Sunday, August 21, 2011

Auf wiedersehen!


I leave Konstanz, and Germany, very early tomorrow morning--I land in Newark around 1 pm Eastern. I've already had my first incident of reverse culture shock--telling people when I'm coming home in 12 hour time no longer looks correct to me after 4 months of European 24-hour time! But I'm sure once I get home I'll readjust to most things as quickly as I did coming home from Paris.

I've spent the last few weeks preparing for everything when I come home--my classes and teaching schedule, ordering textbooks, even arranging to audit an Intermediate German course--but I still don't feel quite ready to leave. Over the summer, and over the past month in particular, I've really fallen in love with Germany. I've spent almost four months working daily on learning the language, and it turns out I've completed about a year's worth of college curriculum--I'll be skipping the two beginner classes and going straight to auditing Intermediate German at Rutgers. I've done a lot of reading for what I hope will be productive and more directed future research projects (and I have 50 pages of single-spaced typed notes to show for it...). But I've also really gotten to experience Germany and German culture in such a unique way by being here.

I don't normally make spur of the moment decisions, so deciding to come here so spontaneously was really out of character. Spending the summer in a country I'd never been to, where I knew no one, and when I literally did not speak one word of the language--not normally a decision careful, plan-in-advance me would make. But I'm so glad that I decided to make the leap. It's been incredibly rewarding. I learned that I can really handle more uncertainty than I ever thought. I can handle spending some time alone, I can handle not speaking the language and trying to learn and asking for help. I've always wanted to learn a third language--I can't say I ever thought it would be German, though! Before I came here I knew virtually nothing about German culture, had never set foot in the country, etc. Now all I want to do is keep exploring! I love it here--it is an absolutely beautiful, culturally rich nation that I think everyone should visit :-)

I definitely had my homesick moments, and many, MANY moments where I got frustrated with my poor German language abilities--life here wasn't always traveling and fun and games. But four months is plenty of time to fall in love with Konstanz, with Germany, and with German. When I got here all I could do was ask "Sprechen Sie Englisch?" Everything was foreign and incomprehensible, even going to the grocery store. Now I'm almost done with my second Harry Potter book in German, I can run all sorts of errands with no problem, and even hold short conversations. Yes, speaking and understanding are still difficult for me, my reading is far better than either one, but I'm learning more every day. I'm so glad I got to live here, and I will miss a lot of things about Konstanz--as well as being a beautiful place to live, it is an amazing college town--I'm going to miss all these coffeeshops and cafes and bookstores when I go back to New Brunswick...

So at the risk of waxing too nostalgic, I want to say thank you to a few people who made my experience here better:
Erin--thank you for encouraging me to apply for the grant when I was hesitating. without you I would not be in Konstanz. I can't wait for office fun when I'm back home!!
Kelly--thank you so, so much for making sure I had friends when I got here. if you hadn't contacted Laura and Alessia, I would not have known anyone here and probably would have had no social life at all.
Thorin--thank you for our awesome coffee dates and for showing me how to get around town without bus or bike. and for giving me another reason to go visit Oregon! you are a fabulous friend and I am so, so glad I met you. meet me at Das Voglhaus?
Alex--thank you for helping me settle in when I arrived and teaching me some basic and all-important Deutsch! :-) it was so nice to know I had a sister in town.
Alessia--thank you for being there for me when I first got to Konstanz, inviting me to meet people, and for our amazing trip to Berlin! I'm so excited for you and Tobi to come to visit me in America hopefully sometime soon!
Tobi--thank you for being your wonderful, smiling self, and for giving me tools to help me learn German (like Lena, liebe meines lebens ;-) ), and for being part of the best intercultural and interlingual lunches ever! I can't wait for your visit!
Ulf--thank you for being an awesome tandem partner and a great friend :-) I had so much fun eating ice cream and exploring Konstanz with you and your encouragement helped a lot with my learning! I'm so excited to hear about your adventures in Canada.
and of course thank you to my wonderful family, friends, and boyfriend for being supportive, listening to my endless stories and frustrations, and for welcoming me home!! I'm excited to see you all very, very soon! It's been a fabulous summer and I am going to miss Konstanz and Germany and Europe like crazy (I already can't wait for the next time I get to be here) but I am really excited to be going home again. So auf wiedersehen, Deutschland--until next time.



Saturday, August 20, 2011

Last week in Konstanz & trip to Freiburg!

Freiburg Münster
Freiburg Altstadt with Bächle
inside St. Stephan's, a church in KN
dipping my feet in--the next day my whole body went in!


This week was my last in Konstanz. Which meant a lot of forms to be filled out (ah, the joys of German bureaucracy), some shopping to be done, plans to be made, etc. I wasn't planning on packing til Sunday but some arrangements with the Hausmeister for room inspection threw a wrench in that plan. So instead, I got to pack early, which meant I had some time for a day trip! More on that in a moment.

I spent the week wandering around Konstanz and spending time with friends! I got to have several lunches with Tobi and his friend Lukas, and a few coffees with Svetlana while I helped with her bachelor's thesis, and I went to the lake with Laura! Swimming in the lake for the first time (well, really wading) was really fun. It got quite warm here this week, up to 90 degrees F and 32 C, so it was nice to take a jump in the water even though it was so cold it actually made my legs hurt for a few minutes until I got used to it. But it was fun to finally get to take a dip in the Bodensee and lie on the "beach" in a bathing suit! The word "beach" is used very loosely in Konstanz--it's either rocks or grass depending on where you are, no sand. But the view is fantastic. I did see way more men in Speedos than I ever need to see in my life, but at least I missed the nude beach haha.

Since the hausmeister's schedule forced me to change my original plans, I decided to take Maya's advice and go on one last day trip with my newly found extra time :-) After some asking around, I decided on Freiburg! It's a city just on the outskirts of the Black Forest, near the French border, about 2.5 hours from Konstanz by train. So I headed up there early this morning and spent the day there. It was intensely hot, which is getting more and more bothersome, I'm glad it's been a cool summer.

But on the upside, Freiburg is a really cool town! It has a beautiful church and Altstadt, as well a a famous university, and is also known for being one of the "greenest" cities in the world. It also features these little canals/rivulets in the streets called Bächle--the legend goes that if you fall into one you will marry a Freiburg native. After eating a quick pizza for lunch, I spent the day wandering through the streets seeing the various sights. There's the two town halls, the Altes Rathaus and the Neues Rathaus, and the famous Münster. It was a really gorgeous church, full of tiny interesting details--random statues and hidden stained glass windows, etc. I climbed the tower to get a beautiful view of the town and the Black Forest (Schwarzwald) all around. Then I kept wandering the streets, saw some famous buildings and towers, wandered into stores because it was so hot, etc. Eventually I had seen pretty much everything and was pretty overheated, so I headed home. It's really hot here and I'm not adjusted to summer weather, especially summer weather with no AC. kind of glad I'm heading home soon to get out of the heat--in less than 48 hours I'll be landing in Newark!

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Seenachtsfest




This weekend in Konstanz was Seenachstfest! Seenachtsfest is a festival held every summer by the lake (literally it means lake night festival). It includes live music, food, and a huge fireworks display put on by Konstanz and Kreuzlingen, and people come from all the surrounding towns to see it.

