Daisypath Vacation tickers

Daisypath Vacation tickers

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

First Impressions of Germany!

 I arrived in the wonderful country of Germany on Friday, July 22. The first day I was so exhausted I had no idea what was really going on. I met my host family (who are incredibly awesome!) at the train station and we had some lunch (mittagessen) when we got to their house. Later we went for a walk and I almost fell asleep in the middle of the street! I wasn't allowed to sleep until normal bedtime to avoid jet-leg. It was harder than you would think! I didn't sleep much on the plane ride over to begin with and then having the time be seven hours ahead in Germany really messed with my sleeping schedule. I'm used to the time now but I still accidentally fall asleep during the day sometimes.
 My first weekend in Germany was good, we didn't do a whole lot but it was nice to just relax after the long flight and the stressful few days I spent in Washington D.C. We had a typical German breakfast for the first three days I've been here, which is a million different kinds of breads and rolls most with seeds but some without. There are also big pretzels that taste amazing and giant croissants. There are a ton of different things to put on the bread like seven kinds of meat, different cheeses, tomatoes, spreads, jam, peanut butter and nutella. I usually have a roll with some salami and butter which we eat open-faced or I mix peanut butter and nutella and put that on a pretzel or a roll without seeds on it. The bread is amazing and even though we have it all the time, I'm still not sick of it! The food is a lot better than I thought it would be. Last night I had some Turkish pizza which was pretty good and they have fries or potato wedges a lot here too. The only problem is that they have a different kind of ketchup which I am not a fan of so far.. Although I do like tea (Tee) more now, fruit tea that is. We have tea time on the weekends and just skip lunch because at tea time we eat some type of cake or some ice cream instead! Also in my host family we usually have a little dessert after dinner which is usually chocolate and vanilla mousse with caramel and chocolate sauce and it may be the most delicious thing in the world!
 I'm working off all the good food (mostly the bread) by walking a lot. The sidewalks are all brick here and everything is so beautiful and clean! My language camp is in another city so I walk to the bus station every morning, ride the bus to the train station, ride the train to the city my school is in, and then walk to school. It takes me about an hour every morning to get to school but that's alright with me because it's fun to be out walking around and riding all the public transportation by myself. My first time riding on a train here was when on my way to my host family's from the airport. I was sitting against a window with two people in front of me and one next to me. They definitley weren't speaking German so I had no idea what was going on when the guy next to me (Andres) asked me a question. I just started laughing and told him in English that I had no idea what he was saying in what ever language he was speaking. He had just asked in Spanish if I was with the other girls in the seats to the right of us (people from my language camp) and so we ended up switching places. He spoke a little English so I talked to him a bit but half the time neither of us could understand each other, which was incredibly funny to me and the other girls I was with. The lack of sleep probably made us seem like we were crazy but we really didn't care at that point. We figured that Andres and all his friends (who were all nineteen and from Spain) were making fun of us "Americans" but we couldn't understand anything they said. It was just very ironic that the first people I meet in Germany are from Spain and don't speak any German!
  Everyday something interesting happens and there are a million situations in one day where communicating is next to impossible! My German is still nicht so gut, but that;s alright because I didn't really expect it to get much better in the five days I've been here. I have a long way to go to become fluent, but each day I learn so much! That's all for today, but please comment and I'll write more soon!

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Hello from Wisconsin

 I'm still in Wisconsin, and I have two weeks until I leave for Germany! On the 19th of July I will be flying to Washington D.C. and meeting with the members of Congress from Wisconsin, since the scholarship I'm on, Congress-Bundestag, is funded by our Congress.  I also have my final orientation before actually leaving for Germany! There's 250 of us from the U.S. that received the scholarship so after our orientation we're all flying into Frankfurt together. After that we're split up and sent to our temporary host families. I'm living in Wegberg, which is about 30 minutes from the Netherlands border(!!!), for the first four weeks. So before school starts I have a month long orientation and language course that will hopefully get me prepared enough to get through the first week of school... Even though I'm super excited about leaving I'm also really nervous. In the pre-departure orientation I went to in May, they told us not to have any expectations so that we can experience everything with an open mind. I have absolutely NO idea what to expect so I think I'm on the right track to having an open mind!
I wanted to make this Blog so that people can follow me where I go over the next year.  So if you have questions, feel free to comment or even suggest places for me to visit : ) Wish me luck.  Auf Wiedersehn!