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February 28 Mission: Swiss Hospital investigationI AM HOME!!! YAY!!!!! I came home yesterday after spending ALTOGEtHER TOO LONG in the hospital! Everything went well and Yes i am sporting a very fashionable cast and am accessorized with Euro-style crutches, which have little forearm holders and do not go up to your armpits. I am up and down stairs like nobodys business though, so better watch out my arms are gonna be RIPPEd in about a week ha ha ha. Anyways, I'll give you all the details about my surgery... but first, some observations on the Kantonsspital Baden (a Kanton is like a province, and a Spital is a hospital FYI. Oh and I live in Baden. There, now you speak German!)
Ok, so here are some of the things I noticed about the hospital:
Ok so other than that, I got there and discovered that I had skipped breakfast and lunch for NOTHING because my surgery was actually on the Friday, not the Thursday, UGH. Oh well. Then I talked to the anaesthesiologist and we decided on a spinal anaesthetic. Then I talked to some orthopedic guy who made sure I was ok to have surgery, then to my surgeon. Then I hung out, went to bed, and didn't realllly talk to my roomies, who were ollllllld ladies. One of them was 93! They all spoke only SWISS German, so I had NO chance of understanding them. Luckily, all the doctors and nurses spoke very good English. Anyways, Friday morning I got woken up to take some sedative drugs and then at like 7:30 they wheeled me down to the operating room for surgery. I have to say that spinal anaesthetic is NOT a pleasant experience. At all. Needles in the spine are not happy. Anyways, I opted NOT to watch them do the surgery, because I wasnt really sure if I could handle that. So instead they gave me some headphones and played awful 80s music (i had forgotten my ipod upstairs, just like the anaesthesiologist told me NOT to do)... I should have watched because it would have made me less nauseous than the music ha ha ha. Anyways, it was pretty cool because I didn't realllly even realize that the leg I kept seeing them lifting up was mine! The only thing I really remember was feeling them doing some hammering. And only feeling it because the table was moving not because I could feel my let ha ha. Anyways, the surgery took like MAYBE 30-40 minutes then I got to hang out in the recovery room, where I REALLY wished I hadn't forgot my ipod! I just kinda lied there for like an hour, then I got to go back upstairs and the feeling started coming back to my legs, WOO HOO! That was weird. Anyways, after a while I finally convinced them to take the IV out and that was awesome! I still had a little drain thing in the incisions they made (they just made 2 little holes) so that was slightly inconvenient for moving around, but no biggie. Saturday was awesome because my surgeon came and changed the bandages and took out the drain and then I had NOTHING attached to me and the physio came and taught me how to do stairs! I went aLL THE WAY UP TO THE 13th floor, from the 8th floor, and then came back down and walked around some more. Had dinner etc and went to bed. Woke up on Sunday feeling NOT so hot. Every time I sat up I got a wiiiicked headache! Weiiiird. But one of the nurses said she had one too and it was probably from the weather so I just lied in bed all day, boooooooo. It was still around on Monday though, and when the anaesthesiologist came to talk to me he said that it was probably a side effect of the spinal anaesthetic. (If you really dont like needles or talking about needles or talking about sticking needles in your spine you might wanna skip to the next paragraph now FYI!) What sometimes happens is that the little hole they poke in the little bag that holds your "brain juice" (AKA cerebral spinal fluid) didn't close all the way, so some fluid was leaking out. Then your brain has to work harder to make more fluid, so you get a headache becuase your brain says "WHAT IS GOING ON HERE?!?!?!" So, what they do is take some of your blood and inject it over the little hole so it clots :) So I says to Mr. Anaesthesiologist I says "Ok but I am taking blood thinners to prevent blood from clotting in my leg" and he says "uh huh." Anyways, I guess he told one nurse to not give them to me but not the other nurse, so she did, and I took them (DOH!) and then they couldnt do the procedure on Monday so I had to wait till MONDAY! Which is ok cuz I had some visitors on Monday night, and even stood up to hang out with them for a while :) So Tuesday around 11 (after they made me skip breakfast AGAIN!) I went back down to surgery and they did this pretty sweet procedure. I have nothing but respect for anyone who can stick a needle into another persons spine and inject blood into it without having a nervous break down. I just do not know if I could ever do that, although anaesthesiologist would be a SWEET job. Anyways, this all took like 30 minutes, then I got to go right back up to my room and hang out until the freaking LITRE of fluid they were putting in me was done goin through the IV. I couldn't convince the nurse to take it out, even after I ate lunch and drank water and everything. Anyways, the headaches stopped like IMMEDIATELY after they injected the blood, it was REALLY REALLY cool! My back is just a little stiff from all the needles, but other than that I am 110%! So, aside from