Saturday 22 June 2013

Home.

Hello everyone.

This is my final blog post from my year abroad blog, for the near future anyway. I left Trier 21 days ago, and due to various things I haven't got round to writing this final post. I had planned to continue the blog regularly over the summer, but my internship in France fell through due to bureaucratic reasons I won't go into, so until I am working abroad for a decent period of time (looking for internships in Germany after graduating in July 2014 - fingers crossed!) I will leave this blog to sit peacefully in the internet.

My final week in Trier was horrifically fast, good fun and yet so, so painful. I have never been happier than I was in Trier, and I met some of my favourite people ever, so it was not fun saying goodbye to all that! I was presented with some beautiful and/or hilarious gifts, ranging from the 10 commandments in Saarlandisch (still can't translate all of them on my own!), to a school t-shirt, some awesome gammelhose (lounging trousers) and a brilliant book of memories from my housemates, which made me sob, struck by an unusual mixture of intense happiness for the good times we had and regret that I had to leave.

Below are just a few photos from some of the lovely things I did before leaving Trier :)


Hiking around Burg Rammstein

Another hike to a viewing point above Trier (bit out of puff by the top!)

Nights out with my girls

FINALLY went to the Kaiserthermen in Trier, the ancient Roman baths.

And much more, including a games night with my second lot of flatmates, which basically being involved being in stitches of laugher all evening.


I cannot explain how much the year meant to me, and I won't bore you with any more soppy stuff. Just look back through my blog posts to see all the cool things I saw, learnt and experienced.

If you are reading this and thinking about doing a language degree, preparing for your year abroad, considering moving abroad, anything like that all I can say is DO IT. In terms of increased confidence, independence, meeting great people, learning new skills (I am the speediest shopping bag packer EVER now) and just having fun nothing can rival living abroad. 

Thanks for reading everyone! Whilst writing this my blog tells me it has been viewed nearly 6,500 times in the space of 11 months. Woo! Its no Perez Hilton, but I am deeply flattered that you took the time to catch up on my odd adventures and rambling prose. 

I'll leave you with a few unexpected effects of coming HOME from your year abroad, which, whilst not being serious, have caused a few awkward moments. (Mostly supermarket-orientated).

1. Having a moment of panic about which side of the road cars should be on, either whilst being a passenger or a pedestrian (pleased to report, however, that the natural driving instinct has kept me on the left at all times).

2. Getting impatient in shopping queues when people faff around.

3. Handing cashiers the correct change to the penny and getting funny looks, because in Britain its acceptable to just hand them a note. Ditto apologising for not having correct change.

4. Marvelling at how stylish British supermarkets are in comparison with German warehouse-style ones, yet simultaneously thinking they could have saved money by keeping it less swish and kept food prices lower...

5. Constantly forgetting the English word for things, meaning your conversation is littered with "that thing....der Schrank...der...can't remember the English word, sorry" (cupboard)

6. Going out to clubs at 10/11 pm and finding it freakishly early, ditto when it closes at 2/3 having the beans left to carry on dancing a lot longer.

7. Talking to yourself in German when you think no one can hear.

8. Talking to your cat in German, and being convinced he understands it better than English.

9. Being surprised that beer is no longer cheaper than a soft drink when eating out.

10. Getting over-excited when you hear ANY German spoken at all, and wishing it was the norm again.

11. You become the annoying person who starts every sentence with "It's different/better/worse/the same in Germany..."

Auf wiedersehen!!!
Beth



Saturday 25 May 2013

20th April 2013

Hello again!

This week I am going to be recounting some of the nice and not so nice stuff that happened after our Germany road trip in March. I bumbled through April, writing my dissertation, planning lessons, partying a fair amount, duelling with the German language and of course, teaching.

Then, erm, as already mentioned, at around 1pm on Saturday, the 20th of April, Tylor and I were chilling in my room, having had a lazy morning watching Game of Thrones. Suddenly there was a bang on the door and my flatmate shouted "Komm raus, es brennt!" (come out, its burning!). Bewildered, Tylor and I looked at each other, then sprung into action: Tylor had been on the point of leaving anyway, so even had his shoes on, I however was still in gammelmode, so ran out of the house in my PJS, coat, just stopping to grab my handbag and of course, my hard drive with my diss on.

(As an aside, I realise retrospectively that all our fire safety chats back in primary school stressed not stopping to grab anything, but at that moment we couldn`t smell any smoke and well, my panic did not completely override my protection instincts for my diss, so I didn`t follow the advice 6 year old Beth received from the nice fireman, sorry!)

We gathered outside in a group of dazed students in various states of dress and varying states of shock, and watched our beloved Lintzstreet house burn. It had started in the attic of number 13 (next door, on the left looking at the pictures) and spread to the attic of our house.


The attic on fire.

Firefighters. Photo courtesy of volksfreund.de

A quick note on an admirable thing in Germany: there are beruflicher Feuerwehr (professional firemen) in every city, but the nation has a astonishingly well developed volunteer feuerwehr system, which is staffed by people from all walks of life ready to spring to action at any time to help those living in both villages and cities. We had the professionals of course but also the volunteers. After the fire was put out, a group of them sat down on the bench for a well earned rest, and took their helmets off. I was really moved upon seeing they were all gangly, acne-afflicted teenage boys (not a normal emotion for that sight, I can tell you) who had just spent 2+ hours of their weekend putting their own safety at risk. Bravo Germany, and thank you, German volunteer firefighters.

