Snapshots of the Week

Please pay a visit to my galleries at Flickr to see all of the photos from my trip. Each week I will select 2 photos to feature here.

You are browing the archive for the ‘Observations’ category...

Feb
28

Well, Hej!

I’m back with the blog! It’s been a while, hasn’t it? I decided to return to Copenhagen for the spring 2009 semester, and after a wonderful Christmas break back at home in NC, I am back in Copenhagen! I’ve been back here for a month now. At first it was rough re-adjusting to the 6-hour time difference and life in the dorm. But after about 2 weeks I finally got back on track.

Classes are very interesting. One of them is called Knowledge Media in Society, and it focuses on various types of media and how they interact in a knowledge society. The other course is called Science Studies, and it is a course in the philosophy of science. Not any particular science, but just science in the sense of knowing. I’m sure I’ll have a better explanation of what the class is about as time goes along!

Well I’ve got a lot of ideas for blogs this time around. I will be much more diligent about blogging. :-)

We had quite a bit of snow the past few weeks. I will post pictures in the next entry. The weather has warmed up considerably and now there is no snow whatsoever on the ground. Plus we had a few hours of sunshine yesterday. It was amazing. I almost forgot what a sunny day looked like! :-) Also, the days are getting longer. Back in December it was dark by 4 pm, now it gets dark at around 7:30 or so. I’m really looking forward to the long hours of daylight later this spring.

I’ll be back soon with a new post (pictures of the SNOW)!

Dec
16

Danish Christmas Dinner; Class Christmas Party (and Earthquake)

Just got back from a wonderful Danish Christmas dinner held in my kitchen! The people in my hall are great cooks, lol. Well, we had pork, caramel potatoes and red cabbage. For dessert we had “ris ala mata” with cherry sauce. It’s basically some sort of rice with whipped cream and milk and almond nuts, topped with cherry sauce. Only one whole almond is mixed in, and whoever gets the whole almond gets a present! We had a nice time even though I couldn’t understand any of the Danish being spoken at the table. I could, however, pick up a few randon words here and there. But next semester I will be taking a Danish class and will hopefully be able to follow along with coversations to some exent. :-)

Last week the International Students at RSLIS held a Christmas party as well. Everyone brought things they eat for Christmas back at home, so we had a wide variety of foods from many different countries. It was all delicious! Since I didn’t have the time (or the skills) to make anything (at that time I was still trying to finish up my project paper), I brought popcorn, popped over the stove!

The Danes really get into the Christmas spirit. The Christmas decorations around town are wonderful. I will try to take some more pictures of them later before I leave to go home!

One more thing — apparently there was a minor earthquake this morning. The epicenter was somewhere in the southern part of Sweden, not too far from Malmo. Some people in Copenhagen felt the tremors. I slept right through it. Man, the first earthquake I ever experience and I sleep through it. Oh well.

Oct
24

October updates!

Here I am, back with another update! First I want to thank everyone who left such nice comments on my last post, I really appreciate it! :-)

Secondly, there are HUNDREDS of new pictures on Flickr from this past month. I’d been too lazy to upload them but they are finally up now. Whew!

Well a lot has been going on for the past few weeks and I don’t even know where to begin. I suppose I’ll just mention the largest highlights:

The Bike
First, I got a bike! I got it from my classmate, Maria who let me have her old one when she got a nice new one! Thanks Maria!! :-) I got some things fixed on it at a bike shop and have been riding it around a park near the dorm. It’s a nice bike!! Yes, I still remember how to ride a bike, even after not riding one for over 10 years! I took it out in the street a few times as well. It’s going to take a while to get really used to riding it in the street though, since people here drive like they are trying to kill you. But the nice thing is that all the drivers here actually look for bikes at intersections, and the bike lanes are sooo nice and wide. Copenhagen is built for bikes! :-)

Afenginn Concert
I have a new favorite band!!! Thanks again to Maria, I was introduced to this wonderful Danish band called Afenginn, and went to their concert in Nørrebro almost 3 weeks ago. They play this amazingly unique, energetic and upbeat folksy music, and some of the songs have vocals. The vocals are in this invented language that sounds a little like Latin with other stuff mixed in…it has almost a choir-like sound. I love them and have been listening to their songs over and over and over and…yeah. They are playing again in about a month. I’ll be at that concert for sure!

