Wednesday, August 31, 2011

One Last Weekend

By the last week of the trip, I had completely worn down the soles of my shoes and the soreness in my feet was getting worse. However, I had one more day of walking ahead of me—a visit to the Berlin Zoo. I didn’t want to spend the whole day on my feet, but I did want to go see the panda and the icebear exhibit where Knut used to live.

In one of the penguin exhibits, the barrier was low enough to reach over and the birds were swimming by close enough to touch. I stuck my arm in the water, and shortly afterward a penguin darted over and started gnawing on my fingers hard enough to break the skin. I suspect I am not the first idiot to try that. Incidentally, the English name for those penguins was translated as “Jackass Penguins,” and a quick bit of googling revealed that while they are commonly called African penguins or Black-Footed penguins, the other name is also used due to the donkey-like bray the birds make. I had assumed it was just a particularly unfortunate translation error.

The Berlin Zoo was a bit of a let-down. I assumed that since it is internationally famous, because of Knut and also because it is featured on Zooborns frequently, that it would be the prettiest zoo I’d ever seen in my life with expansive, natural-looking habitats and nary a square cage with a concrete floor in sight. I was wrong. It is obvious that many of the habitats were built decades ago before new ideas about designing exhibits with the animal’s comfort in mind became the norm.

However, several moments during the visit were very cool. The fossa, the squeaking pile of Asian small-clawed otters, and the mother-baby pair of sea lions that were sunbathing in tandem made my day.

That evening, we went to the Berlin Beer Mile.

The next day, we went to the Berlin Beer Mile.

Monday, we had a long train ride to Frankfurt. Our hotel was near the airport, but far from anything to do or anywhere to eat, so we ate our last dinner in Germany at a doner restaurant and fretted about the air traffic controllers’ strike.

Viva Vienna

The first thing I noticed about Vienna was the graffiti. Apparently professional urban artists were allowed to go to work on all the vertical surfaces in the city, as all the bridges and walls by the river were adorned with evil clowns, steampunk gasmask-wearing figures, tits, and rabbits.

Vienna isn’t the prettiest city we visited, but I am basing that on the fact that they have rats like most places at home have squirrels. See a small critter dart across the street as you go jogging? Yup, it was a big, nasty rat. See a flattened former critter pancaked in the gutter? Notice the rat tail sticking out of it. Not surprisingly, rats have caused huge problems for Vienna in the past, as attested to by the Plague Column that stands towards the center of the city, and the catacombs full of plague victims below the Stephensdom.

The Catacombs in Vienna, much like the ones in Paris, served as a depository for bones of the dead in a city that was running short on space for cemeteries. Also like Paris, the Catacombs under the Stephensdom are nightmarishly dark in places and the air has a certain mustiness caused by breathing in the dust from old bones. Unlike Paris, the ossuary in Vienna contains mostly plague victims, the piles of their moldering bones visible through metal grates in the stones walls and floors.

If you were lucky enough to be a Hapsburg in Vienna, your earthly remains received much nicer accommodations. The royals were entombed in copper sarcophaguses which are melodramatic enough to pass as set pieces for The Phantom of the Opera. The organs of the royals were also sealed into ornate jars so the soft tissues couldn’t rot their precious desiccating corpses.

If you weren’t a royal, your organs might also get preserved for posterity for completely different reasons. The Museum of Anatomy and Pathology at the Narrenturm made me very uncomfortable. While the wax castes and the organs in jars were created for the education of medical students and therefore the improvement of medical care, they felt side-showish. The freakish specimens were completely disconnected from the fact that they were from made from real people who were living with terrible diseases and probably suffering great mental and physical pain because of it. If the people inhabiting those bodies could afford to see a doctor for whatever passed as medicine in those days, they were curiosities first and people a distant second.

I realize that medical ethics as we know them are a very recent invention, but it still felt wrong not to mention that angle of the history of medicine instead of treating the specimens like a sideshow.

Luckily, most of the excursions weren’t squicky. There were several truly cool things in the Natural History Museum, but my favorite was the oarfish. When I was little, I wanted to be super-rich so I could afford to have a ginormous aquarium in my basement and be the only person in the world who owned an oarfish. I’m sure they make terrible pets, as is typical among things which are over forty feet long, but they look so glamorous with their silvery eel-like bodies and pink crests.

The collection of preserved critters was so extensive, I recognized only a fraction of the species represented, and that isn’t even counting invertebrates or fishes, about which I know practically nothing. Ganges gavials for instance—how come I’ve never heard of them? They’re huge and they look like the unloved bastard child of a swordfish and a crocodile, with a little squarggly thing on the end of their snout for good measure. Something so prehistoric and nightmarish shouldn’t exist, and if it does exist, I should at least know about it. On the other hand, I discovered kakapos. Kakapos are wonderful. I feel like the world is a better place now that I know it has hefty sad-eyed tunnel parrots in it.

I also visited the Spanish Riding School. While I didn’t get a chance to the stallions perform, I did see the in their stalls, and I got to jostle a pack of six year-olds out of the way to play with some Lipizzaner foals. Baby Lipizzaners are born liver chestnut, not greying out until four or five, so they were the scruffiest little foals I’ve ever seen.

Weekend 5

Saturday we went to a fair in downtown Berlin, we ate Berliners (jelly filled doughnuts) and bought leather bracelets. We went shopping for a little bit and then all sat out at a park nearby and laid in the grass and journaled or slept =]. The park was by our hotel and had a big, beautiful fountain in it that reminded of the bath houses in Greece. It definitely the place to be on such a sunny day and it was fun to just people watch for a while. We ate some lunch and then went back to fair and got Crepes! We watched a street performance where a guy and girl acrobat did all of these crazy stunts on a really tall pole. There was an international beer festival going on that weekend in Berlin and we checked it out for a while. On Sunday we went back because they were planning on attempting to break the record for the world’s longest beer garden! They had beer from all over the world there and we all decided we liked the flavored African beer the best, the coconut in particular for me! We were sitting at one of the tables when they walked by with the official measuring stick to record how long it was so technically we were a part of the longest beer garden in the world! It was so much fun; I don’t think we have anything like it in the US. Two other girls and I eventually had to go back to the hotel and grab our suitcases to start the journey home. Luckily they were with me because it was a long one. We took an 8pm train from Berlin to the Frankfurt Airport that got in around 1am. And then we had 10 hours to kill in the airport before our 11am flight! Luckily the terminal was open and we took turns sleeping and watching the luggage. I felt like such a backpacker. We got some last minute souvenirs and finally boarded the plane for our 10 hour flight! I was really sad to leave Germany; I definitely could have stayed longer. But it was an amazing experience and I’m so happy I did it. And now I know a bunch of people in my major a lot better than last year!