After the fire. The roof collapsed in on itself, a moment where the seriousness of the situation finally hit me, straight in the optimism, and the tears appeared.

The "attic" after the fire. Photo courtesy of volksfreund.de

As a building we were (and still are) very close, and comforted each other, especially those whose flats were directly underneath the fire. However, it was touching to see how the neighbours came out to help the 60 stranded, crying students: the Gaststätte handed out coffee, rolls and words of comfort for example, and a kindly neighbour gave out a fantastically odd assortment of warm clothing for those of us not dressed for 5 hours in the cold to wear. I am grateful to everyone that helped, and to Svenja and other people who came with their cars to pick up friends and take them home.

The aftermath of the fire was a bit hectic. The best thing was it was established that no one had been injured at all, something I`m so grateful for. The bad thing was that everyone was suddenly homeless for 6 days. The worse thing was that of the 12 flats, 6 were damaged beyond repair and were homeless for good. Those of us in the outer flats, my flat included, tried to help those in the middle.


As for our flat, all but one of us decided to move out despite our flat being intact, as the stress of the situation combined with the future of living in a building site made us just want to get away asap. I only had 6 weeks left in Germany at the time, so it didn`t make sense to find somewhere new. I moved in with Tylor (boyfriend, fellow assistant and fellow blog writer, see here) and his welcoming flatmates. 

A little side note: I`m not a soppy person naturally, in fact my loathing of romantic films is despaired of by many long-suffering friends, but I cannot do enough justice to Tylor´s support on the day of the fire and ever since. Not only did he immediately insist upon my moving in and taking care of me, he`s put up with me ever since, and stopped at nothing to get me out of my little shocked closed-off mind that I retreated into after the fire. Thank you Tylor, you are awesome! <3

Your house burning down when you´re living in a foreign country is not ideal, and afterwards I seriously considered the prospect of going home early and curling up with my cat for 2 months. However, stiff upper lip and all that, or more appropriately I love my friends in Trier too much to leave early, and I´m so so glad that in the end I decided to stay ´til the end.

The exact cause of the fire hasn`t been established yet, and there is a criminal investigation underway. Who knows if or when any solid reason will come out. But the Lintzstreet was easily my favourite place EVER to live and I made some awesome friends there. The feeling of unity amongst the people that live there was summed up with the following poster, designed by Dan (M.D.Rezaiekhaligh), a pretty awesome graphic designer from the building:


Courtesy of M.D.Rezaiekhaligh


Right, drama over. I dithered over wether to write this post or not for ages but in the end I thought well, it was a big part of my year abroad and a learning experience if ever there was one. Next post: some of the nice hikes I`ve been on in the last few weeks!

Tschüss!!










Wednesday 15 May 2013

10 Reasons Why Doing A British Council Assistantship (in Germany) can prepare you for working life in general.

Hi there! Here is a little side post I thought of and wrote on the train on the way back from work the other day.

I don`t actually want to be a teacher, despite the amount of enjoyment I`ve got from doing the Assistantship, but I got to thinking about the skills I`ve learned this year which can be applied (hopefully) to wherever my career may take me after graduating. Here are some that sprung to mind.







1. German schools like to start early, and getting up at 6 ain't no big thing.

2. The impressive skill I've acquired of being able to hide all signs of fear and glide through a crowd of screaming, swearing, fighting kids will help control my emotions in stressful situations in later life.

3. Ditto the knowledge that head up, shoulders back, a deep breath in and a smile can make the world of difference to your outer confidence, and a surprising amount to your inner one too.

4. Teachers like to complain, which is good to an extent but I can now differentiate between the important and not so important issues. (I really don't care if the school fair is on a Sat or a Sun, but the school felt the need to debate it for 35 mins, including 4 votes.)

5. When speaking your own language, as well as any foreign ones you may speak, be aware of what you're saying, and say it as clearly as possible.

6. Preparation is good, winging it considerably more risky.

7. If you feel you're being misused, (too much subbing in my case for instance) then don't be afraid to speak up

8. BUT if stuff seems out of your depth at first, stick at it for a bit. I was surprised how the Big Scary Thing that was standing alone infront of a class of 30 kids became just average and No Big Thing at all.

9. Force yourself to speak to your coworkers, no matter how insociable, exhausted or anti-german-speaking you may feel that day. They'll respond very happily, 9 times out of 10.

10. Cake is always welcome. Everywhere.

Monday 13 May 2013

"It`s just on the outskirts of Nuremburg...I think": Germany Roadtrip, Part 3!

Hello again! I am on it with the writing apparently. There`s sooooo much I want to mention before I go.

Also, this blog won`t be properly ending like I planned at the end of the month, as I have an internship in Nimes, France. I don`t know how much internet I`ll have though, so it will be a while before I know how regularly I can update this. I leave Germany on the 1st of June, go home, turn 21 on the 4th of June and head off to France on the 10th! Crazy.

We left the Roadtrip at my slightly disillusioned thoughts of Prague. The next day we headed to the main station, where we had booked ourselves onto a coach heading to Nuremburg. Shortly after a gleaming white coach with the red Deutsche Bahn stripe and logo pulled up, and we ashamedly admitted our relief at joining the German transport system so soon. It`s like a sort of cuddle blanket for the weary traveller.

