Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Riga, Stockholm, and the Things Between
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Riga After All
Monday, February 8, 2010
A Polish Igloo, Fires, Hockey, and Brussels

Random Observations:
- The flusher (is that the right word?) on every toilet is on top of the tank not the front side.
- Swedish people rarely say "excuse me" when passing. There more likely to shove you.
- Europeans think it's strange to only have cheese on a pizza. Good luck finding that here.
- Cars are legally required to have their lights on all the time.
- Modern buildings are built with spiral staircases that only let one person walk at a time.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Apologies if the formatting is weird but blogger doesn't seem to take well to having Word 2007 docs posted in it:
This past week wasn't as exciting as the past few but I'll report my observations. My classes are plodding along well. Swedish is very easy, grammatically speaking, the pronunciation is nearly impossible. I've probably mentioned that before but it's true for me. I'm enjoying the class nonetheless because we're all in it together and misery loves company. We learned the Swedish word for flashlight, ficklampa, which made all the German speakers giggle me included. "Fick" means something dirty in German look it up if you really want to know. It is also similar to the Swedish custom of fika, which is the requisite twice-a-day, long coffee and pastry break. We were told during induction week to go for a fika break. Another amusing example of the fun of language is the Swedish word 'gift' pronounced yiiift. It can mean marriage or poison!
I finally got around to buying a alarm clock-radio this week and observed something unpleasant: electronics are expensive in Sweden! The cheapest, in all of its negative connotations, was 200:- and that's about $28.00! I bought it at a Best Buy type store so that might be the reason, but that still seems overpriced even for Best Buy. I was hoping to listen to Swedish music but all but one of the songs I've heard has been in English even the Swedish artists! I did discover the winner of the Swedish version of Idol, Erik Grönwall. His number one hit and winning song is a decent cover of "Higher." It probably didn't hurt that he's easy on the eyes.
I took the wrong bus by mistake one day this week. It gave me a chance to the outskirts of the city. The bus I wanted, #26, was supposed to come at 3:25. A bus did come at that time but it definitely wasn't the one I wanted. Instead taking the lakeside road north to Vilhelmsro it went south. Soon as we kept going around the roundabout I pushed the button, instead the usual string in the States, for the driver to stop. Once I got of the bus I started walking towards what I thought was downtown. Well it wasn't the right direction so I ended up in God-knows-where-Jönköking. I almost flagged down a passing police officer but decided against it. (Side note: The police drive station wagons. I’m not sure if they’re Volvo but his is Sweden so that’s a safe bet. Offices also wear uniforms almost completely covered in reflective material. At least the ones walking around do.) I trudged back to where I got off and followed the road back to the Juneporten the main transportation hub in the city. Once I finally got on the right bus I ran into one of my dorm mates I hadn't met yet. He was a very nice, shy, engineering student from Poland and one of the guys who built our welcoming snowman.
Several people from the "house" as we call it went to Copenhagen for one the Australian guy's birthdays. I wasn't invited which was fine they probably went to change their drinking scenery. But it did spur discussion among the rest of us and we've started planning trips of our own. Destinations include Copenhagen, Stockholm, Gothenburg, Tallinn, and London. I'll let you know if and when things come together.
I gave into temptation this week and went to McDonald's. If anyone has ever told you that it tastes different in Europe, they're lying or delusional. It tastes the exact same, at least in Sweden anyway. It was nice to have a little slice of home even it was mediocre fast-food. While wondering around downtown in the middle of the week I decided to try pizza in Sweden. I picked a small place on a sidestreet. I think i was the one restaurant where they don't speak English! After trying my five phrases in Swedish and gesturing I finally ended up with a ha and cheese pizza. It was very thin, uncut, and baked with a slightly sweet bread. It was different than home but not bad. I could grow to like it.
We are all assigned various cleaning duties throughout the semester. This week I was assigned to clean the corridor I live on. So a nice but kind of odd Russian guy vacuumed and mopped the orange hallway. It was surprisingly quick and easy job. It only took us about a half-hour; other people have taken a long time on there tasks such as cleaning the bathrooms and kitchens.
One day while waiting for the bus by the Soviet-esque grocery store I decided to walk back. I found a beautiful trail that follows the edge of the lake from Vilhelmsro to downtown. I’m sure it’s a lovely walk in the warmer months. I’ve decided to follow it to school once it’s warm enough.
I forgot to mention this last week but it's a good story. Last Friday those of us who didn't have class were sleeping in the morning. I was starting to get moving when there was a very loud, brief ring of a ball. I thought it was a dream and laid back down. It happened again so I got up and popped my head out. A few other people were doing that too and I had an image of prairie dogs in mind. We wondered around to see if anyone knew what was happening. It turned out to be the landlord testing the fire alarm. According to the housing office he was supposed to warn us and hold a real drill. That didn't happen. I've stories form others about him and they're not good.
The weekend saw the usual crazy dorm antics. There were wrestling matches, chasing, and knocking furniture over. A French Canadian and English Canadian got into a couple wresting matches and had their own Civil War. A Mexican guy and a Bulgarian girl also got into a match. It was very entertaining to watch. They also chased each other around the house. When I walked into the common room on Sunday morning, I use the term loosely, many of the coaches were knocked over apparently in an attempt to create a bar?
I had to end it on a drunken note but that’s a major part of life in Sweden so there you go.
Random Observations:
-Pizza places always serve kebabs
-Many stores have red carpet out front. Not for elegance but so you wipe your feet
-If you speak Swedish with a foreign accent expect answers in English
-The liquor is only open for four hours on Saturdays.