

After a long silence - hello to all of you again, this time from...eh, Riga, Tartu, Tallinn? Well, right now from Tallinn! So we are back in Europe now. About three weeks ago around midnight, the plane toughed down and we were home. "EU citizens" it said on the sign for the passport control and it took us about two seconds to pass it. Then we got out of the airport and even though the air didn't quite smell like home, everything definitely looked like home. Did we ever consider China as as far developed as Europe? Well, apparently we must have been very badly influenced by our stay in India and everything afterwards seemed like the future, but here now, this was developed! China... you still have some way to go. The taxi was the most luxurious car I have been in for a year, the guy offered real service,

the houses and architecture looked sooo familiar, the music in the radio was well known, in the hostel there were blond heads and brown heads and blond heads and red heads and blond heads,... and the girl at the reception offered us a beer as a welcome... yeah - we are definitely back home. You wonder why we call Europe home and not France or Germany? Well, what could be more home for a European couple than Europe?! I guess traveling changes a lot of perspectives but we both see Europa as home now.


The next day confirmed my thesis about being home - Europe greeted us with perfectly German grey sky and continuous rain!

But still, the streets were paved with cobbled stone, there were pedestrian precincts, one cafe followed another, the restaurant sold roast beef with sauerkraut and Viennese schnitzel - and I was all lost among those familiar sights. Where were those incomprehensible writings all around us, where was the rice with chopped-up ingredients, where were all the black heads, were was the everyday struggle to get what we wanted, where was the pollution and the noise, the communication with hands and feet and the perpetual smile? Where was the adventure? Apparently, it doesn't take a lot of time to get used to a new culture and to break the habits of an old one, so I found myself a stranger among a familiar place and culture and had to readapt once more!

The beauty of home, however, is that you get used to it really quickly and, moreover, there were still lots of things to discover all around us. Our first stop-over:
Riga, where the plane had taken us and where we spent two days exploring the region in the rain and four nights without

sleeping because of the crowd of puberty-hitten, drunk, extremely cool backpackers we were stuck with in our dormitory - are we getting old??? (tja Suse, ich glaube Fun Franks hat sich sehr veraendert...). Nevertheless, we had the time to visit some really nice areas, admire some beautiful architecture and say hi to Roland, a very familiar statue for me because he also stands in the partner city of Riga: Bremen!

However, we soon decided that we had to get away from those clouds and David proposed the itinery >Tartu>Tallinn>Laheema>Tallinn>Riga within 10 days to me. I thought he had gone completely crazy but then he reminded me that we were back in Europe and that we did not have to travel for two days anymore to get from one place to the next! On the contrary, two days travel would probably have brought us right back the doors of our parents! So we decided to go visit
Estonia
and went to
Tartu, a very sweet student town that was extremely dead because of the holidays but just perfect for us to get some sleep and to visit the beautiful town centre, the old cathedal ruins, to chat with Oscar Wilde for a while, and to explore the best ever toy museum that made us want to be kids again! Can there be anything better than to worry only about getting or not getting this new Lego set?! Well, yeah, better would be to get it right away but besides that I mean...





Next was
Tallinn(the pics above), and from the minute we set foot into that city, we fell in love with it! Seriously, nobody can resist those beautiful old cobbled-stone streets winding through old houses, parts of the old city wall and along small parcs, those lovingly decorated restaurants, cafes, bars, pubs and medieval cellars, and those fun people: a girl running around in mirco-shorts where you can see more than is covered, a guy who sells the "smallest kite" in the world and who does nothing else all day long than letting them fly, super friendly girls who sell roasted almonds in medieval wagons

(Ja, Suse, wir sind wohl wirklich brechenbar, aber wer kann bei dem Duft schon stark bleiben...), a gang of 8 people processing through the streets with a drum and singing "Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna", all those artists exhibiting their works in the street,... Even though Tallinn is definitely a very touristy city, it is a beautiful place to be, it has a very special charm and it just gets under your skin. Could we imagine to settle down here for a couple of years? Without hesitation! But first, we did all the regular tourist stuff even though we were freed from the usual backpacker gang. We were back with Hospitality Club and had the most fun hosts possible: a "typically Estonian" family who made our time very special!
Thanks Urmo, Liivi, and Kriss for all the great

laughs, the typically Estonian experiences, the bed, the wonderful cooking, the guitar, the tea with honey, the coffee with milk and sugar, ... We hope to see you again soon! So, from this temporary home, we explored Tallinn and we also went to Laheema National Park for three days. This, however, is the story for another day because this is getting long here! So see you soon again!!

Oh, and this is a special for you,
Ian and Jesper. Do you recognize the card? When we walked into our hostel in Riga, the first thing we stumbled on was the card of the Golden Gobi! No idea how it got there because all the other information was about Europe but who knows... You seem to keep following us around!! :)
1 comment:
"Can there be anything better than to worry only about getting or not getting this new Lego set?!"
If only I would be able to not worry about this...
Angela, you have to attend to an LEGO event when you will be back in Germany. Have a look on 1000steine.de . David, same for you, you are so close to coming back from your "darkage" :)
Bienvenue en Europe !
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