Monday, 26 October 2015

18/10 - We drove to Olympia to visit the arena where the first ever Olympics were held in 776 BC (2791 years ago). The games were held in honour of Zeus, and held every 4 years. People from all over Greece came to watch. http://www.bbc.co.uk/guides/z36j7ty - Lots of cool information on the ancient Greek Olympics. We ran races where the ancient Greeks ran and I won 2! We saw lots of rubble.

The running track


20/10 - We went for a walk along a gorge and saw some Greek villages. They were all made of stone and looked half abandoned.



23/10 - We drove to Nafplio and had Souvlaki for lunch/tea. Souvlaki is meat kebabs with pita breads. It is a delicious traditional Greek food. We wandered round the old town and looked at worry beads. Worry beads are beads on string that you fiddle with to pass time. They are very Greek.

Worry beads

Souvlaki


24/10 - We visited some museums in Nafplio and the fortress. We saw the Archeological museum first. There was lots of pots, glass beads, gold coins and even the oldest bronze armour in the world! We went to the Peloponnesian folklore foundation museum after. There were lots of pretty dresses. We had lunch and then walked up 998 steps to the fortress to look around it. It is only 300 years old.

The fortress

Greek dresses


A pot

The oldest bronze armour in the world

More pots

One of my favourite dresses

What Greek men wore


25/10 - We drove to Mycenae to see some rubble on a very windy hill. Mycenae is 3215 years old. We then drove to Epidavros to see the theatre. The theatre has 57 rows of seats and amazing acoustics. We then went to see the rest of the rubble and made up what it was. It was fun.

Mycenae

Epidavros theatre

Saturday, 17 October 2015

Zadar - Croatia

In Zadar we went to see the sea organ. It's lots of pipes in the sea wall and the sound is made by the waves pushing the air up through pipes. It sounded really cool.

The sea organ

Split - Croatia

In Split we visited Diocletian's palace. Diocletian was the roman emperor in 204-305AD and he built the palace. We also visited the Basilica of Saint Lucia. There was a small statue with messages underneath. We found some really funny ones. One said Dear Saint Lucia, Dillon wants abs, then some other stuff, and another said Dear Saint Lucia, please can we have a nice house in Hawaii with 2 kids. Thanks in advance. There was an underground market that we went to. We also saw some traditional Dalmatian men singers. There was a headless sphinx that was imported from Egypt.  

Headless sphinx

Diocletian's palace

Dubrovnik - Croatia

Dubrovnik we walked around the walls of the old town. They were built between the 13th and 16th centuries and are 2km long and up to 25m high. they have 16 towers; two are round and 14 are square. We had a great view of the old town and saw 2 tortoises and heaps of cats and kittens. After coming down we walked the main street. It's made of marble! we tried to go to a war photo exhibition but it was closed. In 1991 the Yugoslavian army shelled Dubrovnik because the Serbs (from Serbia) didn't want Dubrovnik to be part of Croatia. The battle lasted for 7 months and 114 people were killed. There was some evidence of shelling in some nearby abandoned hotels.

The walls

Rooftops

The main street

We are now in Greece having been on a ferry from Dubrovnik to Bari in Italy, then from Bari to Greece. We are by a beach  and there is a massively huge sand dune that we ran down. Here are the answers to all of your questions.

My favourite food I have had is probably ice-cream or pizza in Italy.

No it wasn’t scary with the pigeon on my head. It happened several times. He just flew up there.

The glass in the Sagrada Familia only let light through and you couldn’t see through it.

We are in Greece and are staying here for a couple of weeks.

I liked a small blue duck.

Venice wasn’t that expensive.

I’m well thanks.

Next time we go to France we are going to Paris.

We were going to the rugby but we couldn’t get there and it was too complicated.

My favourite place is Europe! I can’t decide.

I am still writing and are just about to send some stuff to Toitoi (or Vox)

I don't understand Lucy's market question.

Here are some photos of our van (called the Happy Heffalump)

Our van.


Where I sleep

Thursday, 8 October 2015

Ravenna - Italy

We went to Ravenna on the 24/9. In Ravenna there are lots of churches with pretty mosaics from around 520-550 ad. We visited 3. In the first one there was evidence of mosaics from earlier people (but still around the same time) that had been covered over. There were hands, arms and fingers in pillars and head shapes behind curtains. It looked a bit like people in the shower. The second and third were much more impressive. There were images of bible stories in mosaic. The mosaics aren’t made of small squares but of small cones with square bottoms to make it longer lasting. My favourite part of all the mosaics was a small quail. The windows in the churches weren’t glass but a translucent stone called alabaster.

