Saturday, June 12, 2010

Looking back

Looking back at this month has been incredible. It will be tough to explain all the exciting things we have been able to take part in. Pictures will tell a lot, but our stories will hopefully give you an idea of this week lok adventure. All good things come to an end, but will not be forgotten. lol. Thanks to my team and team leader, all of you were great to be with and share a few PROST with. (dont really know what that means, but sounds good). To our readers - thank you for following and giving us patience when nothing was posted for awhile. All of us on the team will depart our own ways, so stay tuned for us to blog about our different experiences. (hopefully, it might be tough to update while hiking through Europe.

Looking back again, I appreciete all the help we recieved from Rotarians and nonRotarians, your help has made my experience delightful. Sometimes words cant describe everything, but know that it is wonderful to be part of this team, this place and meeting your families. Germany has a lot to offer to the world, the people and myself. Beautiful, relaxing, people are great, culture is alive and YES, the beer is good. Friends and family - i got my camera to WORK. I will post some pics, hopefully as I continue my trip.

Prost to Germany, Rotary, GSE Team, and all the stories I will take home.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Welkommen to Wildeshausen

Today is Wednesday and we are in Varel, a lovely walkable, bikable town but I want to relay our welkommen to Wildeshausen, our last lovely little, walkable, bikable village. Our Wildeshausen hosts greeted us and shared their historic village Dötlingen nearby, took is to Berlin for 4 days and on our return took us to meet the Burgermeister- Mayor of the town at noon on Friday. The appointment with the mayor was at noon. As they told us about their historic rathaus(town hall) on our right, the first of the month siren on top of it went off three times-LOUD LOUD LOUD as it was also the first Friday of the month. Simulaneouslz the town glockenspiel in the new town hall in front of us started and the wooden figures marched across the front of the hall as the bells played! It was histerical- our hosts laughed and laughed. We had experienced a giant Welkommen to Wildeshausen!

The Rotary of Wildeshausen planned an exciting week for us in their town where they also shared their historic cemetary which was from 3500 BC- created before the wheel- wow! Always the Rotarians arrange an english speaking tour guide. The Rotarians then also enrich our experience with their own stories of their lives and their towns. We see in every village folks of all ages bicycling everwhere. It is not uncommmon- in fact common to see 80+ year olds riding bikes with their belongings. Today we saw a group of women all over 80 touring the countryside. The Germans have invested heavily in bike paths and in the villages the sidewalks are marked one side for bikes and one for walkers... and they are well used everywhere.

The GSE experience is like no other. We have seen a side of German life few get a chance to see. Our wonderfuls German hosts share their family customs, lives and philosophy and their homes with us and then arrange for us to see the most exciting, innovative industry, their historical sites etc. We have been welcomed and have enjoyed the most wonderful hospitality you can imagine.

And then for methey go the extra step-they rent a rolling chair so I can keep up with and experience it all and they do it with a smile. Now I am studying the handicapp accessibility of old buildings! and I have had some wild rides in the rolling chair- especially with Fred and Greg. I am so grateful to all for your support.

Rosemary

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Entschuldigung! (sorry)

It has been a crazy past few weeks, but very exciting. Have seen the Airbus plant, a recycle paper mill, a brewery, horse breeding farms, Berlin! It has been really cool, have lots of pictures to show you, but first have to try to get them from my teammates. My camera is not working at the moment. We have shared lots of laughter, some (not me) have cried, lol and lots of stories have been told. Looking back at the people who i have met and the places i have seen has made me feel fortunate to be here. Thank you to all who made this possible. My German could use a little more help, the other day - in Berlin, i tried to order in German and accidentally order 17 orders of schnapps, but meant to order 7, we had a good laugh as did the entire table and bar. Breakfast is ready and have to get the day started. I hope everyone who reads this can give us a little break for not keeping up on the blog, we want to get involved with everything the rotary clubs and host families have done for us. There will be many stories to tell and lots of pictures to share.

Fred

Catching Up

Wow! What a busy time.

Today we are off to Helgoland by catamaran. Hoping to get some great pictures.

