Saturday, May 30, 2009

Day 5+6

Day 5, May 29th

Today started off poorly enough. So I *kinda* got a *little* bit drunk last night at the party , and sort of overslept through my first class :) Thankfully , I got the notes and made it for my next two classes, so no harm done.

Oh, big lesson for anyone traveling to Germany: plug adapters for German outlets are CRAP by themselves. You need to convert the current to the proper amount too, I'm unable to make my wireless network go up and running, which is pretty annoying (especially when I want to use my iPhone's WiFi, let me tell you...).

Also, after this EuroRail pass (going to buy it sometime tomorrow) I've probably used up just about all of my Bar Mitzvah money, so oh well, though it's certainly gone to a good cause.

But it's worth it: 10 days of total travel over a 2 month period to 5 countries of my choice (I chose Germany, BeNeLux (Belgium/Netherlands/Luxembourg count as 1), France, Switzerland, and Austria; this will also work when my parents get here so I'm set for my whole trip)

Classes are starting to get a bit tougher and I feel like I'm in college a bit, but Freiburg is still an awesome place to be. Seriously, Germans have no conception of the term "cross walk", they just cross wherever they feel like which I find interesting.

Plus, the concept of "free refills" is imaginary here; a small glass of coke can cost over 2 euros. If I haven't talked about it before, German water annoys me too. It's essentially seltzer. That's right, carbonated water with a tiny bit of flavoring. If you ask them at restaurants for non-carbonated water they give you a funny look, almost as if the natural choice is carbonated water when you ask for water.

The terrible thing about carbonated water isn't that it tastes bad (it's actually quite good), but that it goes flat like soda. When it goes flat, it tastes absolutely awful, so you can't take it with you on hikes and you have to drink it quickly.

I also found a Synagogue in the city, as well as a third Starbucks. I've taken up a liking for their cappuccino, which gives me a great jolt in the morning (when I'm not running late to EVERYTHING). Also, today marks the first day I made it back from the university to my dorm without getting lost once, a feat I consider pretty impressive ;)

But alas, perfection was not to be. I had found out a while earlier (thanks for the info, Paul, but I already found it) that a Go club meets here in Freiburg and I wanted to check it out. I did a Google Maps search and found it was only 2 km away, which was certainly walkable on my part.

So at around 6:30 PM I headed out (note: still daylight). I had a great time meeting some German go players (they're generally pretty fluent in English) and at around 11 PM I decided to head back. That's when the fun began...

Apparently, it's a lot tougher finding which street to go on in a foreign city when it's pitch black compared to when it's bright out (go figure, right?). Needless to say, being me, I got myself lost on the final leg of the journey back. I knew I was within 10 minutes of home, but had no idea how to get there.

With my iPhone's GPS not working in Europe and everyone's number in Germany that I had not answering or sleeping (11:30 PM), I continued wandering aimlessly for a bit.

Finally, I decided to pocket any remaining shred of dignity I could cling to and called up the one and only Mr. Kyle Trager (tried Mr. Feinman but he was sleeping at work apparently, remember 6 hour time difference). After laughing for a bit, he used Google Maps Germany to plot where I was based on the intersections I was at (some really funky street names in Germany, btw).

Then, using a bird's eye satellite view from Google Maps (and some bare-bones memory from me about where I lived) he guided me back to my dorm, which was awfully kind of him. This will certainly be a fun one for the memory books, and now I guess I have to get him something besides the German 1st Grader's subtraction book I was planning on giving him :).

Besides wasting a good 20 minutes of time (costing me 69 cents/minute, sorry Mom!) on my cell, I was freezing cold when I got back. I plopped in bed and fell asleep near instantly. I thought my troubles were over, but UhOh...

Day 6, May 30th

My cell phone rings at 10:56 AM...I'm sleeping and thinking who would call me on a Saturday morning when I was taking a well-deserved long night sleep. It was Elyssa, whose also in our IES group, asking me where I was.

