09 July 2008

Photos


My home in Germany.
Karen and her parents live in the light brown part.
In the darker part, her brother and his wife live.






The Brandenburg Gate
Decorated for the Fan Mile, to welcome
the German National Soccer Team home.
Finale!






The east side of the Berlin wall.
No paint or grafitti

04 July 2008

Back in America

I am hoping to do a general post when I get back from Michigan on Monday. For now, I just wanted to let you all know that I am back in America...for Independence Day! I am also really craving a burrito!
Until Monday
Bridget

01 July 2008

Heute

Today
This afternoon, after a normal day of school, I rode my bike to Marie's house to meet Sarah's cousin, who is living in Germany for a year. We ordered pizza from a place down the street and sat outside for a bit. I am enjoying being able to comprehend, for the most part, what people are saying. I enjoy those moments even more when I am able to reply in German.
After three weeks, I am thinking in German quite often. It now requires much thought to think a
and speak in English. I find it strange, yet am dreading the regression of this aquired habit.

For the past two nights, Karen's father, Fritz, and I have gone for a long bike ride from 8:30 to 9:30 or 10. Yesterday we rode up to a hill to see the Barenburg in the valley. We also rode under the huge windmills that generate the area's energy. Yep, wind is the source of most of German's electricity. Solar power is common as well.
Tonight we rode southwest to a moor. I think they are the same thing in English. Like in Wuthering Heights. A bog type deal. Anyway, there were tons of moths and horse fly looking things that were biting Karen, but not her father and me. Thus, we turned around sooner than expected. Apparently the moor is not like this during lunch time. I am not sure.
___
Tomorrow afternoon, a bunch of us are meeting at the Freibad to go swimming and to lay in the sun. It is supposed to be 36 degrees celcius tomorrow. Pfeew! Later in the evening, there is a going away party for all of the American students. It will be kind of a farewell until we come back individually one day. I am certainly going to miss Germany, Suligen, Barenburg, German, and my family and friends here very much!
We fly home Thursday and arrive in Chicago around 11. The 'rents will pick up us german-americans (now that is who we are, i suppose) from O'Hare.
:'(
This wonderful trip is coming to an end sooner than expected.

30 June 2008

Die Ende für Deutschland

Not only is it the end for the National soccer team, but also for my stay here in this beautiful country that I have come to like so dearly. The game last night was really something. Aside from the lack of enthusiasm from the team, the crowd was loud and proud. We had a great time. I was wearing my national team jersey, had my face painted, and was also wearing a flag and scarf. (Photo to follow)
I went on a bike ride today, a solo tour, with my video camera to make a film of the town that I have been living in. I think I will take a video tomorrow of the school, the bakery, and so on. I will certainly miss my German family when I leave. But my host mother is talking me into returning for the World Cup in two years. Anyone up for a trip?

Tonight is a birthday party for Karen. She turned sixteen yesterday and since the game was last night, we are having the party today.

That is all for now.
Miss all you Americans!
My peace and love--as always
B

26 June 2008

Wir werde Europameister

Finale!!!!
Germany is in the finals for the Euro Cup!!!!!!!!!
Woooooooooooo!.
My throat is killing me from last night, when they won.
Here are a few clips and films to check out to hear the songs that we are singing/screaming and the team that we are cheering on.
Supa Deutschland
Oh wie ist das Schön another of the same but a better video
My favorite player is 21: Christoph Metzelder...mostly I just like his beard.
in any case...watch the game Sunday if you can. I will be watching it live, full of Deutschland gear--flag, jersey, face paint, scarf. It's gonna be a ball. (no pun intended)

WOOOO!!! DEUTSCHLAND!!!

23 June 2008

Nord See u. Grün KlassenZimmer

On Sunday, eight of us went to the North Sea via train. The ride up was beautiful as was the day in its entirety. We walked along the mud flats for quite some distance, a kilometer or two. They seemed to be never ending. These mud flats are vast are areas of mud...with a bit of water, a few inches deep, covering the mud and sand. It was incredible. As you can see in the picture there are yellow dots scattered on the beach. Those are Strandkorbs, or beach baskets, where people can sit, sheltered from the wind, and even lock their stuff up inside when they leave for an hour or so. Our group simply carried our belongings and sat on the sand. Student's budget. After the trek back to the beach, we went to lunch and to an indoor swimming pool with a wave pool and a slide. Oh, the pool was a salt water pool too. Wicked cool.

