Sunday, September 26, 2010

Just another Sunday at the bøgcafe

CPH
58 degrees, cloudy, windy


One thing I really like about Denmark is that even though the weather here is, well, miserable everyone has such a good attitude about it.  If you can't beat it... go inside, drink hot chocolate, wear a sweater or two (or three), and just forget about it.  Today was that kind of day so I headed to the bøgcafe (book cafe) which is one of my favorite spots here.    



Dad- you would love it.  Although, you would have to bring your own book because all of these are in Danish.  


-Allison

Happy New Year!

CPH
59 degrees, cloudy

This weekend we brought in the new year Denmark-style.  No, it was not the danish new year that is on January 1st (you may think this is obvious but you would be surprised how many people, including myself, asked).  The Danes love themed parties and so friday was new years!  Everyone dressed up to get in the spirit of the night.  Julie, Læsse, and Kaspar worked all day cooking for the feast.  We put two tables in the hall so we could all eat together.  The table was covered in streamers, poppers, small fireworks, and candles.  And, to improve the atmosphere we covered the motion sensor with ducktape so the lights would stay off.  We ate and talked for a very. long. time and by the end it didn't seem so weird to be sitting in a hallway, halfway around the world, in the middle of september celebrating the new years.
There is a lot more to a Danish new years celebration than just eating and drinking and counting down to midnight (although those are three very important things).
Every year the Queen speaks at six o'clock on TV so we watched an old speech on youtube.  This was followed by singing the the national anthem and a few other traditional new years songs.  I did not take part in this nor did I understand anything the queen said, but that didn't detract from the experience.  It is also a tradition to watch the movie The 90th Birthday.  The movie is also a drinking game... oh typical Denmark.  Here are the rules: every time the butler drinks you drink and every time the butler trips on the tiger rug you also drink.  If you watch the video you'll know why I say yikes.  What makes this game more challenging is the fact that you are drinking fisk which is a unique Danish alcohol.  Fisk is some kind of terrible that I've never tasted before.  It is like a combination of mouthwash and liquorish.  Those two flavors on their own are enough, but together?!  WHY?  Anyways, I STRUGGLED through the movie.  The next tradition made up for it.  At midnight we all drank champagne and ate marzipan ring cake.  If fisk and marzipan ring cake were on a scale from one to delicious.... you get it-- they are polar opposites-- marzapan ring cake is freaking delicious!

It was certainly a night to remember and a great memory to have from my time here.    

  

Monday, September 20, 2010

CPH
57 degrees, rainy

Today's topic, dear reader, is sports.  
I write to you today not as a student in Denmark, but as a Buffalo Bills fan in Denmark.  Bills fans are notoriously loyal supporters of one of the worst teams in NFL history.  But the Bills record is neither here nor there.  Yesterday, I went to a soccer game FCKøbenhaven against Brøndby.  To put it into perspective for you Brøndby is a little bit like the Bills, they aren't too.. shall we say...adept on the field.  But, what the team lacks in ball-handling skills the fans make up for with enthusiasm!


Wouldn't you light your chair on fire if your team got scored on?!?  What I love about this picture though is that NO ONE CARES that the chair is on fire.  No one is even looking at it!

There were several small chair fires throughout the game.  As well as some flare displays:



The game was halted at one point when they started throwing the flares ONTO the field:



But, nothing says GO BRØNDBY like setting the building on fire


That at least got their attention.

(I was paying attention to the game I swear)


-Allison





Thursday, September 16, 2010

CPH
59 degrees, rainy

Two quick updates about things I did this week.
 
Tuesday night: Kate Nash concert at Vega.  This was a great concert!  K8 (as my friend George calls her) is quite a good performer, theatrical without going over the top, and extremely talented.  She writes all her own music, has a really cool/unique voice, and plays the guitar or piano in almost ever song.  If you don't know her music I highly recommend you check it out.  



Next, a Wednesday study tour with my Danish class to Roskilde Cathedral.  This is the church in which  all the Danish monarchs are buried.  It is on the small side as far as cathedrals go, but it is an extremely interesting amalgamation of architecture and interior design styles.
    

During the reformation, the inside was stripped of its catholic decor --artwork, furniture, light fixtures, etc.  The Danes, being...well Danes repainted the inside more to their taste.  





Not so churchy anymore.



Just a quick update for now- more soon.