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Week 5

Monday we got up and took a train to Berlin for the last week of study abroad! When we got there we all went on a bike tour which was a blast, I wish every walking tour we’ve done had been a bike tour instead! Except right around ten minutes after we started it decided to rain the hardest it had our whole trip. It was pouring! The tour guide kept trying to stop under overhangs to keep us dry but there was no use, we were all soaked to the bone. But the rain was honestly a lot of fun to ride in, and it was hilarious when we stopped to go into a museum; there’s no rule saying you can’t go in if you’re wet but I wouldn’t be surprised if they’ve changed it since we visited. I was surprised to see how many really pretty buildings there are Berlin, this city is pretty awesome. My favorite place we saw was the Jewish Memorial for the Holocaust. It was a bunch of cement stones that were rectangles rising from the ground at different heights and getting taller the closer to the middle we got. But they were all in a grid, so no matter where I was I could see the outside like I was looking down a tunnel. Walking through, people would seem to dart every which way when they were walking by and it got really eerily quiet. It was really cool and a nice place to think. And of course it was awesome to see the Brandenburg Gate, I had seen it in so many movies and documentaries that to see it right there in front of me was a little unreal. Tuesday we went to Sachsenhausen to see the concentration camp there. We got off the train and walking the same path that the prisoners would have walked which was eery, especially when we got closer to camp and saw how close people had lived to it. Our tour guide was fantastic, probably the best we’ve had and he pointed out that the houses closest to the camp used to be owned by members of the SS and now they are lived in by regular people, I wonder if they know the history of their houses and what they were used for, or maybe they do and just bought it because it was cheap. When we got to the camp it was a little confusing because no one is really sure which parts of it are original and which have been reconstructed. One cabin that had been rebuilt caught fire a while ago due to an arson-attempt by some neo-Nazis. The site left it there, glassed in as a sign that the same prejudice that caused the Holocaust to happen still exists. Afterward we went to get currywurst which I had never tried before but was really good and then we were off to tour the German Parliament building. It was much more interesting than I had expected, There were some soviet style artworks that had been recently added covering a wall. I really like the style, it was kind of cartoony but the point across that in communism it is not about the individual but their role in society. And then there was a part of the building that included bricks from the old building with some graffiti on it that looked really cool. There was a memorial to the new socialistic parliament that was made of a bunch of boxes that look like what you would store photos in stacked up to the ceiling in two rows you could walk between and on each box was the name of a member of the parliament and the years they served. I thought it was odd how Angela Merckel’s box looked roughed up and bent in, because she’s the current chancellor, but then again that’s probably why it was given special attention. We went to the roof of the Parliament building where they have a huge transparent globe that you can walk inside and see a great view of the whole city of Berlin. Wednesday we visited the Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine. We toured their Ultrahigh-Field Magnetic Resonance Facility where they were doing research to develop better MRI’s and other imaging tools and got to go in and play by one of the MRI’s, I could feel the bobby-pins in my hair start to move when I got too close! Then we went on a tour of the ECRC Lab where Adrian Schreiber was doing research on ‘Neutrophil Biology in Health and Disease.’ They were studying a specific disease that affects neutrophils and we were shown one part of their research in particular where they introduced some kind of inducer to neutrophils and observed how they exploded and started to form nets to see if it had any useful application for a treatment. We listened to another researcher talk about her attempts to find a treatment for muscular dystrophy and her English was hard to follow but what I got was that she was looking at a protein that was thought to be involved in repairing muscles and testing its effectiveness. Afterward we ate lunch and then visited the Otto-Bock Science Center! Otto-Bock is one of the leading prosthetic companies in the world. We got to see some of the first developed prosthetics and how they were developed into what they are today. It was incredible to see all of these top-notch prosthetics, I hope that if for some reason I find myself without a limb one day I’m lucky to have access to one of those prosthetics! Afterward we had free time and a few of us went to the East Berlin Art Gallery, definitely one of my favorite things of the whole trip, it’s a section of the Berlin Wall that was painted after the wall fell by artists who had been repressed in East Berlin. In 2009 Berlin got the original artists to come back and re-do their murals. It was incredible, just walking down the wall and seeing mural after mural filled with so much mush passion for freedom both physically and the freedom to express themselves again. Some were filled with anger and frustration and in others there was peace of mind and just happiness to be free. We all tried falafel for dinner which is basically chick peas mashed up and fried into a patty and it was pretty good! Thursday we took a train to Dresden and went on a walking tour. We started the the Frauen Kirche, the Church of the Lady and I’m not sure what architectural style it was but it was absolutely gorgeous, definitely a favorite. The original church actually had a bomb fall right through it’s dome during WWII and destroy most of it. They left it as a memorial for a while and then some people got together and decided to rebuild it. They got like 100 million Euros in donations and if cost over 200 million to build! They tried to save as much of the original stones as possible and put them back in their original place when they rebuilt it. It made for a really cool effect to have a new, fresh church with sections or just random scorched stones from the old church, very old merging with new artsy feel. Going along the tour we saw a lot of really impressive buildings, but oddly the most of them had been recently rebuilt. I had never seen the point of trying so hard to preserve historical buildings in the original state, but knowing they were all mostly new in Dresden made it feel like we were walking around a Dresden Disney Park or something. It was still really pretty and if they hadn’t rebuilt then the city would be practically non-functional. We ate lunch and then Went to the Hygiene Museum which I had been dreading just because it sounded so incredibly boring, but it was awesome!! Apparently Hygiene in old German means science so it was actually a science museum. There was a temporary exhibit on the brain that was unique because it had a lot of artwork associated with the brain but also a lot of factual historical information. It showed how people’s view of how the brain and soul/sub-conscious are connected has changed over the years and as netter imaging techniques have come about. Then we toured the museum and there were so many cool interactive things, my favorite being this machine that let people compete to see who was more ‘chill.’ It basically measured brain activity and a silver ball would roll in the direction of the person whose brain activity was higher, and if the ball reached you then you lost. I lost, big time haha. And then there was an apparatus that consisted of two wires, one that slightly warm and the other slightly cold, that had been twisted together. The thing was actually room temperature but when I touched it, it either felt like my hand was freezing to the point of frost bite or so hot that it was about to melt of, pretty crazy. We were all having so much fun that the museum staff had to kick us out at closing time, oh engineers =]. Friday was the last day of study abroad class! We went the Charite Museum; the Charite is the Medical School of Merlin. The physiology room in the museum was one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen. There were rows and rows of specimens organized by organ system and then within the subunit they went from healthy to diseased organs and the last case in every row focused on one major medical condition associated with the organ system. I saw hearts that still had LVADs connected and ones that had artificial valves implanted and others that had had a coronary artery bypass, SO COOL. There were some joints that still had joint replacements in them, and then one row was devoted to babies that had died due to different birth defects. It was strange because they had been preserved in fluid and still had skin and everything but still really interesting. We had our last lecture by Dr. Wasser in the museum and then we went to the actual Charite. We got a tour of the Medical School and a short presentation on how the teaching structure is. Because it’s free there, the structure that best suits the teacher is chosen instead of the one that best suits the student as it generally works in America. Walking around we passed a group of first years just getting out of their end of year exams, they looked like babies! I forgot they start Medical School right out of High School so they were all actually two years younger than me! We got to go to one of their skills lab a practice suturing, I absolutely love it. We went to a Moroccan restaurant for a farewell dinner and the food was delicious and full of spices I’ve never tasted before. Afterward we said our goodbye’s to Dr. Wasser and Nils and some of the students that were leaving in the morning, it was really kind of sad! But we’d all see each other again back at school.

Weekend 4

Friday we got up and went to the natural history museum. The tour guide was great, I was barely every bored. There was a huge animal exhibit that we toured through, seriously every animal imaginable was in there. I mean they were dead and stuffed but it was cool nonetheless. There was one room that just full of all sorts of beetles, I never knew they were no neat! There are millions of them and they’re mostly deep gem colors with loads of different patterns and iridescence, it’s weird to say but dang beetles are pretty. After that our free weekend started and we caught a train to Prague in the Czech Republic!! We made it to our hostel, the Old Prague Hostel and had a room to ourselves! An unexpected luxury! We ended up just chilling in the room for the rest of the evening. The money situation is interesting, 16 Crones are about 1 US Dollar and 23 Crones are about 1 Euro, I’m just going to translate them into Euros when I shop to feel better about my spending =] Saturday we woke up with absolutely no plan as to what we were going to do- it was awesome. After so much tight scheduling during the week it was nice to have time to just move slowly and do whatever. Our hostel turned out to be really close to town so we just walked! It was raining, it would stay raining all day. First we walked to the famous clock tower in time to see it chime on the hour, and then we walked to the bridge which I have always remembered from when I was younger as one of the prettiest sights I’d ever seen. It was still pretty, but the rain made it look abandoned because everyone seemed to be hurriedly scurrying over it where before it had always looked so lively with crowds and sales people and artists enjoying its beauty. Once we got over the bridge we were cold and wet and found refuge in a Starbucks and camped out in there for a while hoping the rain would let up. It didn’t. We finally got up enough nerve to venture outside again and made it about five minutes before ducking into the nearest restaurant for lunch. Afterward we spent a lot of time meandering along the streets and souvenir shopping, I bought a scarf! That night we went out and saw a live dubstep DJ who was insanely good. Sunday we slept in and then went on a free walking tour of Prague, well a free tour where tips are greatly accepted =]. But the guide ended up being hilarious and really interesting. We learned the famous solar clock tower isn’t really good for much because the science behind it is flawed. We went in an old church where some guy had tried to steal a crown or something a long time ago and was caught and his hand was cut off as a punishment and it still hanging in the church. We also passed the Jewish cemetery but didn’t get to go inside. We ate dinner at a local bakery- I’m going to miss those so much!