I got to see the start of the festival on Friday, because for our last time meeting, Ulf and I were hanging out by the lake near the live music part of the fair. They also had this weird little ride contraption that looked kind of like a hang glider, where people got strapped in, flown up over the trees, and then dipped down into the lake (which has to be FREEZING since it's only broken 80 degrees a couple times this summer)--didn't really get that, haha. I thought it was really funny that all of the music was American, or at least in English. Ulf was really sweet and got me a present--a book of pictures and descriptions of places all over Germany, so that I can show everyone at home what a beautiful, amazing country I got to live in this summer! I'm excited to return the favor and show him around New York when he studies abroad in Canada. Participating in the tandem program was a really nice thing to do while I was here, I'm glad Thorin made me aware of it so that I could sign up!

Saturday night was the fireworks! In the morning, I met up with a friend of one of my apartmentmates from Richmond who had just moved to Konstanz, so that I could show her around. It's weird that now I know enough about Konstanz to give someone a tour! But hopefully she enjoyed it. Then I headed out to the fireworks in the evening. There were SO many people. Each town has a turn at their own fireworks, and then they finish with a joint show. I liked Konstanz's fireworks better than Kreuzlingen's--they were also set to American oldies music, stuff like Dancing Queen and Billie Jean, which I thought was so funny. I watched them from a bridge over the Rhine called the Fahrradbruecke--far enough away so that I didn't have to pay 16 euros admission, but still close enough for a fabulous view of fireworks over the Altstadt and the lake. It was a great show, especially at the end!!

I try to do everything I need to do around town and when I travel "auf Deutsch", as much as possible. I am getting pretty good at reading, but I still have trouble with speaking and understanding. Often when someone says something, I have to ask them to repeat it more slowly. Sometimes when I ask this they switch to English instead of repeating what they said in German, which really frustrates me. I want to learn and the only way I'm going to learn is by practicing! The most understanding person I met was in Berlin, with Alessia. We went to an Italian restaurant for lunch. The waitress heard us speaking English and started to bring us English menus and then said "oh, no, you probably want to practice your German!" and brought us German menus and spoke to us only in slow German. We told her how much we appreciated that and I gave her quite a nice tip, haha. I wish more people had that attitude, because I am working so hard to learn and I don't want people to just speak to me in English. But I guess it also must be frustrating for people to communicate with me when I don't understand.

I can't believe in a week I'll be packing my things to get ready to leave the next morning! This summer flew by...

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Die Abenteuer in Bayern/Adventures in Bavaria





For the first three days of this week, I decided to take a trip to Bavaria, the next province to the east of Baden-Württemberg. I spent my first day of the trip in the city of Munich! The trip from Konstanz took just under 4 hours. After some train mishaps (i.e. getting on one that was going to the same place just ten minutes earlier than the one I had booked), I was in Munich!

My hostel was really close to the main train station, which also meant it was about a 15 minute walk from Marienplatz, the main square in Munich. I had a nice walk through the pedestrian shopping district to get there, which was really nice! So many old and beautiful buildings. Marienplatz is famous for the Neues Rathaus, or New Town Hall, and the Glockenspiel, the dancing clock. I admired the Rathaus quickly and then set off to see the rest of the Altstadt, since I planned to come back for the clock's 5 pm performance. I saw the famous Frauenkirche first, a huge brick church Munich is well-known for. Next up was the Residenz-the palace where several hundred years' worth of Bavarian royalty resided. It was well over 100 rooms, although some were closed. Parts of it were destroyed in WW2 but have since been rebuilt, so everything is opulent and beautiful. After the Residenz I went to the Neues Pinakothek, one of Munich's art museums, with their Impressionist collection. It was a really nice, small museum. Then I headed back to the main area of the Altstadt through the Hofgarten, a beautiful park behind the Residenz. I wandered around the Altstadt a bit, saw some more churches, including the oldest one in Munich (Michaelskirche, I think) and the Asamkirche, the most beautiful and ornate tiny little church I have ever seen. Bavaria is Catholic so the churches are pretty here. After all that, I headed back to the Glockenspiel for the adorable 5 pm performance of the clock! Then some Thai food for dinner and I was exhausted--got up very early to make my train!

Day 2 was a tour of Neuschwanstein Castle! I signed up for a day-long guided tour with a company Eric and I used in San Fran, because I was feeling lazy and didn't feel like looking up how to get there. It was also nice to have contact with other people. The tour took the train from Muenich to Füssen (2 hours) while the guide told us all about crazy King Ludwig II, who built Neuschwanstein. We arrived in Füssen (which means feet! what a funny name for a town) and took a bus to Schwangau (roughly, Swan land), where we had a brief lunch and admired the Hohenschwangau, an older Bavarian castle that is bright yellow. I spent most of the tour with a French Canadian girl who was also alone. After that the guide gave us a choice of a 25 minute, steep climb to the castle, in the intermittent, ever-present rain, or a bus. I took the bus to save my energy to see the gorge afterwards! So then we went to Marienbrücke, the famous bridge with the postcard shots of the castle--it was just as beautiful in person as on all the postcards. Next was the walk to the castle, where we had a guided tour. The castle was only partially finished at Ludwig's unexpected and mysterious death, so the tour is short but the finished rooms are so lovely. It makes Versailles look honestly a bit ostentatious and overdone. No pictures were allowed inside but obviously I snuck a few. The castle is dedicated to the works of Richard Wagner, the composer--he composed operas like Lohengrin, Tristan and Isolde, etc. It even includes a grotto. Ludwig was really into swans so there are swans everywhere. Most of the walls are murals showing scenes from various operas, and everything is carved. The throne room is complete except for the throne, which was never finished.

After the disappointingly short tour, our guide walked us down to the gorge below the castle. Ludwig really picked a breathtaking spot. Giant mountains, a beautiful waterfall...it was gorgeous. Then we took the train home, exhausted and wondering exactly how King Ludwig died....he was deposed under accusation of insanity, and taken to a sanitorium. On his second day there, he took a walk with his psychiatrist and never returned. Both their bodies were found in the lake, in waist-high water. The autopsy reported that the doctor had drowned, but Ludwig's results were never released. It was assumed that Ludwig had drowned the doctor and killed himself, except for one thing-the doctor's watch had stopped over an hour later than King Ludwig's. Mystery...

I ended up spending all of day 3 on my Dachau tour. I've spent most of my time in Germany kind of in awe of old buildings and castles and fairy tales, so I thought it was important to make this little journey to pay my respects, in a sense--both to that tiny bit of my own heritage, and just to that part of German history. Dachau was actually the first permanent concentration camp. The site, now a museum and memorial, is just outside the town of Dachau, which is a 25-minute metro ride from the center of Munich, then a bus ride to the site. Our tour guide was a bit of a Third Reich nerd (he said he had been very interested in the Nazi regime from the age of 6 or 7, which personally I found a little bit weird, but he didn't seem interested in a neo-Nazi kind of way, so I guess to each their own). He explained in detail the political and socioeconomic conditions that led to the rise of Hitler and the Nazis before bringing us into the camp/memorial. Most of the buildings were partially destroyed by American troops post-liberation to symbolically end the Nazi regime, but many are still standing and the rest were restored. Dachau was a camp for men only, and it was not an extermination camp like Auschwitz or Treblinka. Most extermination camps were placed in Poland and Eastern Europe to keep the German citizens unaware of the reality of the situation--Dachau is literally in the middle of a quiet Bavarian town. Before we walked in, our guide, Keith, pointed out the former guard buildings next door, used to train Nazis. Today they are used to train German riot police. This leads to the sounds of boots marching, gunshots being fired, the whole nine yards, which really does add a certain sense of...I guess, reality...to the visit. I'm not sure I think it's the most appropriate use for those facilities, but again, to each their own.