Upon arriving in Nuremberg we changed onto a train heading to our Couchsurfing crib. Another thing I`d always wanted to try is Couchsurfing (link here), a worldwide organisation whereby if you`ve got a spare sofa or bed in our house and are open to meeting new people you can post it on this website, and people can apply to come stay with you. Basically its like Mitfahrgelegenheit in my last post only with sleeping not driving. I was a little nervous of doing this alone, so with Whitney and Tylor there it seemed like a good opportunity to meet new people and safely. Plus, its free!

I knew the place wasn`t directly in Nuremberg, but hadn`t quite realised it was a 40 min train ride away. Then again, that`s my commute, so that`s standard for me! Anyway, we were picked up by our Host, Michael, in Ansbach, Bavaria, and taken to his farmhouse. He lives in a house share in a cool farmhouse with 7 other people in literally the middle of nowhere. I can`t imagine students doing that in Britain but it was great! Everyone was great and it was really chill, they gave us home made apple juice, owned chickens and a cat and our Host played in an acoustic band, called Elena Jank & the Acoustics (our Host on the double bass), check out this video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uJwA9RsIxlQ

I read an article (click for article) yesterday about the downfall of Couchsurfing. I may be new, but experiences like this and the couple of times my flat hosted a Surfer make me glad that, if the original feeling of couchsurfing is indeed fading away, I`ve been lucky enough to experience some of it myself. It was such a positive experience.

The next day we headed back to Trier, it may have taken nearly 8 hours and 5 regional trains/trams but our spirits were high, and we were cheered by the prospect of our own beds. It was 10 days, 9 cities and a hell of a lot of fun.


Here`s a few photos I missed last time:

4 of some 10 odd cars in a row that had been clamped in Prague. Gutted.


The view of Prague from the castle, pretty nice eh?



As a final note: on the weekend before the fire, which is the subject of the next post by the way, we celebrated Whitney`s hen night/bachelorette party/Junggesellinnenabschiedsparty (spot the German term). In Germany the modern tradition is to have a Bauchlädchen, a sort of tray on a neck strap, from which you sell things like cupcakes, shots, sweets and condoms. We got Whitney dressed up and hit sunny, crowded Trier on a Saturday afternoon and wow it was so much fun! Not the most intelligent of pursuits admittedly but so entertaining. 

It was also heartwarming how generous the public were, most people paid at least 3 euros for a cupcake, some 5 or 6, and before we knew it we`d earned 60 euros from 15 cupcakes. The Apprentice, here we come. Below is a picture of us before setting off. Guess which one is Whitney!


Bis gleich!



P.S The Porta Nigra and its surrounding area are covered in 500 mini red and orange statues of Karl-Marx, famous philosopher and born in Trier. It is in honour of his 195th birthday apparently. Amusingly, over 50 have already been stolen.







Sunday 12 May 2013

GerSoc in Leipzig, the Stasi museum and money confusion in Prague: Germany Roadtrip Part 2

Hello hello hello

My dissertation is complete! Which means, I finally have the time and energy to finish the many blog posts I started. Also, I am welling up just thinking about it but sadly I have only 3 weeks left in Trier! This has gone WAY TOO FAST. Right now I really wish I could borrow Bernard`s Watch for a while (apologies if you`re not a British 90`s kid and don`t get the TV reference). He may have used it for worthwhile things like helping his friends out or getting the better of bullies: I`d just use it for a couple more schnitzelabends, evenings sat around with flatmates (new and old) and Sunday afternoon walks along the Moselle.

Anyway, where was I? Of course, the roadtrip! We`d left the tale at Kassel, having just left Pepe the hire car (traumatically). The next day we got picked up by a business man, which we`d organised through a German website called Mitfahrgelegenheit (http://www.mitfahrgelegenheit.de/). Say you`re a German businessman/woman, a commuter or someone just generally going on a long car journey past several cities. To save a few bob on fuel and to escape the German radio (it`s a bit tedious, sorry Germany but it is) you can post your journey on this website and people ring you up and ask to join for all or part of it. The Brit in me was highly skeptical of the safety of this venture, but then the adventurous side won over and tried it out. This was the second time we`d done it, and to get from Kassel to Leipzig in a couple of hours in a roomy car with good conversation for 13 euros, you can`t complain. We arrived in Leipzig in good spirits, and he dropped us off 5 mins from our hostel right in the city centre.

One of the main reasons for going to Leipzig was that the German Society of Southampton Uni was having their annual trip there at the same time. GerSoc is always good fun and having been heavily involved last year as pres I was keen to join them, so we booked ourselves into the hostel. The group quickly treated my American and Canadian co-travellers as one of the gang, and we had a LOT of fun over the next few days sightseeing, exchanging banter and trying not to turn into human icicles.

Incidentally, I seem to have spent a large part of my year abroad trying not to turn into an icicle. Germany definitely does get colder than Britain.

Making myself at home in the amazing hostel. (Say Cheese! Hostel, Leipzig). BIG THUMBS UP.

Leipzig Rathaus. Leipzig is beauuuutiful.


Statue of Johann Sebastian Bach outside the Thomaskirche. 
Leipzig is famous for its influence on and prevalence of classical music. 