Week 4

Monday we took the train from Munich to Vienna and met back up with our school group to check into the hotel. It was so nice to be staying so close to everyone else! No having to take 30 minute buses to meet up! And then we took a short walking tour of Vienna and it was gorgeous, I can’t believe I wasn’t more excited to come to this city. I mean I didn’t know anything about it but it turns out it’s so pretty! Walking around downtown was like walking through a marble dream. The only down side was the smell- I’m guessing they don’t have the best sewage system but it was easy enough to ignore. That night we had our welcome dinner and the food was absolutely amazing. We all learned quickly to eat up at the welcome and farewell dinners =]. Tuesday we got up and took a historical walking medical tour of Vienna. It was interesting but just a lot of information, and then we went into a crypt and saw all of the caskets of the old imperial family, one of which was Maria Theresa the only empress ever in Austria. Some of us ate lunch at a really cute café that served coffee and pastries. Oh and by the way Austria is known for their coffee! How I didn’t know that I have no idea, I haven’t gone a day in Europe without drinking it so far so I’m so excited! And at the café I had my first espresso and I am in love, I never realized that coffee was just watered down espresso before. After lunch we went to the Sigmund Freud museum which was located in his old house. We learned that before the Holocaust, when Jewish people were being persecuted the Nazis allowed Jews to leave if they could pay a very high tax. Freud was very well off already but the only reason him and his family were able to leave was because people donated enough money to his cause. Afterward we had a lecture by Dr. Wasser about Freud’s life. And then that night we went to a local operetta! It’s like a mini opera, and opera with dialogue. It was really good, their voices were gorgeous and it was in German but I could understand it for the most part. It was fun to dress up and go out for a night! And then Wednesday we went to the Vienna museum in the morning and saw a bunch of models of how Vienna grew over the years into the city it is today. And then we visited Stephen’s Church, a huge church that seemed to be right in the middle of downtown. It was massive and so pretty, with the gothic architecture of the Koeln cathedral but with a roof that was tiled with yellow, blue and white it was just so unique! After we had free time and some of the other girls and I ate lunch and then headed to the Museum Quarter district to see a Salvador Dahli art exhibit. The quarter was in the back of this artsy square filled with all of these huge, plastic, bright lounge chairs with people chatting, eating and sleeping on them. I wish I could have just spent the whole day there it was so incredibly chill and everyone was there just to enjoy art and have a good time. The Salvador Dahli exhibit was definitely something else. My theory is that he was both an amazing artist and a genius. His earlier paintings were gorgeous and so different than anything else of that time period, but the more recognition he got for his surrealism the more liberties he took with it. I’m convinced that some of his sculptures were random things he just put together and called surrealism to see if someone would buy it, and they did! But that’s just me. Then we met up with the rest of the group to go to a cute little wine garden. Thursday we visited the Viennese Medical School and learned about the differences between medical schools in Vienna and in America. For example research shows that people are worse at selecting good physicians than standardized testing, so in Vienna applicants are admitted solely on how they score on standardized tests. And in Vienna non-clinical and clinical learning is integrated so that students learn skills along with theory studies and then must master them. Afterward we went to a physiology museum located in a building that used to be an insane asylum. It was filled with a bunch of wax models that had been molded off of people who had suffered from all sorts of disgusting diseases and then painted to look just like it. The tour guide was really knowledgeable and interesting and always had something cool to say about anything we asked. The best part was a case that had skeletons of conjoined and Siamese twins who had dies very young. It was insane the way some of them were connected, there was on pair that was attached to where their bodies were facing each other and perpendicularly one face was facing forward and the other one backward, but they were both on one head, super strange. We ate at a Pakistan restraint afterward that was pretty good, it was buffet style so we took however much we wanted and then when we left we were supposed to give how much we thought it was worth. It was a really cool concept I had never heard of a restaurant doing before but they looked like they were doing well so I guess the concept can be successful! Then we went to the old hospital which is a museum now and we toured the old library that was filled with loads of old books, mostly in Latin but some were in German and a lot about medicine! It was fun, I love the smell of old books and the pages had a cool texture because they had had to be printed off of engravings. Then we went to a museum of pharmacology and saw all sorts of things, my favorite being the old hand turned centrifuges and shakers and the old surgeons kit. Then we had our farewell dinner at a restaurant called the 7 Stern Brau because they brew seven kinds of beer! It was an awesome last night in Vienna with great food and even better people =]

Weekend 3

I got up at 5 and barely made it to the train to Munich thanks to a bus that decided not to come! Luckily my host dad gladly gave me a ride to the Hauptbahnhof and I got to say bye to him and his wife, such a sweet family. We made it to our hostel in Munich and it was soo much nicer than the one I stayed at in Amsterdam! The first thing I noticed about Munich is a bread yeast smell pretty much omnipresent throughout the city. I later found out it’s the smell of hops from all of the breweries here! In fact right across the street from our hostel was a brewery and we went there for dinner and it was so adorable, everyone was dressed in lederhosen and traditional southern German dress. People there order beer my the mass, a.k.a. by the liter! Later we went to the English Gardens which was basically a large park with a lot of trees and winding paths to stroll along. It was really pretty and in the center of the park was a Biergarten that we chilled at for a while and got some Bayern Brezte’s, the HUGE baked pretzels that were so delicious. That night we met some of our roommates in the hostel, a very enthusiastic guy about our age who had a complete lederhosen and whatnot costume he kept showing off to us but he was really nice and then a really old guy who was kind of persnickety when it came to noise and having the light on.. somewhat strange for a hostel especially when we found out he had been living there for two months.. but oh well to each their own! Saturday the 8 20/21 year olds in my group got up at 8am with a game plan.. impressive or what? We went to the Deutsches Museum, supposedly the most visited museum in Germany contained a load of exhibits of different things invented in Germany and how they have evolved and progressed into what they are today. It was pretty much a maze which was really fitting because it allowed us to just get lost in all of the history there was to see there. There were so many cool things I had never heard of, especially in my favorite exhibit which was about the new advancements in nanotechnology and computers. It was really interactive and I saw a C-leg! Afterward we went to the Viktualien Markt, and outdoor market that is open every day in Munich with fresh goods from fruit, vegetables and spices to honey, mean and flowers. That was probably one of my favorite places on the entire trip because everything was so natural and locally grown and it just went on forever! I bought these bread-dipping spices, some unique flavored honey spreads and a bag of sweet cherries! We ate at a local Biergarten and got weisswurst, a Bayern specialty sausage made of veal and it was really good. We shopped for souvenirs, everyone wanted to buy a Bier stein which is a big ceramic cup special for drinking beer. Later one we went to the Hofbrauhaus, the main brewery of Munich and we sat in the Biergarten in the back like everyone had told us to do to avoid the mad tourist crowds and it was true! It was much more chill back there and we had fun catching up with some of the other students from our group who were also in Munich. Sunday we got up and took the train to the Dachau concentration camp. We spent four or five hours there walking through the exhibit, around the memorials and ultimately through what remained of the camp. It was an incredibly morbid and eery place, and we all kind of split up for the most part to go through it on our own. It was just so terrible and emotional to read about, there really were no words and it made it easier to just go through and process it by ourselves. One of the things I realized this time that I never had before is that the liberation of the concentration camps wasn’t all cheering and celebration by the German people and life never returned to normal for the victims. Many of the Germans were still racist and anti-Semitic and the victims were usually the only one of their family who had survived and had nowhere to go because their home had been destroyed and they had nothing. I had always pictured that the liberations of the camps meant that the sun came out and started shining again and everyone went home to their warm houses with their family and hot food sitting on the table. I guess that was pretty disillusioned. We got back pretty late from Dachau without having eaten all day so we splurged and went to the American haven of Hard Rock Café! It was the perfect end to an emotionally taking day and we all enjoying being able to actually order off the drink menu for once!

Monday, August 29, 2011

Two Days of Death

I had several hours to waste on Sunday morning before the Dachau tour, so I went to the Jagd und Fischereimuseum on an impulse. I visited less because I’m an avid sportsman (ha!) and more they had a giant bronze statue of a catfish out front.

Luckily for me, the museum wasn’t the NRA shrine I feared a hunting museum might be. It instead displayed artifacts used in hunting and fishing from Paleolithic to recent times. The only guns in sight were ornate muzzle-loaders, complete with powder-horns, tamping rods, and little molds for making your own lead balls. Many of the other hunting accruements were far stranger—spears for hunting narwhals, crossbows, chariots carved like dragons, Pringles can-like contraptions for storing your war-ferrets, or 4-inch wide iron hunting dog collars covered in barbed spikes. Paintings and tapestries of chest-high dogs running down massively over-muscled deer and rabbits covered the walls. One hall was lined with taxidermy animals, or non-animals, as one case displayed about a dozen Wolpertingers. Wolpertingers are German Jackalopes—composites of various stuffed animals, such as the head and body of a rabbit fitted with a fox tail, and a hawk’s wings and claws.

The Jagd und Fischereimuseum also had a temporary exhibit on auruchs covering how the wild cattle were hunted to extinction in the Middle Ages and how modern breeders are attempting to recreate them, or so I assume, since the exhibit was entirely in German.

