Montag, 27. Februar 2012

Göttingen, Day 1

Hi Mrs. Amri's class!

At the moment I'm studying at the University of Göttingen.
I am there "undercover"  (means: "sacked in") and listening carefully. I'll be a tech savy eagle, when I will be back, I'm sure! And maybe, I 'll have got an Eagle BA degree.

First we had a look at the campus.
These are some of the new buildings.


They have a very old building in the middle of the city as well.
The University of Göttingen is rather old and very famous. Surely you know some of their professors.
You don't??
Do you know Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm?
You don't??
Ah - but you know Little Red Riding Hood.
And you know Cinderella.
And you know Sleeping Beauty.
Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm collected all these fairy tales and many, many more from narraters, wrote them down and let them print for the very first time when they worked here in Göttingen, so that everyone could read them and tell them to all children - and especially you.

On one of the new buildings there is a big ball.
"Giants playing basket ball again?", I asked Mrs. Schicke.


"No", she answered. "Looks more like playing golf, this time."
But it is not a giant golf ball, but a real observatory with a big telescope inside.

Then we made a walk, because we had some time left, before our lectures at the university started.
Guess where I am sitting on!





Some stubs?
Might be.
But no! Not exactly.
This is petrified wood of some giant sequoias - up to 40 m high and about 35 000 000 years old.
Now it is stone, which still looks like wood, but it IS stone. 
We found it in  "Geopark" at the university, a geological open air museum.
I never had thought, that stones could be interesting such a lot.
But they had stones coming from vulcanoes and stones, which were catapulted 20 km high, when an asteroid fell on earth during the time of the dinosaurs and pretty marble stones and big stones, which were moved to Germany by ice streams during ice age ....
Stones are SO interesting!
But at last we had to go to the lecture.

There we had a lot of fun, because Mrs. Schicke learned how to write a computer program to control a small lego vehicle.
Can you imagine a whole class of grown ups playing with lego bricks?? 
Crazy university!!

Samstag, 25. Februar 2012

Lazy Day

Hi Mrs. Amri's class!

Today I had a very lazy day.
We had sunshine most time of the day and it was rather warm.
Mrs. Schicke did some gardening.

She said: "Don't go to that flower bed. You will get dirty."
And she said: "Dont touch the hedge trimmer!"
And she said: "KEEP OFF THE SAW!!!!"

So I went sunbathing on the lawn. 

Freitag, 24. Februar 2012

Going Fishing

Hi Mrs Amri's class!

As I told you yesterday, I went fishing this morning.
I was very successful and caught a BIG plaice.

Plaices live on the sea ground. Often they just lie flat on the sand.
If they are afraid of something, they carve themselves into the sand a little bit.


Watch, how they are swimming!


At Langeoog they live beyond the sand banks, but sometimes they hide in the tidal channel near the beach. In summer people go there and walk along this channel. If they are lucky, they step onto one of them. Then they just keep standing there, bow down and - catch a plaice by hand! 

I had mine for supper today.   

Donnerstag, 23. Februar 2012

Flying Lessons

Hi Mrs Amri's class!

I am on Langeoog again.
Today I went to the beach for the first time.
See me flying in the strong wind!


I had a look over the wide, wide sea and took a good breath of wilderness!

We made a long walk along the beach and I met some friendly seagulls. We had a good chat about fishing here. I'll try it tomorrow, I think.

On our way we passed the national park area. There were some boards to explain the tourists the landscape, the plants and the animals, they could see here.
One board was very interesting to me. It told about the marsh harrier, a remote relative of mine. It shows the art of flying, in which the male marsh harrier tries to impress his female.


You see, he is going up very high and then falling down, head first, spiraling a little bit and flying a loop.
"That's easy for a bald eagle", I laughed.
"Ok", said Mrs Schicke. "Try it. Show me!"

So I went up VERY high and then fell down, head first.

   
I flew belly down and belly up.



I even tried some spirals and some loops.



After all that I felt -  rather sick.



That's no way for a bald eagle to fly!
In this way I would never impress a female bald eagle!!

The only thing she would think about me would be, that I possibly never had learned to fly properly...

Dienstag, 21. Februar 2012

In Search for Springtime

Hi Mrs Amri's class!