-Allison

Monday, September 13, 2010

Danske Post

CPH
60 degrees, rain when its least convenient.

Today, I received my first cool piece of mail.  I have been getting A LOT a junk mail in my mailbox since I arrived BUT today I got a very important envelope.
Yes yes.  Its true.  I am now a card carrying member of the Danish Welfare State!


(Glamour shot!)
But, there you have it.  This little beauty "covers expenditures for acute medical treatment under the Danish Health Act during periods of vacation".  
I also like the last sentence "In the event of serious illness or death please contact ..."
oh no problem I will be sure to call IF I DIE. 

I can also use this card to get into local libraries.  Neat-O.


vi ses,
Allison

Sunday, September 12, 2010

A weekend of adventures

CPH
63 degrees, sunny, windy with sprinkles (of rain)


Well well well.  I have made it back from my first study tour with my European Politics class.  We fit a lot in two and a half days.

We left Copenhagen thursday morning and drove to Jutland which is the part of Denmark that is attached to the European continent.  The only way to drive to Jutland from the Islands is across the Store Bælt Bridge- the third longest bridge in the world and our first destination.


The Bælt Bridge also includes a train tunnel that goes under the water making passage from Jutland to the Islands exponentially more accessible today than ever before with the ferries.  Structurally sound, architecturally interesting, good for Denmark's economy, nice location, etc.  For all of these things it gets an A.  But, F to the government for the $45 dollar toll to cross it and an F to the bridge company for flooding the tunnel during construction and then setting it on fire once it was finally drained.  Also, an F- to the drunk russian captain who drove his ship into the bridge.  

The next stop was the Dybbøl Banke, which was the sight of the Danes heroic military stand against the Germans in 1864.  Let me give you a brief recap of the battle.  The war began in March so in February the Danes began to build their fortifications.  Naturally, they call up GERMANY for their supplies.  The Germans, needing only half a brain for this, figure out what type of fortifications the Danes will be building and how many it is possible for them to build.  Ok. So not a great start.
The war starts, a few battles are fought, and the Danes retreat to their position at the Dyybøl banke.  This is were they have built all these fortifications with German lumber.  So the Germans blow up most of these right off the bat.  The ones left standing are declared off limits by the officers so the soldiers had to stand outside and many froze to death.  Right.  You're probably wondering how they stacked up in combat?  Well, they didn't fire the cannons because they were so inaccurate that setting them off would a) not hit the germans and b) draw attention to their position and prompt the Germans to shoot at them.  So the cannons are out of the question.  Their guns were also slightly older than the German's.  While the Germans could simply load their guns by dropping a cartridge in, the Danes had to STAND UP, pour in the powder, then the cartridge, push it all down with a ram rod, and then fire.  If you made it through all that without being shot, props.  To make it worse, many of the Danes were highly untrained soldiers and many of them forgot to remove the ram rod before shooting.  The historians who searched the battle field many years later were initially confused to find so many ram rods left on the field, but I'm sure the German's were more perplexed at the time.
As you may have figured out on your own, the Danes lost this battle (and the War).

That night we went to dinner at Royals BBQ and Restaurant.  Once the group was seated, the serves excitedly told us that we would be eating hamburgers for dinner.  You would think, or at least I did, that a restaurant with BBQ in its name can probably serve up a good, if not great, hamburger.  Incorrect.  Hamburger = beef patty with a huge piece of butter on top, no roll, and a FEW veggies on the side.  It's whatever.   

On to Kiel where we went to two presentations about the German government and Germany's role as a member of the EU.  All good stuff.  Had lunch on the water, walked around and then hopped on the bus headed for Lubeck.  

Lubeck is beautiful, just beautiful.  It is one of the few northern German towns that wasn't bombed during WWII.




That night there was a big festival with lots of music, beer, sausages, and doughnuts.  So we spent the night hanging out, eating, dancing and getting a good dose of German culture.  Our teacher, Jacob (pronounced yacob), (former cabinet minister of the Danish gov't) came with us to the festival.  




He is called, by some, the George Clooney of Denmark.

The next morning, a little earlier than we would have liked, we began a walking tour of the town led by a strange and hilarious man.

Biggest. moustache. ever.
He has a HUGE moustache and a deep froggy voice and if you combine those with his tenuous grasp on the english language you end up with a unique walking tour experience.  I had a great time on the tour which at times made no sense or was just straight up inappropriate.