That afternoon, I crammed onto a bus with 40-odd other English-speaking tourists to visit the Dachau memorial. At the former concentration camp, it was the little details that were the most disturbing. The line of poplar trees and the gravel fields, laid out just as they were while the camp was operating, were extremely disconcerting. I could not wrap my mind around the scale of the badness that had happened in that place. For instance, on a sign outside the crematorium is a picture showing what that exact spot looked like while the camp was in business—as in, there was a pile of several hundred naked, skeletal bodies, right where you are standing to look at the sign. Horrors like that belong in black and white photos, they can’t leach out into the real world where the sun is out and birds are singing.

Two days later, I was back in the world of barracks and barbed wire fences at another concentration camp memorial—Sachsenhausen. Whereas Dachau had been transformed into a memorial for the people murdered there, Sachsenhausen had been refitted as a celebration of how great Red Russia was. A phallic monument glorifying Russian soldiers dominated the center of the roll call field. Much of the rest of the camp had been allowed to fall into disrepair due to lack of funds—weeds and crabgrass dotted the field, and some of the buildings were deteriorating.

However, the most effective parts of the memorial remained. In a basement used for peeling potatoes, captives had been allowed to paint landscapes and still lifes on the walls. I hope the prisoners found some comfort in the beauty they created in their ugly surroundings. Prisoners held there during the time the camp was run by the Soviets added cartoonish vegetables slicing and cooking themselves. One of the more disturbing displays was the hundreds of scraps of shoe leather that had been dug up on the site. Trainloads of shoes collected from the extermination camps out east arrived at Sachsenhausen and the prisoners were put to work reclaiming the leather and wondering over the fate of the shoe’s former owners.

The most obvious signs of the atrocities which had happened there remained mostly intact. The firing range and the torture chamber known as the “medical” building with its mortuary tables were still standing. Of Station Z, where ten thousand Soviet POWs were murdered, only the foundation and the cremation ovens remain. Like at the crematorium at Dachau, at Station Z murder was employed in assembly-line fashion. Living people enter one end, ashes come out the other. Of course, with the volume of murder they were committing, the killing machine started to break down. The ovens didn’t have the capacity to burn all the remains completely. At Dachau, there were accounts that prisoners couldn’t be hanged fast enough and were sometimes burned alive.

Like at Dachau, I just cannot imagine the amount of suffering and death that occurred where I was standing, and that it had happened recently enough that still survivors and perpetrators still live.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Monkeying Around in Munich

It was still light when I arrived in Munich for the second time. I stayed at a youth hostel near the Tierpark, which is unfortunately quite far from the city center. The commute to my accommodations involved rides on multiple U-bahns and a walk that lasted ten minutes once I figured out where I was going, and almost half an hour when I didn’t. This meant that although it was early evening when I reached Munich, it was dark when I had finally checked in and freshened up. “Dark” in Germany translates to “all places that provide calories in non-alcoholic forms are closed, and yes, even on a Friday night” so I had to have beer for dinner.

I was staying in a 6-bed dormitory that night. The room had been empty when I dropped my luggage off that afternoon, but stacks of Japanese books and several laptops left sitting on the table hinted at both the national origins and the trustworthiness of my roommates. At about one in the morning, I returned to my room to see sleeping heads of long dark hair peeking out of all the other beds. One girl was awake and texting—she looked about 14 years old in light from her Iphone, and she glared at me as I made my bed as quietly as I could. All my actions seemed uncharacteristically loud in that room full of sleeping Asian women. I sounded like an elephant trampling around on the hard-wood floor, the zippers on my duffel bag sounded like nails on a chalkboard, and my locker slammed despite my effort to close it gently. The next morning, I rose up early and crept out before anybody else awoke so I wouldn’t have to feel like That Awkward White Girl.

I left the hostel and followed the signs to the Tierpark. I was the only non-jogger/ dog-walker on the sidewalk that morning. The locals probably knew something I didn’t, as it started raining as soon as I paid my seven euros to enter the Zoo. Even with the awful weather, I knew right away that the Munich Tierpark was going to be one of the most pleasant zoos I had ever visited. Judging by the view from the entrance, I could have been heading down a forest trail, surrounded by old trees, little rivers, and underbrush too thick to see through on either side of the path. I had been walking past the first exhibit—tarpans and aurochs—for some time before I noticed the area containing the animals was any different from the forested areas composing the rest of the zoo. I just glanced through the brush and saw the Paleolithic-looking creatures standing in a clearing. As I understood it, both species were extinct—the tarpan for about a century, and the auroch since the Middle Ages. Therefore, I can only assume that some mad scientist had cloned those creatures back to life Jurassic Park-style, and I will be severely disappointed if the Zoo doesn’t have mammoths and glyptodons by my next visit.

At this point, it was raining rather heavily, so I got to see how different critters reacted. The wisents placidly chewed their cud as water dripped off their backs. The European wolf curled up like a bored German shepherd and would occasionally raise its head and check if it was still damp and miserable before dozing off again. It lay by the fence despite having at least two dens in the enclosure that would be drier. Some of the ducks that roamed freely through the Tierpark sought shelter under bridges or tree limbs for the worst of the rain, others dived and scrabbled over food oblivious to the weather. The Siberian tiger continued to pace between his outdoor yard and inside den—rain and cold could not deter him from patrolling his territory.

The primates fled to the inside areas of their enclosures. Lemurs slept in massive multi-tailed bundles, baby apes played restlessly, adult apes and monkeys picked at their food calmly. I was near the mandrill exhibit when the weather cleared, and the smaller mandrills—I don’t know if they were females or juveniles—erupted in a frenzy of glee. They swung back and forth across their outside enclosure and bounded over their jungle-gym like fluffy balls of energy.

The primate exhibits were truly awesome—all species had expansive areas to play, both inside and outside, and they were contained not by fences, but by moats or other natural barriers that blended in with the landscape. Inside, their environments had dirt floors, not concrete, and they had a wealth of enrichment objects. One baby orangutan had been given a bed sheet, which she would wear like a low budget ghost Halloween costume and sidle around the habitat. When she tired of that, she would throw her sheet over a branch and swing on it like a rope. In another primate house, a gorilla sat half-buried in a pile of straw. She had straw on her shoulders and a tuft of straw on her head. When I looked closer, I saw that she was doddling a baby gorilla in her lap. Mother and child rolled around in their nest before settling down for a nap, the baby clutched protectively under its mama’s huge hand.

Squirrel monkeys are called totenkopf-something in German, which makes sense given their light faces and dark eyes and mouths. Being in a room full of skull monkeys sounds so much cooler than being surrounded by chattering monkeys named after adorable little tree rats.

The Villa Dracula was also pretty cool. Spear-nosed bats flew freely throughout the building. I flinched as they flitted past my face and shoulders, and I could feel one hit my ponytail. I could have batted them out of the air if I was an awful person. Several exhibits appeared to be run on the honor system—animals were close enough to touch, and any carelessness by the guests could injure the creatures. I winced in the free-flying bird exhibit whenever I saw little kids chasing the birds around to get them to fly.

In short, the Munich Zoo was the nicest, most pleasant zoo I have ever seen in my life. All the habitats were wide and open-looking, greenery was everywhere, and there was nary a cinderblock to be seen. The next day was going to be quite a change of pace from that agreeable five hours I spent wandering amongst the critters. On Sunday I planned to visit the Dachau Memorial.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Week 3

