Friday, May 28, 2010

JYM Bayernabend - Day 33

When I bought my Dirndl, I made sure to buy it in time for JYM's Bayernabend Party - a Bavarian themed party at JYM.  Gabrielle and I had a lot of fun shopping for our Dirndls on 29 May, the day before the Bayernabend Party on 30 May (Day 33, if my count is still right).  Then we had lots of getting ready for the party, and of course, at the party itself.  I know some other people took more pictures than me, but here are some of the ones I took:

The group of us who came in Tracht - Dirndls for the girls and Lederhosen for the guys:

In the front: me, Eileen, Gabrielle, Melissa, Amanda, Tina, Ali

In the back: Landon and Jeff


Eileen and me:

Gabrielle, me, and Jeff: 



Kathryn and me:


Nolan...not quite in Tracht, but still a great shirt!

Brijhette, Nicole, and Gabrielle:

Even the JYM statues were decked out for the occasion!

 
And Hans-Peter in his Lederhosen...I think he pulled out his pipe later in the evening:

Part of the entertainment for the night was a live traditional Bairisch music group...a man, his two daughters, and a family friend.  They were pretty good...the two girls sang for some of the songs and their voices were really good too.

One interesting thing though, was that where most people drink water while they're performing, they also had a bottle of beer to go with their water.  I guess that's how you know they're German!

They also performed a traditional German dance - the Schuhplattler.  Basically, the girl spun around in circles, and the guy did all sorts slapping of his feet while moving around.  I don't know how else to describe it, but it was cool...

The girls played guitar/clarinet, sang, danced, and played the accordion too!


After the group performed, those of us who went to the Bayrischer Volktanzkurs performed two of the dances we had learned.  Then, everyone just hung out, danced, and had some snacks and beer.  Not a bad way to end a night!

Actually that wasn't quite the end of the night...after the party a group of us went back to Kathryn's room to hang out for a bit, and ended up having quite the discussion about what kinds of American accents we all have (I think this is one of those instances where Mom would tell me that this is why she doesn't worry about me doing drugs...).  We took some online accent quizzes and they were pretty accurate for most of us.  I apparently don't really have one, just a "non-accent" which I'm okay with - much better than a southern accent!  This is also one of those conversations that we just keep repeating, because every once and a while one of us will say something with a really strong accent and the rest of us feel the need to comment (and maybe laugh).  But that was still a great way to end a night!

Cirque du Soleil - Day 32

I don't even know what to say about Cirque du Soleil.  It's been about a month since I saw the show with my friend Gabrielle, and I still can't comprehend half of what happened.  The only explanation we've been able to think of is that the Cirque du Soleil company wrote God a letter and asked him to suspend the laws of nature for a couple hours every day so that they could practice and perform their show.  Because really, there's no way the tricks they did followed the laws of physics.  We weren't allowed to take pictures during the show, but I took a few on the way to the stadium and snuck a few inside before the show started.

The show was on 29 April (Day 32 of my stay here, if anyone's still keeping track) in the Olympic Stadium in Olympiazentrum.  I've never been out there before, but it was a pretty cool place:

I'm not sure what this building is, but it looked interesting:

Along the way, we passed BMW Welt - a BMW factory or museum or showroom or something else cool - because yes, BMW has its headquarters in Munich: 
There's a nice park out in the area too.  Gabrielle says she's been out there a couple other times to relax or do homework:
 
This was part of the main Olympic Center, but I'm not sure exactly what kind of building it was.  Either way, it looked cool:

 
We finally made it to the stadium to find that the show would take place inside these tents, which were set up in the middle of the Olympic Stadium.  I'm not going to lie, I was pretty excited at the fact that the circus actually took place in a circus tent :)


  We bought the cheap student tickets, but the stage was set up so that everyone had a good view of what was going on.  These are some of the pictures I got before one of the employees told me to put my camera away:
 
Varekai was the name of the show.  The premise was that a young man falls from the sky into a new world at the summit of a volcano.  The new world - Varekai - is full of extraordinary magical creatures and the story follows the young man as he explores Varekei and interacts with the creatures there.  There were also more traditional "circus-y" parts to the show, such as a singing act, a magician act, and a juggling act.  The singer and the magician were both ridiculous - the singer had to run around the stage because the spot light never stayed on him, and the magician's assistant was hilarious - but my favorite was the juggler.  He started out juggling the normal things like clubs and balls, but then he switch to juggling little mini balls with his mouth, kind of like when you see someone spit a loogie into the air and then catch it, except he did it with four or five balls.  He was my favorite, outside of the main story.

