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.

Monday, 18 February 2013

The Best Things I Probably Shouldn't Have Taught to my Students



Another little interlude post for you; Mainz one is coming, I'm just currently up to my (slightly too large for my liking) ears in YARP writing to have much energy left for serious posts.

These types of posts seem to be more popular anyway so I should try and write more.

So.

The Best Things I Probably Shouldn't Have Taught to my Students.

Now I don't mean like, illegal things or anything. I haven't been telling them the best ways to get a fake ID or rob a bank anything, though I have a feeling that would be a popular lesson. No I'm talking about stuff I either, in a fit devilry, taught them deliberately, or stuff I accidentally mentioned and then was forced to explain.

1# Cwtch, to cwtch.
No actual regrets here but I probably shouldn't have taught a class of 10 and 11 year olds the Welsh term for cuddling (umarmen in German if you're interested) before they know the English for it. Or, you know, how to count past 20, stuff like that.

In fairness, I did reluctantly teach them the English word afterwards. Cwtch is so much better though.

2# Popty ping.
Similarly, they asked me if all Welsh words were odd so for the giggles I taught them popty ping, which for the un-enlightened reading means microwave. They found this hilarious.

3# "budge up"
Not really necessary tbh. They all still remember it though, funny that.

4# The After Eight game.
Yeah so in yr 6 today they were learning the prepositions 'before' and 'after' and the teacher asked the kids if they knew the chocolates After Eights. Apparently they're much beliebt in Germany as there was a chorus of "jaaa"s.

Anyway, I stupidly piped up and said we play a game with them back home. Regretted it immediately when asked to explain the game, which basically involves putting it on your forehead and guiding it down your face as it melts, without hands, to your mouth, whereupon you eat it.

Small silence. Fit of laughing. Kid put her hand up..."Frau Thomas...sind alle Engländer verrückt?" (Miss Thomas, are all the English crazy?)

5# That I have (had) a fear of blackboards.

Bit random, but I have never been a fan of chalk on black boards. Luckily almost all classrooms in my comp had white boards, so I was spared, but I spent most of French Ling (inexplicably taught in the maths building at Southampton uni) cringing every time anything was written on the board.

When teaching my AG, we were telling each other unusual facts about ourselves by way of interesting introductions, so I told hem about my fear of writing on black boards.

I've had to get over this fear from day one in Germany as all classrooms are equipped with chalk and black boards, but now I've confided in the year 10s about my former fear they look at me with intense pity and concern every time I have to write on the board when teaching them.

6# That lacrosse is only taught in private schools in Britain

When learning about Canada the subject of lacrosse came up (Canada's national summer sport in case you're keen), and the teacher asked me if we play it in Britain.

My (absent-minded) response? "oh, only in private schools"

Now, until I arrived at uni (where to be sure all kinds of people play lacrosse) I'd only ever heard of the sport in the context of Mallory Towers books, and certainly not being taught at any of the many local comps in South Wales, so for some reason I have it in my head that its a 'private school sport', which I'm pretty sure is wrong.

Unfortunately the teacher responded with "echt?! Interessant. Schreib das mal auf Kinder" (really?! Interesting. Write that down kids). Oops.

#7 Welsh Days of the Week song...in English.

Ok so back in school we had this song that went "Dydd Sul, dydd Llun, dydd Mawr dydd Mercher, dydd Iawn, dydd Gwener, dydd Sadwrn hooray!" (Sunday, Monday, Tues, Weds, Thurs, Fri, Sat hooray!). When my mentor was teaching her yr 5s the days of the week they weren't really getting it, so (as usual without thinking) I said I knew a song to help, planning to adapt the tune to the English days as I went along.

Sadly, my basic music skills failed me as I forgot that the way it is sung in Welsh there are more syllables than there are in English. Also I cannot hold q tune to save my life. Cue me standing awkwardly infront of the class going "Sunda-a-ay, Monda-a-ay..." And so on. Afterwards, faced with 29 even more confused faces the teacher just went "anyway...turn to page 38 in your textbooks"...

#8 That everyone has tapestries on their walls.

This one was a joint effort from Soph (friend from my school days who visited recently) and I. When teaching about the parts of the house a student asked "was ist Teppich auf Englisch?" In a momentary fit of madness Soph and I agreed it was tapestry...until, just as they're about to write it down it hits me that it means wallpaper, duh. So luckily my students were just spared from learning that all British houses are full of tapestries.

#9 The name "bunk beds" is related to bunkers in the world wars.

Whilst this is true, I regretted going on to explain to the class that the bomb-proof buildings used during the world wars are called bunkers, and that the beds within them would be called bunk beds, when a) the class looked confused and a few brave souls put their hands up and asked "es gab einen Krieg?" (there was a war?) and b) the teacher pursed her lips, gave me a haughty look and changed the subject.

