Wednesday, June 17, 2009


I'VE RECENTLY BEEN EATING MORE CASHEWS
and other tantalizing topical tidbits...





Between my occasional excursions I do have a life here in Munich. I've been lucky to have some fun students recently in my English teaching work. A few weeks ago I had a pair of business professionals for a week-long intensive course. One was from Greece and the other from Kazahkstan, but both longtime residents of Germany. We got along really well and had a lot of good laughs in the classroom. They even treated me to lunch a couple of times. Weeks like that fly by and make my job a lot more fun.

At the language institute where I work, whenever it's someone's birthday we usually have a small get-together for lunch with people bringing potluck. The best, however, are always the cakes, usually made by our trainer supervisor. Oh man... they're good.


Friday night is usually the Young Men's activity. We almost always play a little fußball (soccer), but we also do other stuff like cook tacos! (I even found a little Tienda Mexicana near where I live and was able to procure real Mexican tortillas) It's a fun group:





The Young Single Adults of Munich do stuff often. Including this BBQ on the back lawn of the church...







Spontaneous evenings are fun. One Sunday evening, a few of us got together at Katherine's house to cook dinner.



We were all Americans, except for Adam in the back who is from England but lives in Zürich and was here visiting. Hector and Adelaide are a newly married (and graduated from BYU) couple who moved to Munich a few months ago for work. Next to Adam is Katherine who was born and raised in Germany and whose apartment we are at. Next to her is Angela who is a mezzo-soprano from Arizona who sings with the Bavarian Staatsoper here in Munich. Adam was the head chef and Hector and I helped while the girls did nothing but eat. :-)



Since Angela is a part of the Munich Opera, I just had to beg some comp tickets off her. She finally got me in to see a production of Richard Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier. (This was especially cool because Strauss was a Münchner and often involved with the Munich Opera scene.)

So I went to the opera house...



...and had fourth row seats...



Of course, part of the fun was to enjoy the lavish interior of the opera house...








It was an excellent production. The sets were incredible, the orchestra outstanding, and the performances superb. It was four hours with two intermissions, sung in German with German supertitles, but I still enjoyed it immensely.

Here I am enjoying...





One day the University of Utah Singers were in Munich as part of their tour through Europe. The director, Dr. Allred is a friend of mine and I met him with a different choir accidentally in Munich last year. This time he gave me their itinerary so I could know when they would be in Munich. They spent most of the day in a recording session at a church. I had to work that day as well, so after work I went over to the church and met up with them. It was fun to see a lot of old friends from college and some of them were surprised to see me, not knowing that I lived here.

A large group of them wanted to go to the Hofbräuhaus for dinner so they looked to me to guide them to the U-bahn and to the world's most famous pub...




The Hofbräuhaus (from February).... I had walked through it but never eaten there...




We went to one of the upper rooms where there was a huge hall packed with people at benches. A Bavarian band was playing with all the performers in folk costumes...




We sat down and ordered our food from an overworked beer-maid (I had to recommend the best Bavarian specialties to the people sitting around me.)

Here's Dr. Allred with a maß of beer he accidentally received in the chaos of the evening. (To the left of his elbow is Ed Reichel, the Deseret News music critic)...





It was really noisy, and matters weren't helped when this guy came out and started whipping...




Here are some old University friends: Katie, Joseph, and Bronson. It was a bit of a collision of worlds seeing these guys on the U-bahn and similar settings that are part of my every-day life here in Munich.



PROST!




Also in the University Singers is Michael Newton (on the left), the cousin of my brother-in-law Matt. That was funny...




Here I am dancing...




Afterwords, it was pouring rain but a few of the Singers wanted a short tour around the inner city. So I took them around to a few sites and led them back to the U-bahn...



So that was fun. The next few days they were in a small town south of Munich for an international choir competition where they won first place.


Last Sunday the Young Single Adults from the Munich and Salzburg stakes combined for a Singles Ward in the town of Rosenheim between Munich and Salzburg. It was fun and afterwords a few of us Münchners walked through the city. There wasn't much to see but it was still fun...





Oh yeah... I also cut myself not long ago. No, I'm not emo... I was washing a kitchen knife when it slipped and cut a pretty decent gash in my left hand. It was bleeding fairly badly so I thought I had better go to the clinic and have it looked at. I cut myself around 5pm and was walking out of the clinic around 6:30pm with three blue stitches. It was my first experience with the doctors here in Germany and I was pleased with how fast I was in and out (it was a Sunday and I did have to pay a weekend fee), and how nice everyone was. Not bad.



The stitches are gone now and the wound is healing nicely. I think I'll have a cool scar too!


So there you go... a bit of my recent social life and injuries.





Next: Nate reenacting Mission: Impossible ON LOCATION!!


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Sunday, June 07, 2009


BACK TO THE GERMANY




May 1st:

I woke up in Copenhagen and said my goodbyes to Elder & Sister Jepson. They had been so nice to let me stay with them and letting me feel so at home. I walked to the train station, picking up some hot, fresh danishes on the way, and boarded my train.

I rode south through the Danish countryside once again...







...and before I knew it I was at the end of the line.... literally, in this case as this is the southernmost tip of Denmark and here the railway has no choice but to end. See...




I boarded my ferry and watched as we pulled away from Denmark. Here is one of the giant sea cranes they use for shipping...




I rode the ferry and soon I was approaching Germany once again. It was a beautiful day and the waterfront was full of life...










There was a giant Russian sailing ship at port...




A cruise ship...




And a boat for Jessica...




Even more massive cranes...




Rostock is a big port...





The police boats...




Sybille was there waiting for me as I got off the ferry. We drove back to Lüssow and I had a little something to eat before we got Wolfgang and walked about 20 minutes to a field outside of Lüssow. There we got to see the Mecklenburg Motocross...




There were several different motorbike races going on that day. It was noisy, dusty, hot, and crowded with country-folk all out to see the competition. It was great!




Of course we had to get some grilled bratwursts...





We found a nice spot to watch and spectated our hearts out.


Auf die Plätze....

Fertig...




LOS!...







The jumps were fun to watch (and photograph)...








There were so many, it almost felt like watching a hover-bike race...













Then came the 4-wheelers...

On your mark...

Get set...



Go!...













But one can only take so much of motorbikes riding in giant circles...




So after enjoying our time at the Motocross we headed back home. But I just had to stop in one of the raps seed fields...




Once back at the house Sybille got the key from the neighbor to let me go into the church and climb the tower...




Here I be on top. It was a bit precarious as there was no guard railing or anything...




The yellow fields around Lüssow...




Looking towards the windmills...




Wolfgang & Sybille's house (with the skylight)...




Yellow...





The bells were ringing as I descended. It was cool inside this old church because everything inside is ancient and totally authentic. In other words, nothing touristy like all the big churches in bigger cities.




Hours before there had been a wedding and so there were candlesticks on the pews and flower pedals in the aisle. Now the church was empty but for the sunbeams...




Later on I borrowed Wolfgang's bike and rode it around the fields a bit...









We had a nice BBQ dinner outside and the next day I rode the trains back to Munich. I had quite a bit of mileage and several hundred pictures from my little Spring Break in northern Germany and Scandanavia.

...Up next, so what's been happening in Munich lately anyway?

Stay tuned...


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