Author Archives: emf5184

First Month

I haven’t been writing as much as I wanted to, but that is all about the change.  I have started to get into a routine.  Every morning I set my alarm for 7:30, hit the snooze until 8:15 then get a shower.  After a shower I head to the tram for my morning commute.  As it happens about a 1/4 of the people in my program take the 8:35 tram, and the rest take the 8:55 tram.  The 8:55 tram is the latest we can take to get to class on time.  I am the only one usually who takes the 8:45 tram.  After a short 10 minute ride to town I walk across the street to cafe Bistro where I order a Brezel and Cafe Tasse(a small coffee).  When I arrive there are usually 1 or two of my friends already there.  

Since I have been going to this coffee place, I recognize the workers and they recognize me.  I feel like a regular.  And we order, or at least try, to order in German.  The main problem with ordering in German is not that we don’t know what to say, but it is we have heavy american accents and it can be hard for the locals to understand us.  And the locals have thick German accents combined with the local dialect.  For instance on Friday I went to a Biergarten and ordered a Dunkel.  I said it to her a couple times and she was perplexed.  I then pointed it out on the menu and she pronounced it slightly differently.  
Another time I was ordering Bratwurst mit Zweibeln or Bratwurst with onions.  I pronounced Zweibeln wrong, so the lady smiled at me and then told me in English how to correctly pronounce it.  
Back to my routine.  I have intensive German class from 9:15 to 10:45, then a half-hour “Pause” then class 11:15 to 12:45.  In the Pause, a bunch of my friends head to this one coffee shop with great coffee, the cappuccino comes with a little cinnamon heart on top.  Now my class is an international student class, so there are students from Brazil, Czech, Italy, Spain, Japan, China, Korea, and even one other student from the USA.  Well since most of the people in my program go to this one coffee shop, my classmates have begun to call it the American shop.  Even though there is a Starbucks and McCafe across the street.
One thing I really like about Germany, or at least Freiburg is how easy it is too hike.  I can walk from my apartment for 30 minutes and be in the middle of a pasture with the woods behind me and no city in site.  This is my favorite place to go:
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Another thing I really like about Germany is how ahead of the times it is with energy.  In america, everyone talks about how it the future there will be green energy.  In Germany it is here.  Last week we took a tour of the Soccer stadium and of the Vauban, the town we live in.  The soccer stadium creates enough energy from solar power to run the showers, the music, food, lights, everything.  It needs absolutely 0 energy from the grid.  And, the crazy thing was they have been on the stadium for 16 years.  Most if not all of the cells are originals that are guaranteed to last 25 years.  Then we went and saw Vauban, or took a tour of it rather; since we see it every day.  We separate all the trash apart, into organic, recyclable, and other trash.  
I thought that the organic waste would be put into a giant bin somewhere to become fertalizer, but that is old technology.  Instead the organic waste is sent to a power plant where the gases emitted from the decomposing food it used to create bio-fuel which helps power parts of the city.  
And unlike the US, each apartment building is designed by the people who live there.  One such building was the first passiv multi-family building in the world.  What is a passiv building?  Well, it is simply a building engineered so that it doesn’t need heating or cooling.  This one in particular has a north and south facade.  The north one is boring, but the south one has a lot of windows and balconies.  In the winter, the sun is much lower on the horizon, so it shines into the house and heats it up like a greenhouse.  Then it has such great insulation that it stays warm all night long.  In the summer, the sun is much higher, and if it shone into the windows would make a sauna.  Well the engineers who designed the building designed it so the balconies are an exact width so the sun will be blocked during the summer times.  I mean , not only does that help save the environment, but it also reduces a consumer electric bill by a lot!  
Finally we walked across the street in Vauban to the Solar Settlement.  It was build a while ago, looks really cool with the colors and uses less energy than it produces.  All the houses are built as passiv houses by one architect who built and lives in a revolving solar house which revolves based upon the time of day and season.  His house was built in 1994.  Since he was a local he knew about the region, he knew that at night cold winds blew in from the black forest.  So the office buildings have a feature with a vent system.  At night you open the vent and in the morning when you get to the office you close it and the office will be at the right temperature.
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Overall, the coolest thing I about all the green energy is the Passiv houses.  The engineers designed it, so in the winter it is heated not only by sunlight, but also your refrigerator’s compressor, the tv, your computers, and even your own body heat.

Location: Freiburg, Deutschland

First Day

I have been here for one week now, and I have learned a lot in that time.  I think I will write about my first day first, then write another log about my first week.  I spent the first day getting into town, with my minimal understanding of German.  I could ask for stuff, but if people asked me questions, I had no idea what they were asking.  As soon as I got off the flight, I could tell it was going to be interesting when it took me a few minutes to find how to flush toilets.  

After getting my train ticket I set off into the world, but not before I missed a connecting train and had to get a new one 40 minutes later.  Not to big of a deal.  As I round the bend of the train, I saw what would soon be my home.  It looked just as I had pictured it; no, much better.  It looked perfect; even the graffiti looked artistic.  The weather was raining lightly the train ride over, but stopped when I got off. 
As I walked with my three bags over to the tram spot I began to look for how to buy a tram (street car) ticket.  I looked and looked and could not find anything, so I just got on.  Unlike american subways or streetcars from what I experienced, nobody asked to see my ticket, so I was confused.  Now being the good american in a foreign country I began to watch people to see what they did, because I WANTED to buy this ticket.  I soon saw a giant box where people where purchasing a ticket, so I walked over to it.  It looked like something you could buy a ticket, but alas, this was my first day and I didn’t sleep much on the flight.  There were over 20 different buttons.  Some where colored, some had numbers.
I stood there starring at it for about two stops with my three bags on my shoulders, and very tired.  Soon a German came up to me first asked me something in German.  Then quickly spoke English to me.  He asked me where I was going and then showed me how to buy a ticket.  He told me many times to get to my hostel I should take the R�merhof stop.  So far, Germans seem to very helpful and friendly people.  I wait for a long time on the tram.  I was starting to get worried I missed R�merhof.  Then it came and I got off.  made a left and I walked until the road ended, but no hostel.  Then the sky opened up and starting pouring.
So I decided to walk, and walk until I was soaking wet and I had no idea where I was.  After I had walked about 3km I decided to get a cab.  After about 20 minutes of searching I found a Mercedes cab and had him take me about 4 blocks more to the Hostel.  Finally I got to the hostel and was able to change into some slightly drier clothing (since my bags got soaked).  The hostel was in a beautiful area with the wall behind it and vineyards on the hillside.
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Location: Freiburg, Deutschland

Introduction

My name is Evan Farrell and in the fall I will be in Freiburg, Germany with the Environmental Studies and Sustainability Program.  Currently I am majoring in IST with a minor in German and Supply Chain.  

While over there I hope to visit other countries in Europe including Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, France, and Austria.  I hope that I can start to understand the language better and learn to live in a new culture.  
I enjoy many activities such as hiking, running, climbing, skiing, and camping which I hope I get to do while in Germany.

Location: State College, PA