I just recently came back from the rotary Euro tour, and it
was by far the best trip I have ever been on. If you did not already know,
exchange students are the coolest people on earth. And when all of us exchange
students get together, well things just get a little crazy. We are one big, loud
and fun family. We were a total of 30 students plus two advisors. We were 25
exchange students living in Norway, and five exchange students living in
Iceland— that went on the trip. We spent a total of two amazing weeks together
traveling all over Europe. We began by flying from Oslo to Berlin and then our
bus tour began. We had the same pink bus for the whole tour and we sure drove a
lot of miles. We began in Berlin, Germany where we stayed in a youth hostel
right in the middle of Germany’s capital.
There we visited various museums about World War II, and on that first
day we ate a very special German meal, called Spätzel, which is similar to
noodles just that they are potato based and much more tasty.
All of us on the plane ride to Berlin, Germany
A memorial park for to represent all those that lost their lives during World War II
Duncan, Josh, and I inside the memorial park
The delicious Spätzel
Duncan and I in front of Berlin's parliment building, "dem deutschen volke"
Giuli
After Berlin we traveled further south in Germany to the
city of Dresden.
Josh, Anne, me, Duncan, and Karlie
All of us exhange students
Karlie and me showing our California love
All the brazilians Juliana, Luiza, and Juliana
From Dresden we made our way into the Czech Republic where
we stayed in a hotel up in the hills of Prague, the capital. It was a huge and
beautiful city. It was also very interesting to hear a Slovak language because
it is so very different from most Germanic and Latin based languages.
Looking out over Prague
All of us dancing
Karlie and I in Prague
Running out in Prague's countryside
Karlie, Gustavo, Juliana, Juliana, and Luiza
After Prague we were off to the beautiful Austria. During
our days in Austria we ate a lot of Schnitzel and Apfelstrudel. Schnitzel is
the typical German dish and it is usually either fried chicken or pork with a
bready outer shell. Apfelstrudel is their famous apple pastry, which is very
delicious. Austria was one of the more quiet countries of the tour. It was very
peaceful and beautiful and its nature was just breath taking. The first city we
visited there was Vienna.
The Schnitzel
And sometimes we got a little bored on the long bus rides- and painting nails was a result
Inside one of Austria's famous churches
The famous Apfelstrudel
After a night in Vienna we took the bus to Salzburg,
and that city is the true heart of Austria. It is where the movie, “The Sound
of Music” is based. One of our nights here we were lucky enough to see the
musical reenacted.
Me with my big German chocolate pretzel
Anne and me, we decided to be twins for a day
Looking out over Salzburg
Karlie, me, Anne, Duncan, and Ellen walking to the musical
Juliana, Gustavo, and Juliana
Giuli, Karlie, Angela, and me
With the cast
After Salzburg we had a long bus ride to Lido de Jesolo, a
city in Italy right outside of Venice. We were in a hotel right on the beach to
the Mediterranean Sea, which I can now say that I have swum in. We spent a full
day in Venice exploring the historic city and all of its water canals. In the
days we spent in Italy, we had nice and hot weather, a nice change to the cool
Norwegian spring.
Benja and me
The Italians sure like their nutella
Benja and I on the boat to Venice
The delicious Italian pastries
Giuli and me
The beautiful Italian masks
Out at Lido de Jesolo
The interesting Italian stand-up toilets
Following Italy we made our longest bus ride, about 10
hours, to Lyon, the cooking capital of France. There we stayed the night and
the following day we drove to Paris. Along the way to Paris we stopped and had
a tour of Marie Antoinette’s house in Versailles, which was one huge house with
700 rooms! By nightfall we were in Paris.
The beautiful ruins of Lyon
Anne and I on our morning run through Lyon
Lyon, France
And once again we got a little bored on the bus so I braided Anne's hair into corn rows
And the result of the corn rows
Marie Antoinette's palace in Versailles, France
Inside the palace
Giuli, me, Karlie, and Lia outlooking the garden
The beautiful garden
In Paris we did a lot of walking. Our hotel was right on
Lafayette Street, one of the most expensive streets in Paris. And we were about
a half an hour walk from the Eifel Tour, right in the city center. During our
time in Paris we climbed the Eiffel tower, toured the Louvre, ate delicious macaroons
and baguettes.
The Eiffel Tower
Karlie, me, Angela, Anne, Josh, Duncan, and Giuli on the top
View from the top of the tower
Giuli, Karlie, and me in the center of Paris
Duncan and Anne eating baguettes
The Louvre
Me and Mona Lisa
After France we took a boat over to Calais, England. From
there we drove to London. The weather in London was not the best but it didn’t
do anything to change our experience. It was really weird for me to be back in
an English speaking country. But it sure was fun to pretend that we were
Norwegian tourists in the city. We got a lot of questions about what language
we were speaking. In London we saw the changing of the guard at Buckingham
palace. We took the tube, the underground rail system, all over the city. We
went to the covenant gardens, to Oxford Street, and Harrods.
Ellen, Angela, and me
Angela, Karlie, Duncan, and me out on the streets of London
Karlie and me showing off out London spirit
Changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace
Karlie in front of the London Eye
Countdown to the London Olympics
Oxford Street
Throughout the trip we were very lucky with the weather. We
had sun almost everyday with the exception to the rainy London weather. It is a trip I know none of us will ever
forget. We saw, experienced, and learned so much about the different cultures
and all of us students became even closer to one another (and I am pretty sure
that it is impossible to become any closer because we are just one big family).
It was one of the hardest things to say goodbye to all these people that we all
have done so much with over the year. We are students from all over the world
living in Norway. We have learned so much about each other’s different cultures.
We understand what it is like to live on our own in a whole new country. We
understand that with exchange come a lot of high points and also a lot of low
points. Together we all share so much in common, and we understand what it
really means to be an exchange student. We are all best
friends and we are all family—and we all understand one another so well. There
were definitely a lot of tears shed in the airport as we departed back to our
Norwegian families. And that is one of the hardest things on exchange. Over the
course of a year we tie ourselves to a completely different culture, we venture
out of our comfort zones to experience a new way of life and living.
We go to school, we make friends and we become one with this new culture.
Things that before seemed so difficult don’t seem to matter that much anymore.
And the things we value most after a year on our own, some people back home
just won’t understand. I have begun to realize how much I have changed as a
person, how now I hold myself to different standards than I had before—balancing
these two completely different worlds, trying to figure out what to hold on to
and what to leave behind is one of the hardest things. We, as exchange
students, really understand the true meaning of friendship. I have but only a little over a month
left of my exchange. Leaving this country I have grown so accustomed to,
leaving all the new friends I have made is not going to be easy. I look forward
to this last month; I just hope it does not fly by too quickly.
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