Showing posts with label excitement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label excitement. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Explorations

So after having been in Tübingen for almost a week, I feel I've had time to explore most of the city. There are still plenty of places I haven't been, but without a language course or anything to do during the day, Catie and I have done a lot of exploring. Our neighborhood is really nice, and about a ten minute walk from the city center. Just up our road a little way is a small tributary of the Neckar, that is shallow and slow-moving. People picnic there and wade in the rocky riverbed, and it's already a favorite place for me to go and read.



When you walk into town from where I live, the first thing you encounter is the Neckar river and the Neckarbrücke. People punt along the river, and there are various kinds of boats you can rent. We saw someone setting up food in one of the boats, and learned that you can have a romantic, candlelit dinner, while being punted down the river. How perfect! Here are some photos of the Neckar:


This island park runs between the two sides of the Neckar 



Catie and I also walked up to the castle, once on purpose and once accidentally. The view up there is really nice, and as the castle houses the classical archaeology department, Catie was exceptionally happy. There is also a place for archery practice in the back, which I think is great. Tübingen really keeps its medieval traditions alive. There are many fraternities here, none of which are like fraternities in the U.S. They are much more like secret societies, and they have their own, castle-like buildings, and date from the middle ages. My housemate spent a wild night in one of their buildings, with a shirtless professor and crates of beer. Many of them seem to involve activities like fencing and archery, keeping alive this idea of a medieval university. You can see some of their buildings marked with crossed swords or the like.
Views from the Castle:



One thing I like about Tübingen is that is has a more youthful feel in many ways than Regensburg. I consistently told people thinking about going abroad to Regensburg about how young the city was, with all of the students and nightclubs and cafes. But the feel here in Tübingen is really different. The first thing is the graffiti that is all around the city. I love this, because a lot of it is clever or political, and it really gives a flavor to the city. My favorite is right outside our building, where it says "Organsiert Euch" with an anarchist symbol through the "A." This phrase means something along the lines of "organize yourselves" in English, making the anarchist symbol particularly amusing.


I've also found these few gems:

This is not common in Germany

Cartoon pope

I've also noticed more diversity in Tübingen than in Regensburg. Germany has an incredibly homogeneous population, and has had many issues with immigration in the past few decades along with the rest of Europe. However Regensburg was most certainly the least diverse place I have ever lived, and I'm from a small suburban town in New England. The streets near ours seem to house many Turkish families, which while relatively common in Germany, was not so common in Regensburg. I've really enjoyed seeing more than the white catholics that I encountered in Bavaria, and it adds to the feeling I've gotten of the city in my first week in Tübingen. However, it is still Germany, meaning that there are many racial generalizations. One of my favorite things is how Germans group together all of Asia, commonly having "Asia Markets" or "Asian Food." There is a restaurant in Tübingen called "Asia Bambus," for example. A few of my other favorites:



!!!!


Aside from taking photos in inappropriate places (I found the "Orientalischer Lustfinger" in a bathroom at a bar and then was asked why I had run back out to get my camera to bring it into the bathroom), Catie and I have been eating a lot of delicious food and exploring the city. We've had multiple delicious breakfasts and been getting to know the people on our program.

An incredibly delicious rhubarb cake that cost only 50 cents because it was from the day before

Just part of an incredible breakfast, with many kinds of rolls and müsli and juice and coffee

My German housemate also appeared, and turns out to be great. She cooked dinner with my housemate Mike and myself, and we talked quite a bit about the differences between America and Germany. I've been having that conversation a lot, like last night when Catie and I met these two guys who came up to us when they heard us speaking American English. One is German, and one is Russian but has lived here for 13 years, and both are construction workers who dig holes to test dykes. The Russian spoke no English, so Catie and I spent the night having really interesting conversations with the two of them, all in German. We met up with them again this afternoon when they were done with work, and when their jobs take them back to Tübingen we're going to see them again. I hadn't ever spoken to working-class, non-student, Germans, and so it was really interesting to talk to them. It's fascinating what Germans assume about America. I find that they really can't believe how much we have to pay for, and so while they complain about their taxes, they're then shocked when we say children don't automatically have free health care.  Last night we were trying to explain how it can be too expensive to have children, and the two guys we were with could not truly grasp that the state doesn't provide families with what children need. I've also noticed a pervasive belief in the American dream and the possibility of pulling oneself up by the bootstraps. Alex, the guy from Russia, was telling me that if you work hard enough in America you can always get farther, and I had a really hard time convincing him that that wasn't always true. He kept saying things like, "if you need more money for your kids you just work more, because in America you just need to work hard to get far." It's hard to explain the complicated politics of such a large country to someone who doesn't really believe you when you say you can drive for six hours and stay within one state.

Tomorrow we are getting up really early to take a day-trip to Mainz. There is a museum of old books there, which I believe may be the closest thing I can imagine to heaven. We're going with one of the people on our program, who is a theology grad student from Yale. He also loves old books, so this should be fun! On Friday I get to meet the little boy that a friend of mine babysat for last year in Tübingen. I'm incredibly excited because she said he was a great kid, and I'm excited to get to play with a toddler. And when I spoke to his father on the phone, he was incredibly nice and helpful. It's crazy, but I feel like I'm actually starting a life here.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Here We Go!

When I studied abroad in Regensurg, Germany in 2009 I made a blog, determined to document my adventures. As those who followed that blog know, my very last post was made in May (three months before I got on a plane to go home). This time, however, I am determined to do better. I have wanted a blog for a long time to document what I cook and bake, and the fact that I expect to be away from the United States for at least a year, and traveling often, makes it seem that this is the time to make that a reality. So here goes!


Things to expect:
Lots of pictures! I can't promise that they will be anything special, but I've decided that photos are incredibly important to an enjoyable blog. And I love to photograph food, plus I take way too many pictures when I travel.

The Weekly Pastry! I'm hoping to come up with a better name for this soon, but for now it is what it is. And what it is is a plan for my time in Germany. Every week I will treat myself to a new, exciting form of baked good from a delicious German bakery. And every week I will then try to re-create the deliciousness in my own kitchen. This seems like a great way to gain experience in making traditional European baked goods. Wish me luck!

Travel! The semesters in Germany are set up so that the winter semester goes from October to February, and the summer semester goes from April to the end of July. What does that mean? Why, a two month spring break. I went to ten countries last time I lived in Germany, and I hope to keep that up this time if possible. So far I have two major trips planned. The first is to Greece, Turkey, and Egypt, and the second is the UK and Ireland. I also have friends teaching English in both Spain and France, so I'm sure I will visit them at some point. I also would love to realize my dream of going to Scandanavia, where much of my family is from. And if I somehow still have money, I really want to go to Asia next summer.

I take off on August 31st, and am still in the middle of frantically figuring out what I need to do before then. Thus I'm not planning on posting anything for the rest of this summer, but once I get to Tübingen I promise to post! I am determined to do a better job than I did in Regensburg :)