I’m in Germany!

- Yes, you’re reading the title right. [This will also perhaps explain my silence for the past 1 month- I can safely blame it on the chaos before a trip]

For 2 months, or to be precise, for atleast 7 more weeks from now, I will be staying in Erlangen, Germany… which is geographically in the Middle Franconian region in Bavaria, Germany. I reached here a week ago. Its not a pleasure trip; I’ve come for work reasons entirely. Although, I will not be ignoring the pleasure aspect atleast on weekends ;).

Here’s my update:

Details of my trip: Air France flights from Bangalore to Paris, and then onward to Nuremberg (or Nürnberg). Travelling to here wasn’t all too pleasant - there was turbulence during both flights (esp. the second one, which was a tiny plane, and decidedly uncomfortable :(, although the flight attendent was very sweet), and my digestion system turned topsy-turvy, esp. since I have previously also demonstrated an uncanny ability to turn air-sick. Its taken me a week almost to get back to normal.

Lifestyle: I’m doing well. Living in a nice (in fact, luxurious) 2-room apartment, on Paul Gossen Strasse (that’s how its called, but in German it’s written as Paul-Gossen-Straße). I have company - one of my friends, is living in the same apartment bldg as me, so we’re together most of the time. There are also other Indians (with and without family) from office in nearby apartment complexes, so my first weekend was spent in visiting some of their homes, and feeling less homesick.

Weather: I’ve reached Germany on a not so nice time technically - its winter here and temperatures are varying from 0 to 5 to 10 degrees centigrade. However, it could have been worse - supposedly there’s much less cold here than there is usually at this time of the year. In a week, I was blessed with sightings of snow for only about an hour. There is rain though, and there is considerable wind, which is making the cold worse. I’m hoping I can see more of snow later. Of course, its important to have the right kind of clothes here. I’m decked from head to toe except when in the office and at home. So if you see someone looking like a tiny terrorist in Erlangen, you could think that it’s me :). Here is the pic which shows what I look like here - I’m showing off my black head-to-toe attire, including gloves, taken in my apartment:
Head to toe in Black

Food: Not really much of an issue, since I’m comfortable with continental and the like, food. Had a couple of trips to the supermarket over the week, and loaded my fridge with goodies. Once in a while, my friend n I are cooking Indian food, so nothing much to miss. My only worry is the extra calories which I’m going to put on because of the cheesy, fatty stuff I eat over the week. Have to hit a gym soon.

General impressions about the place:

 The view View again

After getting over the initial feelings of “no place can beat India” :), I have started to appreciate the place for what it is. Erlangen is a picturesque place - I’m hoping to take pics and upload them soon. On the top are two pictures of the wonderful view from my apartment window.

Erlangen is spic n span; sometimes, I feel like I’m walking in a fairy tale setting - what with all the cottages, the stone pathways, the clock towers etc. Lots of pretty sights around, including the people. The areas surrounding my apartment are more businesslike, but the places around Siemens City (my office i.e. - Siemens AG takes up a substantial part of Erlangen, and its people, so I’m just using the phrase because there are just so many offices of Siemens around here that its almost like a city in itself) are very pretty and have an old-world charm.

People: Germans here are friendly, and strictly polite. The reason I say the latter is that you’ll get Good morning (Guten morgen), Good day (Guten Tag) etc, with a smile, from virtual strangers, sometimes on the road, sometimes in the supermarket, always in the elevator, and many times in the office. It’s almost like a rule. But beyond that, they are a little hesitant. I’ve been told that for socializing more, they would probably wait for an invite, and you would do good to follow the same. They are also less likely to go over-the-top or shake themselves loose in public (like Indians ;)), and going by protocol is important for many of them. So they may appear stiff/unfriendly sometimes. But the truth is far from that - so don’t go by initial impressions.

Infrastructure, and rules: Both of these bowled me over in the first week. The infrastructure here is very good - they have marked paths for cyclists on the road, and for walking in some places, and since there’s the population is small here, everything is well under control. There is no manic rush, no honking, yelling, no road-rage, and no crazy pedestrians waiting to jump in front of your car. There are signals for walking, and hence you must wait for the signal (even if there are no cars in the vicinity) - dashing on the road when you feel fit, is totally a no-no. The pedestrian has the upper hand here, so if you happen to be in the middle of the road, when the walk signal changes, you need not make a break for it. The cars will wait till you are safely on the other side of the road.