We then walked through the gates, which were the first to have the inscription "Arbeit Macht Frei" (work makes you free). The original entrance processing center is now a museum, which Keith showed us around. It included a map of all the large and subsidiary concentration camps in Europe. I was surprised to see several quite nearby Konstanz, including Friedrichshafen and Radolfzell. As a visitor, the Bodensee area has seemed to me to be somewhat untouched by the Holocaust and the legacies of World War II. After the museum, we saw the reconstructed barracks, then the different religious memorials. Then we were shown the crematoriums and gas chamber. Dachau was not an extermination camp but the gas chamber was used for experiments and for murders once the soldiers started having psychological problems from shooting people all the time. Finally, we saw the ironically beautiful and peaceful wooded area where the ashes of the thousands of burned bodies were found. Visiting Dachau was emotional. It was strange to be standing on a spot where so many terrible things happened-where 200,000 people were imprisoned and as many as 40,000 were murdered.

I think what shocked me most was Keith's description of some of the weird and inappropriate things he has seen as a tour guide. They included stories of Asian tourists doing their typical grinning V-sign photograph in front of the "Arbeit Macht Frei" sign; a small girl climbing on a machine used for torturing prisoners and grinning while her mother took a picture; and a few teenagers taking photographs in sexual positions on top of the mass graves. I guess people can be pretty callous sometimes. I can't decide if I made the right decision, taking a tour. On one hand, I feel like I could have seen everything much faster on my own with an audioguide and then had the time to do something else that day--while the tour was advertised as beginning at 10, we did not get going until 11 and didn't get back until after 4, so I couldn't really do anything else with my day. On the other hand, our guide was really knowledgeable, the people on the tour were really nice, and it was nice not to have to do something as bleak as that alone. It was also good, I think, to really have the time to take in the experience and process what I was seeing.

My overall impressions of Munich and Bavaria are really positive. I really love traveling in Germany--I have now seen much more of it than of France, actually, particularly with the long train and car journeys. Germany is really a wonderful country. I think Americans have a bad association because of WW2, and it was never on my top list of places to visit, but I absolutely love it. The more I see, the more I want to see. And there is still so much! Hamburg, Frankfurt, more of Berlin & Potsdam, Dresden, Cologne, Stuttgart, Freiburg, Tübingen....the list could go on. I HIGHLY recommend it to people traveling through Europe. It really is a magical country with so much to see.


Friday, August 5, 2011

Idioms :-)

inside the Swiss chocolatier in town: it says "For some flowers speak the language of love; for others, chocolate feeds the flames!"
a better picture of the Rathaus-gorgeous building!


So before I leave for my Bavarian adventure on Monday, here's some pictures and idioms! My trip will be three days long: Day 1 in the city of Munich, Day 2 at Neuschwanstein Castle, and Day 3 at Dachau concentration camp in the morning and then more of the city in the evening. Thursday I'll be back to Konstanz for my last week and a half here! Next weekend is the Seenachstfest, the Konstanz summer festival, which should be fun. I can't believe it's almost time to come home!

more idioms I've recently learned from Harry Potter (I'm on page 210 and going strong!):

mit ihr wohl nicht gut Kirschen essen--with her you cannot eat good cherries (English equivalent: don't get on her bad side)

einen Blauen Brief--a blue letter (English equivalent: a pink slip)

aus dem Häuschen sein--to be over the little house (English equivalent: to be over the moon)

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Heidelberg

a square in the old town of Heidelberg
inside the castle courtyard
view from the castle

Yesterday I went on a day trip to Heidelberg! Since Heidelberg is in the same Lander (the German version of a state) as Konstanz, Baden-Wuerttemberg, I was able to buy something called a Baden-Wuerttemberg Ticket. This ticket is 21 euros for one person or 29 euros for up to 5 people, and allows unlimited travel within that state for one day, starting at 9 am. Unfortunately it limits you to the slower regional trains, but that meant I got to take the Schwarzwaldbahn again! Of course, as I was leaving Konstanz a huge thunderstorm began, including pouring rain, but that cleared up somewhere in the Black Forest. It took about 4 hours all told to get to Heidelberg, and I only had a few hours before the last train that would get me back to Konstanz in time to take a bus back to my apartment. Heidelberg is pretty small, though, so a few hours was all I needed!

I started my visit with the Schloss Heidelberg. It's pretty far up a steep cliff (Heidelberg is situated on the cliffs over the Neckar River), so since I had limited time and it was 80 degrees out I decided to go with the Bergbahn--one of Germany's oldest cable cars, which carries you up the side of the cliff to the castle and even farther up! I got out at the castle. You could take a guided tour, which would have been cool, but I was really short on time and wanted to spend awhile in the old town, so I just wandered by myself. The castle is a mix of architectural styles and part of it is in ruins. Its first building was put up in the early 1400s, and it functioned as a castle for awhile, then later became a fort. The reason part of it is in ruins is due to a few wars in the area: the Thirty Years' War and the Palatine War of Succession. Apparently Goethe, the famous German author, used to like to wander around the park surrounding the castle. Since it's so high up, the castle has beautiful views of the Altstadt (old town) of Heidelberg. The castle also includes the Grosses Fass and the Kleines Fass--two GIGANTIC wine barrels. The Grosses Fass holds over 58,100 gallons of wine and had to be at least 30 feet high. It was huuuge.

After seeing the castle, I headed down a very steep, uneven path to the Altstadt (still wondering how I didn't fall and hurt myself) and decided to spend the remaining time before the train wandering around. The Altstadt is bigger than the one in Konstanz but still small, so I think I got a pretty comprehensive tour. There was the Heiliggeistkirche (Holy Ghost Church), a really pretty Gothic church, as well as the Jesuitskirche. The Hotel zum Ritter is one of the few buildings to survive from the Renaissance because of all the wars--it was really pretty. Heidelberg's university is really well known so I got to see some of the older university buildings as well. The adorable windy streets and shops and restaurants were really fun to see! There was even a tiny Hard Rock Cafe crammed in, as well as two Starbucks....ah, Westernization...but I did get iced cocoa from a more unique chocolate shop. Iced cocoa is really a concept we should import to America. I also got to check out the bridge across the river, and take pictures of the castle from below. Luckily, the weather held off! It was warm, humid, and cloudy, but it didn't rain (until I got back to Konstanz in the middle of a huge rainstorm, of course). Heidelberg was a really beautiful town! I wish I had gotten a little more time there, I would have liked to explore things at a slower pace, and check out nearby Mannheim as well. Another time!

