traps (and the national narrative they try to paint). It’s not all blue-domed churches and columned structures; to visit Athens without remembering its recent economic turmoil or the role it served in the refugee crisis is to not understand the city at all. I asked several of my interviewees if the leftist street art is reflective of the contemporary political climate, and they all disagreed, although ironically displayed disapproval towards the Greek government themselves. No matter its ideological origins, mistrust of government (and, relevantly, of their ability to protect their constituents from harm) seems to be a through line. I’m hoping to learn more about this history this weekend, both to soothe my own curiosity and contextualize my research about disaster management.

On a more fun note, here are some tourist highlights of this week:

  • Of course, I had to visit the Acropolis at least once. I was told to get there as early in the morning as I could to avoid the crowds and heat, but the sheer amount of people there was overwhelming even at 8:30 a.m. The highlight of the day was definitely the excavation site underneath the Acropolis Museum, which is down the hill and tucked away from the swarms of tourists. They had all sorts of artifacts  — hairpins, beads, frying pans — that offered an intimate look into everyday life in ancient Greece. Very cool!

The Erechtheion, my favorite building at the Acropolis.

  • On Tuesday, I took a day trip to Agistri, one of the closest (and cheapest) islands to get to from Athens. I rented an electric bike and winded my way through hilly countryside, small coastal towns, and pebble beaches. I swam in water so blue it looked like a ceramic glaze and ate fish that tasted like it had jumped out of the water and onto the plate. Best 15 euros I’ve ever spent.

    The dock at Mariza, Agistri — perfect for jumping off of!

  • One of the highlights of this stop has been climbing up the many hills in Athens. I will never get over how quiet a city seems from so high up, no matter how busy it is on the ground. While hiking up Philopappos Hill offered unreal views of the Aegean Sea, I preferred Lycabettus Hill, a steeper hike that afforded a much greater panoramic reward. I went in the early evening to escape the heat and found that the late sunlight glistened off the cityscape as if it were the ocean. I thought I’d seen the last of Cicada Summer when I left Chicago, but I was sorely mistaken: their humming overpowers the sounds of engines and car horns, especially towards the top of the hill. It was stunningly!

The view from the top of Lycabettus Hill

I’ll have some more updates before I leave for Porto next week, but until then, enjoy these pictures!

 

 

 

Singapore, Athens: taking it slow (at least trying to)

Hello from Athens, Greece! I’m writing this post from the living room of my gorgeous Airbnb while waiting out a summer rainstorm. It has been a hectic few days to say the least, but I’m happy to have made it to my second country in one piece!

My last day in Australia was spent hiking through Royals National Park just south of Sydney. I honestly didn’t think I would include it in a blog post, as it was a spur-of-the-moment trip, but it proved to be more than deserving. To get to the park from downtown Sydney, you have to take a train to the small coastal town of Cronulla and then a ferry to the even smaller Bundeena. Not the kind of ferry that crosses Sydney Harbour — big, multistory boats complete with bathrooms and dozens of rows of seating — but more like a small fishing boat with about six wooden benches and doors that don’t close fully shut. It was a rainy day, and the trip was short but choppy. Let’s just say I’m glad I don’t get seasick.

After landing in Bundeena, I picked up lunch at a local cafe and walked across town to the starting point of the famous Coast Walk. While walking through the residential streets, I saw something I had been looking for since my first interview in Australia: a community fire unit (CFU) box. The expert who lived near the Blue Mountains had told me about the one in his neighborhood — apparently, they are outfitted with some sort of hose or hydrant that community members can use. To access and use the equipment inside, you have to be part of your local CFU, a volunteer but application-only program run by the NSW Fire and Rescue agency.

A community fire unit in Bundeena, NSW

I hadn’t been able to find any in Katoomba, but was overjoyed to stumble upon one on what was supposed to be an off-day. It was raining, unfortunately, which meant few residents were outside, or I would have asked someone about it. But these community units are (theoretically) an embodiment of the core characteristics of successful fire response: they empower and equip community members with the knowledge and resources to respond effectively to fire disaster. I passed three boxes in just ten minutes of walking, as well as several yard signs reading “Climate Action Now” (which I hadn’t seen anywhere else in Sydney). Bushfires — and maybe even climate change — seem to be a facet of daily life in this small coastal suburb. 

Not five minutes later, I saw why. As I turned the first bend of the trail to enter Royal National Park, I was genuinely taken aback at the terrain before me. On the right side of the path was the dense, diverse shrubbery I’d come to expect from Australia’s coast. On the left were the blackened remains of trees for as deep as I could see. The ground was covered with fresh greenery, indicating that the fire happened several years ago and/or was at a low severity. Based on research I did after getting back to my hostel, it could have been from October 2020 or a more recent “hazard reduction” blaze. Nonetheless, seeing scorch marks (especially ones only a few hundred meters from houses) was extremely helpful for my research.

