Jacqui-S
Moderator
- Location
- Fife, Scotland
Hey, Señor, your ML is very brave. Tell her next time to have a hot drink first, and wait a little for her hot shower, she will feel better 
Go Emily!

Go Emily!

Honestly @Jacqui-S , I think I had an out of body experience. I don’t even remember swimming, just jumping in! I did feel very refreshed…just amnesiac.Hey, Señor, your ML is very brave. Tell her next time to have a hot drink first, and wait a little for her hot shower, she will feel better
Go Emily!![]()
They are super shiny! And slippery! A lot of the older German tourists use their alpine walking sticks to try not to slip and fall over.Beautiful! Those cobblestones look so clean and shiny!!
Until high school (13 years old), I’d never even met someone who’d been out of the US. Or rather I’d met a lot of people who came to the US from somewhere else, but no one who was born in the US who had visited another country. Then my social studies teacher - who looked like a Mexican-American Tom Selleck, swoonWhat wonderful travels you have, have you always have had wanderlust? I thought the streets were shiny because they had just been washed! Are they shiny because of stone used, or worn down over the centuries?
Croatia is very, very on the tourism route, but October is late shoulder season so it is much quieter. I think it’s also more of a holiday destination for Europeans (mainly Germans, Austrians and Italians) vs worldwide - though Carbón and I have run into some big Chinese tour groups including yesterday in Šibenik.Wow, that view is incredible! And it’s so reassuring to know there are other beautiful places other than what we know on the typical tourist routes—which have become unbearably busy. (As I was trying to type “become”, “Venice” appeared!)
@Emily_Babbelhund, what an adventurous life you live, really living and not wasting a moment. Also brave! I do admire you, fortunately I get to 'visit' second hand which is great, thanks to youUntil high school (13 years old), I’d never even met someone who’d been out of the US. Or rather I’d met a lot of people who came to the US from somewhere else, but no one who was born in the US who had visited another country. Then my social studies teacher - who looked like a Mexican-American Tom Selleck, swoon- spent every Friday for a month showing us his photos from his European honeymoon. Blame Mr Rodriguez because from then on, I wanted to come here and see it all myself!
Also it is just purely addictive to travel: every new place is a chance to be a new, different, or maybe even better me. And around every corner may be the most beautiful or weird or funny thing I’ve ever seen. I also like the challenge of doing things I’m not comfortable with - like driving into a strange city - and feeling like I conquered my fears in a small way.
Like I said…addictive.
Re: the pavement, it’s a particular kind of stone. It’s not wet in my photos, it’s just very slippy and reflective. Your shoes squeak walking in it! Dry it’s fine, but wet is kind of like walking on a skating rink.![]()