Travelling within the city: The bus transport system here in fantastic - very well laid out, lots of buses at all times. There are numbers for each buses - At each bus stop, there will be a map posted along with information about all the buses coming and going from that stop. The information for a bus is usually: the number of the bus, the stops it goes to, the timings for all the days of the week. There are usually buses, every 5 minutes in all the main stops. And they adhere to the time very well. At the max, you can expect a 2 min delay. A traveller like me would take a monthly pass (Mobi card) which I can get for 34.17 Euros, and with that I can get on any bus, and go anywhere within the city, any number of times. There are no conductors in the buses, so no one will ask you for your ticket, except after 8, when the driver of the bus will open only the door next to him for entry, and you have to show him your card. Within the bus, there is a digital display of the forthcoming stops. Also there is an announcement mechanism, where a nice female/mail voice in German, will tell you what the next stop is. If you want to get down at the next stop, you will have to press a button inside the bus (there are many of such buttons strategically placed on bars within the bus - so you will have easy access wherever you are sitting), and the digital display will then display “Wagen halt” next to the stop name, which will mean that the bus will stop there. Only one person needs to press the button of course - but don’t automatically assume that the bus will stop at all stops. You need to look for the “Wagen halt” on the display next to the stop name. If it is not displayed, press the button, and it will be. If it is already displayed, it probably means that someone else has pressed the button, and the bus will stop.

Whoa. What a load of details. I would have liked to write about entertainment and the like here, but will reserve it for future posts. Right now, this one almost sounds like parts of a German cultural training :). Anyway, this will do for the first set of my initial impressions here. More updates will be coming later hopefully, so for now, Guten Tag :)!

Posted in Me, News, Travelogue.

39 Responses to “I’m in Germany!”

  1. Non Breaking Space » Birthday bumps Says:

    [...] sent me the first SMS wish from Germany, followed by Polly and [...]

  2. Sree Says:

    Good post Shikha. Good info abt Germany. Yes, till day I had a feeling that Germans are very unfriendly and cold. Have a nice trip.
    Y’day I happened to watch Sillenu oru kadal on a DVD and I liked the movie very much inspite of not understanding Tamil fully. I could understand little Tamil, but most of the times I went by the subtitles. I googled for a while and ended up in your post abt SOK. It was a good post and even I really liked “Munbe Vaa En Anbe Vaa” very much. I don’t know the meaning of those lines but the melody caught me a lot. And Bhoomika & Surya were great in the song.

  3. Umesh Says:

    I’m getting a “I love Germany” manam

  4. karthick Says:

    Hey Shikha! Great to have you back with your usual bigggggggg post. :-) I have seen Germany only on TV and in a few vintage world war time movies. I enjoyed watching Justin Shapiro’s episode of Globe Trekker (Travel and Living) in Germany. A perfect black mask is enough for people to think you as a bear. :-P My wishes for a safe and pleasant stay in Germany. :-)

  5. UmeshUnni Says:

    Hey Shikha - have a fun trip. The good thing about Europe is that you can get around pretty easily - both within the country and across Europe - so I guess you’ll be travelling a lot to Southern Europe for the warmer climes of Spain, Greece and Italy.
    Do you speak any German? I did two semesters of German back in college and found it pretty easy to pick up. As a matter of fact, I could speak better German after 8 months of the course than Arabic after 8 years of it!
    Geez - get over the weather and grow a thick skin :) I go out in 5-10C weather in a tshirt nowadays. Gloves?? Only if I was skiing!

  6. shikha Says:

    Sree: Thanks for dropping by :). Welcome!… and thanks for the wishes. I hope to have a nice time here too.

    Munbe Vaa is a breathtaking song. I did see the translated lyrics on the web sometime ago; unfortunately couldn’t find it afterwards. If I do get it, I’ll post a link to it. Yes, I agree; Bhoomika and Surya were gr8 in the video.. You can find the videos of the song on YouTube btw.

  7. shikha Says:

    Umesh: Hehe. Well, I cud hv gotten influenced to stay here a bit longer, but the TV channels are all in German!!! (unless I take a dish connection)… so will be craving for English and Indian channels till I reach back home ;)

    Seriously though, I won’t change my devout affection for India, for any country in this world, however wonderful it may seem!

