February seemed to fly by! On the 13th, USAC had an excursion planned for all the students. It was a day trip to Basque towns around San Sebastián. We visited a Basque farmhouse, a church that has a very modern style, and looked at rock layers in Zumaia. The Basque farmhouse is now a museum for people to see how they lived relying on the land. The church was built in the 1950's and had a very unique style. It was very interesting. The rock layers are studied by geologists because they date back millions of years. It was a great day and informational for all of us.
Last weekend was a four-day weekend, so I decided to fly to Hamburg, Germany. My friend from Flagstaff, Brittani Davis is studying just north of Hamburg. I also have two German friends that live in Hamburg that I wanted to visit, Fabian and Maxi. Fabian studied for a year at Flagstaff High School and I have kept in touch with him since. Maxi is a good friend of Fabians, and now is Brittani's boyfriend. The start of the trip was very rough. After missing a flight and being stuck in Frankfurt without anything for a night, I FINALLY made it to Hamburg to meet Brittani and Maxi!
We spent the weekend touring Hamburg and Lüneburg. Lüneburg is the town that Brittani is studying in. In Lüneburg, I went to the church where Bach began learning piano and saw the street that is named after him. Lüneburg is the only town that wasn't bombed during World War II, so everything looks so old and all made of bricks. It wasn't bombed because it was an important place for salt mining. The salt was used as a spice and food preserver for soldiers and civilians all around. The streets are cobblestone and it was a really beautiful town to walk through. The most interesting thing for me were the gold tablets. As we were walking around, Maxi pointed out the gold tablets to me. They were cemented into the ground in front of doorways where Jews lived during World War II. A tablet would have a person's name, birthday, the concentration camp they were taken to, and the date of their death engraved in it. Growing up you learn so much about the Holocaust, and to actually see something first hand in Germany was unbelievable.
Hamburg was a great city also. There were waterways everywhere, a beautiful harbor and lakes. I stayed at Maxi's house with his family for the weekend, which was great because it was a true German feeling! I tried Currywurst (which was delicious), great beer and traditional German breakfasts and desserts!! Flying home was a bit of a hassle again with both of my flights being delayed, but I finally made it.
The weather in San Sebastian this week has been beautiful! Finally feels like the beach town it is supposed to be...but I think rain comes again tomorrow. Classes are going well and I'm still learning more Spanish than I ever could at home! Patrick is coming April 2nd and we're planning on traveling so I've been doing lots of research for that! Two girls and I are trying to plan a trip to either Prague, Czech Republic or Dublin, Ireland for our long weekend in March! So tough to decide! :)