Culture Night
October 10th was culture night. Museums, businesses, libraries, restaurants and plenty of other institutions all over the city stayed open all night and people could come in and view exhibits, go on tours, try new foods, hear music, etc. For 75 Kroner, the culture pass allowed free entry into all of the culture night exhibits and free transportation on the Metro, busses, S-trains, etc. I ended up going to 2 places, an art museum downtown (I forget the name, unfortunately, but they had a lot of stone sculptures) and the old stock exchange building. It was interesting, people were dressed up in costumes. Heh. There were so many lines that it was hard to get in anywhere else.

Fall Holiday: Louisiana, Zoo, Malmö
Last week was the Fall Holiday. It was a nice break from school before all the major project work begins. On Tuesday we went to the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art to see this manga exhibition. It was really neat, and in addition to seeing the manga we checked out some other exhibits. Plus, the grounds outside of the museum are amazing. Pictures are on Flickr.

Then on Saturday we went to the Zoo and had a fine time. There were soo many animals yet it was all very close together and it was easy to see everything. They had a monkey house, a giraffe house (but we didn’t get to see the giraffes because they were cleaning the house. Oh well), a huge elephant house, a butterfly/tropical house, reptile/lizard house, a petting zoo area and a lot more I’m forgetting at the moment! We even saw part of feeding time for the lions! Haha. I’ve got plenty of pictures of the zoo up on Flickr!

Finally, on Monday, I went with Yeliz (who is from Turkey and in the bachelor’s program at RSLIS) across the bridge to Malmö, Sweden! It took less than 40 minutes total to get there by train. It’s a very nice and peaceful over there and thankfully we had nice weather (although it was quite windy). Malmö, we walked around the shopping streets, visited an old church, and a castle (one of the oldest surviving castles of the Renaissance period) that had been converted into a museum, saw the famous Twisting Torso tower and walked around by the waterfront. For dinner we had kebabs! The guy at the kebab stand was a little rude but the food was good!

The funniest thing that happened in Malmö was when we were looking for the museum and entered this old little building that LOOKED like it could be a museum…we weren’t sure where to go so we went to the desk labled “Information” up front. The lady didn’t even look at us even after we tapped on the window and called, “Hello? Excuse me…” We both realized that maybe she had some sort of problem (as in not “all there” in the head).  We decided to go on upstairs but saw no signs or any indication of where to go. I thought that maybe it was just an old house for people to tour or explore. Upstairs, we found a coffee vending machine and were almost about to buy coffee and tea but decided to do so on the way out so we wouldn’t have to carry it around the exhibits. We went around the corner and ended up in a hallway; maybe this was the main exhibition area or something. There was a door nearby. Yeliz slowly opened it and we both peeked in — and found ourselves staring into the faces of at least 10 older men decked in black and white suits sitting around a table in the midst of what looked like a business meeting. We were both like, Oh-My-God and quickly dashed out of there. Oopsie. Looks like it was a private office building we’d walked into!!! We couldn’t stop laughing. We had been about to buy hot drinks from their vending machine and everything. Shortly after that, we found the actual museum (the castle museum). What an experience!

Other places of note:
I’ve also visited Christiania a few times, both by night and by day. Christiania is an alternative, hippie-like neighborhood-community within Copenhagen (in Christianshavn). They have their own government and there is an on-going controversy over whether or not it should stay separate from the city. It’s a very interesting spot…a little touristy, but still different. At least 800 or so people live there, in unique homes around a lake shaped like a thumb. You are not allowed to take photos anywhere but we did manage to snap a few when we went to a Jazz night at a club there. By night, Christiania can be a little creepy since there are no streetlights (only bonfires and lasers whenever they have a laser-light show).

We also had a chance to visit the Black Diamond, which is the Royal Library of Copenhagen. It’s one of the architectural marvels of the city, and on the inside it looks like mall, not a library. There are old fashioned reading rooms as well as modern ones. I can’t wait to go there to work on my project paper. Sure beats working in the dorm!

That’s about it for this update! Til next time!! :-)