slight digestive trauma from not eating or eating hospital food, and from having all my dignity taken away by having to have 2 surgical procedures done, and from having to wrap a garbage bag around my leg when I shower, and walk as slow as a snail, the whole surgery experience wasn't soo bad and I am quite looking forward to being up and about again. I have to have this cast on for 6 weeks, after which I can start weight training again with the bad knee, but I cant run again for FIVE MONTHS (August 23rd) So, I am counting down the days :) If anyone has any ideas about what I can do instead of running (i hate swimming, FYI) then I would appreciate it, because I am gonna get tired of walking pretty quick I think... I cant wait till I can get on a bike! February 19 How to treat the common coldSo today I am feeling a little bit sick... with a cold... and seeing as how I am supposed to be having my knee surgery on Thursday, I need to kick this, FAST. So, I googled some home remedies for "curing" the common cold and have tried a bunch of them. Due to the sheer number I tried I won't be able to tell which one actually did it... but as long as I get better I don't really care. I am hoping to just make my body such a hostile environment that the cold will be like "AHHHH I WANT OUT!" Here's what I have tried so far:
1.) Crazy amounts of water
2.) Increased orange intake
3.) Tea
4.) Vitamin C tablets
5.) Cold FX
6.) Hot peppers with stir fry for dinner
7.) Ginger, lemon, and honey in hot water (very very tasty)
8.) Chewing on a clove of garlic. Yes, I actually did this, and it was disgusting, but I am convinved it is what is evacuating my sinuses so nicely. I would NOT recommend this unless you are absolutely desperate.
9.) Going to bed early (executing this phase very soon)
The weirdest remedy I found was to pour hydrogen peroxide in your ears. Some dude was convinced that the only way cold were propagated was through ears... and so this was the only cure. I will NOT do that, don't worry. I am not insane!
Anyways, time to execute part 9!
Update:
Confounding results obtained from the aforementioned study lead this researcher to conclude that the only way to cure the common cold is to stay home from work and sleep all day. All other measures have been proven ineffective, and do not provide immediate relief. February 18 Schweizerishces LandesmuseumToday Krispin and I headed to the Swiss Culture and History Museum in Zurich. (This is where I went skating in the winter) It only cost THREE FRANCS (less than $3) and was a pretty sweet museum. We started in the slightly depressing and monotonous Religious art section… and I seriously think I have seen enough winged altars to last for the rest of my life. Ugh. Anyways, thankfully that section was cut off due to renovations and we hopped over to the Prehistory and Early History section, which was sooooooo cool! Almost as cool as the massive diorama or a re-enactment of a battle, which was pretty crazy. I cannot imagine sitting and working on that thing… it would have driven me mental for sure it would have taken so long! There was tons of old tools and pots and descriptions/pictures of who controlled which parts of the world at the time, I actually learned quite a bit… after asking Krispin some ridiculous questions of course. Anyways, there was a section that had old jewellery in it and it was sooooo pretty! Then we found this room that was called “A museum within the museum” and it was the collection of stuff from this old castle that is actually really close to our town, and that I will probably go see now. And there was lots of little murals of the castle so that was sweet. Also, a heart shaped baking pan, how can you go wrong! I really enjoyed this section, but unfortunately all good things must come to and end and we ended up back in the religious part of the museum. But it was not so bad, because the exhibit was interrupted by several rooms, that I believe have been moved there, from the Fraumunster Abbey in Zurich. The rooms were pretty sweet, all wood and with beautifully decorated stone stoves, a pretty rockin’ convent I would say. Unfortunately the “Medieval treasures” section was closed, but I enjoyed the old pharmacy probably more anyways. And then began the information about the Reformation, and this went on for a while. Somehow we missed the part of the history where the original 13 cantons became “the confederate” but got lots of info about how these cantons got the other ones to join. I think there are 26 today, but I couldn’t name most of them. My bad, there is 23 cantons, 3 of which are split into pieces that don’t count as full cantons by themselves. Anyways, we saw some pretty sweet huge old globes and lots of old gold cups and plates, a fashion display, a coin exhibition, and a special photo exhibition that was really well done. Unfortunately, the arms section was closed, so that was kinda a bummer.
Here is a little bit of info about the building itself, which is absolutely gorgeous! “The tower, copied from the town gate of Baden (YAY BADEN!), has become a symbol of the city and can be seen from far away. The museum building of 1898 in the historicist style accommodates probably the largest collection in Switzerland devoted to cultural history. In the rambling rooms and corridors of the building visitors can experience fascinating and unexpected views of Swiss cultural history.”