Yesterday was great tour of Jever Brewery - one of the oldest breweries in Germany. It was followed by a paper recycling facility tour. That was really informative and interesting. I don`t think any of us had any idea about paper recycling - the scope, the volume and values. Did you know that most of our recycled paper is shipped from N. America, processed in Europe and shipped back?

The day before was a great tour of the Airbus facility. It was really interesting to learn how they are able to take parts manufactured in 5 different countries, ship them to a central point, put them together and have them work! We weren`t allowed to see the new production facility for the new 380, but we did get to see one sitting on the ramp. I think we must have really made an impact because Emirates Air just ordered another 32 Airbus 380s - for a paltry $9B euros! Wow!

Sunday was the move day and settling in with our new host families. Fred and I are sharing a place with a retired vetranarian (sp?). He`s a great guy. On of first day we were able to see a colt only 14 hours old!

Gotta run, don`t want to miss the boat!

Sunday, June 6, 2010

trabbi!


Our trip to Berlin was wondervoll. So many sights and history that we learned so much about. Now we are at our 5th club and host families for a week in Varel. Tomorrow we go to Hamburg and we stop at Airbus. We will try to post again soon!

Friday, June 4, 2010

an unexpected interlude

After 5 wonderful days in Bremerhaven, we spent the day in Bremen. the steps were 3 not 2 and oops my (Rosemary) right ankle smacked on the marble floor. A quick visit to the Rotarian orthopedist- we must x-ray and then it is broken and you must have surgery! I spent the next 3 days in das krankenhaus, hospital awaiting surgery, studying the German healthcare system, in intensive German language training with my 82 yr old roommate Brunhilda and on a diet as I was always waiting for surgery! There was a big accident on the autobahn and they were prioritized for surgery and I continued my studies- also the doctors were going on strike and only doing emergency surgeries and if I left I would not still be an emergency! So our wonderful Rotary hosts visited me and we continued our converstations about the German tax system, gap years for students, the spirituality of work. sabbaticals etc. and I continued my intensive German language studies with Brunhilda- a sweetheart. Not many gse leaders learn some of the words I now know like clinger- to call the krankensweister or krankenplagen- male and female nurses have different titles.

Monday at last the krankensweister said surgery- I was so excited and off I went for the surgery -20 minutes that I had waited over 4 to receive. I read three of thbooks my hosts brought and joyfully left das krankenhaus on Wednesday to rejoin the team.

My wonderful host Katrin drove me to Bruchhausen Vilsen to meet the team. Many thanks to all the Bremerhaven families for your support and good hopes as we all wished for the interlude to end. All of life events and people have things to teach us and I am continuing to reflect on my learnings.

This great team brought stories of their Emden visit and learnings. It is like being with 4 live sponges- learning and observing and gaining so much from each of the Rotary visits.

I am off with mz ünterarmgehstützen, sticks or crutches as we Americans call them and nicknamed hopalong by Greg. the Rotarians also have a rolling chair which we use when it works best. Flexibility and good humor have gone a long way as the Rotarians have been going out of their way to ease the way for me to continue. I could not do it without their support and for that I am deeply grateful. Cheers to our host Rotary clubs.

I have new souvineers from Germany- 2 nails and a wire- which I am 100% sure are of the highest quality. the knots or stitches came out today - thanks to another good Rotarian and off to the district conference tomorrow.

I am grateful for the team members who have blogged as I have not worked out time and equipment compatibility to blog. GSE is so full with the experience part that it has been challenging for all to find time to post. keep reading - we will continue and tell you all we can about this truly amazing, rich expreience and wonderful German people.tschüss

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Berlin - Day 1

The first full day of Berlin. What an incredible learning adventure. There is so much history to know and to understand. The wall, the cold war, Checkpoint Charlie, the museums - everything.


A busy busy day but the most moving was the Halocaust memorial - a series of stones and paths that you follow - as you go deeper into the stones, the silence overtakes you, even the echo of your footsteps fade...


An eerie and unsettling reminder about one of the darkest parts of our history. Very moving!

Walking thru the town is a mixture of new and old and war and peace - brilliant heritage buildings sitting across from squat concrete bunkers. I can't describe it in a few short sentences.


And now I must run, a new day has begun and I can't risk being late!