To quote my journal on Monday “we basically had LOADS of class, which was at least super interesting because it was Dr. Wasser [lecturing], and because the topic was medicine.” I’ve noticed that the longer I’m in Germany the worse my English gets! But it was really interesting, Dr. Wasser lectured about prehistoric medicine and got really excited when he started to explain the growing evidence that interbreeding occurred between Neanderthals and Cro Magnons (early Homo sapiens) indicating that we all most likely have some Neanderthal in us. I mean not gonna lie that’s some pretty exciting stuff =] I found out William Harvey is the Father of Cardiology so basically an all around bad a and I intend to learn more about him. Later we had cultural studies with our program coordinator, Nils where he lectured about German politics. Normally I don’t find politics all that interesting but Nils kept comparing the German system to the American one and I finally realized that my disinterest has resulted in me knowing absolutely nothing about our political system. I never realized how much decision making went on in government, kind of silly I know but before it had always seemed as a kind of one-track road with a specific destination. I enjoyed seeing how another country could take a different path and be their own kind of successful, politics definitely isn’t black and white. After class we went to the Haribo outlet and were literally little kids in a willy wonka wonderland! I stocked up on all of the candy I used to eat when I was younger, I blame my over-indulgence on the sentimental ties! And then we went back to AIB to watch a screening of the movie Goodbye Lenin. It was really good, set in the 90’s after the Berlin wall fell, unknown to a pro-soviet mother who had been in a coma the entire time. Her son didn’t want her to find out and there was a comedic twist to his struggles. Tuesday we took a charter bus to Bacharach, a cute, little town on the Rheine and walked around a little bit before jumping on the Lorelei Rheine river cruise! The weather was exceptionally amazing and sunny and we sat out on the deck, sipping on weiss wein schorles, soaking up the sun like true Germans and enjoying the gorgeous views. It really was something of a fairytale; the river was lined on either side by green rolling hills with castles tucked away every couple of miles, the history and stories of them playing in the background. My favorite story was of two castles situated less than a quarter mile from each other, apparently built by brothers who disliked each other so much they couldn’t live in the same castle. We got off at a different town and ate schnitzel for lunch before talking a short hike up a mountain to a castle. The view was so pretty from up there. And then after- surprise we went wine tasting!! By far one of the most fun things we did, we tried two white wines and three red while and the table quickly became very social and everyone was having a blast. Wednesday we had some class in the morning and then went to die Museum der Deutsch Geschichte, the German History Museum. It appeared deceivingly small and we spent a good few hours in there but learned a lot. I really need to stop being so surprised that Dr. Wasser knows so much about.. so much! He always has colorful facts and details to add to everything we see, it’s somewhat reminiscent of that movie Limitless. Later a group of us went to a Biergarten overlooking the Rheine and just chilled out, the weather had cooled off and our table was situated under these massive trees that must be decades old- whoever said nothing in Germany is younger than 100 years wasn’t kidding. Thursday we had class in the morning about the Nuremburg Doctor Trials. It was a pretty emotional topic to get through for me, I visited Ausschwitz when I was younger and read ‘Night’ by Elie Wiesel and have even met a Holocaust survivor but every time I learn a little more about Holocaust it seems to only get worse and the picture in my mind becomes even more terrible and unbelievable. There always comes a point where I just can’t understand how something so horrific ever happened, and to the extent that this did. Although it was hard to get through it was extremely interesting from a medical standpoint and definitely important in medical history. But man, some of the details of what went on in the medical experiments were just so despicable it made me sick to my stomach and I couldn’t bring myself to write it down. Even thinking about it now still makes me sick. But after that we went back to Koeln and this time took a tour off the roof of the Cathedral and it was one of the coolest things I’ve done! Right before we went up it started to storm as if it show us the gothic architecture in it’s element and it was incredible. I have so many pictures of random things on the Cathedral because I just couldn’t get over the fact that I was so close to it all! And then we walked around inside the cathedral but on a walkway up high by the ceiling that went right by all of the huge stain glass windows that had always loomed over me, and now they were eye level! Walking by the newly constructed stain glass window was my favorite because all of the colors were so bright and the light shining through them bounced off of the stone pillars making a starry effect that I could have stared at for hours. Afterward we went to the zoo and took a tour around. There was an Animal Body Worlds exhibit there that was so cool with a huge elephant and a giraffe and guerilla and other animals plasticized to where we could see all of the muscles, veins, nerves and organs. At the same time it was a little morbid that it was located in a zoo but nonetheless very cool. That was our last night in Bonn, my host family made me a nice dinner of steak and barbeque sauce =] and I got to hang out with the girls for a little bit before they went to bed. My host dad had a surprise for me- an Abschieds shot! A farewell shot of Vodka lol. Bonn has been an awesome city and I loved being there for the first three weeks and living with a host family was a blast! I’m excited to see Vienna and Berlin too though, it’s bittersweet but I definitely had a great time here.

Weekend 2

This weekend I took the train to Duesseldorf to meet up with some friends from middle school, talk about taking a trip into the past. Beatrice and Veronica were two of my best friends and I hadn't seen them since the last time I visited Duesseldorf three years ago, but when I stepped off the train and saw them it was like no time had passed. Except we all looked a lot older- I guess the late nights and stress of college does that to you. We went to the Kirmes festival which happens every year on the Rheine, it's a traveling outdoor festival with a lot of rides, food and beer. There were loads of people there of all ages walking around and having a blast. We only went on a couple rides and ate some dough balls filled with strawberries and covered in vanilla sauce- yum! And then we met up with another childhood friend and saw the latest Harry Potter, in english =] I was surprised by how many people were in the english showing, it was packed. The next day we all grabbed lunch and caught up on the last three years, Beatrice is going to university in LA but the other two stayed in europe. Veronica goes to a private university in Ireland were they're required to wear uniform and Philippa is at one in London where running into British movie starts is a frequent occurrence. They were all surprised that my accent wasn't more reminiscent of old western flicks which made me laugh. It was strange to be back in a town I had lived in for so long. Strange in how normal I felt there, at home. Everywhere my head turned was something familiar that brought back memories long locked away in my brain somewhere previously out of reach. I took the train back to Bonn, skyped some friends from back home and then met up with some other students from the program at a local bar to see USA vs. Japan in the Womens World Cup soccer final!! Such a close game, we only lost in shootouts when we had dominated every other aspect of the game. All of the Germans at the bar kept saying that with how many things Japan has gone through recently they needed the win more, I see what they mean but I still would have like USA to have won. It was a great and relaxing weekend, much different from the hectic one last weekend but both good in their own respects =]

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Week 2

This week started out with a lecture from Dr. Wasser over the Hohenstaufen Dynasty. It was mostly about religious history involving Martin Luther which I found really interesting because Dr. Wasser managed not to paint him in one color but in many shades. Afterward Elena and I were taken to a radiologist by Sebastian for our german lesson since we already speak some german and it was so much fun, I was surprised by how much I could understand and loved going over case after case of fractures, birth defects and cath lab images. Some of the images of narrowed arteries in the brain were insane; I couldn't believe some of these people were still walking around. And then we went to an Anesthesiology Museum which seemed to contain pretty much every device in the history of anesthesia and was run by an adorable retired anesthesiologist. It was really cool to see the predecessors of all the machines I had seen in the OR earlier this summer, I can’t imagine what they will look like when I’m running my OR. Tuesday we went to Koeln and took a tour through the cathedral and around the city. The cathedral was absolutely breathtaking, the gothic architecture gave it so much stoic character. Our tour guide was incredibly knowledgeable and really made me wish I could see what it looked like when it was originally built, painted with lively and bright colors on the inside instead of the cream walls it has today. We toured some Roman ruins that had only been found five years ago which mean that the last time I had been in the city I had unknowingly been walking right over them, pretty trippy if you ask me. We toured a Holocaust museum that was actually an old Stazi prison. It was pretty creepy, the eeriest part was definitely when we could see into the prison cells and read the inscriptions that had been left by prisoners awaiting their death so many years ago. Some were encouraging, others angry and the worst just completely hopeless. Anything involving the Holocaust is always really interesting to me but at the same time just so unreal. On Wednesday we got to go to a hospital in Bonn and shadow doctors! I saw a radial fracture repair, a soleus muscle biopsy and the beginning of a nucleotomy, the repair of a herniated disk. The doctor I shadowed was really funny and so willing to answer any questions, it was definitely one of my favorite trips. That night we went to the women’s world cup game USA vs France! I think the win was ever so slightly due to our incredibly spirit that we showed by painting ourselves red, white and blue. On Thursday we had a really long but incredibly interesting lecture over the Holocaust- as eerily fascinating as ever. More specifically it was about the Nazi Euthanasia Programs. The whole lecture I had a slightly sick feeling coming on, some of the things that Dr. Wasser talked about were just so unbelievably terrible. Afterward we took a tour around a homeopathic garden which was really a lot of fun. I had never really heard much about this kind of alternative medicine and I wish we could have learned a little more of the theory behind it, but I really like the whole natural-ness of it all. Friday we took a bus to the Aerospace Museum of Europe which turned out to be a lot cooler than I expected. All of the astronauts up at the space station are from all around the world but the funny part is that they each generally live in parts of the space station that were manufactured by their country. Afterward we visited a palace nearby that was absolutely gorgeous. The decorations were so over the top and fairytale like. And that was the end of week two! A lot of things in our schedule but all of them worth the time and a great learning experience.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Retrospective