We visited a Stasi museum in the old Leipzig Stasi headquarters. Whilst wandering around the displays of anti-capitalistic propaganda, I was see-sawing between 2 emotions: incredulity verging on hilarity at the conditions, beliefs and actions of the Stasi. The second was horror, which crept up slowly. It may be interesting to read about, but the extent of the observation the Stasi subjected on East Germans came as a complete surprise. I knew, obviously, about the black vans and the neighbour-on-neighbour- suspicion and the Überwachungskamera (CCTV), but I hadn`t realised just how much the lives of the everyday East German had been remotely-controlled like a child`s race car. It puts the CCTV debate back in Britain in a new perspective, certainly, and I left thinking about how lucky I am to live in a country where freedom is almost exactly what it says on the tin. 

I`m not saying East Germany was in general a bad country to live in. In fact most people I spoke to (including the business man who drove us there who had lived in East Berlin until the fall of the wall)  spoke of it very fondly on the whole, but the Stasi really was a nasty business indeed. Below is a list of the Stasi officers themselves who were executed for disloyalty (hingerichtet) to the party, and other reasons. The last one, Werner Teske, (wiki page here) was one of the Stasi elite, executed for alleged treason and the last person to be executed in Germany.


Quick story I`ve just remembered. We asked the businessman "where were you when the wall fell?" (always a good question to ask any Germans older than about 33). His answer (remembering he lived in East Berlin and was about 18 at the time) was great. I can`t remember the facts exactly, but this is my best retelling.

He said he was at a house/bar getting drunk with his friends. They`d been discussing the tension in the city, but none of them thought much would really happen. One of the friends was particularly drunk, and went outside (to get some fresh air I imagine.) Later on, when they thought the guy had passed out, he suddenly banged the door open, stumbled into the room and said "Morgen fahre ich nach West Deutschland!" (Tomorrow I`m going to West Germany). They all laughed, and the businessman said "go to bed, you`re drunk and talking rubbish". That was indeed the night the wall was torn down, so their drunken friend was right after all, drunk or not.


We also went to Dresden for the day. I was mal gespannt (no direct translation, kinda means like curious to see how it turns out) to see Dresden, as I had no idea how much it had been rebuilt since being essentially completely destroyed during the Second World War, particularly during the bombings of February 13th - 15th, 1945. The old town has been completely rebuilt, and is very beautiful. I didn`t like it as much as the new town though, which, though rather ugly, feels more like the Germany I really like : a bit alternative, bustling with locals and hidden gems. Two of these gems we found; one was a huuuuge bycicle, the other, a tiny photo booth, where we`d heard the record amount of people in there at one time was 8 people. Naturally we tried to break this record, but only managed 7.


GerSoc on a bike.

Cosy.


The middle photo makes me laugh every time, what possessed me to make that face I have no idea.

On the last night in Leipzig we headed to the Moritz Bastei for a night out. It was good fun, its like a series of underground tunnels, during the day you can eat there very cheaply and in the evening the same goes for the partying. We had a small er, run in with the police on the way, when Paddy was fined for urinating in a rubbish bin. In the words of the Leipig Polizei: "We are sorry but we just do not like that in the city of Leipzig". 

The next day we sadly left GerSoc behind and headed on to Prague. We did another Mitfahr, though sadly this one wasn´t er, quite so good, as the Czech driver turned out to be slightly psychotic. An example: we`re driving along the stunning river Elbe. We`re in a new country, and the sun is shining. However, only one eye can appreciate the beauty, and our nerves not at all, as the rest of us is concentrated on the extremely erractic over-taking of the Czech guy, and praying that we won`t crash. Good news! He didn`t crash, but lesson learnt: not all Mitfahrs are the best. 

We reached Prague, and proceeded to get some money out so we could travel into the city centre. This triggered a typical tourist moment: standing there, with 1000 Kroner in one`s hand (about 40 euros) and thinking "do I buy a car with this or a chocolate bar?".

I have to admit though, that over the next few days we spent a lot of time wandering around Prague, waiting for that "I love this city this city is amazing its even better than what everyone says it is" moment. It never came. Prague is gorgeous, and there`s plenty to see, but what I think ruined it for me was being such an utter tourist. I`m afraid readers I`ve got too used to being able to speak the language, and knowing where I am, and being shown places by locals. I`ve been spoilt, basically, so suddenly I was all too aware of the swarms of loud, ipad carrying (I kid you not, people use Ipad as cameras, hahaha!) and semi drunk tourists. I felt embarrassed and uncomfortable, and wanted to be back in Germany where I blended in with the locals. Speaking of which, aside from manning the overpriced stalls and coffee shops, the locals were nowhere to be seen in the city centre. 

My dislike of Prague may have had a lot to do with my state of mind generally though, as by now the journey was starting to take its toll on us. I was getting nosebleeds from the cold, Tylor had a bad cold and Whitney was still limping from Würzburg, and badly. Being a decent tourist requires a bit more energy and interest than I could really summon up at the time, so take my thoughts of Prague with a pinch, nay a bucket of salt.

That`s it folks! Part 3 coming soon.





Monday 22 April 2013

1000 odd km on the wrong (right) side of the road: Germany Roadtrip, Part 1.


Hello everyone!

Sorry for the rather large gap between blog posts, I'm a bit stressed at the moment writing my dissertation type thing due in soon so have very little energy or inclination to write for pleasure. Stress also spiked when my laptop gave up the ghost (interestingly Germans have a very similar idiom for this, den Geist aufgeben).

