Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Morgan Undeported!

That is correct, I am being undeported. I will be arriving in the motherland on June 4th after a quick 10 day layover in Italy. I recommend dollar beers at Rock bottom in Ballston for all that read this blog on wednesday, June 6th.

Greatest Potato Chips Ever.



Tasted exactly like thanksgiving. Or maybe just the powder from instant chicken noodel soup. At any rate, they're worth the trip to France.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Explanation on why I haven't been blogging

There exists this other hotel called the Marriott. Friends of mine are staying there. The Marriott has free breakfast, dinner, and vodka. End Explanation.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

I hooked arms with a German man.

It was all part of spring fest (same as oktoberfest). We were in a large tent, drinking beer by the liter, when the Germans at our table stood up on the bench and started dancing. Well, I'm not one to be shown up by some German with fancy dance moves, so I stood on the bench too. Soon it turned into everyone hooking arms and kicking. Good times were had by all.

Pictures will be added if I can get my hands on them.

London

I took a trip to London this past weekend with my friend Chi. A few of the noteworthy items:

1) I was off the plane for 3 minutes when I found the root of the English dental hygiene problem. Apparently, they have been trying to chew their toothbrush.

2) It turns out, driving on the left side of the road doesn't only matter if you're driving, it also matters if you're trying to cross. Cars were coming from all kinds of directions I didn't expect. Luckily, Chi was there to save my life 18 times.



Unfortunately, I look neither right nor down. I look left, where the cars are supposed to be coming from.

3) Exchange rates are very important. 2.50 is expensive for water, but when that's in pounds, so you're actually paying over $5 for water, it's ridiculous. Everything was priced as you'd expect it except 1 pound is 2.08 dollars. My wallet still hurts.

4) It may surprise some that in a land that names its food "bubbles and squeaks" and "bangers and mash", it is hard to find something delicious. The best two meals we had were both in the airport.

5) Despite my request, the Queen will not be commenting on this blog.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

I can't clap to a beat.

We all know I am not musically inclined, but now, thanks to the internet, we can quantify how bad I really am.

I took the 3 tests here: http://tonometric.com/

First came the tone deaf test. 36 questions. I had 2 options, so with the speakers off, I should get 18 correct. I had the speakers on. I got 20 correct. 55.6%. Some may say I got lucky on 2 questions, and I'd have to agree. I guessed on every single one.

Next up, rhythm test. I felt like I was doing a little better on this one, then came the score. 48%. Again, two options, and I failed at getting the score I should've gotten with the speakers off. I believe the exact phrase used by the site was "possible rhythm or memory deficit". Memory? Come on, now the site is just taking shots at me while I'm down.

Finally came the adaptive pitch test. This test showed at 500 Hz, I could reliably differentiate two tones 4.2 Hz apart. Which is...... Above average! It's a small victory, but I'll take it.

So do these results mean I'm putting the dance shoes away for good? Well, I don't own dance shoes, but I still plan to go out there and embarrass anyone willing to dance with me. And don't give me a hard time about it, I apparently don't hear what most of you are hearing...

Cooking goes bad.

So, the plan was to eat this:



Drink this:



While sitting out here in 70 degree weather:



Instead, right when I put the food in the electric skillet, it shorts out. It lasted two months. Not the worst $20 I ever spent, but close...

Without a cooking device, I was forced to walk all the way across the street to consume fish and chips and drink guiness. Wow, my life is pretty rough...

Sunday, April 1, 2007

I had to pay European prices for Gas the other day.

$6/gallon. Ouch.

The German highways only have gas stations every 50 km and only certain gas companies let me take advantage of my tax exempt status. After about 150 km, I had no choice. At $6/gallon, I decided to buy 4 gallons...

In other news, I think I've worked my last weekend, so I should have some European extravaganzas ahead to blog about...

Thursday, March 29, 2007

I need to:

1) Remember to buy a can opener. Or…
2) Remember to not buy cans.

While I’ve gotten pretty good at opening a can with a razor blade, I wouldn’t exactly call it easy…

That is all for now...

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Museums. Well, Museum at least.

I was working last weekend, so I took Tuesday off and went to the Mercedes Museum. Check out pictures of horse, bus, and cars.

Went to the Ritter Sport chocolate factory on Friday. We learned when we got there that the factory had a museum, not of chocolate, but of modern art... Art Museum out in suburbia didn't exactly seem like a must see, but at least they had a chocolate store.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Goodbye Fiat.

Today I turned in my Fiat for an Audi 3 diesel with a navigation system. Significant upgrade, significantly cheaper. Of course, I could really be saving some money if the rental place offered the Mazda 6 live-in edition (engineered by K. Goza).

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

More on Germany

1. Parking lots in Germany will have a sign that says "frei" (free). After parking several times and having to pay, I've realized they mean free as in available, not free as in free... I guess there's more to learning a foreign language then memorizing words.

2. Afraid of declining birth rates, the German government will now give its citizens up to $33,470 to have a baby. Maybe I should go find me Helga while I'm here....

3. March has significantly less Madness in Europe. It's a good thing I didn't come here during football season.

Mannekin Pis

I've been working hard on trying to find out the story behind this kid, his pee, and why it attracts hundreds of people at a time away from things such as beer, chocolate, and seafood. It turns out, it is not known where he comes from. There are several stories surrounding him, mostly involving the peeing producing some sort of military victory... Brussels, you would've been better off just claiming you made it up (see: Hokie).

Pictures

Monday, March 5, 2007

Brussels

Went up to Brussels this weekend where a coworker from DC, Mel, just starting to work with NATO. The first site to be seen would be Brussels' most famous - Manneken Pis. More on it later, but it's a small statue of a kid peeing. Well, at least Brussels has beer, waffles, chocolate, and seafood to fall back on...