Retrospective

Getting back to the States was a weird but good experience. I miss many aspects of Europe but enjoy having a car and the conveniences of the States. First thing that shocked me was how heavy american’s are. I think that I became used to seeing smaller European people so the amount of overweight people seems out of control. I also miss the weather. The cool weather would be wonderful, being able to open a window instead of having to use AC would be great. Also a little bit of rain would be a welcome thing. The public transportation system would be nice to have here but it wouldn’t work well because of how the USA is set up. It was nice to not worry about driving home from the bar or something like that. It is nice that I have my own car now because it takes much less time to get around. The jet lag wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be. Maybe because I had the weirdest sleeping habits in Europe. I am looking forward to planning a return trip someday to Europe to explore more.

week 5 berlin


Wed August 3, 2011

Today we woke up around 615. The showers are becoming a problem when you have 5 guys who need to shower in the morning. It worked out ok because we made it to breakfast and out on time. We went to the molecular research institute. This was wonderful because I got to see what I have learned in biochem and micro put into use. We first got a lecture about the history of cellular biology from a guy from texas. We then got a tour from a triathlete who got his start in the USA which was cool to me. We saw how neutrophils kill and trap bacterial cells with DNA nets. This was cutting edge and cool research which was exciting. After that we learned about how muscles heal. This research could be used to cure a form of MD. After this we got to see state of the art MRI machines. We saw a 3, 7, and 9 tesla version. These were able to get a better image than the standard 1.5T used clinically. I couldn’t go see them on the inside because of my shoulder implant. We then went to otto bach to view the new prothetic devices used clinically. It was great to learn about them. I had a good time riding around in the wheelchair. After this we went to the east side gallery which is part of the berlin wall which people painted on. I didn’t care for it but it was great to see that the germans have come far enough that they can used the wall for art. I ate at the thai place again because it seems healthy and cheap. I actually like eating the veggies I guess my tastes are broadening. We attempted to go out to karaoke but we couldn’t get in. I was very surprised by a woman which I thought was a gay man. Anyway she helped us try to find another place to go but we ended up getting lost. So we ended up getting home early around 12:30.

Thursday august 4th

Today we went to Dresden. This was a great town. I enjoyed all of the architecture and how it was all located very centrally. The city walk was informative but it started to seem like all of the other city walks. They are starting to all blur together for me. I decided to try and get something good for lunch so I headed to Augustiner. I was surprised that they had a place in Dresden so I was excited to eat there. When I got there I found out that they wouldn’t open for another few days so my hopes of getting a schnitzel and a munich beer were shattered. I have been on a roll of wanting munich style beers. It is probably because it is harder to find them here. So I decided to go get Mcdonalds which wasn’t a great choice but it was the first mcdonals I have been to which had extremely good looking cashiers. They were all blonde and very good looking. It was good to eat something quick because then I was able to walk around by myself. After lunch we headed to the hygiene museum which was awesome. It was very interactive and interesting. We all got split up into groups and had to give a guided tour through a part of the museum. Our group got the room about Sexuality in Germany. This section housed some really funny thing and also some interesting things. It amazes me how open germans are with sex and nudity. There were also some cool things like a leg extention test which showed your leg strength. My strength is much less than when I was lifting so I wonder what it would have been back in the day. I feel like I have gained at least 5 pounds on this trip from over eating and beer. After the hygiene museum we had a 2 hour train ride back which was enjoyable. I rode with wasser and niles. We all had some beers and talked about random things. I then sat with another group for a little bit to stretch my legs etc. When we got back we started to pregame a bit and then headed out to hackasher markt. We stayed at an irish pub which had good mixed drinks and Guinness so I was happy. I had a mojito which was enjoyable and tried a little bit of a mai thai which was interesting. We then started on our way home when two bums started to bother our group. One was drunk and tried to pick a fight with niles but he quickly defused the situation. I was ready to fight and I am glad nothing happened. Once we got back I stayed down stairs with niles, bailey, and Kristin till 2:30 am. We just talked about random things like the differences between german dating and American dating. Also how german parents are different from American parents. Some of the things seem good but I am undecided if they are truly good things. Things such as being able to talk to your parents about your sex life etc. Once I laid down around 2:45 I passed out super-fast.

weekend 4

Weekend 4 Prague
When we went to leave Wein I was slightly disappointed when I saw our train. I thought to myself well I guess we are going to eastern Europe. The train wasn’t very comfortable nor did it have power outlets which was a bummer because I wanted to use my laptop to blog and watch a movie. Travis did find a power outlet…in the bathroom. After arriving we made our way to sir toby’s hostel. It was an interesting place. We got free food which was nice. It wasn’t the best but I couldn’t have cared. The first night we decided to go to club meca which was a different experience. It was an electronic club which picked up as the night went on. We ended up making it back around 3 am or so. The next day we took a city tour in the rain which was interesting but I started to get a little too cold to care about the history. Once the tour was over it stopped raining it seemed like great timing. We walked around and did various other things such as seeing old architecture etc. We went on a pubcrawl as well which was alright. It wasn’t as good as the one we went on in Vienna but it was still fun.

week 4

Monday morning/afternoon
We arrived in Wein around lunch time. We didn’t have any troubles finding the hotel. (Hotel Deutchmaster) the name cracked everyone up, idk if it was just because we were tired or what. Once inside we saw our room and were like thank God! After staying in hostels/uncomfortable conditions we were finally able to relax. For me I just wanted a clean towel which was larger than a wash cloth. We all unpacked and set off to go get some food. We walked around for a good 20 minutes until we finally decided to get pizza and a waffle. Not a great combo but none the less. Once Neils and Dr. Wasser got there we took a city tour which was really nice. The architecture in Wein is wonderful. I was really impressed by it. We saw various things including the plague tower and the Spanish riding school. I personally couldn’t appreciate it as much as some of the others just because I didn’t know about it before hand or know how much work went into training these horses to do certain things.
Tuesday
Today we started our day off with a medical history walk lead by Dr. Wasser. I enjoyed it but was a little tired still. I think that even though I finally got some sleep I need more. We got to see many things in Wein and the amount of medical history amazed me. After getting lunch at Aida a coffee shop where I had my first Viennese coffee mélange (macchiato with whipped cream) we set off for Simgond Freud’s house. It was cool to see where Freud worked and also to be in a place where someone of his importance worked. I was upset that we didn’t get to have lecture in Sigmond Freud’s house but I guess things happen.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

weekend 3

Weekend 3
July 22-24
We decided to go to munich for our long weekend. I went with a group of 8 people. We decided that it would be better to leave early Friday morning rather than Thursday night like some others. I think it was a good choice because from what we heard the night train wasn’t very comfortable. Anyway we got in around lunch time and quickly walked to our hostel. We stayed at the meninger (or something like that). It was a lot cheaper than I had expected which was nice. After realizing that we were a little early for check in so we decided to head over to the Augustiner Brau haus. This was my first taste of munich beer and it didn’t disappoint me. I had a mass of augustiner edolstoff. Great choice in my opinion. After this we went back to the hostel and regrouped. The next day we decided to go to the englisher garten which was nice but it rained a little bit which wasn’t the best. We walked around which wasn’t really my thing but we then ended up at the Chinese tower which was really cool. We had masses of hofbrau dunkle which was wonderful. (I think I developed a taste for dunkle even more in munich) While there we got to people watch which was really funny. There was a man in a where’s waldo costume which cracked me up. We also went to the Technical museum that day. I was really impressed with the detail and amount of different things in the building. I would love to go again another time when I return to Germany. One of the bigger highlights was going to the hofbrau haus. It wasn't the same as augustiner but it was different in a good way. It was very touristy but I think thats why I liked it. I got to try all of the different kinds of hofbrau that they offered. After this weekend I feel in love with Bayern and really hope to return there one day.