Also, since writing the above a few days ago my house caught fire. Everyone is ok due to someone raising the alarm early enough but we are currently all temporarily homeless and slightly in shock. As a result, I can't sleep, so I thought I'd catch up on my blog posts. I may write about the fire in a later post, but in the meantime we'll content ourselves with the stories of the Awesome German Roadtrip.

So, back in March Tylor, Whitney and I decided we hadn't seen enough of Germany and as Whitney only had a few weeks left before returning to the States we planned a haphazard road trip.

Our trip began Thursday, 21st March. Trier Hauptbanhhof was the launching pad, a 3 way happy clap was our official opening ceremony. We trained it to Koblenz, during which Whitney and Tylor discussed the first things they would do upon arriving back home in the States and Canada respectively. In a nutshell, a lot of barbequing. As a Brit, I naturally couldn't contribute a lot to this.

Upon arriving in Koblenz I started to get rather nervous, as we were to hire a car, and I was to drive it. Driving on the right + German driving (very aggressive) + Autobahns + Snow makes for a very nervous Beth. I was soothed a bit upon finding out our car was a Ford Fiesta, a newer version than mine at home but still, Fiestas I can do. Anyway, we set off and despite Tylor having to keep a close eye on the distance between our car and parked cars (not always big enough) I was doing it! We headed up to Hannover to pick up Heather, Tylor's friend from home, then headed to Kassel.

During my Autobahn driving experience Tylor fed me chocolate as a reward for not driving into oncoming traffic, basically.

I'm sad we didn't get to see more of Hannover. Here's some pictures (courtesy of Tylor) of the Rathaus and a cool ruined church we saw during our 2 hour stop though:



The drive to Kassel was the worst drive of the weekend, as it was so foggy you could barely see 50 metres ahead and also snowy. Luckily nothing happened though, and we arrived in Kassel safetly. We much delighted in telling Heather, who has only recently begun the adventure that is learning the German language, that her street in slang meant penis street. So mature.

Anyway, we made Heather's lovely apartment in Kassel our base for the next few days and did a few day trips to see some other cities.
I hadn't heard much about Kassel, but was interested to learn from Heather that Kassel is a mecca for modern art. Each festival they keep one of the exhibitions and erect it somewhere in the city. We discovered a few of them, and I simultaneously but completely independently realised I wasn't entirely keen on all Modern Art. Examples below:

Casual rock in a tree.
A silver lion being attacked by Ants. Tylor was not pleased.
 
OK so this one was actually quite cool. Who doesn't like a giant robot after all?

All in all though Kassel is very pleasant, and just outside of the city there is a beautiful castle, with a huge statue of Hercules on the top of the hill. We only went as far as the castle I'm afraid, as we hadn't much time and there was a high chance due to snow and ice of taking a speedy and slippery trip back down the hill:


For Tylor's much better description of Kassel, with more historical stuff, click here.

The next day we headed to Göttingen, a beautiful old university city just over the Bundesland border back into Niedersachsen. Sadly it was "a bit nippy" so not much exploring was done. We also accidentally crashed a wedding when looking for the Information Centre, oops. Who has a wedding in a tourist information centre anyway?!

Hoover purchased (don't ask) and the sights seen, we headed back to Kassel to warm up a bit (and y'know, sleep). The next day we headed to Würzburg, in the Franken region of northern Bavaria. I'd heard about Würzburg and its beauty from a uni friend who's from there (Hi Fred if you're reading!!) so was excited to see it for myself. We checked into our hotel and set off to see the sights. We had about 3 hours that afternoon to see as much as we could, so we sketched out a strategic plan of attack. Our first stop was the Würzburger Rezidenz, a baroque castle near the city centre.

For all the "Must Sees!" follow this link: http://www.wuerzburg.de/en/visitors/must-sees/index.html

 
Heather, Tylor and Whitney making a W for Wurzburg.
We also taught Heather some useful German over dinner.
 

We were on edge, wanting to see as much as possible in 3 hours, which seemed an impossible task. However, 3 mins walk from the Rezidenz we found ourselves at the next Must See, 4 mins later we were standing at the next one Würzburg Cathedral (see below). We stared at the map, surprised. How could we have crossed the city centre in a matter of minutes? The answer came to us simultaneously: Würzburg is bloody tiny.

No matter, it just meant its beauty was concentrated into a more manageable arena.
After a small run in with a casual football riot, we headed to the Main Event of the Day, the Würzburg Festung Marienberg (fortress), which has been a defensive site since about 1000 BC. The Fortress itself has been there since roughly 1200 AD. Unfortunately, we managed to get lost when trying to find a way up to the fortress twice, proving it to be a very well designed fortress in doing so. We eventually found a winding path up through the vineyards. We took a shortcut up an incredibly steep hill, and Whitney and Tylor (cool kids that they are) decided to charge the fortress. Fun, until Whitney woke up with a sprained foot for her troubles the next morning. Battle wounds aside, we still took the fortress.

The Fortress, with a random bagpipe player in the foreground!

The view of Wurzburg from the fortress.
 
Anyway, the next morning we headed home, tired but happy, to Kassel.

Below is a screenshot of our route through Germany, 1,080 km in total, fun. Note the Netherlands for size reference.


We were due to say goodbye to the car (dubbed Pepe) by midday; we arrived in plenty of time, cleaned out the car, put the keys in the deposit box and called a taxi.