In other news, I found out that Alessia and I accidentally wandered into Berlin's biggest prostitution district while we were making our long walk as a result of the metro closure. I thought the area looked somewhat sketchy, and there were a few younger women standing in doorways, but it was daytime and no one was bothering us, so I wasn't concerned. I looked it up when I got home and found out we were walking on a corner that is home to a huge brothel. I was telling the head of the PhD Welcome Center about it, and he laughed and said that it happens, since it's not that far from Potsdamer Platz and the tourist areas.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Berlin!

in front of the East Side Gallery, a section of the Berlin Wall turned into murals
the Reichstag
the Berliner Dom
the Brandenburger Tor

This weekend was my trip to Berlin with my friend Alessia! Berlin is a wonderful city and we had a great time--we didn't see nearly everything there is to see in two days, but it was a great weekend!

To get there, we chose the cheapest option for transportation--mitfahrgelegenheit. No, it's not gibberish, it's a German website that has been organizing carpools for the past 10 years. We found a ride going from St. Gallen, Switzerland (about an hour away) to Berlin for much less then the train or flying. I was a little worried about what basically amounted to a ride with a stranger, but I picked a driver who had 8 years of good reviews. It turned out that he was driving a minivan and had 4 other passengers riding to Berlin, all about my age, including two Swiss French boys, so we chatted in French for awhile. The ride took over 7 hours--we didn't get to Berlin til 12:30 am (left at 5). Jan, the driver, dropped us off at the S-Bahn, kind of like a subway that runs in a circle around Berlin, and we eventually found our hostel. We got to bed late Thursday night/Friday morning.

Friday morning we woke up excited to see the city! Unfortunately it was raining, but that's kind of just a hazard of travel, especially in Germany this summer...but our hostel was really centrally located so convenient to walk. We spent all of Friday in Mitte, the Berlin tourist attraction district. We started with Potsdamer Platz, Berlin's Times Square, and walked past the striking Memorial for Murdered Jews in Europe--it's really interesting to see and takes up a whole city block. Then we went to the famous Brandenburger Tor, which is really impressive and beautiful, and walked down Unter den Linden, Berlin's main tourist street--full of beautiful buildings, cathedrals, palaces, etc. We stopped at the Berliner Dom, which is a beautiful cathedral on the Musueminsel, or Museum Island. We didn't go to any museums there this time because I wanted to see as many things as possible, but Berlin has about a million museums.

We ate lunch at a delicious Italian restaurant and got warm for awhile (I had gnocchi in butter and sage sauce, mmm!) and then went on to Alexanderplatz, which has 3 landmarks: the TV Tower, a really tall building you can go up to the top of (we didn't because of the weather), Marienkirche (the 2nd oldest church in Berlin), and the Rotes Rathaus (red town hall). It was really pretty. Next up was Nikolaiviertel (Nicholas' quarter), an adorable little neighborhood with windy streets. Then on to the Deutscher and Franzoesischer Doms, two cathedrals facing each other, and to the Faussbender and Rauch chocolate store, where several Berlin landmarks are reproduced in chocolate. We were soaked by this time so we took a break in Dunkin Donuts (yes, I was excited to have a donut) for some hot cocoa. Our last stop of the day was the Neue Synagoge, which is modeled after the Alhambra and survived being burned in Kristallnacht.

Saturday, unfortunately, was also rainy. We hopped around the city a bit more instead of sticking to Mitte. Our first stop was the Reichstag, or German Parliament building. They had just made a new rule that you need a reservation to go inside, so we didn't go in, but the outside was beautiful! Next up was the East Side Gallery. This is the longest preserved stretch of the Berlin Wall, turned into a series of murals by various artists. Looking at all the different murals and reading the words was really cool! Next up was the Jewish Museum in Kreuzberg. It was really interesting and informative--the building was beautiful and the architecture inside was really interesting. We tried to go to the Schloss (Castle) Charlottenburg but unfortunately unannounced metro construction made it too hard to get there--next time! Instead we walked to the Gedaichtnis Kirche. It's a famous church nicknamed the "hollow tooth" because it was bombed during WWII and its spire was damaged. I was sad to find out that they were reconstructing the spire and had covered it up--the pictures looked so cool! Our final stop of the weekend was KaDeWe, the Berlin answer to Harrod's. It was really cool, plus they had a section of American groceries, which was exciting for me--I got to show Alessia all my favorite foods!

This morning we got up super early to take the train for 9 hours, and got home this afternoon....thoughts on Berlin as a whole: I really liked it! It reminded me of Paris in that it seemed that there was always more to see and do. I feel like there was a lot I didn't see. Two days barely scratched the surface. I was surprised at how few tourists there were, how early things closed, and how empty the city seemed in general. New York would have been super crowded on a weekend in July. Maybe the weather, or maybe everyone was on August vacation early? I liked the architecture a lot as well, and all the history in the city. I would love to go back. A lot of things in Berlin seem new or almost new--I guess it's all post-war and post-fall of the Wall. The Hauptbahnhof (main station) especially looked really futuristic.

Thoughts on Germany after seeing most of the country by car and train: I saw sooo many wind turbines and solar panels. I'm so impressed with Germany's alternative energy commitment. The Autobahn was not as scary as I expected. By train today, I got to see Frankfurt (looked a lot like New York, with all the skyscrapers) and the Black Forest (Schwarzwald--really scenic). Why is the Black Forest called the Black Forest, I wonder? Throughout the entire car and train rides it always seemed like there was a castle up on a hill somewhere not too far away. I think all of rural Germany is just full of castles.

So in other news, last week was pretty quiet except for a surprise visit from my friend Tony last weekend! He is stationed in Bavaria and drove over to see me before deploying to Afghanistan Monday. He probably won't have time to read this but good luck and stay safe!!!

I am about 110 pages into my German copy of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. It's teaching me so many new words! One new idiom: jemanden auf die Palme bringen: literally, drive someone up the palm tree, or in English, drive someone crazy!

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Ludwigsburg and Kreuzlingen

This week I didn't have too much going on, just some short trips! On Wednesday I went to Ludwigsburg, a suburb of Stuttgart, for my research. Ludwigsburg is home to the Deutsch-Franzoesisch Institut, or German-French Institute. It is a library devoted to the studies of Germany, France, and their relationship--full of books, periodicals, and a press archive. I was told it would be helpful to my research and it definitely was. I saw very clearly why my professors told me it was so important to learn German---if you know German, there are a lot more resources available to you than if you only speak English. Nearly everything in the Institute was written in either French or German. So for the last month I am here, I'm going to work really hard to make my German reading comprehension better before I go home!

Thursday Ulf and I went to Kreuzlingen, the Swiss town that Konstanz borders. After seeing it, I'm really glad I live in Konstanz! The town is not nearly as pretty, or as big, and obviously because it's Switzerland everything is more expensive. In KN a scoop of ice cream never costs more than 80 or 90 euro cents--in Kreuzlingen it was 2 francs and 50 cents for one scoop! Their harbor was nice, though--they had some pretty chairs and a tower you could climb to look out over the lake! I also learned some more about "die Daumen drucken", the German expression for "fingers crossed", that literally means "to press the thumb". Apparently the gesture for it is more like a closed fist, and Germans only cross their fingers when they are lying! haha. Context is very important for things like that, I guess.

I've been listening to some more of my German language course podcasts--they're getting interesting. One of them features an elf (ein cobalt) who honestly sounds exactly like Elmo. Every podcast also includes a "musical interlude" with what I'm pretty sure are only German/Austrian composers! So I guess it's cultural lessons, too.

I keep hearing about how it's really hot at home--well, in Konstanz it's been around 60-65 degrees and rainy most of the last two weeks. To me, perfect summer weather! Hope everyone at home is staying cool in the AC!