Old scorch marks from a bushfire in Jibbon Point

The rest of the day was spent hiking along the jagged, dramatic cliffs of the national park. The rain meant my shoes were soaked through with mud, but also that I had the trail almost completely to myself. It is hard to put words to the devastating beauty of this coastline. I expected the views of the Pacific to be breathtaking, as they always are, but I was surprised by how the sandstone cliffs themselves were almost as impressive. They ripple with reds, yellows, and deep browns that prove a stunning contrast to the deep green of the bushes and blue of the sea. My walk back through Jibbon Lagoon felt like something out of Alice in Wonderland — the sand was made of colorful shells, logs covered in bright orange fungi lined the trail, and tall trees formed silhouettes that looked like giant lollipops. My now-permanently muddy socks were definitely worth it. 

Look at that sandstone!

The next day, I checked out of my hostel and ran some last-minute errands before my redeye to Singapore. This included a goodbye stroll through the Royal Botanic Gardens, a pit stop at the Art Gallery of NSW, and a final Woolworths run for TimTams. After a seven-hour, restless flight, I was happy to check into a hotel room at the Singapore airport for a few hours of sleep — the room was exactly big enough for a bed, a shower, and a sink, which could not have been more perfect. 

I woke the next morning (afternoon) and immediately went out to explore Singapore! It was (regretfully) my only stop in Asia, and while it was technically just a layover, I intended to make the most of it. I first took the train to the Haji Lane to see the famous mosque and surrounding street market. Stepping outside the liberally air-conditioned airport, I was struck by the summer humidity, a brutal awakening after staying in temperate, “wintery” Sydney. I was more surprised, however, by how lush the city itself was — while I had expected dense, concrete urbanity, I was met with more trees than skyscrapers. This was emphasized by my visit to Gardens By The Bay. It’s hard to believe that such a vast natural space can exist in such a major city. But walking along the lily pad ponds or under sprawling palm trees and mangroves, it’s easy to forget you’re in a city at all. 

Gardens by the Bay

After soaking up the gardens for several hours, I took the train to Newton Food Center, a food market made tourist-famous (in part) by Crazy Rich Asians. I cooled off with some coconut water and stingray sambal, which is cooked in a banana leaf and topped with rich, spicy sambal paste. My girlfriend had challenged me to eat one thing that day that I had never heard of before — I was very pleasantly surprised.

Stingray — delicious!

After taking a quick trip back to the Marina Sands Bay building to watch the sunset over the city and to the gardens to see their evening light show, I took my final train ride back to the airport for my second consecutive redeye. I took Singapore’s public transit system more times than I could count in only six or so hours of exploring, and like with Sydney, I would have taken more if I could! The CTA has some lessons to learn.

Sunset over Singapore’s skyline

When I arrived in Athens at the crack of dawn on Wednesday, I was completely exhausted from my days of travel. But, unfortunately, I couldn’t check into my Airbnb until later that afternoon. Bleary-eyed and brain-dead, I managed to find my way to my neighborhood via subway (a process which made me realize how much I’d taken for granted English as Australia’s lingua franca) and parked myself and my luggage at a coffee shop until the apartment was ready. I had been nervous about staying at a cafe for so long — it felt rude to take up so much space — but quickly learned that leisurely breakfasts are far from unordinary here. The slow-paced service eased my nerves. I actually enjoyed the people-watching: groups of friends drinking espressos and smoking cigarettes, showing off their dogs, stopping other friends on the street or chatting with the baristas. I finally made it back to the hotel, settled in, and grabbed an early dinner before falling asleep while it was still light out. While I’m eager to fill every second of this trip with excitement, the day was an earnest reminder of the importance of rest. 

I tried to carry that message with me today, too, as I was exhausted even after sleeping for twelve hours. I made myself coffee and breakfast before walking to the National Archeology Museum. While Greece will certainly be an important stop for my research, I partly chose Athens to honor my inner Greek mythology nerd (I was a big Percy Jackson kid). Seeing the marble statues and painted vases inspired by those stories was surreal. I casually ate the best gyro I’ve ever tasted in my life as I walked through Syntagma Square, the National Botanical Gardens, and several cute neighborhoods in between. I admired the endless street art, boutique stores, and gorgeous parks. While I’m incredibly excited for all the tourist activities that await in the week ahead, I have to admit that I like the slow, too. 

If you made it all the way to the end of this post, thanks for sticking with me! I’ll update with more Athens adventures soon. In the meantime, I’ll be enjoying this stunning view from my apartment window and learning to take some time for myself. Until next time!

The view from the charming balcony of my Airbnb