Overall the museum was an excellent day to spend a lazy Sunday afternoon. Luckily, the “no pictures please” blurb didn’t appear till the last page of the brochure so I did manage to get some pictures. One of my favorite parts of the museum was the free coat check, because I dumped all my stuff and really could focus on learning. Hahaha. I thought there would be more information about the political history of Switzerland, but I am kinda glad there wasn’t, because it is hard to absorb too much of that at one time. I would like to learn more, and CLEARLY I need to review my European history because today I was like “Krispin who were the Celts… and where did the come from… and the Germanic people… ok… and…” hahaha. And the names Calvin and Zwingli definitely sound familiar and I know they had something to do with the Reformation but I really couldn’t tell you what. Anyways when we got home from the museum I cooked up some serious dinner. I made cornbread because I realized that I had like 1.5kg of cornmeal in my cupboard… oops! While I was baking that I did up some stir fry and pork, and the bread was looking FABULOUS and then I did something else for TWO MINUTES and it got burned. It is pretty dry but pretty tasty and delicious with honey on it! It’ll make great sandwiches when I melt cheese on it! Jam Packed SaturdayPart I of a JAM PACKED Saturday: St Gallen So Saturday morning I got up pretty early and took the train to St Gallen, Northeast of where I live. It was a super foggy day when I got there… bummer! I had a chance to take a good chunk out of my book on the train though. (I started a new one, its called “From Beirut to Jerusalem” and I HIGHLY recommend it already! I HAVE LEARNED SO MUCH!) Anyways, I arrived and discovered that the schedule the internet gave me for the post bus to the cheese dairy I wanted to visit was not right… and had to wait 1.5 hours. That was cool though, I walked around the town and it was SO BEAUTIFUL. My lonely planet book described the buildings as out of a Hans Christian Anderson fairy tale, and I would have to agree! They were just so cute and pretty! Anyways, I made my way to the huge Abbey that is the main tourist attraction of St Gallen, and it was enormous! I didn’t go inside, but just walking around it was pretty amazing. By that time it was time to head back and catch the bus though, seeing as how I am a little slower at walking these days. On the way to the bus though I found this store that only sold tea, teapots, teacups, and other things associated with tea. It was insane. THEN I saw another shop that sold the same stuff! INSANE! Anyways, I finally got back to the bus station.
The bus I got on was a DOUBLE DECKER post bus! (The post office runs busses here in Switzerland, and they are really good! I know, its scary to think of Canada Post running busses… how do you return to sender on a bus… but they are quite punctual and comfortable, and they usually go longer distances and are actually one of my favorite modes of transportation.) The ride to get to Stein in Appenzelle was quite scenic. Appenzelle is, again according to Lonely Plant, “the Newfoundland of Switzerland.” But, nonetheless, the rolling hills and forests are incredibly beautiful. I finally arrived in Stein, and so begins...
Part II:Cheese Making in Stein The bus stopped right across the street from my mission objective: the Appenzeller cheese demonstration dairy. Now, a little history here, Appenzeller cheese is pretty much the single most stinky cheese you can buy in Switzerland. One of my co-workers and his roommate used to have wars with it… hiding it in each other snowboard bags and pillow cases etc. So, as you can imagine, this stuff is dangerous, but incredibly tasty. Anyways, I was absolutely crushed when I discovered that the demonstration dairy was closed for renovations! I even checked the website before I went and it said NOTHING about this, so I was pretty devastated. Luckily, the little restaurant place was open so I went in and bought some cheese to console myself. I bought a combination pack which had 4 types of cheese: Bio Appenzeller (organic), Mild, Strong, and Extra strong! Thankfully it came in an airtight bag so it was ok in my backpack for the day.
Now I had some time to kill before the cheese making demonstration started so I went outside for a little walk, came back in to check to see if it had started yet, which it hadn’t, and went for another little walk and had a rest on a bench. Finally I came back at the actual correct time and it was starting.
To start with (after you skim the milk to the exactly precisely defined fat content), you have to heat the milk up to 31C for 30-40 minutes so that the curdling process can begin. Then after it becomes thick, you cut it with the “cheese harp,” which results in “small corn sized granules.” This chunky part is the curds, and the watery leftover part is the whey. Mmmm Little Miss Muffet knew her cheese production. Anyway, the whey is used to make Rivella (very VERY popular here in Switzerland) which is a carbonated beverage. You may think it sounds nasty, but it contains lactose and calcium and tastes like gingerale, with a kinda funny aftertaste. Anyways, the curds are then washed with water, and this mixture is heated up again, to 41C. I know, insane precision. Anyways, once it is the right consistency, you separate the curds and press them. This is called fresh cheese, and doesn’t really taste like anything. This is where we left off in the demonstration I watched. Anyways, after the curds are pressed the real stinkification business begins. The cheese is treated in a salt bath, which “enhances the flavor” and “is essential for the formation of a firm rind.” While the cheese is maturing, it is regularily treated with the salt bath. The longer it matures the stinkier it is… mmmmm yummy!