Don't. Mention. The. War.

#10 My Dad shook hands with a bear.

Picture the scene. Yr 7 are learning about Canada. There is naturally a lot of talk about bears (or rather "beers"). I am telling the story of how when cycling in the Rocky Mountains my Dad came across a bear, and luckily was far enough away to retreat without sparking its anger (or rather hunger). Unfortunately, I was telling this story in German, and used the verb "treffen", which without reflexive or preposition means more to meet someone, or shake their hand. Which meant I gave my yr 7 class a highly amusing mental image of my father casually making the acquaintance of a bear.




Who said teaching is boring?




Plus, hey, at least this year I'll know I made some sort of impression...


P.S. Hey guess what? It hit me the other day I've been in Germany for 5 and a half months already. Crazy!

Sunday, 3 February 2013

Ende gut, alles gut.



Hello and welcome to the latest edition of Beth's hectic life in Germany!

This post is about a fun weekend in February (the first weekend). Soo picking up straight after the last one, Soph left my flat at 3.10 am to catch the dratted Flibco bus to fly home, which can't have been fun for her. 3 hours later, my own alarm went off and the horrific event I'd been dreading happening since I began working on a mountain an hour's train ride away happened: I accidentally pressed cancel instead of snooze.

A good 30 mins' dozing later, I began to sleepily register my lack of second alarm, so rolled over and looked at the time...a few seconds of pure confusion followed by utter horror, it was 6.53. My train left at 7.04 and the station is 7 mins (speedy) walk away. Shooting out of bed, I was a blur of terrified Welsh girl chucking clothes on and hoping for the best. Things were made more complicated by 2 things: 1) I was doing substitution first thing and had a class of 29 ten year olds waiting for me, so missing the train wasn't an option. 2) I was heading straight to Landau for the weekend after work, so had to pack 3 days worth of stuff into my little rucksack.

Year Abroad Tip: try and get stuff ready the night before work, even on normal days when you have more than 4 minutes to get ready it is a lifesaver.
Mettlach Bahnhof, my second home.

Anyway, I miraculously made the train, but unfortunately my stress levels soon peaked again when faced with 29 very whiny 10-11 year olds, who were doing their best to terrorize the sub. I hereby apologise to all sub teachers I made it my business to be rude to in school, I have now been on the other end of it and it really isn't fun.

Anyway, the less said about that class the better, except I accidentally told the class to "halte die Klappe", which basically means shut up and isn't the politest thing to say, oh and I made my first ever (and ideally last ever) student cry when I wrote his name on the board as a warning if he didn't stop talking. Na ja, teaching isn't all sunshine and lollipops.

Later that day (and having done my third run of the day for public transport), I found myself back on the Harry Potter train (see here for clarification) to Landau to visit Helen, with Meg coming to stay too. We've been trying to keep up these mini Southampton uni reunions roughly once a month as its a nice piece of home life that relieves the craziness of casually living in a foreign country.
Here's the route I took to Landau from Trier. Basically the same as to Wissembourg, as they're very close together.


Then followed a luuuurverly weekend of films, good food, a trip to Karlsruhe to see the beautiful palace, a looot of walking, lush cocktails and a pleasant evening in the rather pretty Irish pub, the evening only being marred by the discovery that my new set of playing cards weirdly only consisted of cards 9, 10, Jack, Queen, King and Ace, twice. This limited the amount of games we could play to er, snap.
Helen and I infront of Karlsruhe Palace, pretty breathtaking! Also very cold.

The radial city of Karlsruhe
Stolen off Google, this is a shot of Karlsruhe (the palace is at the bottom of the picture) which shows how the city spreads out in a fan like shape from the palace, which I found immensely cool.

Me looking very sad at discovering I'd bought a specialised set of cards by accident that missed out numbers 2-8.

I'm sitting writing this on the train back to Trier from Landau. We had a bit of a lie in after a long sleep (in which Helen and I both nearly elbowed eachother in the face, oops) and a bit of a walk around Landau itself, which I actually really liked.

This week should be interesting: got a few things to sort out with my mentor teacher, who is still making me do a lot of substitution, plus a timetable to jiggle about for a bit of frische Luft as the Germans say.

Next weekend is...Karneval!!! I am more excited than an overly excitable dog about to be fed, so watch this space for a blog post next week explaining what it is and just how much fun I had running around Mainz in my dalmatian onesie/Welsh rugby gear. That's once I've got over the killer hangover, of course.

Tschüssi! Xx

*Oh, and the title is German's equivalent of all's well that ends well.

#YOLO



So writing this regularly seems a little difficult at the moment, but I'm pleased to report I'm having too much fun and am a little too busy on my year abroad, so that's the most important thing, gell?*

Anyway, so much to write about! I'll start with Strasbourg.