That's right!! We had a Saturday field trip to the Black Forest (cool place on the edge of Freiburg). It was originally scheduled for Sunday and I had totally spaced that it changed. The train was leaving at 11:15 AM and I was in no state to leave the dorm.

Dressing at approximately Warp Factor 9.9 (Warp 10 is physically impossible!), I sped out of the dorm and onto the tram to get to the major train we were leaving from (when I say "tram", I mean the Freiburg slow and local tram, but when I say "train", I mean the larger transportation system for Germany as a whole).

When I was two stops away, Elyssa calls me again telling me that the train was about to get there and that I wouldn't make it in time. Well, I was going to see about that..

So the tram gets to the train station and I zoom out dashing at top speed. I see the train I need to get on (#7), and run down steps 3 at a time. Then, I swear the scene comes right out of a Hollywood movie...

I see someone in my group get on the train (the last person), and I'm running as fast as I can. When I'm perhaps 100 ft. away, the train closes it's doors and starts moving... Nobody in my group sees me, and I run after the train for a second before giving up...Stupid Hollywood...

Aw crap, I just missed a fun field trip for the day! Well, after a good 5 minutes of sulking dejectedly at my own absurd stupidity, I decide to make the best of it. I'm a naive optimist I guess (according to polling in Germany, that's one of the most common stereotypes they give to Americans) I drown my sorrows in Flammkuchen (delicious!) and then buy gifts for family back home. I see a museum, a theater, go into some churches, and try and use my non-existent German to mingle with the populace. The farmers market is pretty cool, got some delicious Freiburg strawberries!!

At around 5 PM I meet my group that just got back from the Black Forest. After we all have a great laugh about me missing the train by a few microns (or a hundred feet, but whose counting...), we get some snacks and go back to the dorms. Thankfully, the evening ended quite a bit better than my continual mishaps.

We all decided to go out to dinner as a group to a relatively nice restaurant, and I had some sort of salami-eggs-baked potato meal, which was divine. We chatted for a bit about our respective days (everyone wanted to know how mine was since I kinda missed the scheduled activity), and about Israeli politics, what would happen in the Iranian election (you have a bunch of International Relations students at the same table, what do you expect?), and then a bachelor party started next door to us...

German bachelor parties are WEIRD!! Instead of just having a crazy drunken party, all of the bachelor's friends buy a special shirt for the occasion, and then go running around town selling stuff and making a scene to try and pay for it and maybe get some more cash for the bachelor party. Yea, I know, what?

At least that's what I understood from a local German's broken English...suffice it to say, it was pretty funny and you can check out the funny video below. I decided to buy a cigar which the bachelor party people were selling, which was pretty good.

Oh, and my MOM has how Google Friended this blog...seriously, anyone who reads this and doesn't has no idea how to use a computer ;) Don't be outdone by Judy Gelber on the computer :)

Anyway, that's all the fun for this time, see ya next time!!



Thursday, May 28, 2009

Mmmm...German Beer...

Day 4, May 28th

Hey everyone! Well I'm a little woozy right now...just had a few beers, a few shots, and all is well in the world of my brain.

Anyway, before we had the party tonight and I got *slightly* marginally inebriated, the day was fun. We had our first day of real classes which was nice. I forgot to bring a notebook for classes, argh!! How could I have been so stupid?? Where's a walmart when you need it, right?

That is #1928575 on my list of "Things Josh Forgot To Bring". Following classes, we went to this really cool Turkish restaurant (they're all over Germany, as are Chinese restaurants) where I tried "Lambcuch", or something, which is like hummus, lamb, pita, and a few other spices mixed together. So good! I know my new favorite food while I'm in Turkey.

Anyway, tomorrow I'm going to beg my mom to allow me to buy a Eurorail pass. Apparently EVERYONE ELSE HAS ONE, and we have so much free time over the weekends that I don't think I could afford not to get one. Then again, this trip already costs close to a billion dollars so who knows?

I got friendly with quite a few more people today (thank you alcohol!), from both the US and native German students. I'm going to join some of the Germans in my dorm room for a casual game of soccer later in the week so we'll see how that goes.