Plans for next week: thinking of taking a day trip to Heidelberg and Mannheim on Tuesday since the rain is supposed to stop, and Thursday night Alessia and I leave for our weekend in Berlin!

some German words I've learned recently:
jemanden zur Schnecke machen: literally means "to make someone into a snail". figuratively, means to embarrass or humiliate someone by yelling at them. Learned that one from reading Harry Potter.
ein cobalt: elf or goblin
der Fremde: stranger

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Harry Potter and Seehasenfest

I have now seen Harry Potter 7 part 2 in German and in English! I enjoyed it a lot, even though they left out a lot as usual. Seeing it in German (and going to a German movie theater) was really interesting. German movie theaters have assigned seats, you choose your seat when you buy your ticket. The theater was carpeted (no sticky linoleum floor) and full of big red plush seats. There were even two person seats for couples. I got popcorn, because it's something I miss from America, and got to choose between sweet or salty. I understood almost everything in the previews, but the movie was a bit harder. I would say overall I probably got about half of it. But I did learn a bunch of new words, some of which are below. It helped that I knew the story and one or two of the better-known lines already. It was interesting seeing it in German, though! I'm glad I did. It's weird that something that started being important to me at age eleven is now over. (Thanks Aunt Ro for buying me that first book!)

Beforehand, Thorin and I tried out a cheap Thai restaurant I found, which was delicious, so now I'm completely thrilled. Every place I live needs to have an affordable Thai restaurant nearby.

Saturday I went to Seehasenfest in the nearby town of Friedrichshafen with my friends Alessia and Tobi! Seehasenfest (literally meaning sea hare festival) began after WW2. Friedrichshafen is not on the Swiss border like KN, and was almost totally destroyed in the war, so the city council wanted to do something to get the people's spirits up, especially the kids. So they began holding the fair, and there's a guy dressed as a hare who runs around the whole time. Apparently that originates from the fact that the people who live around Lake Konstanz are referred to as sea hares? All this background info is from Thorin/German Wikipedia.

The fair itself was fun! It made it feel more like summer, although it was definitely a German fair. Everything looks the same as home until you start looking more closely at the food stands, and everyone is selling currywurst! They did have an American specialties stand with corn dogs, though. haha. Tobi drove to the fair from Konstanz because it's impossible to get home late at night in KN. So we took the car ferry to Meersburg, drove to Friedrichshafen, and parked at Tobi's friend's house. We met her and her family later, and they were all so nice! I got to practice some German with her mom while we waited for everyone to go on some of the rides. I did ride the Ferris wheel though :-) It was beautiful--Friedrichshafen is on the other side of the lake from KN, so seeing it from 50 m (about 150-200 ft) in the air was amazing. The big attraction of Saturday night at the fair was the fireworks! They were really nice, kind of made up for missing the 4th of July at home! We got home very late but it was a very fun night :-) The best part was not having to pay admission--it was free for kids under 18 and Tobi and I decided we looked young enough to pretend we didn't speak German and say we were 17, and it worked...multiple times at the various checkpoints we went through...saved 4 euros but damaged my self-esteem haha.

Something else I find funny--I often ask Alessia about Italian words or foods or other things that I know from my family and our traditions--she says it is very amusing because I pronounce everything in dialect (which is how I learned the few words I know) and sometimes she doesn't understand what I mean until I describe it. :-) I was happy to find out that mozzarella in carrozza is a real Italian recipe, as are rice balls!

So, here are some words I learned from watching Harry Potter auf Deutsch!
muttig--brave
der Stab--wand
die schlampe--bitch
tod/tode--dead, death
wirklich--really


German band in the biergarten--loved their outfits :-)
Friedrichshafen and the Bodensee from the Ferris wheel
fireworks!

Tobi, me, and Alessia on the Ferris wheel

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Liechtenstein

So today Thorin and I ventured to Vaduz, the capital of Liechtenstein. Liechtenstein is a teeny tiny country (61 square miles with a population of 35,000) sandwiched in between Switzerland and Austria. There's almost nothing to see there but hey, it's country #10 for me, and it was only 90 minutes away by train!

So the trip there involved 4 short train rides (on the way, we learned exactly how huge Lake Konstanz/the Bodensee is, because we were following it the whole way) to the Swiss-Liech. border, where we then took a bus through Schaan and Vaduz, the two biggest cities. We stopped in Vaduz (pop. 5,000?), where we got a souvenir passport stamp from the tourist office (major highlight of the trip). Liechtenstein is essentially a principality of Switzerland, so they use Swiss francs and speak German. Since they use Swiss francs (although euros are accepted pretty much everywhere), everything is accordingly expensive. We found a fairly cheap place for lunch and enjoyed the nice weather.

After lunch, we wandered around town, which took all of an hour. Sights include some souvenir stores, the St. Florin Church, the Rathaus (town hall), and the Schloss Vaduz. The Schloss Vaduz is high on a hill overlooking the town, and the Liechtenstein royal family still lives there, so you're not allowed to visit (although the climb looks pretty exhausting, so I'm not sure I'd want to). Liechtenstein is one of the remaining monarchies of Europe. There's not much to see in Liechtenstein, but the tiny town/country does inspire a lot of jokes. Thorin ordered a Liechtenstein Brauhaus beer at lunch. The slogan on the label read "Ein Land. Ein Bier." which translates to "One country. One beer." This led to a lot of jokes like "One country. One....noun.", etc.

The trip home got a little complicated due to limited transportation but we made it back! And while we were waiting for the train in Switzerland I even got Ben & Jerry's. yum. So a short day, and I've definitely been to more interesting places in Europe, but the mountains make Liechtenstein quite picturesque.

So, to finish up this post, some fun German idioms I've learned:
der Löffel abgeben: to give up the spoon (English equivalent=to kick the bucket)
Daumen drücken: to press the thumb (English equivalent=cross your fingers)
Eine Jacke, eine hose: jacket or pants (English equivalent= six in one hand, half a dozen in the other)

me in Liechtenstein!
Schloss Vaduz

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Random photos

Thought I'd share some photos I took this week in my wanderings :-) next update will tell of my adventures in Liechtenstein planned for Monday!



one of my favorite muraled buildings in KN--can't wait to make it to Stein-am-Rhein and see some more before I leave


an accordionist teaching a tourist how to play--I watched them for a few minutes because it was so entertaining


Ulf showed me the inside of the Rathaus (town hall), office of the Burgermeister (mayor)--the courtyard is absolutely beautiful


Burgermeister! I had to laugh remembering Burgermeister Meisterburger from "Santa Claus is Coming to Town"...

Friday, July 1, 2011

4th of July update from your favorite expat

So right now everyone is going crazy over the women's World Cup, which is being played all throughout Germany this month. Germany's team has won its first two games, making for some very excited celebrations in my dorm. The US is also expected to do very well, and are playing today, so go America!

Right after Eric left, it finally started feeling like summer here, unfortunately (I hate hot weather and Europe is not air-conditioned). It hit 90 degrees and up two days in a row. I had no heat in Paris in the winter and I would choose that again over having no AC here when it's 90+. So I went out and bought a fan. The temperature immediately fell 20 degrees. But I'm sure sometime over the next 2 months it will go back up, sadly.