Anyways, sorry for that incredibly dorky description of cheese making but I thought it was fascinating. After I finished at the cheese dairy I went for one more little walk around Stein while I was waiting for the bus. The bus finally arrived and I went back to St Gallen, and experienced Fasnacht!
Part III: Fasnacht in St GallenFasnacht is a celebration in German speaking parts of Europe. I am a little confused about why it happens, but I believe it started as a kind of pre-Lent occasion to gorge yourself on junk food before fasting. It also is supposed to scare away winter, which is quite unnecessary here this year, but the show must go on anyways. When I was in Innsbruck last weekend it was the “Fashings” festival, which I think is quite similar. It started last Thursday in my town and St Gallen and Luzerne, but doesn’t occur till next week in Basel, but they call it Carneval, and so I think it’s a bit different. Apparantely this is like THE parade to go to, but I don’t think I will be able to go due to knee surgery. We’ll see though, I could dress up as Tiny Tim or something. I did miss the big Fasnacht-ing here in Baden, so it was pretty cool I got to see some in St. Gallen. Anyways, Fasnacht was quite unsettling for me at first because the Swiss people, who are usually so clean and reserved, just go insane! I was walking around St Gallen and there was confetti all over the streets. Weird, usually the streets are clean! All the kids dress up to be whatever they want, and their costumes are absolutely amazing! They are so detailed and beautiful! The amount of facepaint is pretty astounding too! Anyways, there was a bunch of kids in St Gallen just running around setting off fire crackers everywhere! They scared the BEEJESUS out of me like five times! How uncivilized. This made me not like Fasnacht at first… but it started to grow on me when I happened upon several quite random marching bands in the streets. Here I was just walking along when from the left approached a band dressed up as astronauts and from the right the “T-squad” and they just kinda merged their songs and kept marching. It was pretty crazy. The costumes were SO SWEET though, there was one astronaut wearing a volleyball skin as a helmet ha ha ha. I kept walking around the old town in St Gallen and saw a band dressed as Mexicans, some Brazilians, and my favorite was the people dressed up as pilots. (On a side note, I MUST be becoming European-ized because I am starting to feel the need to buy some aviators. I know, awful isn’t it?!?! I think I will be able to over come this though, or at least wait till Kaley comes to visit so I have some trustworthy supervision) Anyways, I watched this band for quite a while because they were really good. Then it was time to head home, and I had a solid nap on the train. Like out cold when the ticket lady came by. I was tempted to stay longer but I was absolutely dead tired, and realized that I hadn’t walked that long in a very very long while. My calves were preeeeety tight and I basically just crashed when I came home. February 13 Zig, Zag, Chicken Poo!Last weekend I went to visit my Mom's sisters husbands sister, Jennifer (some sort of Aunt, removed or 2nd aunt or something) and her family in Innsbruck, Austria. They are originally from Ontario, like the rest of my family, but moved to Europe to be opera singers, and thats what they do now! HOW COOL IS THAT?!?! Anyways, I had been planning on going to visit and when I discovered I might be having surgery soon I said WHAT THE HECK I'll go this weekend! So I hopped on the train and when I got there Dan and Ben (her husband and her son) picked me up at the train and took me to their SWEET apartment! It smelled like a real house, it was really exciting for me. (My house smells funny... very funny.) Anyways, Ben went to bed and I talked to Dan for a while until Jennifer got home from work. After she got home we chatted a little more and then went to bed. I felt pretty bad because I was sleeping in Bens room, and he was displaced into the computer room where there was an extra bed. He said he didn't mind and that he slept well, but I mean you never sleep as good when you are displaced like that! His bed was pretty sweet though, had this electric heater thing on top of the mattress so the bed was toasty warm when I got in ... yay! OH AND THEY HAVE GUINEA PIGS! I miss my pets :( The guinea pigs were ABSOLUTELY ADORABLE! One looked exactly like my old guinea pig (and its hair was remarkably similar to what mine looks like in the morning...), and the other one looked exactly like Kaleys old guinea pig.