Anyway, at the party we drank, talked of times past, and of course I made a complete fool of myself dancing. Thankfully I banned all cameras from taking pictures of me, so dont expect any facebook embarrassments to laugh at:)

I had a shot called a "Sour Apple" (thats how it was translated, dunno if it was perfect), which tasted surprisingly like sour apple and was pretty good. Anyway, I'm just typing whatever random thought appears in my head, so sorry if this post is a little unorganized and rambling (oh, and Germans don't have nearly the obesity problems the US has).

I have reading to do, so in retrospect I probably should have done it BEFORE i got drunk, but it's all good ;)

Oh, and one last thing: curse Iowa!! Those Iowans and their stupid High Fructose Corn Syrup...I challenge everyone reading this to have a cola product made with SUGAR instead of High Fructose Corn Syrup (like 99% of US soda's have) and taste the difference...that damned corn lobby really screwed us. I mean, HFCS is even WORSE for you than sugar, tastes worse, IS worse, and just about any other criticism you can lay on it.

Went to GameStop today (go figure, right?)...new PS3 and XBOX360 games are 70 EUROS!!! Utter insanity...

Life lesson for today: when getting drunk in a foreign country, make sure that you're always with friends (I was, of course) to ensure you don't do anything to make Americans look even stupider than the stereotypes that Germans already have for us (I've heard them all...)

Or maybe 'Germans having a "stupid" stereotype for Americans' is itself a stereotype? Philosophical, I know...but I'm too tired to rant about aimless subjects anymore so good night everyone ;)

Few personal notes before I pass out:

-Grandpa Howard - Congrats on learning how to read my blog ;) You're definitely better with computers than my other grandpa :)

-Feinman - Good to know that SOMEONE understands the concept of "google friend", unlike the rest of you lame-o's.

-Katlyn (a.k.a. Mrs. Feinman)- You're one tough customer to find a gift for, seriously... For all those times you cleaned our house and made me the most delicious dinners ever, I'm going to find you the perfect gift from Europe if it kills me ;) *(Psst...any ideas Mr. Feinman?!?!?!?)

-Kyle - Reading the news for the first time in a few days and you know what I saw? HAH!! HAH!! I TOLD YOU BURRIS WAS A CROOK!! HAH!! HAH!! DID YOU SEE THIS CRAP?!!? HAH!! YOU SUCK!! HAH!! Ahem...sorry, small amount of alcohol in system...

-Maddy - Thanks for leaving a comment :) I didn't know you were that good with a computer, bwahahahahha! Make sure to teach Claudia and Sophie (and maybe Hannah) how to read my blog too, you're the boss while I'm gone :) When you start your blog tell me.

-Mom - Banks suck really badly everywhere...not only does Suntrust charge me $5, and a 3% conversion-to-euro fee, but now I'm told that most German banks charge an ADDITIONAL $5 for international transfers...sheesh they're total jerks.. I need to withdraw at least 200-300 Euros at a time for it to be even worth it

-Everyone Else - Leave comments! I'll find them a lot easier than everyone emailing me their responses to each of my posts (*cough* barbara *cough*) It's way too easy, right at the bottom of each post you'll find a comments hyperlink, click it.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Day 2 + 3



We had a fun time taking pictures of a few of the US stores that we found. Take a look at these.



Day 2, May 26th

Day 2 was our first day of real orientation. I forgot a few things (a comb, floss, washcloths, the list could go on but i prefer not to embarrass myself further) that I had to buy. Freiburg is a beautiful city of about 200,000 people. Everyone gets everywhere on these little local trains which is pretty cool.

The other people in the program (17 others and me) all seem like pretty nice people. We come from as diverse places as Florida, California, Texas, New Jersey, Illinois, Oregan, and quite a few more. No other Floridians besides me though.

As you might figure, about 10 of the people are International Relations majors which makes for fun political discussions.

