Author Archives: kgk5008

Finally, an update!

It was really difficult to look back at the past three weeks and try to summarize them. On the one hand, everything runs together in one giant blur, but on the other, it feels like I’ve already been in Marburg for a year.

I guess I should voice my biggest complaint and my main excuse for taking so long to post an entry.  My dorm has no internet, and I’ve only had sporadic internet access since I arrived in Marburg.  People buy modems for their dorm rooms and share the wireless with other people, but right now my building is virtually empty because most of the full-time German students are on break and won’t move back into the dorms until the beginning of April.  Hopefully I can get some internet access then.

As for the city itself, it looks like it came out of a fairy tale (which is fitting, since the Grimm Brothers studied in Marburg!). Whenever I got into the Oberstadt, or Upper City, I feel like I’ve stepped back in time. Aside from the modern street signs and the occasional car or bus, it looks like it’s been virtually unchanged for 300 years, right down to the crooked timber-framed buildings and rickety mechanical rooster on top of the Rathaus that crows every hour on the hour.

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Travelling is pretty convenient right now. With my student card, I can use the rail network to travel around the state of Hessen for free, and starting April 1st I can travel to select cities outside of Hessen. Frankfurt is only an hour away by rail and very easy to reach, and my exchange group took a trip to Wiesbaden last week. This past Sunday, I visited Kassel with friends, and we’re planning a day trip to Mainz for this weekend.

I’ve been taking a language course intended to reinforce my German, and that lasts until next week.  It’s been fairly useful, but my one complaint is we aren’t focusing on grammar very much, which is my weakest link right now, because I haven’t taken a grammar-intensive German course since the spring semester of 2010.  Still, I’ve learned some useful vocabulary and they’re also helping us get settled in Marburg.

I’m going to sum up the three trips I’ve taken around Hessen so far, but the pictures will probably do them a bit more justice.  My group for the Orientation Program went to Frankfurt on March 6th and intended to tour around the city a bit but stumbled on the Karneval celebration instead.  The parade was a lot of fun to watch, but we did get some sightseeing in as well.  Frankfurt has some nice old architecture near the city center but is overall very modern, with towering skyscrapers and a bustling shopping center.

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On March 16th, our language course hosted a trip to Wiesbaden, Hessen’s state capital. We got to see the Hessian parliament and took a tour around the city’s Markplatz, which is beautiful.  Wiesbaden also boasts more than 60 hot water springs, which can be found all over the city and are safe to drink from, although I tried some and it tasted horrible.  Wiesbaden was once a cultural center of Germany, and a towering Wilhemine-era casino and the gorgeous Staatheater are at the heart of a large park there.

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Then, this last Sunday, March 20th, I went on what ended up being and adventure in Kassel with some friends. We got off at the wrong station (Kassel has 2) and ended up in a very shady part of the city. Thanks to a German-speaking friend we managed to high-tail it out of there and managed to make it to the city’s main market area, but most of the shops were closed (as are most stores and restaurants; I’ve noticed that Germany pretty much shuts down on Sundays).  Kassel was mostly destroyed after the war, so it has a very modern look and lacks most of the quainter, older architecture of Marburg and Wiesbaden.  After an out-dated guide book took as to a museum that has been closed since 2008, we finally decided to take a tram up to Kassel’s main attraction: the Wilhelmsh�he Park.  The park is full of meandering paths and gardens, with a palace on one end and a towering monument of Hercules on the other.  We trekked all the way up to the base of the monument and the view was absolutely incredible.  We’re planning on going back in June when the waterfalls and fountains are running.

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Well, that’s pretty much the past 3 weeks in summation. Hopefully I will be able to post more regularly once I get a decent internet connection. 


Location: Marburg, Germany

Pre-Departure Update

getting ready.JPGWell, this is it. My flight leaves at 9:30pm EST from JFK International Airport, and will be landing at around 11am CET at Flughafen Frankfurt am Main. From there, I have to go through customs, and then it’s an hour-long train ride to Marburg followed by a short bus ride to report to where I need to be. I’m more nervous about the trip itself than anything else, because this is the first time I’m travelling such a long distance by myself, without any family, friends, or other students. Once I get to Marburg, though, I’m sure I’ll be fine.


As for updates from the past three months, there isn’t really much to tell. The most eventful thing was an attempt to apply for a Visa while I was still in the US back in January, but it was denied because I didn’t have the official acceptance letter from Marburg yet. I have all the paperwork ready now, so that’s one of the first things I have to take care of once I get to Germany. Other than that, the only happenstances were filling out applications for the orientation and a month-long language course that starts next week. I have to take a test on Wednesday, and based on the results I’m going to be placed in an appropriate level of the language course. The goal of it is to get us up-to-speed with our German before classes officially start in April.

So, I guess that’s that! I’ll get another update up later this week once I’ve gotten myself settled in at the University of Marburg!

Location: North Caldwell, NJ

An Introduction

Hi everyone, my name is Kevin Kochel, I am in my 4th year at Penn State, double majoring in German and Comparative Literature. I will be studying in Marburg, Germany in the Spring. I am a history and literature nut, so I have always been fascinated by Germany and German culture. I hope to get everything I possibly can get out of my semester abroad, including a total immersion in the culture and (hopefully!) fluency in the language.

I’ve got a few last-minute things to take care of before I go, the biggest among them being my Visa. I have an appointment to take care of that at the German consulate in NYC the Monday after the semester ends, but I feel like it is going to be a hassle. The requirements for the picture are very, very picky but hopefully the one I had taken over Thanksgiving break will be up to snuff. Other than that, I am a bit apprehensive and not looking forward to sitting around twiddling my thumbs at home for more than two months (I don’t leave for Germany until the end of February), but I hope Marburg will be worth the wait!

The city itself looks really neat. I did my homework and researched its background a bit, the University of Marburg is nearly 500(!) years old, with a student population of 20,000 in a city of 80,000 people… not quite the same ratio as State College, but it is still definitely a university town, although I’m very curious to see what differences there are.

The sooner my semester in Germany starts, the better. I just hope the next two and a half months fly by!


Location: State College, PA