Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Update

So its been a while since i've updated this...sorry i'm not very good at that.

Anyway we have about 5 and a half weeks left here which is surprising how fast it has gone by now. At times it crawled by but now we have less than 40 days! We are fully into our field study and that is going well I'm enjoying both of work at the Nansen center and the county council, very informative however i'm not exactly sure what i'll be writing about yet...
My other major paper is my case study which I am actually really enjoying researching and hoping this will be able to help me for my capstone next fall and that paper is due in two weeks so hopefully it will go well. As I said not much is going on over here. It snowed two days before Halloween, and while I'm used to having wet Halloweens I have never had a white one. Halloween is definitely something that is very different over here, not many people decorate or go trick or treating however they do like to dress up and their are a lot of parties especially since it was on a weekend this year.

The only other interesting thing going on is viewing the election from over here. Everyone is ecstatic that Obama won. While he is our President-elect now and will have my respect I still hold many reservations about him which makes me in a one person minority over here. Thats fine with me but its still hard sometimes. I guess we'll see how things go but I have found it facinating how truly invested people from all over the world are in the U.S election. It has made me appreciate my ability to vote in that election.

I guess thats really all I have for now I'll try to update a little more between now and when I leave but like i said I don't really have much to report on right now...

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Venice

Picture links: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=76321&l=5c434&id=699291207
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=76324&l=a2df6&id=699291207
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=76327&l=adfb0&id=699291207

Venice was amazing, and I could write several blogs on our trip. I've been thinking about what I would want to say about it. For one it was a beautiful city, even though I'm not one for a lot of water, it was beautiful walking along the canals or standing on the Rialto bridge looking over the Grand Canal with the buildings lined up on either side, right next to the water. We kept thinking that it really does look like all the pictures we had seen. We couldn't believe it was really that pretty. There were no cars but watching the boats negotiate though the canals was a different form of rush hour. They have every function of another city but in the form of a boat; garbage, mail, personal boats, buses, taxi's, delivery, we even saw a boat that had frozen fruit or something to that effect that you could buy from it.
One of the things I didn't so much enjoy was the amount of people. Moving around was tough enough but having to have to navigate with our luggage was another story entirely. The only time we didn't encounter enough people to feel as if we would get run over was in the morning before 9 or 10 when the shops opened. At that point it was mostly locals on their way to work. And walking through rush hour n Venice can be just as hectic and terrifying as driving a car in any other city. It was the sheer amount of people though that really clued me into why the locals don't exactly the like tourists even if they are why the economy is thriving. With the amount of tourists to Venetians is about 400 to 1. The two place where that could be seen the most was the market place by the Rialto bridge and St. Mark's square.
St. Mark's square was really cool. The church was beautiful full of mosaics and various other decorations that would take forever to describe and unfortunately no pictures are allowed inside. Since we didn't wait in the line outside that would have taken hours because we were with a tour group we got the abbreviated version and only walked around the ground floor. We did however walk past where St. Mark's (or Mark, of the gospel of Mark, for those of us who aren't catholic) remains apparently rest. Adjacent to the church was the Doge's palace, basically the government building. One one side there was the prison, connecting the two was a bridge, famously known as the bridge of sighs because prisoners crossed it just before they were taken to be executed. On the other side is two pillars that are known as the entrance to the city. They also happened to be the exit since it is between the two that prisoners were executed, looking at the clock so they knew exactly when they died. Nice thought huh? As far as other major sights that we saw besides the Rialto bridge which was cool but it was just a bridge with shops on it, even if it is the oldest one in Venice. Anyway we went to the Academia museum, which is the most famous in Venice and toured around looking at the paintings. most of the depicted a biblical scene or a story from Catholicism which is what my mom enjoyed looking at most since neither of us are really the artistic type, but they were beautiful paintings.
As for my favorite part of the trip it would have to be the shopping. Everything there was just so cool. My favorite thing that I saw and luckily it was everywhere! were the masks that are traditional in Venice for the Carnival that takes place in February. They were all so amazing i had a hard time keeping my eyes off of them. During our tour we found out that the masks were used during the early venetian period as a way for politicians to keep the anonymity while doing deals that may have questionable morals. After finding this out I realized why I liked them so much :). Prostitutes however were not allowed to wear them, their identities had to be known, as well as commoners. Only those with status or a title could wear them. The glass that came from Murano island was also incredibly cool.
I decided this blog would be less of a day to day occurrence and more about what I liked and disliked. As I have said in my other blogs if you want to know anything else about it just ask. If I think of anything else I'll make a new blog about it.Thanks for reading!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Venice- getting to our hotel

