Thursday, July 20, 2017

Summer Updates! (Long post)

Classroom packing was quite the job.
It's summer here, which means lots of festivals and celebrations popping up, everyone we know is traveling somewhere, and the weather rotates between warm (80s to low 90s at the hottest) and cold/raining (50s-60s). It's a decent balance, a little tricky without air conditioning, but overall, feels very mild compared to what we hear is happening on the East coast in terms of heat waves at the moment! June 30 was the last day of school for Sarah, who ended the year having to pack up someone else's teaching stuff and move rooms for next year. The woman who she was covering for did come in and clean out some of it, but otherwise there was a lot of box packing and moving going on in the last week of school for Sarah. 
We learned about the Wolpertinger, a
Bavarian bigfoot, so to say. Here's a
weirdly taxidermied one in a window
display in Garmisch!
We've been up to a few things this summer. First up is German courses! Joe is taking one through work and Sarah signed up for one that just runs through July, since school is out. We're working on our vocabularies and knowing when to use the "Akkusativ" or the "Dativ." In some situations, people have stopped responding to our German with English, so that's a good sign that we're improving. 

Something really neat Joe got to do was called the B2Run. Held at the Olympic Park, which is obviously becoming a favorite place for us, this was a 6k race that all the local businesses compete in. Every office sends a team. They get fancy running shirts, they train and prepare, and boy do they show up! There had to have been over 30,000 people there to run. It was so packed and full. Joe ran with his work group, and I was naive enough to think I'd be able to find them there...nope! In the pictures below you can sort of see the crowd, but it's probably hard to tell the capacity from the photos. It was neat to see all kinds of offices sending teams to compete. 

This was just the crowd walking toward the start line, which was probably still 500 meters away. So many people!  
This is a huge open area and it's completely full of people! The stadium is in the background, where the race ends.


In the distance you can see the stream of people running. Joe said it was kind of hard to actually run because the path, which is only a few people wide, was jam-packed. 


Next up, we got bikes this past weekend! We feel like true Münchners now that we can bike everywhere. It's actually fairly lovely to ride to a biergarten and hang out or to be able to take ride a bike to the store instead of always having to walk. Sidenote: they do have the appropriate headlights and bells, as those are the legal requirements here. Our second day owning them, Joe suggested we ride to the lake by the school where Sarah works, and so off we went. 24 kilometers later (around 14 miles), we made it to the lake, Starnberger See, and had some lunch before deciding maybe we'd take the train back with the bikes, instead of riding home, as we were pretty tired from the ride there!  It was still a lovely time, even if our bums were a bit sore at the end. 

Sarah's bike! We bought them at the Olympiapark Flohmarkt, which is like a giant
flea market that happens every week. 

Joe's bike!


Lake Starnberg


In June we played soccer with some friends a few times at the Olympiapark indoor arena, and we went to the Tollwood summer festival one afternoon to wander around, see the artwork, and of course partake in a bier and a brezen. We had the freshest pretzel we've ever eaten- it came straight out of the oven- and now we're not sure how we will ever eat bread outside of Germany ever again. 
Outfitted for Tollwood.
These were Roswell-esque wood carved statues.

This is a GIANT flower made entirely
from old metal road signs! 

Tollwood sights! To the right is a "beach" complete with sand and beach chairs where people could sit and eat, and in the background is a stack of cars. Just, a stack of cars. At night it's illuminated and really beautiful, actually. The arts at these festivals is truly unique! 


And now for the big update- our jobs! Sarah is happy to report that she's been contracted to cover a maternity leave position at the Munich International School in Starnberg for the 2017-2018 school year, and is really excited to fill this teaching role. At the moment it looks like she'll be working mostly with 3rd grade students who need learning support and the 3rd grade team, as well as working across curriculum and grade levels with colleagues as needed. She's excited to learn a bit more about what makes a school PYP (pre-IB diploma track) and to continue to work with students who need that little bit of extra support. Joe, on the other hand, is even happier to announce that he's been awarded the Humboldt Fellowship. This is long-awaited news, as he applied back in February after working on the application since our arrival September! The Humboldt is a fellowship award that only makes it to 13% of applicants, so it's a big surprise to find that he was awarded one! What this means is more funding for Joe's current lab and their projects, and a 2 year position to continue working with the group at Max Planck. For us, this means we'll be here in Munich through the fall of 2019, most likely. That could always change depending on the job search Joe will do toward the end of the fellowship, and when the start date would be for whatever his new job is. 

We are rather excited not to have to face moving next summer, although we know this makes it more difficult for family since we will be abroad a year longer. For us, that seems like a good incentive to plan a visit to see us! We do have plans to be back stateside twice before the end of 2018, so we'll be able to see family and friends then. For now, that's all we have! We've got a special offer awaiting us on AirBnb, so perhaps in August or September we'll travel somewhere else! We've still got space on our pullout couch for Oktoberfest if anyone's interested.... ;-)
We biked past the Oktoberfest grounds, and this is what it looks like mid-July. They've already started setting up the tents! 
Up next, we're preparing for a big visit from Joe's family, where we'll meet them in Venice and then we'll all trek back to Munich after a few days. We are excited for the visit and to see family! 