  8. shikha Says:

    Karthick: Thank you for the wishes :). Its good to be back. I hoped I could post more often once I’m here, since I won’t have many other occupations. But work is taking all my time now. Let’s hope the forthcoming weeks ease out in terms of work.

  9. shikha Says:

    UmeshUnni: Thanks! Yeah, I hope to be travelling a bit now that I’m here. Atleast in and around Germany, and hopefully Austria.

    Do I speak German? - hehe. Yeah. About three/four phrases which basically mean “My name is …”, “No flesh please”, “Good morning” and “Next Stop”. But right now, once I’m back in the apartment after work, I’m watching an hour of TV - which is all in German. So I watch
    German versions of Bigg Boss (i.e. Big Brother), Kaun Banega Crorepati (i.e. Wer wird Millionär) and English movies dubbed into German [If this goes on, I might end up learning a little more German than I thought I would ;)].

    Right now, German sounds to be like a whole lot of Guttural sounds put together. I don’t know if I’ll be successful translating that to anything sensible in 2 months :)

    As for Arabic, I can still read many of the letters, and remember a few words, so for now, my Arabic is better :D.

    Weather - well, I think I’m getting over it actually :). I’m finding it much less cold than when I first experienced it. The first day I could barely stand without shivering. Looks like the thick skin is coming on :D. But I don’t think I’ll discard my gloves soon. Out in the cold, my fingers sort of ache, and I lose feeling at the tips after a while… anyway, even thou I won’t graduate to the T-shirt level (!!!), I hope to be able to discard my cap and muffler after a while.

  10. the visitor Says:

    Hiya Shikha!!!
    Nice to hear from you! And that was a nice detailed post from you. Now I have to show off my Deutsche to an ausländer. he he. *rubs hands gleefully*.

    Liebes Fräulein Shikha, wie langer wille Sie in Deutschland bleibt? Wir vermissen Sie hier :( Bitte bald zurückgekommen.
    Die zeit ist jetzt 11:47. Gute Nacht. :)

  11. the visitor Says:

    And Happy Valentine’s Day :D

  12. shikha Says:

    Visitor: *Wail*. Oh No!! It can’t be more German!!!

    Hehe ;). That was a good one. Multi-lingual talents eh? English, Tamil, and now German!! Totally cool.

    The ‘rough’ translation would be:
    —-
    Dear Miss Shikha, how much longer will you be in Germany? We miss you. Please come back soon.
    Its 11.47 now. Good night.
    —-

    Now don’t think I’ve learnt German so soon. What do you think the online translation sites are for? :D
    Btw, I could recognize some words though,without the aid of a translation tool - Fräulein, Shikha (hehe), wie, langer, wille, Sie, wir, Bitte, ist and Gute Nacht. Looks like my German is better than I thought it is ;)

  13. shikha Says:

    Visitor: As for Valentine’s Day celebrations over here - was totally boring. Comparatively, India is so colorful on Valentine’s day. The TV is full of Valentine’s day specials, there are wishes everywhere - on the paper, malls are all decorated with hearts, there’s red everywhere in sight with many people wearing red, roses being given out,… love is so much in the air. I missed all that here. All the color i got to see was the black jackets, brown roofs, gray streets, my cream-colored PC and transparent rain :-(. No love in sight anywhere.

    So hope your Valentine’s Day was better than mine. Belated Valentine’s Day wishes! :)

  14. Visitor Says:

    Das ist gut! Sehr Gut, Fraulein Shikha. :)

  15. Nariyal Chutney Says:

    Guten morgen Shikha :). The only German I wanted to see was Hitler because his moustache was something that is not seen much these days. It is nice to know that Germans are warm and friendly , make max use of your stay out there :)

    P S: I hope you are not working with German Toursim department in promoting Germany in India :P

  16. shikha Says:

    Visitor: Ha! I needed no translation tool for that one. Dankeschön Visitor ;)

  17. shikha Says:

    Nariyal: GudumoarninG NC :) [that's a hangover from your UBI type2 description]

    Mentioning Hitler in these parts is very offensive btw…so for now, I will have to keep that word out of my vocabulary. As well as refrain from refreshing my memory on what his moustache looks like anyway. [Wasn't it a little Charlie Chaplinesque? I am not literate on moustache styles thou, so correct me if I'm wrong].