We ended the tour at the Schiffergesellschaft (give that name a try), an old restaurant that was used by mariners for hundreds of years.  It reminded me of a scene out of Moby Dick.  It was very dark inside with lots of candles, paintings of the sea hanging on the walls, and lots of model sailing ships hanging from the ceiling.    

From here, we headed back to Copenhagen.

The End.

-Allison  



   

Monday, September 6, 2010

Dinner Club

CPH
60 degrees, sunny

Today was the first night of dinner club with my Danish hall mates.  Dinner club meets four times a week and everyone rotates through cooking.  I have a few weeks to figure out what I am going to make.  Up until now I have been eating a lot of eggs on toast, salad, and pesto pasta for dinner...yikes.  Tonight was a wonderful change of pace.  The menu? Bacon Pie.  Alright!  The food was good but it was even nicer to spend time talking and laughing with this unlikely group of people.  I forgot how much I miss sitting down to a dinner table and relaxing.

At the end of the meal everyone gathers around the table to decide who will do the dishes.  I must say, they have a great system for choosing. Everyone  rolls dice.  If you roll a six you are free from cleanup duty.  You keep rolling and passing until there are only three people left.  Four, four, four, four, four.  Yahtzee! Unfortunately, that didn't get me out of cleanup.

Vi ses (we'll see each other later),

Allison   

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Weekend Edition

CPH
61 degrees, sunny

Friday:



I went to Tivoli Gardens which is the second oldest amusement park in the world!  I have never been one for amusement parks maybe its my propensity to be motion sick or maybe that I just think amusement parks in the US are just dirty and over-used. I DONT KNOW. But what I do know is that I love this amusement park!  Some words I would use to describe it are charming, delightful, magical, enchanting.  A few steps through the archway and SHAZAM a peacock.  When have you ever seen a peacock walking around at Darien Lake?

And they don't just have fancy fowl.  Everything is fancy!
The lights, the fountains, the gardens, the rides, the candy, and even the souvenir shops were more little boutiques you would find on a street.
  



The park includes all sorts of rides: ferris wheels, roller coasters, bumper boats, and this awesome safari themed merry-go-round.  The also had carnival games and one in particular which I think is awesome.  You get five wooden balls and you throw them at real dishes to try and break them.  There didn't seem to be any prizes for hitting the plates other than the enjoyment that comes from smashing dishes that are neither yours, nor yours to clean up.  
This is one amusement park I would DEFINITELY come back to.

Saturday:
Weather - 62 and sunny

More of a low key day today.  I spent a few hours walking around Copenhagen University's Botanical Gardens.  




The greenhouses are just packed with plants and there is no real rhyme or reason to the way anything is arranged.







The gardens outside are all meticulously designed and maintained and because its free lots of people just come to hang out, eat lunch, or just take a nap.


    

So that's what I've been seeing.

Till the next, 

Allison

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Field Trippin'

CPH
65 degrees, SUNNY

Wednesday is the DIS designated "field study" day and today was the season opener.  My Danish Politics and Society class headed over to the police department to meet some of Denmark's favorite civil servants.  This isn't a joke though, they really do like the police here.

So friendly!

We role up to the police station where we meet Kaspar who is in charge of the platoons.  Cool guy.  He gave us a quick run down of the history of the building, which I will share with you because I think it says a lot about the attitude the police have here in denmark.  The police headquarters is a formidable stone building meant to give the impression of strength and power.


                             
BAM.  
But, then you go inside and its a whole different... well, building.  Ten percent of the total project budget was spent on decorating and ornamentation.


 
"Floating" stair case

This attention to detail and refinement is very much a part of the way the police go about their jobs as well.  Police protocol in Denmark is extremely civil, well planned, and efficient.
Examples: 1.  Kaspar explained how billy clubs are often considered to be an excessive use of force.  2. When you are being arrested- two police officers hold your wrists, put their other arm under your armpit, and walk you away.  3. Instead of spraying tear gas, Danish police have created a soap spray that "blinds and confuses" the person creating problems.  4. Instead of using people and fences to make police barricades they line up their fancy police trucks in a line so no one can pass.  This also gives them the option to "sit inside and eat chocolate," Kaspar's words not mine.  

They've got one hell of a system going over here and the thing is, it works!  Something like ten officers have EVER died in the line of duty in Denmark.  So tip of the hat to you Denmark police- keep up the good work.