Hand and head shape


Cool mosaics

Quail

Translucent stone


Venice - Italy

We went to Venice on the 25-26/9. On the first time we went there we flipped a coin when ever we got to a junction. Did you know that Venice sinks 2.3 cm every 10 years? It also used to be it’s own country. We wandered round in circles for a bit than wandered over to the San Marco. We fed the pigeons while mum and dad queued for St. Mark’s church. St. Mark’s church was destroyed in a fire in 932 ad then rebuilt, but in 1063 the Doge didn’t think it was impressive enough so he demolished it. It was rebuilt (again) in 1094. In the church there were some mosaics but there weren’t as impressive as the ones in Ravenna. We didn’t have a Gondola ride though. For dinner mum had traditional cuttlefish ink pasta. It was black and tasted fishy.

Venice canal

Black pasta

Feeding the pigeons in Piazza San Marco

On the second day we made masks. Well we painted them. We learnt about traditional methods and mask history. I learnt that masks are a very Venetian thing. One of the first masks was called a Volto and was worn by men and women and had a big chin so you could eat and drink without taking it off. It was generally worn with a hood and cloak of silk and topped off with a tripod hat. Another type of mask was called the Moretta or Mutta. It was worn by women and was black and oval shaped and covered only the mouth, eyes and nose. It was held on by a button that was gripped in the lady’s mouth so she couldn’t speak. That was how it got the nickname Mutta. The Plague Doctor mask is a very distinguishable mask. It has a long beak and covers the face. It was sealed around the edges by a cloak and hood. For protection the eye holes were covered in glass and the breathing slits in the beak had herbs pressed to them on the inside. The Plague Doctor looked quite disturbing because they thought the plague was caused by spirits and so tried to scare them off. The Venice carnival lasted for 2 months and required everyone to wear masks for the whole time. In some places it was law to wear masks all year and there was a very popular game were you could only play if you had a mask on. While wearing a mask called the Gnaga you couldn’t be arrested unless you were being violent. I chose a mask that covered your eyes only. I chose to blend pink and purple for the background. To do that you paint half and half with your chosen colours then you get a clean brush and stab the paint starting from the bottom of the light colour and going up to the dark colour and finishing at the top of the dark colour. We then chose some colours to do the patterns and then freehanded the rest. We chose ribbons and the mask was varnished. I am very proud of my result. The masks are paper mache and hand made.

Volto

Mutta

The Plague Doctor

My mask


Skocjan Caves - Slovenia

On the 30/9 we went to the Skocjan Caves (don’t ask me how to pronounce it). There were two parts. The first part was called the Silent caves and the second the Water Murmuring caves. In the silent caves there were lots of impressive stalactites, stalagmites and stalacmuts (or cave pillars). The stalactites and stalagmites grow 0.0075 cm every year. The biggest one is called The Giant and is 15m tall and 200,000 years old! In the Water Murmuring caves there is a river. The river goes out through a small hole. Sometimes the hole gets blocked and the cave floods.  The water level rises 80 meters. There was an old explorers trail on the rock face and an old tourists trail by the river. The lowest point we reached was 121m underground. The cave system is 6kms long! The explorers only discovered the Silent caves in 1904 but discovered the Water Murmuring caves in the 1860s. This was because the caves were so dark and they were on the opposite side of the river from the Silent caves.

A photo we took in the cave

The 2nd half of the cave 


Predjama Castle - Slovenia

On the 1/10 (pinch and a punch for the first of the month no backs!) we went to Predjama Castle. Predjama Castle is 813 years old built into a cave and has natural tunnels and walls. It is halfway up a 123m cliff. The torture chamber is a natural room. Erazmus (the Slovenian Robin Hood) lived in the castle in the 14th century. He got attacked and wouldn’t come out so the attackers tried to starve him out. But Erazmus had a secret natural tunnel to the next, slightly warmer, valley. There he got food. Erazmus even sent the attackers talk a roast ox and cherries! The cherries in that valley weren’t ripe and you cant see the cave very well from the outside so it appeared that Erazmus was staying put; so the attackers thought that Erazmus had magical powers. Erazmus had water collectors in the cave to collect water because the stream; their rainwater source, could easily be poisoned. Finally the attackers caught a servant. The servant told them that the weakest place is the bathroom. The servant was released back into the castle to signal when Erazmus next went to the loo. The attackers got the signal and attacked the bathroom. Erazmus was killed. His girlfriend planted a lime tree next to his grave and it is now hollow and charred. I think it was hit by lightning.

Prejama castle

One of the half natural walls


Plitvička jezera - Croatia


On the 4/10 we went to Plitvička jezera. Plitvička jezera is a park with lots of waterfalls and lakes. It is beautiful. We saw a red frog by the bathrooms and fish in the lakes. The lakes are a beautiful blue and the highest waterfall is 26m tall. The deepest lake is 68m deep. We got a boat across the biggest lake and a bus up a hill.

A waterfall

Us on a board walk

A waterfall

Part of the park