Week 3

Monday July 18th
Today we had a lecture from Dr. Wasser first thing in the morning. Everyone who decided to go to paris for the weekend had gotten in about 4 hours before lecture. They looked so incredibly tired. For lunch I tried to find a new place to get food but I ended up getting lost for about 30 minutes. I finally decided to eat Mcdonalds for lunch because I ran out of time and this seemed to be the best option. When we returned to AIB Niles taught us about the German political system. It is interesting to me how their system works. They are able to have 5 large parties function compared to only 2 in the US. They have to form an alliance with 2 or more parties in order to accomplish anything in government. After this we had some free time to go to Harribo gummy bear outlet. This was basically a giant candy store that only sold gummies. I deiced to get some funny stuff for abby and the family. They had some 4kg boxes of chocolate/bears that you could buy. Some people purchased these but are going to have a hard time figuring out how to get them back into the states. On the way back from Haribo we saw a liquor store called trinken gut. (good drinks) Once we walked in the entire group looked like the little kids going to haribo factory. We spent a good 45 minutes trying to decide which beer to get. I ended up getting some Paulaner and a .3L of Jagermeister. I found some cool Jager glasses as well which I decided to buy. I still don’t know if I want them or will gift them. On the way back to AIB we enjoyed our beers. Once at AIB we watched a movie about east and west berlin. It was in all german so we had to read subtitles. I enjoyed the movie although it was a little weird.
Wednesday July 19th
Today we went on a rhinecruise. It was the best weather the trip has had for one of these cruises. We went to a little german town which had the stereotypical archetechture. Wooden houses with flowers etc. it is a great region for growing grapes for wine. On the cruise we sat in the sun and had a weizenbier. After the cruise we went to a wine cellar and took a tour. We learned all of the ins and outs of making wine. We got to see the large barrels which could hold up to 9000L of wine. After the wine tour we got to taste five wines. We had 1 white reisling, 1 blanc de noir, and three reds. The last two were the best. One nice saffenburg red and a desert red which was sweet
Wednesday july 20th
Today we talked about what we are doing in Vienna and berlin nothing super exciting. After lecture and lunch we went to the museum in bonn called the haus der geschichte (house of history). It was interesting. Most of it was about east and west germany. It was interesting to see how germany came to be today because of this troubled past. From our tour we could see how the NSDAP (nazi) caused lots of problems leading into the GDR days in germany. I expected more from WWII in the museum. I also got yelled at because I leaned on a piece of the Berlin wall in the museum. I thought that this was ridiculous because it is a giant cement wall that isn’t going to be hurt by me touching it. I figured that people in berlin get to touch the wall all they want. Oh, well. After the tour we went to a temp exhibit which featured sex and german youth history. It had a place to practice putting on condoms. It was very humorous

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Program Week 5 (Berlin)

We got to Berlin pretty easily and somehow found Dr. Wasser and Nils as we were getting on the tram to go to our hotel so we made it there pretty easily. Our hotel was pretty cool. I ended up staying in an apartment with 4 other girls and we had a kitchenette and everything else. Then we went on a bike tour of Berlin. That was really fun. It was a great break from having to walk everywhere and we got to see a lot more of the city than we would have if we had walked.

On Tuesday, we got up and had breakfast at the hotel before going to Sachsenhausen which was a concentration camp a little ways outside of Berlin. Because it was in the part of Germany occupied by the Russians after WWII, the camp was mainly a memorial to all the communist prisoners during the war. It was pretty interesting. It took me until almost the end of the tour for it to really sink in that this was a place where people actually died and where all the things that happened during the holocaust, really happened. It was definitely an experience. Then we went back to Berlin and took a tour of the Bundestag (German parliament) before going back to the hotel and being set loose for the night.

Wednesday, we went to the Max Delbruck Center for Molecular Medicine in the morning. That was pretty cool. We had a guy that was originally from San Antonio give us a short introduction lecture before we were split up into two groups. One group was sent off to learn about their neutrophil and muscle research while the other group took a tour of all their magnetic and MRI everything before we switched places. The neutrophil stuff was really interesting and it was fun to get to play with the magnets.
In the afternoon, we went to the Otto Bock Science Center and we got to learn a lot about all kinds of prosthetics. They had a lot of interactive stuff there and they let us play with it all after our tour which was a lot of fun. A couple people got a little excited because they finally got me off my feet and into a wheelchair. After that our program day was officially over and I ended up just doing a bit of souvenir shopping before going back to the hotel.
We got up early on Thursday morning and took a train to Dresden and we had a city tour as soon as we got there. The city was pretty interesting. It was definitely an East Germany city. There are still quite a few differences from the East and West and I think going to Dresden really made us realize that. The crosswalk lights are different in East Germany than they are in the West. We got to see that in parts of Berlin as well but in Dresden it seemed like they were everywhere and they had a bunch of girl ones too.

Then, in the afternoon, we went to the Hygiene Museum. It wasn’t all about brushing your teeth and the importance of showering like you normally think of when someone says hygiene but it had to do with all types of different things associated with the human body and health. There were a bunch of different rooms and each room covered a different topic. One room was all about life and death, another about sexuality, another about beauty, and things like that. They split us up into groups and each group had to present their room to everyone else. I was in the nutrition room. It was definitely a challenge because everything was written in German so I didn’t really have much of an idea about what anything in the room was supposed to be pertaining to. They had a lot of interactive things there so we ended up staying until the museum closed before going to the train station to head back to Berlin.
Friday morning, we got up and took a tour of the History of Medicine Museum in Berlin. Our guide was awesome. I think he liked having a bunch of medical students to lead around because he didn’t really have to sugarcoat anything he said. I think Nils enjoyed it more than the rest of us because he got to sit back and enjoy our facial expressions. After the tour, we had our last lecture inside the museum in what used to be a lecture hall for medical students back in the day. The building was bombed during WWII and they only partially restored it. It was so cool to have our last lecture, on the last day of the program, after a cool tour, in what used to be a lecture hall for medical students, that was partially ruined from WWII bombing. For me, that pretty much summed up the entire trip. It was a good ending.
Then we spent the afternoon at the university where we got to play with some interactive medical teaching dummies. I think the pre-med students enjoyed that a lot more than the vet students really did. It was interesting but I still prefer veterinary medicine a whole lot more. Then we went back to the hotel and had some time to pack and get ready before going out for our farewell dinner.
They took us to a really nice Moroccan restaurant called Kasbah. It was definitely an experience. The inside of the restaurant was so cool looking and the food was really good. I can now say that I’ve had couscous. They washed our hands with rose water before our meal. That was a little different. Wine and lamb couscous is a bit of a jump from beer and BBQ. It was a really great last dinner and a good way to enjoy our last night all together.

Prague

When we got to Prague Friday night, we didn’t really do a whole lot. We just got settled in, did some laundry in the bathtub, and made a few calls from my skype. Skype has to be one of the greatest inventions ever made. I got to call my mom for about 2 cents a minute. It was really nice to be able to actually talk to her and see how everything was going on at home.
We didn’t get up Saturday morning until about 10 o’clock. It was pretty nice. Then we went into city central and got something to eat before walking around for a bit. We found belly dancers. That was...... interesting. Then we found out that Heather’s card still wasn’t working because her bank was updating things and froze her card because she was overseas. So we had to go back to the hotel so she could call them and ended up taking a bit of a nap waiting for it to get late enough that the bank would be open back in the States. Then, once she managed to get everything resolved, we went back into old town, got dinner, did some souvenir shopping and went on a ghost tour. That was pretty awesome. We went on the tour with a couple Germans and a couple Norwegians and we had this really funny British guy dressed in a massive grim reaper costume as our guide. He had a pretty twisted sense of humor. It was amazing. And it was rainy during the whole tour which made it even more perfect, in my opinion. Then we just went back to the hotel and crashed out for the night.
Sunday morning we slept in again but not quite as late. Once we finally got going, we went to get something to eat and then just spent the day shopping and going to museums. We went to the Ice Age Museum, the History of Chocolate Museum, the Museum of Torture, and the Wax Museum. It was a pretty nice day overall and we had a lot of fun just hanging out.


Program Week 4 (Vienna)