Here things took a dramatic turn for the worst though (dun dun dunnn), as we then realised we'd forgotten to actually lock the car, and the keys were irretrievable. To make things worse, the new Fiesta is missing the manual door lock buttons by the windows, stupid modernisation. Even better, the door lock button on the dashboard we tried pressing sat in the car reversed itself once any of the doors were opened to then get out.


Thoroughly stumped and starting to panic, the taxi arrived. We sent Heather in to stall, which, considering her aforementioned lack of German involved her going "Kleine Moment" and pointing at us. The taxi driver, bemused and concerned, possibly thought we were trying to steal the car.

Anyway, then Whitney, goddess of America, saved the day. She had the bright idea of closing all the side doors, opening the boot, clambering through, pressing the button on the dashboard, clambering back out and closing the boot, which locks automatically after itself. And hurrah! It worked. Cue us dancing around, wildly celebrating Whitney's intelligence.

As Tylor said, trust the Americans to have to come save us all from ruin (or a rather hefty fine).

I'll end on this happy note, Part 2 will be coming soon, depending on well, you know, my living situation.

Auf wiedersehen!





P.S you may have noticed an awful lot of war and battle imagery in this blog post. This is a representation of our mindset and determination to see as much as possible of Germany within 10 days, and we would stop at nothing. Woo!

Tuesday 19 March 2013

Trains, planes and Cymru am Byth!!



Hello again to my odd blog. Today I'm writing to you from a café next to the train station in Mettlach, and I'm late for school. Not by my own means, I was at Trier Süd at 7.04 as usual but the trains have done something I wasn't even sure German had a word for, they've gone on strike. Luckily I'm not working properly til 3rd lesson, so i'm just waiting for a lift up the mountain.

Anyway, this blog post is about my short visit home last week. This isn't going to be just a long rambling post about my 30 hour wait to get home though as, fun as that was, blow by blow account would prove be a bit boring.


The departures board for the airport, hard to see but almost all flights have "annuliert" written after them (cancelled).

In a nutshell, due to heavy snow Frankfurt am Main airport got closed due to snow, and I got caught up in it. This involved:

  • A 4 hour queue on Tues evening. By the end of it me and my fellow queueing buddies were best friends. Shout out to guy going to Copenhagen, guy from Mexico, guy from London and Danish guy.


The Bild (Germany's equivalent of The Sun) summed it up nicely.

  • Missing 2 connections and 3 planes being delayed. Or something, lost track a bit.

  • Badgering Lufthansa for food vouchers every 4 hours or so, resulting in nearly €50 worth of free food.


My final plane to take me home arriving through the snow. I thought, having got all the way to Brussels, it was cancelled again, but apparently the snow wasn't too much of a problem on Weds evening.

  • Upon arriving in Birmingham discovering that my bag never left Frankfurt, and not actually giving a damn because at least I myself had made it home. (Update, it arrived Monday aternoon, 6 days after they lost it...)

Oh well, so ist das Leben and all that.

The first 2 days when I finally got home were nice, just involved seeing my family and oldest friend Abs, watching some films and visiting Cardiff. On the Saturday however Exciting Things took place: Wales v England Six Nations decider.

In general I'm not a massive sports viewer, (at least, apart from this summer when, like everyone else, suddenly all I wanted to do was watch Turkey play Spain at ooh, I don't know, the leaf-blowing semi finals at the Olympics) but when it comes to rugby my love has slowly but surely grown.

As a child I hated rugby, as it would mean every week I (accompanied by the cat) would have to make a quick exit from the living room, startled by my Dad's explosive cheers of "come on Wales!", "run you bugger!" Or "****", my ears ringing from the aural assault that is the sound of his man hands clapping together in tension/excitement.

Anyway, the older I got the better I found watching rugby, and once at uni the fun times with Southampton uni Cymrusoc cemented my own passion for rugby. So, seeing as I was home for the event of the year that was Wales v England I duly made my way into Cardiff to watch the match. Even 4 hours before the atmosphere was electric. A sea of red flowed through St Mary's Street, a hotpot of older generations booming out Sospan Fach and the younger (female) generation replete in tiny dresses, towering heels, red dragons on their faces and blue knees from the cold.

(aside here, but ok, I know we welsh are a hardy lot, but HOW those girls expected to last in those heels from 1pm to 2am I have no idea, and really wanted to ask them).

Fans watching a 15ft screen. Note the random fans dressed in white amongst the red: they're the English, bless them.




Complete with a Welsh dragon on my cheek I too headed pub-wards. We eventually settled on the Gatekeeper, where after some sly yet oh-so-casual shuffling awarded all 4 of us with a brilliant view of the 15 foot screen. At 4.55 I went to queue for the loo, forgetting that the anthem was about to start;upon hearing the words "Mae hen wlad fy nhadau..." I dashed back to my friends, garbling something about how loo time can wait.

Here is a crappy phone video of the craziness that is a welsh pub 200 metres from the stadium singing along to the Welsh nation anthem. WARNING: Turn the volume down before you watch it.




Brief pause to explain something: Wales v England is always a big deal, but this year was particularly special because, although England were winning the tournament at that point, Wales weren't very far behind them on points, so IF Wales were to beat England with 7 points of more of a lead we would win the six nations (though not the Grand Slam, sniff). Tense stuff.