So for our mid semester break my mom came over and took me and Makara to Venice for a few days. My mom got here on Friday and I picked her up from the airport and got to show her around Hamar a little bit, again such as my apartment, school and places I normally go to. On Saturday afternoon we went down to the Oslo airport because we had a 6:30 am flight on Sunday. We ended up eating dinner at the airport since it had the most selection of food that was too expensive, as compared with our hotel. Our hotel was literally across the street from the entrance to the airport which made it easy to go back and forth between except for the continuous downpour, biting winds and low 40 degree weather we werre encountering.
Sunday morning we got about 3:30 to take our bags over to check them. We came back to our hotel to check out and eat breakfast and then went back to go through security. We made it through and over to our gate where we sat for a while. They started to call for boarding and from where we were sitting we couldn't see a plane but thought it was only our angle. As we walked down the gate we saw people going down stairs and no plane to be seen. Everyone was getting on a bus, we were so confused, especially at 6am. The bus drove us over to our plane where we then had to stand outside in the freezing cold and wet tarmac as we climbed up some steep stairs to finally board the plane. This was only the first flight of the day. On the way to Amsterdam we were able to watch the sunrise over Europe. The most beautiful part was flying over the Alps. They were the most gorgeous mountain range I have even seen in my life. After the plane landed in Amsterdam we had to negotiate our way through a very busy airport to find our next gate since we only had about an hour before the plane was to take off. This time there was a plane to get directly on to and the second flight was as uneventful as the first.
After we landed and got our bags we tried again to figure out where and if we go through customs. Again we don't, so technically we have no proof we were ever in Italy, but we were. My mom figured out where we were supposed to go to catch the water bus to get to Venice. We got down there and boarded the bus that would take about an hour to reach Venice. Me, loving boats so much, had a great time especially when bigger boats went buy and our boat had to slow down to go over the wakes. After a few stops and about an hour we made it to the Rialto bridge stop where we got off. All the bridges in Venice are stairs, we each had at least two bags and my mom had four because she was taking some things home for me. We had no idea which side of the bridge we were on. It was about midday and we were getting hungry and had already been up for some 9 hours. We asked an Italian which way we needed to go and he pointed us in the right direction but we had to go over the Rialto. One of the busiest spots in Venice, next to St. Mark's, it was jard to get over the bridge with all of our bags but we finally did it. We were only a few blocks from our hotel but since we were having trouble reading the signs again we had to ask for help. We finally made it to the hotel and draged our stuff up to the third level, again no elevators. The room was beautiful though and we were very excited that we were actually in ITALY!!!!!

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Hillary and Jeff's visit

Sorry I haven't updated in a while, not too much was going on and then a whole bunch of things happened at once.
The first thing was that Hillary and Jeff came to visit me here! They got to Norway on Sunday and through Wednesday morning they were on Norway in a nutshell. Wednesday morning I picked them up at the Hamar train station and brought them back to my apartment. Wednesday for the most part we just hung out and I showed them where I live, go to school and a little bit of the town. the weather wasn't great the first or the second day so it was hard to show them how pretty it was when we were walking around on Wednesday. Thursday I had class all day so they had to fend for themselves. Friday we decided to go see some of the things in Hamar I hadn't really seen yet. However since I hadn't been there before and we didn't have a clear idea of where we were going or a good map we pretty much just walked around Hamar and eventually ended up at the train museum which Jeff had wanted to go to. Most of the touristy things close in early September as we had found out and even though we got to walk through the museum it wasn't as it would have been if it were during the summer. The rest of the day we hung out, they made dinner for me and Makara and it was delicious :D, because i had cooked on Wednesday evening, theirs was better though. Saturday we went down to Oslo and looked at some of the main tourist attraction there such as the royal palace, a couple of museums and Vigeland sculpture park, which is one of the most famous places in Norway. We had dinner and I got the 7:30 train back to Hamar so they could catch their flight the next morning.
It was hard to say goodbye since I haven't really been able to talk to them while i'm over here except on facebook, but I really enjoyed their visit and it made it easier on me to have family visit in the middle of the trip. It gave me something to look forward too when adjusting here the first month or so was difficult. It made it easier to say goodbye, even though i was sad to see them go, was that my mom would be coming in less than a week and we were going to go to Venice for my break.
My blog about Venice and my mom visiting will be in a few different segments so you may read them as you wish :)