Ok, got to my room, few fun things I discovered:

-The toilet has TWO BUTTONS to choose from...apparently button one is for #1 and button two is for #2...
-I'm living with 4 Germans and another American in my suite (I have my own room, we share 2x bathroom and kitchen
-Bikes are HUGE in Germany, people ride them everywhere and there are quite a few bike lanes
-The street and sidewalk are somewhat merged together in places, making travel a bit annoying.
-You have to PAY for ketchup packets in McDonalds (I've seen 2 MCDonalds so far)
-We've invaded Germany...I've seen 2x Starbucks, a gamestop, a subway, a few high-end clothing stores, and a CitiBank)
-I've already decided what I'm getting a few people (among them Misters Feinman and Trager)...I'm sure you'll enjoy it
-Germans don't drive SmartCars (seen only 2), most are regular cars that are pretty fuel efficient nevertheless.
-Many Germans speak a little English which makes life so much easier.

Day 3, May 27th

Today is almost finished (going out later tonight). I spent about 2 hours exploring the Freiburg area, which is actually pretty cool. Classes are starting tomorrow and I don't really know what to expect. Also, a few of us are planning a mini-trip this weekend to possibly Switzerland, which is really close by.

My friend Ben and I decided to go aimlessly wandering around the city today, which was pretty fun. While having an HD video camera is pretty cool, unfortunately the videos take FOREVER to load...

Take a look at all the fun sights we saw:





My First Post - A Few Days in Germany

Today is officiall Day 3, so I'm going to retroactively write about Day 0 and 1 here, and 2 and 3 in my next posting.

Day 0, May 24

Today is the day I left. Thanks to everyone who helped me prepare for the trip (Barbara, thanks for the endless advice on "various things")

I'm excited to see what I can manage in Germany, but we'll see what happens. Anyway, I'm flying from Ft. Lauderdale to Michigan to Frankfurt, which is a bit out of the way but oh well.

The trip to Michigan was pretty painless. However, due to weather complications, I got in 30 minutes late. International flights must be boarded 30 minutes prior to departure, and I got into the airport perhaps 45 minutes before departure. I'm sure I looked like a funny scene running with a massive backpack, laptop, and suitcase in tow. I made it with the gate *quite literally* closing right behind me.

THe trip to Frankfurt had it's ups and downs. The TV's had dozens of new release movies for my perusal which was nice, but I had the classic "seat next to extremely overweight person" dilemma which was annoying.

Day 1, May 25

Once I got to Frankfurt on the 25th, more fun awaited me. I had a huge amount of dollars in my pocket that I really wanted to turn into Euros ASAP. I saw a currency exchange at the airport and decided to do it there. Unfortunately, unbeknown to me (fine print written in German, go figure), those ****s at the airport charge a 7% fee on any conversion, and the conversion rate is mediocre. Lost some money, but oh well...

To get from Frankfurt to Freiburg, I knew that I had to take 2 trains and a taxi. Deciding to test out my newly-gained basic German (studied on the plane ride), I attempted to buy my train tickets completely using German.

That was a mistake...I bought first class tickets by mistake and spent an extra 50 euros meaninglessly...Yea, I know, "classic Josh", don't even get me started Kyle...

Well, let me tell you, first class costs 50 euros more for a reason...it's NICE!! The first train was 30 minutes long and I had a great time, getting personally served free soda (with sugar instead of high fructose corn syrup, go Europe!) by the attendants. I thought I had made the best mistake ever, but that wasn't to last...

The train was a bit late and I almost missed the connecting train, but thankfully I made it. I got into the front of the train barely in time, but I'd made another stupid mistake...

It was the back of the train. First class was 8 train cars away and I had a giant backpack, giant suitcase, and laptop in tow. I could take my licks and spend 2 hours in coach, or dodge my way through 8 cars.

Like hell i was going to waste 50 euors...I spent the next 20 minutes going through the cars, and when I finally made it to first class it felt like the promised land. The rest of the trip was pretty uneventful.

When I finally made it into Freiburg (pronounced Fry-Burg, not Free-Burg), I got myself a disposable cell phone, got a quick cab, and I made it. WHEW!!