    Max use of my stay - well, looks like my office is making max use of my stay anyway. Currently, I’m working like a dog.

    German Tourism - interesting idea. I should sell these pieces to them then *Contemplating*…
    No, if I would be working with any tourism department, it would be with the famed Kerala Tourism and “God’s Own Country” guys. Some earlier posts of my blog would indicate that ;-). Of course, I should say, I *was* working for Kerala Tourism. But now I’ve lost my place to you.
    I’m sure that from now on, there’ll be loads of foreign beings pouring into the state, to witness the great “Malayalee Christian” wedding :D

  18. mathew Says:

    was blog hopping from nariyal chutney…another temporary deutschland malayalee says..guten tag…!!

    almost similar awe and admiration for the place i felt in the first few days i landed here..Things work in precision…and infact even by european standards..germany is a well oiled machine!!

  19. shikha Says:

    Mathew: Thanks for dropping by! And oh, yeah.. Guten Tag :-). Some part of my morning went in going thru your blog, and *Bowing* I have full appreciation for your amazing “bachelor” culinary skills. Hope to peruse thru your recipes and try them out in my bachelorette’s kitchen :-).

    As for the well-oiled machine, I think that its not only Germany as a country, but the people too. Most of them work like machines atleast ;-)… and yes, I’ve already been told that other European countries are pretty lazy comparatively.

    I think that to some extent many things function here so smoothly also because there’s minimal population to control. Comparatively, I think India does pretty well considering that we have people occupying every inch of the land (at times, in crowded buses, I’ve even looked into my pockets to see if there are a few fellas pushed in there ;-)) and with Indians being the multi-lingual, culturally diverse, rebellious, totally whacko people that we are :D.

  20. mathew Says:

    lol!!..but u have to pay up if you are trying out my recipies!! :-P

    I still cant help believing that our country work perfect amidst the chaos…I dont think the germans can manage the complexity we posses!!

    viel spass!!

  21. A.S. Says:

    Thanks for leaving comments on my blog.

    Germany is a fascinating country and I hope you do get an opportunity to travel around. The Deutsche Bahn offers these Weekend tickets (Wochenende Ticket) that is quite useful for travelling to nearby places using slow trains, especially if you can find other people to travel with you. Bavaria is a beautiful state and you should certainly explore the region… Munich and around is strongly recommended and you could also check out Nuremberg, Würzburg, castles along the Romantische strasse etc. If you manage to make long distrance trips, Berlin is a must, and I’d also recommend Cologne, Heidelberg and some small towns/villages. Check out CouchSurfing (http://www.couchsurfing.com) and Hospitality Club (http://www.hospitalityclub.org) which are a fantastic concept for travelling and meeting interesting people.

    More specific comments about your comment in my blog out there.
    Have fun!

  22. amimu Says:

    i have not been to germany, i think the european culture is rich with art and music. i always wondered a land that produced beethovan, bach and mozart also produced hitler

  23. Shikha Says:

    i hvnt read ur post yet,but curiosity brought me here:)..we share something else other than our names(and being asked frequently abt why mallu is called shikha AND software)…i saw ur pics..i dance too :)
    will keep coming back :)

  24. shikha Says:

    Mathew: Ahem. Well, lemme try them out… if they do succeed, we can work out the economics of sharing your recipes ;). Of course, I’m also partial to the wonderful new recipes I found in your cookery wonderland - esp. “Virgin bread delicia” :D.

  25. shikha Says:

    A.S: Thanks for all those details! I know about the Wochenende Ticket - I’ve been told that 5 people could travel with that. Lots of my fellow Indians frm office travel over the weekends with the ticket and I’m planning to get along with some of them soon :). Well, hopefully I will get to see atleast some of the places you’ve mentioned, prob Munich, Nuremburg for sure, and hopefully Neuschwanstein, Salzburg etc. And if I need any more info, I know whom to ask :D

  26. shikha Says:

    Amimu: Thanks for dropping by :). Don’t forget Einstein btw, and all of Germany’s contributions to science and engineering. Well, every basket has some bad apples, so Hitler was prob. one of them.

