20 November 2009

Holiday Season

It’s official. The holiday season in Germany has officially begun. You are probably asking how I know that. Hopefully with this post I can begin to give you some insight about the holiday season as I see it in Germany. During the next 5 weeks ( I know, can you believe there are only 5 weeks until Christmas!?) I’ll keep posting more about Christmas in Germany-a land famous for its Christmas spirit.

As I was reading the paper at breakfast this morning, I noticed a huge extra section of the paper. I had no idea what it could be. One glance at the cover and I knew the answer. This section of paper contained profiles and information on many of the Weihnachtsmarkts and Adventsmarkts in the area around Aachen and NRW. The Aachener Weihnachtsmarkt, for example, starts today and runs until December 23, 2009. It is open everyday from 11am to 9pm and people come from all over Germany and all over the world to visit the Weihnachtsmarkts in Aachen and Monschau. The Weihnachtsmarkt in Monschau (where my school is) is very famous. Although it runs only on the Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, thousands of people converge on the village during the 4 Advent weekends in November and December. Here is a link to the Weihnachtsmarkt in Monschau: www.monschau-weihnachtsmarkt.de.

In America, the Christmas season begins for me the day after Thanksgiving. Every year, we go out to the trees my parents planted and look for the perfect Tannenbaum to cut. By the end of the day, we have a beautiful, fragrant Christmas tree standing in our living room, glowing with lights and decorations.

Yesterday, I got home from school at noon to find the house transformed into a paradise for Christmas lovers like me. Karin has so many beautiful Christmas decorations and everywhere I look, I see another one that makes me smile. We don’t have a large Christmas tree, but we have small artificial tree that lights up. Meike told me last night that we will take it to Austria and put all the presents under it in the Wohnwagen! So, I don’t know if you did the math, but we’ve begun the Christmas season this year a total of 8 days before I do normally in America. But I’m certainly not complaining!

That’s not the mention the stores selling Christmas wares. I noticed holiday decorations and advertisements coming out with the Halloween things! I’m sure there are places in America where this is the same, but I have never really seen anywhere like this.

Now to the other side of the news spectrum.

I took a test in Geography yesterday. There were three parts and it was all writing, no multiple choice questions or short answer! Those were the good ol’ days. Part A of the first part asked me (in German) to describe the climate in Colombia. Part B asked me to describe the climate conditions bananas need to grow. The second part asked me to describe the development of banana export in Colombia from 1920-2000. The third part asked me to decide whether or not banana growing in Colombia is a good economic undertaking. We had a couple of graphs and diagrams from the teacher, as well as an atlas that included climate maps and the locations of banana growing in Colombia. Obviously the questions were not hard. The hard part was writing everything down in German! My vocabulary and grammar skills are fine for speaking in class or in normal conversations, but writing a Geography test is a little different! I think it was a good experience though. I wasn’t required to take the test, but I wanted to take it just to see what it was like. We’ll probably get them back next Wednesday or Thursday.

This is especially for Grandma and the others who are interested in the countryside. I will try to describe a bit of it for you and maybe add some pictures. We’ll see. Right now, the grass is very green, but wet and muddy. All of the large trees have lost their leaves, but some of the small trees have a few leaves left. It is very windy almost everyday and I can always see the windmills (like in Eastern Washington) spinning. The region where I live is called the Eifel. There are all sorts of funny things people say about the Eifel. Some say the weather is almost always bad (not true), others say that in the Eifel, everyone knows everyone else (sometimes seems true, but that’s probably because I have only lived here for 3 and a half months), and I once heard someone say “I’ve got a sore throat” and someone else said “I think the entire Eifel has a sore throat”. Although the Eifel is quite large, the small towns do seem very interconnected. In addition, we are up on a steppe/plateau above the flat land around Köln and Aachen. There are rolling hills here and a lake called the Rursee. A lot of the countryside is fields with cows or horses in them. There are a lot of cows here! Also, a common sight on the roads around here is huge tractors driving what seems to be (in my opinion) very fast. Sure, one might see a tractor driving every once in awhile on 202, but only for a short amount of time and not very fast. I definitely see new things here that I have never seen before everyday.

I don’t know if it is completely obvious in these blog posts, but sometimes I feel like I am losing my English. Not so drastic, but there are definitely some times when my sentences sound juvenile or have punctuation and grammar mistakes. Also, when I talk to Kayla and Leilani, sometimes the three of us have problems saying something in English! Another thing I always laugh about is how often, one cannot always directly translate a word from German into English. Sometimes, there is a word I know in German that would be perfect to use in an English sentence. But if I am talking to my parents on the phone and speak a sentence in English with a German word stuck in there, it would make sense to me, but my parents would be wondering what I just said!

Well I’d better go post this now. Aren’t you proud of me that I wrote 2 posts in one week?
Carrie

2 comments:

Kaylee G said...

Wow Carrie I am always so mesmerized by your posts! Everything sounds so amazing! I bet it is absolutely beautiful there for the holidays!
Miss you tons!
Kaylee

bmiller.dragonfly said...

Hi Cherry! Yes, your blog has improved 100% in the month of November! Great job! I don't think you have lost your writing skills at all! Quite the opposite!
Please keep it up. love you, mom