Friday, September 19, 2008

End of Module 1

Our first class ended this morning after turning the final paper. The last lecture was thursday and all in all it was a pretty good first class. This past week went by pretty fast except for the fact I've been sick. Monday night, since we didn't have class until the evening on teusday, we celebrated my 20th birthday. We had nine people here the seven Americans (including Makara and myself) and Afrika and Gerson two of our friends that we've made while we've been here. We had margaritas (my favorite drink) and just hung out dancing, playing games and talking.
I'm looking forward to the next module that starts on monday and I'm especially excited for wednesday since my sister and Jeff are coming to visit!! Then it is only one more week until our mid semester break which means that we've been here for almost 2 months already and have only two months left. It has already gone by so quickly I can't believe it.
If anyone has any specific quesitons about what i've been doing, learning or anything else feel free to ask, i'm trying not to make my blogs too long and boring.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Excursion

So last Monday which also happened to be my birthday our class, Society and Culture, set out on a excursion to see other cities in Norway and get a better feel for how the welfare state works. Our first stop was a 3 and a half hour train ride north of Hamar in a little mining city called Roros. (picture link, http://www.new.facebook.com/album.php?aid=71511&l=dcac7&id=699291207 copy and paste it)
Roros was found in 1644 after a man who was hunting reindeer. The man shot a reindeer and it tripped over something shiny. This prompted the man to begin building a town beginning with the Furnace. There are two main streets in town running parallel with each other, mining street and church street. Mining street had the furnace as well as many of the high powered officials of the company with the director at the front of the street so that he could see everyone who was coming or going from the town. The other street, Church street was named for the church that was built on it. It is the 3rd largest church in Norway holding over 1,000 people. On an average Sunday there is usually no more than 20 or 30 in attendance however on Christmas eve the church is full to capacity. It is most evident in the church of the class system. First off men and women were to be separated on the two sides of church. The place that a person sat also noted there standing in the town and it could easily be seen if someone received a promotion during the past week because they would then be sitting closer to the front of the church. Our guide also told us that because of the mining process and the sulfur nothing was able to grow in Roros until 1953. Much of the town is also historically preserved, even the waste called slag, that is produced during the mining process. No one in the town is allowed to change the basic structure inside or outside their home. Another rule that has also protected the town immensely from becoming a ghost town is a law that requires home owners to live in their residence the majority of the year, meaning it cannot become a seasonal town. After our tour of the town we were free to do what we wanted until we met for dinner. Makara Genevieve and I decided to set out in search of the largest desert in Scandinavia that was about 2km from the town. We set out not entirely sure the direction we were supposed to go however we did see if from across the road. We weren't able to find the trail to get to the actual sand but it was still pretty cool to be able to see it. We were also told that it couldn't technically be a desert since it received about twice as much rain as the average desert but the sand is similar to what you would find and it was left over from the last ice age.
We left Roros and took another train up to Trondheim (pictures, http://www.new.facebook.com/album.php?aid=71521&l=034aa&id=699291207). On the train ride up to Trondheim we had a very interesting time. Genevieve (from Ithaca college but part of our PLU program) and I were making cootie catchers or fortune tellers and having the Tanzanians take turns with them. We also introduced them to MASH were you predict what kind of life that a person is going to have. We all had a great train ride up sharing what we did in elementary school with the others in our class. We arrived in Trondheim and headed to our hostel. I've never stayed in a hostel before and it wasn't what I expected. It was as if I was back in the dorms at school, 4 people to a room and a bathroom down the hall. They had a breakfast spread in the morning and a room with a TV (we never really watched it though). I went to bed as soon as we had gotten all the room settled since we had to get up at 7 the next morning.