We were sitting off to the side of the stage, so we didn't have a straight view of the set, but we could see just about everything:

At different points throughout the performance, a few of the performers dropped onto the stage from the platform that you can see lit up in the center of this picture, including when the main character opened the show by parachuting into the new world Varekai:

 These poles were used throughout the performance as part of the background, through which the different performers appeared on stage.  The performers also climbed the poles and swung around between them:

That's all that I was able to get of the actual set, but I bought a program as a souvenir and took some pictures of the pictures in the program:

This is the main character, parachuting into Varekai and doing his acrobatics around this net.  He spent probably about ten minutes swinging around, wrapping himself in the net, unwrapping himself, and doing all sorts of flips and tricks:


This was one of the other main characters.  She was some sort of contortionist, and Gabrielle and I decided she must have zero solid bones in her body - she bent herself into a pretzel, twisted so she was halfway upside down, and did all sorts of other things that really shouldn't be humanly possible:

These were some of the mystical creatures in Varekei and did all sorts of flips.  Half of the time, one of them was flying through the air:

I don't know what kinds of parents let their kids join the circus, but these boys' parents knew what they were doing.  They had a juggling and tumbling routine:

These guys were crazy - all four of them were doing flips and trick off of one trapeze, and half the time they were either climbing all over each other or hanging on to the trapeze by one hand - or doing both at the same time:


This picture didn't turn out so well but this act was so cool that I had to post it:

The guy on the bottom would flip the guy on the top around on his feet, kind of like a seal flips a ball on his nose.  They just kept going and going, to the point where the guy flipping through the air was moving so fast that he kind of looked like a human wheel. At one point, the flipping guy stood on top of the bottom guy's feet and tried to flip from there and land on his feet again...he missed, but got right back up and started flipping again.  That was the only mistake I saw in the entire show, and I was so impressed with how he started again right away that it really didn't matter.

Finally, at the end of the story, the two main characters get married:


I wish I had a picture of the wedding feast, which was the grand finale.  I can explain it much better when I can use my hands to illustrate, but clearly, that's a little difficult on a blog, so I'll do my best.  They brought out these two huge swings, and at first I thought they were just going to walk around on them, maybe go upside down, maybe do a couple of flips off of them, but instead, they went absolutely crazy.  Two or three people were on each swing at a time and would take turns flinging themselves off the swing to land either in a giant canopy that was in the background or on another guy's hands, who was waiting on a platform to catch them.  Then, the two swings turned towards each other, and the performers started jumping off one swing, flipping like crazy in the air, and landing on the other swing after passing someone else going through the air in the opposite direction.  At this point in the show, Gabrielle and I were both going mental, convinced that someone would miss the swing, but everything went perfectly and we were just left completely mind-blown.

Gabrielle and me after the show - I'm surprised our chins weren't on the floor:

So yea, that was Cirque du Soleil.  I'm so glad I was able to go see it, and that Gabrielle was able to come with me - I was originally going to go on my own, but it's always so much more fun to have a friend with you when your mind is blown.

Here goes! - Day 61

Alright...

Meredith left today to go home and back to the real world (who needs that?).  I can't believe her two weeks here went by so quickly, but this means that I now have time to catch up on my blog...so here goes!  I'm going to start from when I last blogged and work my way back to now - starting with Cirque du Soleil!

