Sunday, September 30, 2012

Leiden, Netherlands

One of the days we took a train of the city to a smaller town called Leiden. The train was nice, fast, and cheap. Only took us 30 minutes to get there. Daniel had read it was a quaint town with a windmill, so when in Netherlands- we had to see a real windmill. It also was the birth place of Rembrandt which we kindof stumbled upon by just walking around, so that was cool. And you know that bridge over in Holland, MI near dutch village- the white one with the black metal accents- like a drawbridge?? Well guess what- they had one exactly like it in Leiden!

Amsterdam 2

Amsterdam has two of the great museums of the world- the Rijks Museum and the Van Gogh museum. Rijks was under construction, so much to Daniel's liking :-) there was only a "highlights of the museum" exhibit which lasted about 12 galleries rather than the 300+galleries that are normally open. But really it was just what I wanted to see so it worked out great for both of us. There were 5/12 vermeer's on display and the super famous Rembrandt's like his self portrait and Night Watch.
The Van Gogh museum was pretty unbelievable. So many galleries full of Van Gogh- the famous paintings, the unseen paintings, and some amazing surprises. They did not allow pictures in the museum, so that was disappointing so I took a picture of the sign as my memory of the museum, and of course got a lot of souvenirs in the gift shop.

Amsterdam1

At the end of August I headed up to Amsterdam for a week of vacation. Daniel flew in from Columbus, and it was actually the same flight time for both of us- so really was a "meet in the middle". We spent a whole week which was the perfect amount of time. The city was so walk-able that we didn't take a taxi the entire week. Weather was amazing- cool but sunny. It only rained once in the afternoon and it was a quick storm so we got a beer and was over before we knew it. We stayed at the Hotel Pulitzer- a hotel that is 22 row houses joined together to create this awesome hotel! We had a top floor suite which had peaked roofs in the living room and bedroom and a fun little loft above the living room. It was like staying in a little cottage with the low ceilings then peaked gables- will definitely be staying there again if we go back. The bulk tulip bulbs were in the "floating flower market" It was so cool to see all the vendors selling bulbs like it was a fresh fruit market. They really do love their tulips here.

Monday, September 24, 2012

Warsaw, Poland

I know, I know, I haven't posted in weeks. I feel like I haven't been at my apt in Dubai for more than 36 hrs at any given time the past month. Daniel and I headed out to Amsterdam the end of August, then I hosted the US brand team in the middle east for a week, then we all went to Istanbul for a week and now I'm in Warsaw, Poland for our new country brand launch! I'll post the pictures of Amsterdam and Istanbul this week as I'm finally FINALLY going to be in Dubai for the week- and everyone is flying back to the US tonight! (deep breath! ahhhhh) It will be so nice to be in one place for a while.
So, Warsaw. I'm sitting outside at a starbucks in the old town, it's only 48 degrees out (10C), and I'm taking it all in because when I land in Dubai in 12 hrs it will 90+degrees and humid. Warsaw is a blend of a few old and alot of new--- new being 1980's, and a few new skyscrapers under construction. There are large areas where there is nothing- just grass, weeds, and then a few buildings, and then more open areas. When I asked about it they said it was from WW2- most of the city was destroyed, then the city was under Russia so communist era had no money to rebuild the city, so they ended up with all these vacant areas. This is also why the city is such a mix of very little old and a 1980's. There aren't hardly any heritage sites, very few museums, and maybe 8 churches that are historic. Compared to Vienna, or Prague it looks like a city you'd find in the midwest. I know- you're probably thinking "what?? The midwest?" but sitting here, in a starbucks, with an ING bank building across the street, with a few hotels along the street and a strip mall looking building around the corner, it really does feel like "just another city". It is also different to not see tourists. I have only once in the 5 days of being here seen 1 person with a camera outside the old town square which is in the picture above. That is the one area that was left in tact for the most part after the war. Otherwise, there are no groups walking around, no tour buses lining the side streets. It is a real, working class city. And I have to say it is refreshing. They are all really nice, people say hi to each other in the hotel, the group of associates I trained were all very polite and hard working and so excited for our new stores. The food is good- a mix of bavaria (bratwurst, beer, potatoes), perogies, and then the normal chain restaurants like McDonalds, BK, and KFC... no Chili's though, but I survived :-) Currency is the Polish Zl, not on the Euro- so I will have yet another envelope of a foreign currency in my safe! Seriously- I have 10 envelopes now! Our stores here look so good, the newest of new concept where they are wallpapered with our new 'blue and white' gingham pattern, and they are all located within the 50' of the mall entrances. Alot of good things going for us here. I'm really looking forward to the opening and seeing how the press events go. For sure we will be the sexiest, most fun store Poland has ever seen! :-)