The game kicked off (with huge applause for Leigh Halfpenny, current Welsh rugby god and ideally my future husband) and we screamed our hearts out. At halftime the score was Wales 9 - 3 England, so while we were in good spirits we still hadn't won the tournament by any stretch of the imagination. That is, until, early in the second half Wales scored a try, then a glorious second one, and a conversion. We screamed, hugged each other, hugged randoms, someone poured a pint down my back in excitement and frankly my dear I didn't give a damn. Before we knew it the score was 30 - 3. Even with over 15 mins left people made their way to the bar and bought bottles of champagne, and the few English in the bar either surreptitiously made their way out of the screaming pile of Welsh or (the better ones in my opinion) shrugged their shoulders, summoned a grin and congratulated the people around them.

At full time (despite a cheeky last minute attempt at a try by England) we went crazy for roughly the 8th time :for the second year in a row Wales had won the six nations!

Now, if we could just beat New Zealand one of these decades...

I know I sound like any other sports fan and you're probably sat here wondering WHAT ON EARTH this is doing in a Year Abroad blog in Germany but I'll just say this: its times like these when, no matter how Germany is and will probably continue to be in the future my adopted home, I will never give up the brilliantly average (excluding rugby of course), cheerful and ever-singing nation that is Wales.




Get me the tissues.

PS I am pretty sure this will be the last blog post til the beginning of April, as in 2 days time Tylor, Whitney and I are heading off on a 10 day backpacking adventure around Germany (and Prague) where I may be learning to drive on the right (wrong) side of the road as we go, eek. Tschüss!!

Thursday 7 March 2013

Let's just call this YARP Procrastination...


So this is one of my posts without a theme...or point. I've been in Germany for 6 months now. This is odd. I've only got 3 months left! Seriously where has the time gone?

Identifying the last 6 months as the best of my life is an easy task. I have had SO much fun this year and met some brilliant people. Also my German is y'know, getting better.

However I'm going to be honest, I'm not really the ferociously independent, culture-savvy girl I spend a lot of time pretending to be whilst hanging out in Germany (ok, you'd clearly figured that out already), and there are a few things I probably wouldn't have coped without to be honest. In no specific order...

1. The Scott Mills Show on Radio 1. It's hardly the most intelligent thing in the world and I would probs get more out of listening to German radio during my train journeys but sometimes the random banality that are the podcasts are exactly what you need. I mean like, on those days where its 8 am, you've been up for 2 hours already and haven't a soul to speak to (except for the kids from the special disciplinary school 2 train stops up from you, and that's not pleasant, believe me), its just nice to hear some familiar voices. The downside to this is it does occasionally cause me to laugh out loud on public transport, which is very much frowned at...

2. My flatmates.
What can I say. They've nicknamed me "Betzi", have endless patience for my stammering German and forgetful ways, mother me when I'm stressed and bake delicious bread. They're brilliant party buddies too (in fact much more hardcore than I). What more could I want? When I took the risk of waiting for their decision to take me for the spare room or not (read about that here) it was one of my über rare good decisions.

3. Internet-savvy parents, who are brilliant at keeping up an email correspondence, even if its a slightly odd one at times.

4. In contradiction, a best friend (shout out to Abs) who has the time, patience and good heart to keep up some good old fashioned letter writing. Nothing can cheer me up more after a hard day teaching and travelling than one of her kooky letters with its 5+ stamps waiting in the letter box.

5. Nice teachers. The ones at school who actually seem to give a damn about my presence, and are ready to help me with the little things.

  • Example 1: the teachers who have agreed to sit in on my YARP interviews so I don't get suffocated by the red tape that surrounds researching involving children. 


  • 2: The teacher who came up to me and went "Do you know what, I've decided. Wales is much more interesting than England, I even bought a Welsh phrase book the other day out of curiosity".* 

Day made.

6. My room. I've said it before and I'll say it again, I looove my room (and my bed) and can't imagine being happy living in a place I didn't like.

7. Trier.

Ahh, was für eine schöne Stadt! Big but not too big, with plenty to do and a nightlife in all shapes and sizes to match your mood. Highlights being:


  • Cubi Culum a (miraculously) smoke free, friendly and reasonably priced bar and restaurant in an old cellar in the town centre. 
  • Die Grüne Rakete (the green rocket) which is Trier's version of Jesters, only slightly cleaner but on the downside you can smoke it in and they are slightly too-keen on nineties hip-hop. Still, if like me you adore Jesters then perfection is clearly not your main concern.
  • New Mintons. They have €5 Schnitzel on Tuesdays, 'nuff said.
  • The Porta Nigra. (see background picture on blog). Interesting historically, looks cool and at the end of the day its a very convenient meeting point. **
  • The half Turkish kebab house, half bar on the Saarstrasse. 2 things I love about this place:
    • it smells SO nice on my walk home from work/anywhere else in Trier basically
    • its such an odd combination but it just WORKS. So you go in and the first half is typical Döner laden: a pile of lettuce, a vat of garlic sauce and of course the two friendly Turkish guys slicing off the meat. A few metres beyond however and you suddenly find yourself in the middle of a typical Trierian bar, with wizended locals drinking Bitburger by the barrel and screaming "Jawohl!!" and other things in their incomprehensible Trierian dialect at the Handball on the TV in the corner. Odd.
8. Deutsche Bahn
Say what you like about it, if Britain had a rail network HALF as developed, efficient and reasonably-priced as Germany's David Cameron could take half the year off for Good Behaviour and spend the other half dealing with the important issues, like the ratio of crisps to air in Walker's crisp packets, or finding the key to eternal life purely for Queen Elizabeth the second's use, stuff like that.