"Carnival" is for chasing the winter away.
That was yesterday.
So, today should be springtime in Braunschweig.


I begged Mrs Schicke for looking for the spring.

It MUST be somewhere! 

And really - we found it!
We went to the botanical garden and saw

 Palm trees


Palm trees?? No, of course not. 
It is curley kale, a vegetable, which is very famous in the North of Germany during winter. The traditional dish is potatoes, a LOT of curley kale and "Bregenwurst" (which also is named "pinkel" ), a very special kind of sausage, which in earlier times contained pork's brain. 
I would like that, because I am an eagle, but Mrs Schicke don't. 
Today it is just a sausage made with a special recipe. 




Then we went on and found

Snowdrops (Schneeglöckchen)


and winter aconites (Winterlinge)


I think they look funny- everyone wears a little green collar under his yellow head.

Then we passed a sequoia tree and I got homesick a little bit.
I took place on one of its branches and had a rest until I felt better.
I love the smell of the sequoia tree.


At last we saw a witch hazel (Zaubernuss).

Look at these wonderful blossoms!
And now I know, springtime has come!

Montag, 20. Februar 2012

Carnival, Carnival!

Hi Mrs Amri's class!

Yesterday was a very special day - Carnival day in Braunschweig.
We went to see the parade.
First we had to pass the medieval part of the town.

You see all the nice wooden framework.
Houses were rather high and "deep" in those times, but not very wide.
This was, because people had to pay a tax for their houses and the amount of this tax depended on the length of the house at the streetfront. So they kept this side of the house as small as possibel - except they wanted to representate their wealth.
These houses are kept not so well, but you can see a very, very small house - just two windows wide at the front.

Can you draw a framework house? Or even build a model??
Try to omit the diagonal rods. What happens?

Everywhere I saw people dressed up.
I saw tigers and dragons, monsters and batmen, smurfs and vikings.
And then I met someone, you know very well :
I even saw a laughing house!

I was very astonished. Never before I had heard of a house like this.
It was colorful and looked crazy. No straight line anywhere!
Mrs Schicke told me, that this house is a project of the american artist James Rizzi.
So I took a closer look and I saw a lot of funny details. And hearts, hearts, hearts everywhere.


Cloudy windows!

I LOVE YOU!

Everywhere people prepared for the parade.
The street was very crowded. Then I heard a funny music. I asked Mrs Schicke to bring me there.
It was an orchestra of hand organs.
They had a lot of instruments played mechanically, when the organ grinder turned the big wheels.
Mrs Schicke introduced me to them and then - big surprise! - they made a concert JUST FOR ME!!


As you see, I was even allowed to sit on one of the organs. Hello folks!!

The orchestra has got an own website and here it is:

The parade took more than four hours. There were many wagons and bands and dancers.
They throw sweets and chocolates and the children watching the parade are trying to get as many of this as they can.
It was a lot of fun!









Sonntag, 19. Februar 2012

Sightseeing in Braunschweig

This morning we went to town. We had breakfast at a café: two rolls each, a lot of cheese with chestnuts in it, other  cheese with chili and sweet pepper, salami and ham and boiled eggs and jam and nougat spread, some fruits, tomatoes and "lollo rosso" salad. I was allowed to sit on the table and got some ham and egg. 

We went to a large place. There were nearly no people because the shops still were closed. But I met six (!) horses. Some of them were on the roof of a big building. I wondered how they came up this high.
Mrs Schicke told me, they took a tower crane and were lifted to that place. They pull a chariot like on top of the Brandenburger Tor in Berlin.


 
There were two more horses in front of the building, carrying some dukes of Braunschweig.
They look very much like the one I saw in Hannover, but the horsemen got hats different from that, King Ernst August had.
The outer shell of the building has been the palace of the dukes of Braunschweig, but nowadays there are a big shopping mall, a museum and a library inside.

Next we went to the castle.
It is a very old building. Before, there was an even elder castle on this place, but during the 16th century the dukes "modernized" their castle in the new fashion style of their time, called Renaissance, and so it remained for the next 400 years until now.


Next to the castle there is a cathedral. It was founded by Henry the Lion, an important sovereign of his time. That was 800 years ago.