Feeling a little adventurous and fancying a weekend away Tylor and I headed to Strasbourg, in the Alsace region of France. I'd always wanted to go there, having heard it was nice and also being the geeky linguistics student that I am I've written an essay or two about code switching in the area so was curious to see the linguistic situation for myself.

We headed down on the train, enjoying crossing the border into a new country in a comfortable but empty train. Our hotel was just outside of the main town, so ideal. And what a BEAUTIFUL place. Surrounded entirely by water, the old houses lean crookedly on one another for support, overshadowed by a number of majestic churches and of course the cathedral.


Petit France, Strasbourg cute oder?


A view of some lovely houses by the canal in Strasbourg.

I also met up with my uni friend Meg, who's living about an hour north of Strasbourg. You can read about my visit to the beautiful town of Wissembourg from before Christmas here.


I did it, I went full Alsace.

We enjoyed ourselves going for walks, eating crepes and practising our rusty French, until alas I was struck down by food poisoning and consigned to watch crappy French reality TV in bed, leaving Tylor to venture out in the snow alone and feed me miniature amounts of ginger ale.

On Sunday morning we travelled home, breathing a small sigh of relief upon returning to Germany, where you weren't in danger of breaking your leg the moment you stepped off the train, as they'd actually bothered to clear the ice unlike France.

Next fun activity: well actually kinda sad at the same time, but on the Thurs there was a WG party in honour of two things - my flatmate Marie's birthday and a friend, Chiara's, leaving party. Marie cooked an amazing meal for about 12 of us, then ( with a bit too much Riesling getrunken) we headed upstairs to the party.


That's me in the middle with a selection of flatmates and friends :)

Soppy moment here (I try to keep them to a minimum I promise) but several times during the evening I found myself thinking wow, how lucky am I. This is the kind of amazingness I set out for on my year abroad, but didn't hope to actually get; the opportunity to chat with good friends, meet new people, and even better party with them, entirely in German! When I think how lonely I could have been considering the location of my job I feel so very lucky that I took the gamble of coming to live in Trier. I realllyy don't want to leave at the end of the year!

Finally this week my school friend and fellow germanophile Soph took a break from serious doctory stuff to come see me in Trier. Was lush to see her: we reminisced about old times, tried some Guiness and Soph even came to school with me to see how terrible a teacher I am. We played a fun game with my AG (after school English club) where teams had to compete to conjugate a verb correctly: their reward? Being allowed to ask Soph a question. The team at the end with the most amount of info about her won.

I love being able to plan fun lessons like that.

I've already written the follow up post to this about the weekend after Soph's departure, so read on lovely people.

Bis gleich!



*gell is a local dialect word which is making it's sneaky way into my vocabulary, it means "isn't it?"

Also, the title is a shout out to Soph's catchphrase, which I think I heard at least once an hour during her visit :P

Thursday, 17 January 2013

Ah, Germany.

This post in inspired by a couple of stress-inducing occasions, triggered by my feeble attempts to integrate further with German society.

German readers: apologies if you think I'm just whining here, I probably am but Britain really is much more laid back in certain ways, and also much more disorganised!

Basically, some of the best bits of German leisure time can also be the most confusing for foreigners. Most of that results from my own slowness and misunderstanding. Sometimes, to be honest, Germany has made an everyday process so complicated or efficient it actually gets a little bit terrifying (I refer you here to this post, about supermarkets)

The German Mensa

Whether it was in school or university I can't remember but at some point I clearly remember being sat in a German class, doodling away as usual, and having my ears prick up at the subject of the German university Mensas, and how amazing they are. The Mensa is the cafeteria, and I was promised that if I ever got the chance to go to one I should not pass it up, being lauded as a place to get seriously cheap and good food every day.

Having now lived in Germany, with a uni pass to boot, for over 4 months without having paid it a visit, I jumped at the invitation to meet a friend there last week. Cue utter confusion.

There are 3 (or is it 4?) different stations, with a couple of different options each. Huge queues tail back from each, and once you've made your decision, it's difficult to go back. Haughty German women behind the hatch stare at you with a careful mixture of disapproval and indifference as you try and choose between two. Drinks can only be bought in vending machines with pre-loaded cards at most stations.

As an indecisive Welsh girl, who can be a little fussy about food, and still hasn't quite adapted to German briskness, this was a little terrifying. Especially as there's even a specific order your dishes have to be stacked on the tray, with a moving conveyorbelt to add that extra dash of angst.

However, the food is nice (especially the chocolate pudding), it is a cheap as advertised all those years ago and all the German students seem to manage fine, so I think I'll put this one down as learning experience.

The Library
So for my Year Abroad Research Projekt (bleh, btw) I had to venture into Trier University library to find some decent books about Saarland. I was apprehensive about this, as I remember the hours spent wandering around Southampton Uni library in the first few months of my first year, hunting down books which turned out to be 3 floors above me.