9. Whitney and Tylor, two of my favourite people I've got to know this year. We're doing a 9 day trip in 2 weeks time to explore some of eastern Germany, including meeting up with Southampton University's very own GerSoc in Leipzig and then heading on to Prague. You guys rock and I cannot wait!!


10. My laptop. LOL JK. I feel it needs a mention because I use it so much and I wouldn't have coped without one, plus it did survive The Attack of the Facewash back in October, but I do find myself longing for one with a working keyboard and one that doesn't regularly shut down without any warning.


How did I get to 10 already? Odd. Anyway, hope you enjoyed. Bis bald! xx




*no I didn't make that up, he really said that to me! In English too, so it's not even a case of overly hopeful translation.


**sorry, I am joking, it has much more worth than a good meeting point, honest.

Friday 1 March 2013

Mainzzzzzz




Hello everyone! Friday was St.David's Day in Wales, I was keeping up tradition (ish) by wandering round Trier in my Welsh rugby shirt and making welsh cakes (ish) on a waffle iron.

Finally got round to this post, have figured out how to keep up with the posts: downloading a notepad app and writing them on my phone on the 40 min train ride to or from work.


I've been writing this on a few mornings in late Feb. It's finally light enough to see something other than pure blackness out of the windows, so I've been enjoying admiring the early morning 80 meter coal barges puffing their way up the Saar. I can't help but wonder how the driver, situated at the very back, gets round the many corners of the windy Saar. I have trouble controlling a shopping trolley in a supermarket.


Anyway, I'm rambling. So, starting on Thurs the 7th of February the German FastNacht festival kicked off and so began one of the best weekends of my year abroad so far. The Thursday is called Weiberdonnerstag, which is traditionally a day when women are in control. What it really means is you're allowed to go up to any man wearing a tie, cut a bit off and get a kiss for your trouble.


Sadly I didn't take part it this odd tradition, but my flat did hold a pretty sweet flat party, costumes and all. We all decided to go as animals: I was a sheep, Natalie a peacock (Pfau in German), Mari as the blind mole (off a tv programm I think) and Anne as a rather spectacular owl.

See photo below.






Also, check out this photo of Tylor helping me clean the floor the next morning. I had never seen it so bad!





The next day I did the 4 and a half hour train journey to Marburg, Hessen, to see Vic, a uni friend.


She's working at a variety of uni libraries there (see her blog here) but hangs out with the Erasmus students there, who we met. Marburg is SO beautiful! I would (and have) recommend it to anyone for a day trip or weekend away: see pics below.












After that I jumped on a train to Frankfurt am Main on my way to Mainz. The train station at Frankfurt (oh and Giessen on my way to Marburg by the way) triggered strong flashbacks of mine and Soph's Maggot Farm adventure back in the day. Might make a flashback post about that next.


So, Mainz. To explain, you know how in Britain we have the scrummy tradition of making and eating pancakes just before Lent starts? Well instead for the 5 days before most of Germany including and south of Cologne dresses up in costumes, consumes large amounts of alcohol on the streets, generally goes crazy and throws big parades through towns, villages and cities. This also apparently has something to do with the end of winter too, its a confusing time of year.


Anyway this all culminates on the Monday with huge 4-5 hour long parades in Cologne and Mainz, and I was lucky enough to head to Mainz with Tylor and Whitney to stay in the apartment of Tylor's friend, which even more luckily overlooked the parade route.


The parade kicked off at 11.11 am (people having claimed the best spots -meaning something to lean on- and started drinking from 9am). It consisted of a mixture of music bands, floats with political messages and floats with people chucking out sweets and bouncy balls- check out the pictures below.





Reference to a traditional song sung on this day: "Komm, wil woll'n den Eisbär seh'n" (Come, we want to see the polar bear)




Note the people on the float chucking sweets.








Bit of a political one there...








With 3 sets of large windows overlooking the parade on the first floor we had the opportunity to test the throwing skills of the sweet-throwers in attempting to chuck us sweets through the window, to mixed results. Fun activity in its own right though.

You are supposed to shout "HELAU" and wave your arms in Mainz and "ALAAF" in Cologne. Why, sadly no one actually knew...









Once the parade was finally over we had a little break (ate food and played drinking games) before heading out to the huge street party in our costumes.


2 highlights of this more restful part of the day were:


1) watching the army of street cleaning machines and people take to the road immediately, leaving it in spotless condition after 20 kind. This was almost as entertaining as the parade itself, and was summed up amusingly by Tylor's friend saying "Germans love to PAAARTAY. But then we must clean."


2. The discovery that amaretto and fanta is lecker (tasty).





The great cleanup effort





To be honest, the less said about the evening the better (plus this is getting rather long). I will leave you with 3 excerpts:


1) Whitney finding a giant box costume, donning it, then, unable to see her feet, falling over the kerb and lying helplessly and tortoise-like on her back on the floor. Creased.






2) Me donning aforementioned giant box and dancing to LMFAO's 'I'm Sexy and I know it'. My movements being a bit restricted this basically consisted of me jumping up and down and wiggling the costume from side to side.


3) Tylor and Whitney hunting out the side of an old car bed in Sparmobel (old furniture) on the street and borrowing it. Cue all 3 of us running along the empty streets making race car noises and pretending to crash into our friends. So immature but so much fun.





Sadly said car had an accident overnight. Devastated.