I haven't done too much that's exciting this week...hid from the high temperatures by eating gelati, and been working hard on my German and on my reading. I found some free German podcasts online to help me learn, and I'm trying really hard to work on grammar. The sentence structure and word order is really confusing, it's kind of backwards from English. German also has four grammatical cases which can change the nouns, pronouns, articles, and adjectives, which are driving me insane. But I'm powering through--I'm on page 3 of translating Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, and I will be seeing the movie in German in 2 weeks. I am noticing improvements in how much I understand but I'm still not satisfied--I want to understand more of what goes on around me. I keep being told I have unrealistic expectations, however. Well, I have two more months to improve!

My language partner, Ulf, took me to the Bismarck Turm in Konstanz yesterday (Bismarck Tower). Otto von Bismarck was the chancellor of Germany under Kaiser Wilhelm, and was instrumental in unifying Germany. The tower is on a hill surrounded by a vineyard, which was cool. Apparently there are Bismarck Turm all over Germany, but according to Wikipedia the one in KN is considered important because it's on a border of the newly unified Germany.

Some of my newest German words:
aufgeregt=excited. you can also say ich freue mich auf (I am looking forward to...)
deibisch=the closest English equivalent would be thieving or thievish. funny word.
gleichweis=likewise. I was really proud of myself because I figured out how to spell the word and what it meant on my own! I wished the lady who took my rent money "Gut Wochenende" (good weekend--I have since found out that you are supposed to say "Schönest Wochenende"), and that was what she responded.

This is the first time I'm spending the 4th of July out of the country--I hope everyone at home is having a great holiday weekend! Wish I could come home and have a hot dog haha.

me standing in Germany and Switzerland at the same time!
view of the vineyard and the lake from the Bismarck tower hill
Bismarck Turm

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Eurotrip with Eric!




So I've spent the last two weeks traveling around Europe with Eric, which has been really, really fun! We met in London, then proceeded to Paris and Rome, and he left this morning after spending a few days back in Konstanz with me.

I got to spend the afternoon in Zurich before leaving for London (my flight left from Zurich Airport so early in the morning that I had to spend the night in Zurich to get there on time). Zurich is really a beautiful city! I actually preferred it to Geneva or Interlaken. I didn't see very much--my hostel was in the old town so I spent the afternoon walking around there. But the old town is beautiful. There are two big churches, the Grossmunster and the Fraumunster, facing each other across the lake. Zurich is a big financial center now, apparently, but you wouldn't know it from the old town. So I wandered around for a few hours before having dinner and heading to my room to watch Hannah Montana in German (thought of you, Megan) and go to bed early. I had a taxi waiting at 4:30 am the next morning. My taxi driver didn't speak much English so I got to practice my German! We managed to hold a short conversation, which I was proud of myself for, since it was so early in the morning. I got to the airport (a ridiculous taxi fare later...why is Switzerland so expensive?!) before the ticket counters even opened, and had plenty of time.

So next stop, London! I had about two hours to wait before Eric got in, so I had breakfast, and then I started hearing people talking about flights from the US being delayed because of some bad storms around NY, so I got worried. Luckily Eric's flight was only a few minutes delayed and he zipped through customs and met me on time. We took the tube into London and started off our trip with a double-decker bus tour! We sat on the open top, which was great at first since it was about 70 degrees and sunny. The tour got stuck in traffic and took a little longer than expected, and 4 hours and some rain later, we were pretty cold and wet. But it was really fun to see so much of London right away! We ate dinner that night in a pub that had been there since 1723. Day 2 in London started out in Notting Hill, at the Saturday market on Portobello Road! It's a huuuuge flea market with tons of delicious food and funny stalls. We of course stopped at the travel bookshop featured in the movie, and ate delicious street food for lunch. Then we went to St. Paul's Cathedral, where the admission fee is so high that your "free" audioguide is an iTouch. Both the church and the view from the dome (523 steps later...) were gorgeous, however, although the audioguide was a little too much religious stuff for my taste. We spent the end of the day wandering around Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens, one gigantic park in the center of London.

Day 3 began rainy, unfortunately, so the Yeoman Warder tours at the Tower of London were canceled, much to our disappointment--apparently the Yeomen don't like to get wet. But we spent several hours seeing all the exhibits in the tower--Eric really liked the armor one. The last time I was in London was mid-November, so I was shocked at all the crowds for everything. The line to see the Crown Jewels was so long we didn't bother. Then we headed off to the British Museum, since it was still pretty gross and rainy. It was insanely crowded! We started our final day in London by walking through St. James' Park to Buckingham Palace to see the changing of the guard. Apparently it was the queen's birthday celebration, so we were treated to an hour-long performance by the royal band. Selections included a long Beatles medley (which was great, the whole crowd sang along) and the theme from the Incredibles. After that, we went to St. Martin in the Fields' Church for lunch at the Cafe in the Crypt--a cafeteria style lunch in a real church crypt! The food was delicious and it was certainly an interesting atmosphere. Next up was taking pictures with the lions in Trafalgar Square, and then Westminster Abbey, still my favorite part of London (and now Eric's too!). We ended the day at the National Gallery. Dinner was at a delicious fast-food place called Nando's recommended by my friend Ramya--their chicken was amazing!! Apparently they are coming to the US soon--here's hoping!

So the next morning it was off to the train station to take the Eurostar to Paris. After about two hours, we were in Gare du Nord and I felt like I was home again! We rented an apartment in Paris, the cheapest non-sketch lodging option, which was in the Latin Quarter, one of my favorite neighborhoods. We could see the Pantheon from the tiny balcony. After dropping off our things, I took Eric on a tour of the Latin Quarter: starting at Notre Dame, we saw the church and climbed the towers; then Sainte-Chapelle (Eric's favorite); then a nice walk down the Blvd Ste-Michel before dinner (I finally got to have escargots again!). We ended the day sitting in the Jardins de Luxembourg in gorgeous weather. I also enjoyed watching French TV in the evening. Day 2, I made Eric walk a lot. We started at the Arc de Triomphe, climbed up, then walked down the Champs-Elysees to the Place de la Concorde and the Tuileries. Then we did a quick Louvre visit--it was intensely crowded but we managed to see some exhibits I wanted to show him. Next, we went across the river to the Marais. We started at the Centre Pompidou, and then walked from there to the Place des Vosges while I took him on a little tour of the district, Paris' oldest neighborhood and now the Jewish/gay quarter. We finished the day on the Ile Ste-Louis at Berthillon for ice cream! After all that walking, we were exhausted, and we went home to freshen up before going to my host parents' apartment for dinner! I missed them so much and it felt so good to be in the place I used to live again! They were as kind and pleasant as always and after a few minutes my French came back with ease. After dinner and seeing some pictures of their two new grandchildren, my host dad took us on an abridged version of his famous "Paris par nuit"tour--we arrived at the Eiffel Tower just in time to see it sparkle! We were out late that night but it was worth it!