This was made worse when Tylor informed me that you are not allowed to bring bags etc. into the library, and are expected to have a padlock ready for this purpose. Not having one, Tylor kindly offered to set up camp with a book and my stuff outside.

Anyway, I wandered in, looking as lost as an English guy in a welsh pub on St.David's day, and thankfully spotted someone I knew. She advised me to go speak to the guy at the desk to ask how the library works, which I duly did, and got an earful of ranting about "stupid, lazy students who need to learn to do things on their own" for my trouble, but amongst the beautifully declined adjectives I salvaged a word which sounded like WebCat, which is the name of Southampton's online library database. Turned out Trier has a similar system, so after a bit of searching I find a promising sounding book.

Cue 20 mins of attempting to look like I knew what I was doing (a skill you perfect on your year abroad) and repeating the location of the book over and over in my head. Eventually I found it, and made a bid for freedom with the book under my arm.

It may be a small book, and a small feat, but I still get proud when I achieve stuff like this on my own. Plus, I only got shouted at once, which in terms of German bureaucracy is about the best you can hope for.

The Swimming Pool

This wasn't too bad. Germans love their swimming pools. Probably something to do with only having a coast to the north. Anyway, I went with a couple of friends to the local pool, which was reallly nice! Big improvement on Pencoed swimming pool back home, where you feel cold and damp for days after, and get a verruca the moment you walk through the door, shoes and all.

After figuring out the system, which based around a waterproof chip you put around your wrist, I had to stifle a giggle upon getting in the pool. It was chaos. A boiling pot of swimmers going up and down, following no system at all, so every few metres you had to dodge out of the way of someone else, and occasionally got a kick in the hip/elbow in the face for your trouble.

Anyone know the German for "why don't we all swim in a clockwise direction?"

I'm just joking really. German pools are 100 x nicer than back home (along with most things). But  the lack of efficiency did tickle me.

Hope everyone is well!

I'm off to Strasbourg now, so next post will hopefully be less rambling from me and more beautiful pictures.
Bis bald!

Sunday, 6 January 2013

Christmas in Trier!

Hullo everyone, I'm back in Trier and back on the blog posts. Happy New Year everyone!

In Germany, New Year's Eve is called Sylvester, and as well as wishing people happy new year you also wish them "ein guten Rutsch", which means a good slide. So, have a good slide into the new year. Cute, oder?

A few to catch up on now, and most importantly I would like to tell you about December in Trier, Germany. December in Germany means many things, the coolest of which is....Christmas Markets!

Trier has a particularly nice one. Not huge but big enough and undeniably pretty.

Trier by Day, looking at the Cathedral. Photo courtesy of Tylor.


Trier by Night, the Hauptmarkt.

During the day they're a little cold, but there's plenty of stuff to look at, and in the evening the place becomes full of people young and old, local and foreign drinking Glühwein from commemorative mugs and eating yummy yummy Bratwurst. During the month of December until I flew home on the 22nd I think I went to the markets about 17 times. So, most days.

The next fun activity myself and the other assistants decided to indulge in was ice skating! Not once, but twice sogar.
The relative skating ability of the assistants was directly related to where they'd grown up.
Tylor and Hilary, having grown up in Canada, a land where you eat ice for breakfast, were brilliant and put us all to shame.
Whitney won the bronze medal representing Alberquerque, USA.
Then the UK in its entirety were the runners up, shuffling around the ice with the occasional wobble, progressing to a half decent and reasonably fast but definitely not stylish parade around the ice.
Special mention to Gunjan, who was a champ on her first time, especially considering she grew up in India, where (according to the ever trusty Wikipedia) there are a grand total of 5 indoor ice rinks.


Trier Assistants on Ice, December 2012. Photo courtesy of Hilary.

What else? Oh yes, my mum came to visit! Bringing my aunt with her, we spent a few days exploring Trier, sliding around in the snow (this was the same week that I got caught in the snowstorm) and buying stuff at the markets. We also headed to some other markets, one at Saarlouis (disappointing) and Saarbrücken (better).

My final weeks involved drinking Glühwein with the Lintzstreet chicks, singing christmas songs (the best German one is called in the Christmas Bakery/In der Weihnachtsbäckerei) and teaching kids about Christmas back in Wales. All I managed to do was give the impression that we drink a lot, oops.

We also had a Christmas pot-luck dinner amongst us assistants, which resulted in lovely food, a great secret santa exchange and a group viewing of The Muppet's Christmas Carol. As we say in Wales, lush.



On December 22nd I flew home for Christmas and I was genuinely saddened to go. I love my life here in Germany, I have made amazing friends, enjoy my job and believe it or not my German is getting pretty good too. I realised I would be incredibly sad to leave in the first week of June but hey, that's still 5 months away so in the meantime I will make the most of it.

Bis gleich! xxx