When walking past a bunch of seafood places, I made a comment about snails being on a lot of the menus. Mel said, with no previous bacon-wrapped-bacon conversations influencing her, "they're actually pretty good wrapped in bacon". Consider the bacon makes everything better point proven.

Next up, a bar that's in the Guinness book for most types of beer. They had 2004. I drank 2. One tasted kind of like Sam Addams, one tasted a lot like pennies. mmm... copper...

Sunday morning we went over to a flea market. I was thinking it was going to be a tourists' flea market with lots of souvenirs, but it was definitely more geared towards locals. Nothing purchased, but I came across an 8-track car stereo. Unfortunately, it wasn’t compatible with the Fiat...

Brussels summary: Beer – good. Mussels – excellent. Waffles and chocolate – fair. Statue of kid peeing – weird enough to warrant its on blog post.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

The weekend that went not good.

The plan: Weekend in Paris.

Actual events:

Left Saturday morning with my coworker Adrienne for Paris. Got to Cologne where we planned to transfer trains. The train from Cologne to Paris was reservation only and we got into Cologne too late to make the reservation. We now had the decision on whether to wait 2 hours for the next train to Paris or jump on another train somewhere else. After looking at the schedule, we decided on Amsterdam.

Before catching the Amsterdam train, I came across the worst pizza ever. Salami, mushrooms, and tuna fish. This is just more proof that if it isn't pork, the Germans don't know how to make it edible...

We got to Amsterdam early afternoon, did some sight seeing, ate excellent Mexican food (run by supposedly the only Mexicans in town), then caught a comedy show (blogged earlier). After the show, it was time to grab our stuff from a locker in the train station and find a hotel.

We got to the train station to find a large metal door in between us and the lockers.... About three feet above eye level, there's a sign showing the hours the locker room is accessible. Stupid important signs not being in plain view...

No stuff, but at least we'll have a bed to sleep in. We go across the street to a hotel. They just rented out their last room to the people that walked in ahead of us. We try the next hotel. No rooms. About 5 hotels later, we catch a bus to a different part of town. After about 10 more hotels giving us the answer: "There are no rooms available anywhere in town", we start to see the writing on the wall, this is going to be an all-nighter...

We start at an Irish pub. I'm talking to the bartender, who can't believe there are no rooms available. It's the middle of the off season and the city wasn't busy. He says he may be able to the help us though. He knows a guy. Umm… Is this help that I want? He goes off to make a phone call. He comes back. "Sorry, I can't help. My buddy works at a hotel, but he's on his couch sleeping". Well, at least I know he was actually trying to help.

Irish Pub closes up at 3am. Next up, Burger King. A Norwegian girl behind us in line decided to explain to me that drunken Dutch people are not nearly rowdy enough and that they should be louder like Norwegians. I told her she was too loud. She didn’t take me seriously and only got louder...

Burger King closed at 4. Walked 40 minutes back to the train station where we hung out until the 6am train that went back.

Not being able to sleep Saturday night caused me to miss out on two very important things on Sunday: Falafel for lunch and Heineken brewery tour. Very unfortunate.

Went to sleep around 3pm and slept straight till the next morning. Good times.

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

I can confirm 4 in the morning does actually exist.

I was always pretty sure 4am existed just as a late night hour reserved for 3rd dinner. It turns out, it is also considered a morning hour. I'm finding this out the hard way for the next two weeks.

When you east coasters are watching the last minutes of Lost tomorrow, my alarm will be going off. That's unfortunate...

Monday, February 19, 2007

Comedy Club

I went to a comedy show called "Me, MySpace, and iPod". They spent 2 hours mocking people with blogs. But... I thought this blog was finally making me cool...

On a non-emotionally damaging note, the 22 euro ticket included a pitcher of heineken for each person. Not bad.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

German Language Update

Reading: Several hundred words.
Speaking: Around a hundred words.
Listening: 10ish words

Obviously, I never needed to develop listening skills hanging around the people that read this blog...

Austria with Holzhueter

So here was the plan: Drive from Stuttgart, to Neuschwanstien (Disney castle), to Innsbruck (Austria), to Salzburg (Austria), back to Stuttgatt. 10 hours of driving, not counting lost time.

The directions led us down a road with no name for about 20 minutes. Doubt was starting to set in right when we saw a sign in downtown Fussen for the town the castle is in. 4.2 km to the right. The street to the right looked abnormally populated with people, but I didn’t argue with the sign... Should’ve thought that through more, definitely a pedestrian only street... One U-turn and zero people hit later and we were back on our way…

Eventually, we got to Neuschwanstien. The next tour wasn’t for an hour and half though. If we wait, we'd never make it down to Innsbruck before everything closes. So, we took a couple pictures, ate and headed back out without actually going up to the castle.

In Innsbruck, we came across a street performance. The kids (some around 10 years old) had whips, so obviously we had to stop. Not only whips, they also carried flasks and would slap someone in the crowd on the back (with hand, not whip) and give them a swig. Unfortunately, Julie and I were a few rows back and didn't get the opportunity to accept alcohol from a 10 year old.

Next, we walked by a store giving free schnapps tasting. Amazingly, we got out after only buying 4 bottles...

That night we went to a piano bar that lacked a piano player. The Indian bartender, who spoke German as a third language, mocked my pronunciation... Little did he know, my English is only slightly better...

Salzburg was fairly uneventful. Ate the Austrian classics – greek salad and pizza. Checked out the Fortress Hohensalzburg – they've added ceramic tile and an audio tour since it was built in 1077.

No Kangaroos were seen during our trip...

Monday, February 5, 2007

The buses and fire trucks in germany

...are made by Mercedes. I'm impressed. I'll try to update this with a picture of a firetruck with a big Mercedes emblem on it.