More Hiking! This time, the Garmisch Partnachklamm and the Schachen

Inspired by new hiking backpacks and proper hiking boots for Joe, we embarked on another hiking adventure one Sunday in early June. Joe's colleagues shared some books with hiking routes, and we looked through them and chose to hike to the Schachen, which was meant to be a hideaway in the Alps for the king, back in the day. It's a fancy house truly hidden in the hills. There is a path to drive most of the way up, but we chose to hike up. By our estimates it was supposed to be around a 3 hour hike, but it turns out that it was really 3 hours one way. In total, we were walking (through the town, to the hike, the hike, the hike back, back through the town) for probably around 6-7 hours! The first part of the hike takes us past the Winter Olympic grounds (from the 1930s) and through the "Partnachklamm" which is a gorge between the town and the alps. It's a beautiful walk through the gorge, and was a welcome break from the heat of the sun. Once you make it to the other side, there are many hiking trails that split off into various mountains of the Alps and a restaurant, so one could just go through the gorge, have a nice lunch, and go home. For us, of course, that was not the plan! It was certainly a tiring day, but worth it for the views, the exercise, and the experience. We had a great time.  Here are a few of our favorite pictures, and here is a link to the full album, because Sarah took a TON of pictures.

The ski jumps at the older Olympic Park! By today's standards, these feel horribly undecorated. 

Hiking Routes. If you can zoom in enough to find "Schachen" that's where we went :)

A picture while walking through the gorge.

View from the bottom of the gorge!



The view from the far side of the gorge. Amazing! 


There were stacks and stacks and stacks of rocks on the river at the far side of the gorge. Not sure why, but they were there!

Wondering when we'll reach the top, as this seemed plenty high...
The first hour of hiking was pretty much this.



Thinking we were close to the top. It was still another 45 mins.


The Schachen!

Picture with the Bavarian flag at the top of the mountain.


Not the schachen, but a cute little shack nonetheless.

Bavaria. 

Matt and Lish visited!

Back in May we had some much-welcomed visitors! Sarah's brother Matt came to visit with his newly-ringed fiance for some much needed sibling hangout time. We did some hiking in Tegernsee, ate at many biergartens in the lovely spring weather, and saw the sights and sounds of Munich. We also spent a day in Salzburg where we toured a castle, walked A LOT, and ended our day with a sprint from the Monk's brewery to the train station, as we hadn't been paying attention to the time. Don't worry, we made  it back, obviously!

Here are some pictures from the visit!

Hiking in Tegernsee. Here we are just at the start! 
We hiked past the starting point for a Paragliding adventure. Here, there were several waiting for their turns to glide above the town and the mountains! 




The view of Tegernsee from the top of the hike. The mountain top is Wallberg. Looks like a postcard! 

Joe and Lish at the top! Most hikes here have crosses at the true peaks of the mountains. 

Much deserved bier at the end of the hike. Matt couldn't wait to try his, as the Dunkel biers were a favorite of his.

Inside the Parish Church St. Andrä in Salzburg 
In the Mirabell gardens (also Salzburg).


The view from atop Castle Hohensalzburg




A playground meant to improve climbing skills. Matt and Joe enjoyed some climbing and swinging here at this part, which looked like it was meant for adults as much as it was meant for kids!

Matt, Lish, and "The meat plate." Joe was probably cracking wise as we were taking this picture. We had a fun visit! Glad they could make it out to see us! :)



Monday, June 12, 2017

A Little Trip to Rome

The last weekend in March, we flew to Italy for a chance to meet up with a friend in Rome for a few days! Sarah's former co-teacher Caroline was going to Italy for her spring break, and we decided to take a trip to visit her and see the sights in Rome. We saw quite a few sights, in fact. According to the pedometers on our phones, we walked close to 40 miles in 3.5 days there.

We had an absolutely wonderful time. The weather was perfect, the crowds were small, and the sights were...OLD. Sarah spent a lot of time reminiscing about Latin class, ancient Roman politics, and the marvel that is plumbing (which was created in Ancient Rome, and which she talked about at length each time they passed a public drinking fountain), and Joe discovered that in Italy you can order pasta that comes to you served, steaming hot, out of the inside of a cheese wheel. It was a grand time! We even lucked into seeing the Pope's weekly address (on accident), although it was given in Italian so there's not a lot of it we understood. Something about bring light into darkness and being Christ's light in the world ;-).

Here are a few photos, and here's the link to the whole album (fair warning, there are like 400 pictures!).

Enjoy!
Flying over the Alps! 

Hanging out in the gardens at Villa Borghese

Inside St. Peter's Basilica
Inside St. Peter's Basilica


At St. Peter's Square, where we saw the Pope give a greeting. He was high up in the residence area (not this building), so
getting a good picture didn't really happen. 

One of the original Ancient entrances to the city, on the Via Appia! 
Inside the Roman Forum

Visiting the Pyramid of Cestius, an Egyptian pyramid built in Rome. 


View of a government building from the Ponte Matteotti bridge on the River Tiber.

One of the aforementioned public drinking fountains.

Obligatory Colosseum photo!