It took many years to complete the building.
Inside there are wonderful paintings. In those times only few people were able to read. So the walls were painted with pictures telling important stories of the bible. Now the people could "read" the bible by looking at these pictures.
Outside I found a ball in the wall.
I show you. Look here!

You can't see it? Let's take a closer look!

Mrs Schicke told me, this was the result of some giants playing basket ball.
But I didn't believe THAT!
Then she narrated, that this is a real cannon ball, sticking in the wall since a siege of the town in 1615.
I was VERY impressed!

Between the cathedral and the castle there is a free place, used as a market place in former times.
Just in the middle of it there is a lion's monument.


This is the symbol of Henry the Lion. He had installed this monument to present how mighty and rich he was.
The original artwork was covered with gold and is stored in a museum now (just use the door right to me, to enter the museum and see him).
But why chose Henry a Lion as his heraldic animal and not a bald eagle like me??

There is a legend, that once Duke Henry came to see a furial fight between a lion and a lindworm. Henry helped the lion and saved his life. The lion was so grateful, he never left the duke anymore. When Duke Henry died, he laid upon his grave until he himself died as well.


At the wall of the cathedral I met some more lions.
 A wild and grim one and a lioness with her cub.


The lioness was very friendly. I played hide and seek with the cub, but the cub was very young and the only good place to hide, it could think of, was beneath lion-mum's paws.
Not SO difficult to find a cub under a paw, when it forgets to reel its tail up...

Once more the castle - the big one in the background, a small one in the foreground.

Later on I met an owl.
She was sitting on the ground and looking around.
"What are you doing here?" I asked. "Owls should sit on branches instead of a brim of a well. And they should sleep during daytime!"
"Oh, we belong to an old fairy tale", she answered. "Would you like to listen to it?"
A monkey, also sitting on the brim, offered me a warm and cosy place. So I huddled against him and listened.

The owl told the story of Till Eulenspiegel, baking owls and long-tailed monkeys.
You can read it here on page 35.



The last place I visited today was the old guildhall.
Not so interesting, I thought. Just a lot of holes in the walls.
Mrs Schicke told me, that this house was full of mathematics and geometry.
Everywhere you can see symmetry and difficult circle constructions, like the trefoil and the quatrefoil.



The master builders of those times were very proud of being able to use a circle!
It was secret art!

Suddenly I saw a metal rod mounted to a column.
Curious as I am, I wanted to know the purpose of mounting a rod to a wall. 


Around the guildhall people organized a market.
There they sold everything (no potatoes and tomatoes and corn of course - guess why :) ).
They sold fruits and grain, wine and honey (and wine made of honey), pots and pans, brooms and brushes,
fabrics and ropes.
And everything had to be measured!
It is easy to measure the amount of pots and brooms - just count.
It is easy to measure fruits and grain - take a pair of scales and some balance weights.
It is difficult to measure wine. But they got bottles and jars: fill them up and  - count.
But fabrics and ropes were measured by ells.
An ell is the length from your ellbow to the top of your fingertips.
Have a look at your ell.
Then take a look at Mrs Amri's ell.
Do you see the difficulty in measuring with ells??

So the Lord Major of Braunschweig determined, that there should be a kind of consistent ell in the duchy of Braunschweig.
They just took someones ell (maybe, it was the duke's personal ell), made a  rod of this length and mounted it to the wall. So everyone could go there to measure the fabrics, he wanted to sell or buy.
As it was rather crowdy sometimes at the rod, they decided to make wooden rods of the same length, everyone could keep at his market stand.
But when a customer didn't believe, that this wooden ell had the correct length, he still could go to the wall to prove it.

Many, many years later, when the meter was invented in Europe, they measured the ell and found, that it was 57,07 cm long.
 But that is a very strange dimension and difficult to calculate with.
So they decided to measure length only in meters and centimeters from now on.
But they kept the name "ell" for a wooden rod to measure with, till nowadays.

After I had learned so much, I was tired.
Mrs Schicke wanted to do some shopping, what usually is really boring to me (except she buys tasty food!).
So I begged to go into the rucksack and have a nice nap.
I woke up, when all the shopping was over and we went home.
So I can't tell you anything more about Braunschweig today.