Trip to Ludwigsberg and Esslingen
This week on Wednesday, Deutsche Kompakt took us to Ludwigsberg and Esslingen. Each of these towns are about an hour away from Tuebingen and 20 or so minutes from Stuttgart. This excursion had the ability of being a really interesting trip since there were so many interesting sites on the agenda but the weather was absolutely horrible. It rained all day and was about 20 degrees. That being said, however, it was still a really fun trip
The first place we went to was Ludwigsburg and toured the Resident Schloss. This palace is the largest baroque castle in Germany. It was built by Duke Eberhard Ludwig of Wurttenburg in 1709. Although we only had time to tour one wing of the Schloss (we were there for two hours), we saw both the King and Queen’s chambers (The duke’s successor’s were appointed kings, I believe by Napoleon), the throne rooms, the theater, the chapel, which was changed from being catholic to protestant and vice versa several times, and the various portrait galleries. Our tour guide spoke only in German so I might not be giving you fully correct information about the palace. I think I picked up most of what he was saying but he did speak pretty fast and he was swabisch so he sometimes reverted to using their words instead of the regular hoch-deutsch. Among some of the famous personages that lived there was Karl Eugen who gave part of his name to the University of Tuebingen; its official name is Eberhard Karl’s University of Tuebingen. Eberhard V, the other name associated with the University, was the first duke of Wurttenburg and was the one who actually founded the college in 1477. Karl Eugen was only responsible for its name.
After lunch, we visited the Film Academy in Ludwigsberg. It is a school, as you probably guessed, dedicated to teaching the craft of movie making. They have directing, sound-editing, animation, and set-building classes. Two students showed us the campus and some of the short films they were working on; they have a very well-known animation department and win several awards for it in Germany each year. Students remain at the school for a long time; they have to finish making their particular film before they are allowed to graduate, which in many cases (especially with animation) takes 6 to 7 years. While the study of filmmaking seems really interesting, I’m not sure I would have the patience to work on one particular project for that long period of time. The students also have to deal with things like maintaining funding and so forth. I’m not sure how they do this (our tour guide also only spoke in German so I only caught the point about them needing funding) but it seems to be a pretty stressful career path. When we toured the building where they built all their set pieces, however, it was like going down memory lane. I remember doing all of that painting and designing props in high school!
We traveled to Esslingen when the tour of the Film Academy was finished. There are many famous churches and a beautiful Rathaus (town hall) in the town but the rain turned into a downpour so we were forced to seek shelter in a Café rather than take our tour. Fortunately, Chris brought his cards and a couple of us played card games until the rain let up. We then had time to do a quick walk through the city but by that time all the churches were closed (everything closes at 6:45 in Germany except for restaurants). That night, however, we attended a wine tasting. We went to a wine keller where we were served 6 glasses of Esslingen’s famous wine and a cold cut dinner. It was all very good but I don’t think it was good planning on our teacher’s parts to give a bunch of college students six glasses of wine then put them all on a bus for the hour ride back to Tuebingen; everyone was a little tipsy (including me) so needless to say it was a very loud bus ride. The Weinkeller also sold the wine that they let us sample for pretty cheap; I bought my favorite one (a rose colored wine that was sweet but not overly so) for 4 Euros. So when you come visit mom, you will have to sample it.
This excursion was the main excitement of the week. A couple of us sampled the pizza place my mentor recommended to us as the best pizza in Tuebingen on Thursday. The food is pretty cheap and they make great pizza; they have a gorgonzola pizza which is very tasty. We also went bowling on Friday with our teachers and I actually bowled a 126 (weird I know) and the second game I bowled a 100. Everyone now thinks that I am a great bowler even though I tried to tell them that it was pure luck. I usually don’t make it past 50.
I was supposed to go hiking today but I’m not sure the weather will cooperate with this plan. It’s very grey, cloudy, and is sprinkling rain. I’m beginning to think spring will never come.
Oh! I also got my class plan for Tuebingen together. I made some changes to it after taking with my teacher. She recommended to me that I take one lecture course at the University and one Grundkurs. The Grundkurs is like the lecture ones except they have smaller class sizes and the subject matter is more particular. I will also have more assignments in this class and actually have to do a presentation at the end. She recommended this course instead of another lecture one because I can more easily find other students to help me in the class and the teacher can devote more attention to me. It has its pluses and minuses and if it is too hard, she said I can always drop it. My class schedule is as follows:
Monday- 8:30am-10:00am Grundkurs:EInfuhrung in die Allgemeine Ethik (intro ethics course)
2:15pm-3:45pm Junge Literatur (ISP course so one geared to exchange students)
Tuesday- 2:00pm-3:30pm Konversationkurs (ISP speaking course)
Thursday- 4:00pm-6:00pm Weltreligion (World religions)
Friday- 10am-12:45pm Deutsche Gramatik (ISP grammar course)
I might possibly die this semester but hopefully I will come back with very good German skills. This might not be my easy semester after all….