On Tuesday we walked into town to meet with a local politician who discussed with us how the labour party was operating in Trondheim. The current mayor has also apparently done a very good job of keeping the promises that were made during campaigning. During her first term it was free and available kindergarten and during her second term she has been working on enough quality care for the elderly. After meeting with the politician we had lunch and then walked over to Nidros Cathedral the largest church in Norway. We got a tour but we weren't able to take pictures inside. The history of the church is extensive (you could look it up on Google if you want to know more about it), the inside was beautiful. It is almost impossible to describe but it has been one of my most favorite places I have visited in Norway so far. After the tour of the Church we visited the Archbishops Palace that is now a museum, including the royal regalia. We saw the clothes that the king wears when he is crowed, the royal jewels and the crown for the King, Queen and Crowned Prince. Nidros Cathedral is where the coronations take place. After our scheduled visits we had the afternoon and evening off. Makara, Genevieve and I again set out and walked around Trondheim. Shopping in Norway however gives you a heart attack, there is no pleasure shopping here since everything is twice as expensive. With not much else to do that night we headed back the hostel sat in the main lobby and talked. The next day in Trondheim we did a walking tour of the town. We first walked to the Fort in Trondheim that looks over the whole city. The fort was taken over during WWII by the Germans part of it was even used as a prison for those who were loyal to Norway. One place in the fort that we saw was a place that those loyalists to Norway we brought and executed. It could be heard all over Trondheim and the citizens knew what had happened. After we walked through the fort we walked to the University of Trondheim. As we walked through the University you could see the buildings become more modern from the first building in the front built in the 19th century to the building in the back that was built in the last 10 years. We headed into the town and then took a taxi to the music museum. This museum had some of the most obscure and very old instruments. The museum was not one of my favorite parts of the trip, mostly because my knee was hurting from the walking but there was still some pretty cool things.
After the museum we went down to the boat launch to catch our ferry to take us to Kristiansund. We arrived in Kristiansund around 8:30 and made our way to the other place we were staying. It was like a motel only they weren't rooms, it was cabins were 4-6 of us would be in an area it had beds, a kitchen and a bathroom. It was nothing like I've ever seen before but it was pretty nice. The first day we toured some of the different companies that work within the oil industry that is based off shore of Norway. The next day we took a hike around town with Inger's second cousin as our tour guide. We walked to the church in town, one of the most modern structures I've seen. The building was designed to let the light play inside the building. It was completely different from Nidros Cathedral or the church in Roros but they all had the same feel when I stepped inside, the churches in Norway have all been completely beautiful, all were Lutheran as well, since that is the state church. We walked through a park that the city helped to restore and then up to another park that was nicknamed lovers lane. Some of the most beautiful scenery that I have ever seen besides the the sunset over the water on the rocks the night before. We hiked up a little further and reached the highest point in Kristiansund where there was a tower that was built to help ships see the islands of Kristiansund. After we took pictures over looking all of the town (
http://www.new.facebook.com/album.php?aid=71544&l=911ea&id=69929120), we hiked through the woods to a chapel on the other side of town and walked through one of the most unusual and beautiful cemeteries I've ever seen. The cemetery was divided between the rich and the poor, which was one thing we noticed through out the entire trip, how very class ridden the whole society was when everything was built. We walked through the cemetery and to another part of the sea side. Most of the beaches in Kristiansund were large rocks that were actually very fun to climb over. We walked back through the hiking trails and made our way back into town where we walked around some more before we headed to dinner. It was our last dinner as a group. The whole trip went pretty well, the more time that you spend with people from other countries the easier it is to see the differences in culture. It was definitely an experience of this trip that I'll remember however a week is definitely a long time to be with a group of people who see things very differently and trying to work around that.
The only not fun part of the trip was the bus ride back. I still hate bridges although i did have to walk across half a dozen bridges during our trip (terrifying but i did it!), however since Kristiansund is made up of four islands to get to the mainland several bridges were involved, we were also traveling at night on a bus that made several stops, needless to say the motion sickness patch I hoped would work didn't. After some time the 8 hour bus ride did improve until we finally reached our apartments at 5:30am Saturday morning.
Sorry this was so long, if you have any more questions, I was trying to shorten this up some, email me or leave a comment. Hope everyone is enjoying my blog!! See everyone in 3 months!

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Another week. (picture links!)

So this past week has been very uneventful. Its hard to believe I've already been here three weeks! It still feels like I just got here. Classes are going well and tomorrow we are heading off to Trondheim and Kristiansund so that we can see and experience the welfare state first hand. We'll be gone one week and I'm sure that when i return my blog will be very long!
This entry doesn't have really any stories to tell but just to let everyone know thing are going well over here. I'm not putting up pictures on my blog but here are two links to the photos I have so far, http://www.new.facebook.com/album.php?aid=68948&l=612b0&id=699291207 and
http://www.new.facebook.com/album.php?aid=68952&l=689ce&id=699291207
Enjoy!