
Saturday after work, Alex, a couple of other exchange students and I went to the "Terror Háza" in downtown Budapest. The Terror House was the headq

The next weekend was spent in Komárom, a city approximately 4 and a half hours from Nyíregyháza where my friend László lives. László was preparing for an English language exam so the weekend was spent watching movies and having conversations in English. Komárom is an interesting town because it is split right down the middle by the Slovakian border. From László's house it only takes about 10 minutes to walk across the Danube into Slovakia. Needless to say, I felt the need to cross the border (in defiance of Rotary's "no travel outside of Hungary" rules) to visit an "Irish" Pub (does a Guinness sign outside the pub qualify it as and Irish pub?) which was filled with musicians singing famous Hungarian songs.
Hungarian train workers have been striking every few months since I arrived here and I thought that my weekend plans were going to be ruined by the strike that started on Thursday evening, but luckily the strike lasted only about 9 hours, so by the time I arrived home from school last Friday I was able to pack up my bags and jump on a train to Szolnok where the Rotary Club there was holding a Farsang (don't ask me, I don't know what it means) Carnival. Everyone was required to dress up for the carnival and my friend Skyla and I had planned that we would go as a pair. Skyla dressed as a tree, and I went as a bird. Unfortunately, since I hadn't thought that I would be going to the carnival, the first train that I could catch arrived 30 minutes late, so I ended up putting my costume on in the tiny hotel bathroom. Believe me, when you have to put on fake eyelashes adorned with feathers, you don't want to have to do this in a public bathroom with 3 angry Hungarian woman waiting behind you so that they can wash their hands. Luckily, in the end my costume came together much better that I had hoped, so the evening was a success.
I know I owe you a bunch of pictures, but unfortunately, in the move from host family to host family, I have misplaced my USB cable. As soon as I get it back I will upload a bunch of new photos for you. In the meantime, please feel free to laugh at Skyla and I in Skyla's photos of the Carnival. (The girl wearing the polka-dotted t-shirt that says Pöttyös on it is Christine, who was dressed as a Túro Rudi, the famous Hungarian chocolate bar that I blogged about a few months ago.)
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