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Okay, new plan... - Day 58

So.  Tonight is the first night that Meredith and I have been done with our sight-seeing activities and back in the room before midnight, so clearly I have not had much time to update this blog.  And of course, tonight I have all sorts of homework to catch up on before classes in the morning, followed by classes all day tomorrow and a trip to Nuremburg on Thursday.  Meredith leaves on Friday, and we're trying to cram in as much as possible between now and then, so I probably won't have much time before then.  But here's the new plan: on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday I will update my blog with a billion pictures and stories.  I have nothing planned for this weekend except sleep, blogging, and homework (in that order) with some hanging out with friends thrown in there for good measure, so hopefully I will be able to catch up.

Just so people (ahem, Kristin) get off my back about updating and posting pictures, here's a little teaser:


Ten points to whoever figures out where I am and what I'm doing there.

Toodles till Friday! :)

Sunday, May 16, 2010

The lost three weeks... - Days 29 - 49

Where has the time gone?  So much has happened since the last time I posted...

First, I still have more pictures of my dirndl and more stories about the breathtaking Cirque du Soleil show I saw on April 29th, and of the JYM Bayernabend Party on April 30th.

Second, I took a billion pictures while I was in Spain last weekend, where I saw my roommate Emily and explored the city of Bilbao and the beaches nearby.  I was there May 6th through May 9th...well, I was supposed to be there through May 9th, but after a change of plans - thanks to the lovely volcano - I got an extra night in Madrid in a fancy-schmancy hotel with a bed wider than I am tall, and got back to Munich on the 10th.  I missed a class because of the flight change, but really...I suppose I can't complain.

Finally, my friend Meredith (who I've known since middle school) got here on Thursday for a two week visit, and we spent the weekend with my friend Karthryn (from JYM) in Salzburg...I took even more pictures in Salzburg than I did in Spain, which is really quite impressive.  Meredith and I are going to Prague, Bamberg, and Nuremberg this weekend - I have next Monday and Tuesday off from classes because of a holiday - and are also trying to figure out when she's going to see all the different things she wants to see in Munich.

Of course, in the middle of all this fun, exciting stuff, I still have to do the boring stuff like classes and homework, too.  I really really want to post all my photos, so I'm going to start picking out the one's I want to post, but I make no promises of how soon they'll actually make it onto the blog...all those pesky classes keep getting in the way!  Since I'm about to fall asleep at the computer, I don't know if I'll get any up tonight, but I'll at least get closer to posting them!

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

The lost week - Days 29 - 39

So...several cliches apply here.  "Time flies when you're having fun" and "so much to do, so little time" are the two that first pop into my head because they're both ridiculously true.  I can't believe how fast time is flying by!  I feel like I never have time to slow down because I'm too busy having fun.  I definitely want to catch up on this blog with what I've been up to for the past week and a half, but it's way too late here to do all that (or early, I suppose, since it's now after midnight).  But at Kristin's insistence, I'm posting this tiny little snippet of a preview about all the things I've done since the last time I posted.  I probably won't get the chance to write anything else until Monday, because...are you ready for this?...I'm going to Spain tomorrow!  I'm going to Bilbao, which is somewhere near northern coast of Spain, to visit my friend and roommate Emily, who is studying there this semester.  Hopefully when I get back I'll have a billion more pictures to share and some time to post them, but for now, here are two of last week's highlights:

CIRQUE DU SOLEIL!  Completely amazing...I think my jaw was on the ground for at least 24 hours after I saw the show Thursday night.  I went with one of my friends, Gabrielle, and the only satisfactory explanation we've been able to find as to how they do some of the acrobatics and tricks that they did is that they simply ask God to suspend the laws of physics and nature for a couple hours every day so that they can rehearse and perform their show.  It was truly unbelievable!


And the other highlight of the week?  Something without which my trip to Bavaria would not be complete - a Dirndl:
 
 We had a Bayernabend party (a Bavarian themed party) last Friday and quite a few people wore Tracht (traditional Bavarian dress - Dirndls for the women and Lederhosen for the men).  It was a lot of fun, and I bought my Dirndl just in time for the festivities.

Lots of other stuff has been going on too - classes, hanging out with friends, trying to squeeze in some sleep - and I'll try to fill in some more of the gap on Monday, but for now I have to finish getting ready to go to Spain tomorrow!

Bye until Monday!