Well we made it from Munich to Vienna without incident. We all met up at the hotel to check in before meeting Dr. Wasser and Nils to go on a historical city walk of Vienna before going out to dinner as a group. I had my first experience with schnitzel and it was really good.
On Tuesday, we got up and went on a medical history walk through Vienna which was even more walking so I was concentrating a bit more on trying to block out the pain from my feet than the actual content of what Dr. Wasser was telling us. I was only about half there so there’s no telling what I missed. If anyone from future History of Medicine trips happens to read this, I have a bit of advice - Don’t get hurt! It may seem like common sense but, trust me, it’s a good kernel of wisdom to keep in mind.
In the afternoon, we went to the Sigmund Freud museum that was originally the house that he lived and worked out of for most of his life until he had to flee to London to escape the Nazis. Then we had some free time to get ready for the operetta that night. The operetta was a lot of fun. It was all in German so I didn’t understand a word of it but it was still a really cool experience. I wore a dress and makeup. My mom and friends from home are sure to make a big deal out of that because they know how rare it is for me to wear something other than jeans, t-shirts or tank tops, and tennis shoes or boots. It was really nice to be able to be outside at night and not bake. It was kind of cold actually.
Wednesday was a pretty short day program-wise. We just went to the Museum of Vienna in the morning and then had the afternoon off. I went shopping at the Spanish Riding School gift shop and then at H&M with Michelle and Carrie. Then I went back to the Spanish Riding School with Elyzabeth and we went on a tour. We didn’t get to see any sort of performance but they took us through a the stables, tack room, and they showed us the arena. In the tack room they showed us how every horse has it’s own saddle and bridle and how the saddles are custom made for each horse. Then they walked us through the barn, showed us a few horses and explained how they are all named and things like that. Then they took us to the arena and we got to sit down while they explained why the riders still take off their hats when entering the arena and things like that. They even have special sand in the arena that’s part sand and part fibers to give it more cushion. Then they took us outside and we got to watch some mares and their foals play around for a bit. That was a lot of fun and definitely worth the 8 euros I paid for it but I’m also a complete horse nut that’s to be expected.
Thursday was really long. It seemed like they tried to fit almost all of our program activities into one day. We started off the day by rushing to the university and listening to a lecture about how medical school works in Austria. Then we went to this house that was the first real insane asylum (they had just put all those people in jail before that). Now it’s basically a museum that shows all kinds of different medical conditions. They had things like cyclops babies in jars, prolapsed uteruses, different skin conditions, black/coal lungs and things like that. It was far from pretty but it was so cool. Then they took us to this library that had a bunch of old medical books. That was kind of interesting. They actually let us look through the books ourselves and see what all they had in them. Heather and I looked at a veterinary one and only about 1 in every 5 pictures actually resembled a real animal. Then we got to see a hospital that was built to give medical care to the peasants before we went to the museum of pharmakognecie. Then we went back to the hotel for a bit before going out for our farewell dinner at a brew house in Vienna. I didn’t enjoy it anywhere near as much as I normally would have because my stomach and the ibuprofen weren’t exactly getting along with each other. It was a really nice dinner though.
Friday morning, we got up, checked out of the hotel, and went to the natural history museum. It was pretty nice. They had a special parasite section that was pretty interesting. We had a pretty good guide too. He found out we were pre-medical and pre-veterinary students so he tried to make his tour more specific to us. We had some time after the tour to walk around on our own and I managed to find the horse evolution part which I liked. My hose lunatic side has really managed to come out this trip. Then we were free for the weekend. We went and wandered around for a bit before going back to the hotel to pick up our bags and then head to the train station. I had a nice little nap sitting on the platform while we were waiting on our train and then we were off to Prague for the weekend.

Munich

When we got to Munich we ended up just getting a taxi to take us straight to our hotel so we wouldn’t have to figure out public transportation with all of our luggage because we officially done in Bonn and starting on our two and a half weeks of living in hotels. Once we got to our hotel, we all agreed to have a nap time. It was glorious and we definitely needed it. We were a bit delirious which was shown by our random, uncontrollable laughing over seemingly nothing during the taxi ride. Our driver probably thought we were completely insane.
Once we all finally woke up, we walked to this really great Italian place that was pretty close to our hotel. Then we just went back to the hotel, relaxed and had a bit of a movie night. We watched The Proposal and part of Killers before we completely crashed out. Our hotel is really nice. We each have our own blanket and two pillow each and the beds are so comfy. I didn’t think I’d ever be so excited over a Holiday Inn.
We didn’t really do a whole lot on Saturday. Once we finally got up and going we went and ate breakfast/lunch. I split a pizza with Heather and had a beer and a choco-Bailey’s crepe. Absolutely delicious. Then we sort of wandered around a bit trying to figure out what we wanted to do. We ended up going to the zoo again even though we had gone to the zoo in Cologne a couple days before. We were a group of mostly pre-vet students so we used that as our excuse to justify going to another zoo and Matt didn’t really offer much objection.

The Munich zoo was pretty awesome. It was really pretty and natural looking. It made it really seem like the animals were in something close to their natural environments instead of an enclosure. We all had a lot of fun just wandering around. The only bad part was that my camera died so I only got a few pictures. We saw some “tarpans” though. That was pretty awesome even though they’re extinct and what we saw are just horses bred to look like them.

Then we went and met up with some other people at the Hofbrauhous for dinner before wandering around a bit and looking at whatever souvenir shops weren’t already closed. We ended up going back to the hotel relatively early and made another attempt at watching Killers all the way through. We failed.
On Sunday, we slept in again before going to eat breakfast/lunch at the Hard Rock Cafe. We had planned on trying to do some more souvenir shopping but virtually everything was closed so we ended up walking around at the English Gardens. The walking wasn’t exactly fun but it was really pretty and we found this sort of outdoor beer garden in the middle of it. I had a Raddler (beer lemonade) that was quite good.
Then we went back to the hotel and used the computers and workout room for a bit. Then we got yelled at for trying to wear swim suits into the sauna. Apparently the rules say you’re supposed to go in naked but that wasn’t going to happen. Then we finally finished watching Killers. It only took us three nights.
Then we got up Monday and made it to the train station and on our way to Vienna for the week. There was so much to do in Munich that we didn’t do but I’m still glad that we had a more relaxing weekend. It was much more enjoyable than running around everywhere and doing 50 million different things everyday.

Program Week 3

On Monday this week, we had class all morning and for the first part of the afternoon before we went to the Haribo outlet store to satisfy our sugar tooth and stock up on candy. Then we went back to the AIB and had a sort of movie night because Nils wanted us to watch Goodbye Lenin. I was sort of expecting some dry educational type of movie so it was much better than I had expected. When we first got there everybody just sort of wanted to go back to their host family’s houses to relax for the night but by the time the movie was over, none of us wanted to leave.
Tuesday was pretty awesome. We got up early to go on a cruise down the Rhine River. That was so nice. It was great to just be able to sit there, relax and enjoy the scenery and the company. Then we got out at this little town to eat lunch before we hiked up this hill to take a tour of a medieval castle that was apparently the only that wasn’t ever conquered. It really hurt having to walk around on all of those uneven rocks. I don’t think I enjoyed it anywhere near as much as I otherwise would have if I hadn’t been so focused on trying not to cry. Then they took us to a wine tasting. It was really nice but I felt pretty awkward and out of place at the same time. Simple country girl at a wine tasting in this really nice place. It really hit me then that I’m a long way from Bandera, Texas.


I got up a bit early on Wednesday morning to hobble my way to the AIB so I could go to a doctors appointment for my feet. The doctor didn’t really do a whole lot for me. He just gave me a prescription for some high dose ibuprofen and told me to stay off my feet. It was kind of an odd experience. The doctor acted like he didn’t want to touch me at all and he would only really talk to the student worker that came with me to translate, even if he was saying something in English to me directly. I am now taking about 2,400 mg of ibuprofen a day to keep the pain level down to bearable. I can’t believe I actually hurt myself. I can go jumping down waterfalls down the side of a mountain and only get a few bruises and scratches. I run around like an idiot at a soccer game and I rupture the bursae in my heels. Congratulations to me.
In the afternoon, we went to the Hause de Geschichte (German recent history museum). It covered pretty much everything from 1945 to present day. It was pretty cool for me to see something like that because in all the history classes I ever took all through middle and high school we were doing good if we made it past 1900 by the end of the year, so actually getting to learn about recent history is a new experience for me. Then class was cancelled after our tour so I had a chance to go get my hellish pain meds and then I just went back to my host family’s and tried to spend the night relaxing.
Thursday, I got up early again because I wanted to try and mail a box home to my mom before class started but the DHL didn’t open until I already had to be at the AIB for class. Dr. Wasser talked about the Nazi trials after the war and then we all went to the hauptbahnhof to catch a train to Cologne. We ended up heading to Cologne a bit earlier than was planned so we could meet up with our guide (who actually showed up this time) and go on our rooftop tour of the Cologne Cathedral. It was rainy and dreary which made the tour of this gothic church so much cooler than it would have been already and we got to see the gargoyles at work.

Then we got to go to the zoo. They were having an animal body worlds exhibit going on so we got to see that which was pretty awesome. I’ve always been a fan of going to the zoo anyways but it was extra nice to be able to at least see animals. I feel so animal deprived. Having to walk around definitely wasn’t fun but it was better than having to be carted around in a wheelchair. Nils offered to push me around but I felt pathetic and like a huge burden on everyone enough as it was so I just sucked it up as best I could. Which, in retrospect, probably wasn’t the smartest thing I could have done but my normal stubbornness was well at work at the time.

Then we made our way back to Bonn, I got my box mailed, and I spent the rest of the night enjoying my last night in Bonn and packing until I had to be at the train station on Friday morning so we could all get to Munich and start our weekend there.