  27. shikha Says:

    Shikha: Hehe :). Feels funny to reply to my own name!
    So you dance too! Gosh. And I noticed “Having grown up in the Middle East” which is very much the same with me. Its getting curioser and curioser, as Alice in Wonderland would say… I’m gonna be hooked to your blog for sometime too :)

  28. Ram Says:

    Enjoy your stay in Germany.

  29. shikha Says:

    Ram: Thanks :). Sure will try!

  30. the visitor Says:

    @shikha(wordpress) & shikha(blogspot)

    By a very weird coincidence on Feb 17 I was typing in shikha in the address bar and clicked ‘enter’ thinking I had chosen the complete url; (actually by mistake I had typed in only shikha in the address bar) and I landed in this totally different looking blog, where the owner’s name was shikha, but the template looked different, and the post also looked different. Surprise of surprises was that the person was also a software engineer, based in Bangalore. Only after seeing a couple of the latest posts I could guess that it was a totally different person.

    This is really a weird series of coincidences, because on checking this comment section I find the other shikha commenting here! Is it just a coincidence or by design. I am suspicious of the shikhas cos both are s/w engineers, and the posts of both shikhas contains a lot of complex programming code).

    Even today I tried typing shikha in the address bar and I was redirected to the blog (this happened in Mozilla Firefox). How does this happen? If I type the-visitor it goes to some other site> :(

    Bye :)

  31. shikha Says:

    The-visitor: Yes, you caught me. You just found my alter-ego, who writes the blogspot blog :D…

    Hehehe. Of course not. The other Shikha is someone else. Although, yeah, the similarities are striking on a first glance: Mallu, S/W engg, Bangalore, currently onsite and much more.

    Your comment confused me for a bit - you said shikha(blogspot). There is another blog - shikha.blogspot.com, which is yet another Shikha (Gosh. My name has become as common as the Mallu Lakshmi’s of the world!), and for sometime I thought you were referring to her! I looked around in that site to spot if she was yet another S/W engg in Bangalore, but it appeared to me that she was not, so I assume you’re talking about http://vivantunevie.blogspot.com/.

    As for why we’re both commenting on each other’s blog - well, it would be a funny coincidence that you stumbled on her blog at relatively the same time I did. To vouch for my innocence ;), I can tell you how I found her blog: Mathew(wetspark.blogspot.com) [from my comments] -> Deepa(deepasayz.blogspot.com) -> Shikha. And then, I sort of commented on hers, which is why she replied back.

    I hope now it’s proven that we’re both different people, and not alter-egos, hehe.

    I guess the problem in Mozilla firefox is that it reroutes to the first site that pops up from the search engine with the keyword “shikha”. I tried only “shikha” in google, and got her site as the first listing.

  32. Umesh Says:

    Pehle hi itna tension hai ki Karishma kaun ! Raveena Kaun ! us tension se nikle nahi…ki ek aur tension, … SHIKHA KAUN? Tum jo ho woh tum nahi koi aur hai, woh jo hai woh woh nahi koi aur hai, main jo hoon woh main nahi, ya main bhi koi aur hoon? Main kaun hoon?

  33. shikha Says:

    Umesh: *Bursting out laughing*…

    Here’s my answer:

    “Thaan aaraanennu thanikku ariyaanmelankil thaan ennodu chodikku thaan aaraanennu. Thanikku njan paranju tharaam thaan aaraanennu. Ennittu njaan aaraanennu enikku ariyumo ennu thaan ennodu chodikku, appo thanikku njan paranju tharaam, thaan aaraanennum, njan aaranennum”.

    Hehehe. Couldn’t resist from replying with that ;-).

  34. Nariyal Chutney Says:

    Too much work :? . What abt new updates from Germany about the carnival?

  35. shikha Says:

    NC: I’ve started getting a bit of relief on the work side thankfully… used the time to update my blog pages a bit. Updates about the carnival :)… well, I didn’t want to make it too many Germany posts at a time, so mayb I’ll wait till I do some more exciting things and then put it in a post soon :D.

  36. Lonely In Space Lyrical Love - Part II « Says:

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  37. Amit Says:

    @Umesh

    How many times have u seen “Andaaz Apna Apna”?? :-)

  38. Umesh Says:

    @Amit: I lost count of it buddy

  39. riya Says:

    Hey Shikha,

    Where do u stay in Erlangen?

    R u still there ?
    I will come to Erlangen in 1st sep .
    Can u suggest for my trip . This trip is for 6-8months.

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