To finish the day, at the Nord See, we had ice cream. Which is actually a daily happening in most German towns/families. Ice cream when we are out and cake when we are at home.

_________________________________

Today we went into the Green Classroom, which is pretty much a farm with a classroom, and learned about the general milk production of Germany. While it is certainly more sound than America's milk production, I still find large farms to be careless and so forth. However, this farm had incredily interesting equipment and seemed to be aware of their animals needs. For example, each cow wears a collar that has number 'charms' as well as a charm with a computer chip in it (the larger green piece). The computer chip contains all of the information concerning that specific cow (or heiffer, actually). The most important task that this chip carries out is the measurement of the cow's grain. Other than being fed a standard portion of food--hay silage, straw (strange to be in food, I thought), minerals, corn silage, and dry hay--each cow gets a specific amount of dairy grain a day. This is where the extra cool equipment comes in. The cow walks into the feeding stantion when she so chooses, the computer reads her chip number, and then dispenses the amount of food that she is supposed to have. Now, here is the cool part, the cow taps a bar inside of the trough and the machine dispenses about a third of her amounted grain. If she decides to roam the barn (free stall kind of deal), the computer will read the next cow's chip when she enters. But, if that first cow decides to stay, she can tap the bar again to recieve another third of her alloted ration. The machine will stop dispensing grain once a cow's third portion is recorded to have been dispensed. Cool, eh?
That's not the only cool thing this farm has. They also had a cow back scratching devise. No joke. There was a machine hanging on a post in the barn that looked like a miniature car wash set up, without the water and soap. A cow would walk up to this set of green and white brushes and tap on the side brush with her head or back to start the motor. Then the brushes would start moving. The top brush when in a circular motion, while the side brushes went up and down or side to side. The motor would run for about a minute and then stop until the brush was tapped again. Bizzare, and yet very clever to keep the cows occupied and content.
This might drive some of you nuts, but I can't upload a video on this computer. And that is all I have of the brush machine, so I am uploading a picutre of a cute Holstein calf for you to look at in the mean time.
At the end of the tour, we all got a box of Milch/milk and a cup of yogurt. People in Germany eat or drink dairy products warm. Milk isn't kept in the fridge. Neither is butter (my American family does this too-just with some butter) or yogurt.
So, finally a picture of Dan and me at the classroom. He had his 18th Birthday yesterday. Congrats, Danny!
Hope all is well in America. I hear the flooding is doing awful things for farmers. :( Mother Nature should really poor down on the Bush estate.
...who said that? not me.
And happy summer solstice, a few days late.
My love and peace,
B

20 June 2008

Freitag gibt Freiheit -- Friday gives Freedom

Tonight, after the BBQ at Marie's, a few of us are going to Kreml. And out of my interest in honest journalism, I am attaching the link to Kreml's site for you all to check it out for yourselves. Dad, I am bringing the light up ice-cubes to Marie's party and to Kreml. I figured most people will get a kick out of them there. I plan on taking pictures and bringing the cubes, at least one, home for Karen's father.
Tomorrow we are all hoping on a train, way to early after a night out, and heading for Hanover. There will be an hour long tour through a museum of hunting and such (blek!) and then shopping and roaming time. When we get back, some of us might end up at Kreml for a while. Hanover is a nice city and the weather is expected to be beautiful this weekend--in the high 20s and low 30s (Celcius).
Sunday will be a small group trip to the North Sea/Nord See for swimming, shopping, and such. The train ride up to the N.S. is about three hours.

I Skype-d the folks this afternoon. My dog (Karnali) has created a blog to keep me updated on her well-being and that of the others in the family. We're pals. And obviously are sincerely missing each other. So after you finish checking my blog, you may want to check out her blog.

Alles gut in Deutschland
B