On Day 3 in Paris, we started at the Musee d'Orsay--unfortunately it's under construction so a lot of it was rearranged, but it was still beautiful. Next up was the Musee Rodin and Les Invalides, Napoleon's tomb. We kept it short so we'd have energy for Day 4, which was Versailles! Unfortunately it was INSANELY crowded and much colder than forecasted. We got all the way out into the gardens, as far from the chateau as you could be, when it started pouring rain (we hadn't brought umbrellas either). So we ran the mile back to the castle and the other half-mile to the train station, and headed back home to dry off before dinner with my old friend Orlando! He showed us around the Jussieu area of Paris, and the part of the Seine where they do salsa dancing classes! I saw some things that were even new to me, which was exciting. On our last day in Paris, we started in Montmartre, which I correctly guessed would be Eric's favorite (except for the harassment by street vendors, of course). We saw Sacre-Coeur and then wandered some of the tiny windy streets, and ate lunch at a bakery, protected by an awning while it poured again. Next up was the Opera Garnier--we got there just as a rehearsal was ending so we got to see the sets on stage! Then I got to do a little shopping on the Rue Sainte-Honore--we saw a wedding at La Madeleine before stopping at Laduree for macaroons and at the Longchamp boutique! We capped off our stay in Paris with a trip to La Tour Eiffel. My one regret about Paris in June (although the weather was gorgeous), other than the crowds of tourists, was that it doesn't get dark until almost 11 pm, and Paris is most beautiful at night, I think. So we ate dinner and then went up the Eiffel Tower to wait for sunset. We stayed until about 10:30, when it was semi-dark, to enjoy the lights, and then came down in time to see the 11 pm sparkling from Trocadero. (The Eiffel Tower sparkles at night on the hour for five minutes)

The next afternoon we arrived in Rome. It was really, really hot. London had been rainy and in the high 60s; Paris, sunshine and clouds and in the low to mid 70s. Rome was easily mid-80s, persistently sunny, and humid. I did not like that. After dropping our things at the B&B we were staying at, we spent the end of the afternoon at the Coliseum before resting up for the next day. We started Day 2 (just as hot and sunny and humid) at the Roman Forums, which Eric really enjoyed--it's all the archaeological ruins of ancient Rome. After a few hours there, we headed down the Via del Corso to see the Pantheon, the Trevi Fountain, and the Spanish Steps. We ended the day in Trastevere, eating at La Cisterna, a place where my parents ate on their honeymoon! La Cisterna means "the well" in Italian, and it's called that because of the excavation of an underground well underneath the restaurant, which they take you on a tour of after dinner! I was proud of myself because we got directions to the restaurant in Italian and I understood them--the street is really hard to find and not on maps so we had to ask people, but we found it! We spent our final day in Vatican City: the museums and St. Peter's, then back into Rome to see the Catacombs of San Callisto and the San Giovanni in Laterano church. Vatican City was so crowded that I was getting really uncomfortable in the museums, since I'm claustrophobic. I was glad to be out. I've now been to Rome twice and don't plan to go again. The weather in summer is terrible (in my opinion) and the city is dirty, smelly, sketchy, poorly maintained, inefficient, and CROWDED. The train from Termini Station to the main airport is actually programmed to tell you how late it is upon arrival. There's a lot more of Italy I want to see, but Rome I am completely done with.

So the next day we spent all day traveling back to Konstanz. We flew from Rome to Vienna, Austria, where we had a layover before flying to Zurich and taking a train back to Konstanz. Four countries in one day. We arrived home in time for dinner in the pouring rain. The next day was a national holiday I'd had no idea about, and I had literally no food in my apartment since I'd been gone for two weeks. So we tried some restaurants in Konstanz and walked around the city a bit, but everything was closed. We had German food that night with my friends Thorin and Alessia! The next day we went grocery shopping and went to Meersburg with my language partner, Ulf. We walked around the town a bit and had some gelati! On Eric's last day here, I showed him Konstanz, since everything was open--the harbor, the funny statues, the shops, etc. We tried some Turkish food for dinner and then he got ready to leave. He started his trip back to the US a few hours ago, and now it's back to work for me!

Monday, June 6, 2011

The challenges of learning a new language

So my reasons for being in Germany are twofold: first and most ostensibly, to do research on the political culture of discrimination against Muslim immigrants in Western Europe, to the extent that I'm able at this point in my academic career. Secondly and probably more importantly at this point in said academic career, to learn German in order to further my research later on.

However, due to the fact that private language schools are insanely expensive and I arrived at the wrong time to take a language course through the university, I've been learning largely on my own. I've used two online courses (busuu.com and Deutsche Interaktiv, for anyone interested), and have added in a combination of grammar workbooks and websites, watching dubbed American TV shows, and translating Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, as well as my language exchange partner, Ulf! So essentially I'm not only teaching myself the language but designing my own curriculum. The Internet's a wonderful thing, isn't it? I don't think it would work nearly as well if I wasn't physically in Germany hearing German every time I leave my apartment, though.

I literally had no German background at all prior to arriving here--when I knew I was coming I made it a point to learn greetings and numbers, and then all of a sudden I was on a plane to a country I'd never been to where they speak a language I couldn't say ten words in. If there is one thing I hate, it's being dependent, and the second I got here I hated being dependent on other people's English-speaking abilities. So I've worked as hard as I can to make that less of an issue. It's very different from my semester abroad in Paris. I had about 7 years of background in French (even though American methods of teaching second languages are awful), I was living with a family, I was with one of my best friends, and even arriving I wasn't dependent on people speaking English--fluency happened pretty quickly and almost without me realizing it.

Here it's very different. Not only because I arrived all by myself to spend the summer working on my own with no background in the language. I feel like every day I am flooded with hundreds of new bits of information--new words or verb conjugations that I learn and immediately forget, cultural notes, ways to phrase or pronounce things. While in Paris I was shooting for big goals, like watching a movie without subtitles, or having a phone conversation, or understanding song lyrics, here I'm happy with little victories. After going to Geneva, where they speak French and I could communicate easily, I came back to Konstanz intensely frustrated. I can think in French, I can switch from French to English at a moment's notice, and I can understand what people say to me. My grammar may have a lot of mistakes but I can do very well without any assistance in a French-speaking place. Thinking of how to say things in French comes very quickly. Coming back to a place where I couldn't understand a word anyone said anymore was disheartening.

In Konstanz, I have to think of what I want to say. Then I have to break it down word by word to figure out the words I know and the words I don't know. If I'm out and about, I have to look up the words I don't know in my phrasebook. If they're not there I have to figure out another way to express what I mean. Then I have to make a guess at word ordering and verb conjugations. And if it's not in the present tense, forget it. I thought doing everything in French could be exhausting sometimes, but it's nothing compared to this. Imagine shopping for food or toiletries when you can't read anything that's on the labels. Or trying to get daily tasks like buying a bus ticket or making a deposit at the bank accomplished. Every time I leave my apartment it's difficult.

Obviously you can't become fluent in a language overnight, or in a month, or even in four months, particularly without formal instruction. So I'll just keep up what I'm doing, and in August see where I am!

With that, here's to the little victories of the past few days:
-ordering gelati in multiple flavors in a cone or a cup--kugeln im becher (scoop in a cup)!
-making a deposit at the bank in German...einzahlung (the deposit)!
-explaining to the woman waiting with me for the (very late) bus that there had been a car accident near the Konzil Theater so that was why the bus was late--der Unfall (the accident)!
-paying my rent and spelling my last name in German--bezahlen (to pay)!

hopefully there will be many more!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

SeeLife and Stoplerstein

So it's been a pretty quiet week since I got back from Switzerland. I've been trying to get some work done both on my Deutsch and on my research. I met with the professor supervising me while I'm here, and he made some suggestions, so I may be taking a trip to Ludwigsburg, a city near Stuttgart, in July to visit the Deutsch-Französisch Institut. My newest language-learning strategies include regular viewing of American TV shows in German (the easiest to find are the Simpsons and Scrubs so far) and trying to read Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone to learn new vocabulary. I'm not making sentences as fast as I'd like, so I think I'm going to add in studying verbs from my verb book every day, and finding a way to study prepositions.

After I got back from Switzerland, I went to get ice cream with Thorin and he showed me something really interesting that I want to share. Apparently several years ago in Germany an artist was commissioned for a project called the Stolperstein (literally means stumbling-stone in German). They are golden stones that are placed in front of buildings where deported Jews lived or worked prior to deportation. They list the person's name, date of birth, camps deported to, and then date of death and/or liberation, where applicable. There are several scattered around Konstanz, Thorin showed me a few, and apparently they are now in every German city. I included a link to the Wikipedia article on them here if anyone is interested in reading more, and my pics of two of them are at the bottom of this entry.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stolperstein

I also went to SeeLife with Ulf, my language partner! SeeLife is the aquarium in Konstanz. It was small but still really fun to see! It was really well put-together, the exhibits were nicely done. For some reason the fish were SUPER active and excited, I swear the penguins were showing off for the little kids. Then we went to Cafe Aran for ice cream, after looking around a bookstore in Lago (the mall). Apparently my German pronunciation is good! yay! except for that darn -ch sound, I can't quite seem to get it right. And I said my longest German sentence to date trying to explain that my mother was proud of me for traveling alone! Grammatically correct sentence, no, but hey, I'm just happy to be stringing seven or eight words together.

Today is a holiday in Germany, Ascension Day, and EVERYTHING is closed. I'm assuming Ascension Day as in post-Easter ascension, but I'm not a very observant Catholic, so I went for Turkish food! Thorin and I went to a little place near the harbor. I had yufka with meat--it was kind of like a burrito? but it was yummy! Then we walked around the city, which was crowded because everyone was off today, and climbed the Munstertur and walked around some more. It was much nicer to climb the Munstertur on a clear day.

Turkish food
at SeeLife

one of the Stoplersteine; I think this one was for someone liberated
a bad picture of the Schnetztor, one of the remnants of ancient city walls surrounding KN
another Stoplerstein, this one for someone murdered in the camps

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Geneva and Interlaken


This week I took my first ever solo trip! I figured Switzerland was a good place to start my travels for the summer, since it's so close by. So I went to Geneva and Interlaken for 2 1/2 days.

I started out my trip with Geneva. All my traveling was done by train--I love European trains. They're fast, comfy, and on time. Much more than you can say for Amtrak or NJTransit. I don't think they're terribly expensive, either, considering the distances traveled. So it took about 3 1/2 hours to get to Geneva from Konstanz, I had to change trains once. I got there about noon on Tuesday. After eating lunch and checking in to my hostel, I set off exploring. It was SO hot--over 80 degrees, which I was unprepared for. I was happy, though, because Geneva and I have a language in common--chocolate...I mean French! It was so fabulous to hear French again! I could actually understand everything going on around me for the first time in a month.

Geneva seems like a pretty small city and almost everything there is to see is clustered in one really walkable area. So I walked around and saw the Rhone River and Lake Geneva, which are a beautiful turquoise color. The Jet d'Eau is at the spot where they meet--it's the tallest water fountain in the world. It was pretty cool to see. Then I wandered into the Vielle-Ville, or old city, walked around a bit, and went into the Cathedrale Sainte-Pierre. Geneva was a big hub of the Reformation, John Calvin used to hang out there. While Protestantism is all well and good, I have to say, their churches really aren't any fun to visit because they're so boring to look at. But the cathedral in Geneva has a tower you can climb, plus it's on top of a hill. So of course, because that's what I do, I climbed the tower, and the view of the lake was lovely. I went back down to the ground and went to a nearby art museum. By this point I was limping somewhat--my flats are super comfy for my feet but not so much for my heels--they tend to rub them a little raw and also rub off any band-aids I put there. So I was moving pretty slowly for the rest of the day. After the art museum, which was pretty unremarkable but nice, I headed back down towards the river to get a view of the Jet d'Eau close up, as well as to see the famous flower clock. Being in the main section of Geneva is like being on 5th Avenue in NY. Everything is designer and everything is insanely expensive. A meal at McDonalds, for example, costs about 10 Swiss francs, which is a little more than $11. So I passed a lot of expensive stores, looked at the flower clock, and the Brunswick Memorial, which is a famous person's burial place. Then it was time to look for dinner, since I hadn't really had anything filling for lunch and my feet were killing me. Unfortunately, it was about 5:00 and Europe doesn't really do dinner that early, haha. I finally found a relatively inexpensive pizza place that was open, and then headed back to the hostel and enjoyed French TV while doing some work-I think the best part was seeing what American shows the French choose to watch. That night it was 7th Heaven, and then a French show that had to be from the 80s or early 90s, judging by the outfits, and then in the morning I was treated to a French episode of Phineas & Ferb. The downside to traveling by yourself is that evenings can get a little quiet.

So in the morning I woke up and headed off to see the gigantic broken chair and the UN. Then I walked around a little more by the river before heading off to Interlaken on the train. I got there around 1 pm. The train ride from Bern to Interlaken was beautiful because you could see the biggest mountains of the Alps, still covered in snow, the whole way. I dropped my bags off at my hostel and started walking around. There's not tons to do in Interlaken unless it's in the way of adventure sports, so I was able to see the town pretty quickly and have a traditional Swiss dinner of cheese fondue. Interlaken may be a small town but it is beautiful. The mountains that overlook it are lovely--I wish I could come back in winter when the whole thing is snow-covered and not just the tallest peaks. There are people everywhere para-sailing, and you can watch them land. I saw another flower clock, guess the Swiss have a thing for those. The one in Interlaken has musical dwarves that chime the hour, though, which was cool. It depressed me a little to be back in German Switzerland, where I once again have no idea what's going on. Had a few problems with my hostel but they lowered my rate by a ton without me even asking, so can't complain. Switzerland is EXPENSIVE so every little bit helps...I also got to watch The Simpsons, Grey's, and Private Practice in German, lol. Educational, I suppose?

So Thursday morning I got up, ate breakfast, and hung around awhile before heading out of Interlaken on a boat cruise across Lake Thun. It took about two hours to get to Thun, the town on the other side. The ride was incredibly scenic--got a little boring by myself but it was gorgeous. From there I got a train that went straight to Zurich, where I could get a train back to Konstanz, and here I am. I'm really tired but I had a great week!

Thoughts on traveling by myself...it was really great until the evenings, then it got a little lonely, but I did get some work done! However, evenings are really long when you're by yourself, because tourist sites close around 5 or 6, and it doesn't take that long to eat dinner alone, and then you're stuck for several hours. I wish I'd brought my laptop, but then I would have had to worry about keeping it safe. Watching foreign TV was fun, though! Overall I enjoyed it, and never felt unsafe, although I was also in well before dark both nights-I think I wouldn't have felt so safe had I been out at night. Then again, it's not hard to be in before dark when dark isn't until 9:30 or 10 pm...ah, Europe.