Saturday morning it was BEAUTIFULLY sunny out, and I spent a lot of time looking out the window and checking out the scenery around their place. Innsbruck is TOTALLY surrounded by mountains, it is soo beautiful! Anyways, we had a huge Canadian style breakfast with pancakes, bacon, and eggs. Mmmmm tasty. After we had all got through the shower, we headed out for a walk to check out the old downtown of Innsbruck, which is absolutely gorgeous! We saw the Golden Roof, which actually has shingles made out of gold! It used to be a palace. On our tour we stopped by the theatre and got a seat hooked up for me for that evening. We walked around for a bit and then eventually headed back for lunch. After lunch we went on a drive up the mountains a little bit on both sides of the valley around Innsbruck. I haven't really done a lot of driving around since I've been here, so this was a nice change of pace. I got to see a LOT of stuff in a very short amount of time. Anyways, we had to head home for dinner because Jennifer was performing in the opera I was going to see that evening. So after we got home and had dinner we headed out to the theatre. The seat they hooked up for me was SWEET! It was like where the boss sits and there was tooons of room and a perfect view of the stage. I really enjoyed the performance; the first part was a big choir singing famous opera songs, and the second part was duets from famous operas. (Jennifer was only in the 2nd part). Although I didn't recognize too many songs, it was still really really cool! I especially enjoyed the orchestra, who was FANTASTIC. When the concert was over I got to go backstage and we took a picture of me and Jennifer all dressed up in her costume. Then we headed home, had a little snack, and went to bed.
Sunday was banana day; banana muffins for breakfast, then we went out for a drive again and a little walk on a little historic path and a not-so-little horse started eating Bens jacket. The path was really pretty, although it should have been COVERED in snow! Boooo! Anyways, the walk was nice, and even though it was cloudy the air was still very refreshing and I was glad to get out and move around a bit. After the drive we headed back and had a banana bread snack and hot chocolate while we played "Zicke Zacke Huhnekacke" which is a board game like concentration, where you have to flip cards over and remember where they are. In English, the game would be called "Zig Zag Chicken Poop." AHahahahahahhahaha. I thought it was hilarious. Ben, of course, kicked everyones butt. Twice. After we got beat at that we just kinda hung out until I had to catch my train. Jennifer packed me one HECK of a meal for the train, and I basically ended up eating all the way home. Mmmmm good. I did meet an Austrian lady who is teaching Spanish in St. Gallen, Switzerland, and whos Mexican husband sings opera there. SMALL WORLD because thats where Jennifer was working in the summer! Anyways, all in all I had an absolutely fabulous weekend and I'm really glad I got to meet Jennifer and her family, because they were SO NICE! I really appreciated them letting me come visit and stay with them, it was possibly one of the most normal relaxing weekends I've had all year!
This week has been kinda slow so far, just been working and grocery shopping... I'm sure you don't want to hear about my 50% off yellow peppers and asparagus, because as exciting as my pasta sauce and homemade meatballs are to ME, I am sure they are not as exciting when you don't get to taste them :)
Tomorrow, however, I am probably gonna head to Zurich to see the Rodin exhibit on at the art museum there... WOO HOO I love Rodin! The Rodin museum in Paris was FANTASTIC so I am quite excited for this! February 08 My KneeSo I had my MRI on Monday, and it was one of the most comfortable experiences of my life! There were foam tracks for my legs to sit in, and pillows and blankets everywhere and the nurse, who spoke only German to me (and I understood) gave me some nice headphones and I basically napped for 20 minutes while I was in the machine. Sweeeeeet. I thought that my knee was getting better... even though the swelling wasn't going down, and today I went back to the doctor and figured out that my ACL (Anterior Cruciate Ligament, the one that prevents your thigh bone from sliding forward of your shin bone) is mostly ruptured. Sooo long story short I am getting it repaired, hopefully next week, and I will then have TITANIUM STAPLES holding it in place... WOOT! I am a little bit nervous...but have complete faith in the Swiss doctors and I'm sure it will all be fine. ACL repairs are usually pretty intense to recover from though... hellllloooooo physio!
Anyways, this weekend I am going to visit my uncles sister in Innsbruck (Austria) and she is an opera singer! So I get to go to the opera! YAY! I am pretty stoked! February 04 TechnoramaThis weekend was a pretty fantastic weekend. Friday night I watched Monty Pythons Life of Brian, and it was possibly the 2nd stupidest movie I have ever seen (1st goes to My Super Ex-Girlfriend). Anyways, it was fun and I had a nice little nap. Saturday I had a GREAT sleep in, cleaned up the paper recycling on our balcony and then headed to the Brokenhaus in Ennetbaden (that translates to "the second hand store accross the river). It was pretty sweet. They had a lot of cool old stuff, tons of furniture and old books and records and dishes coming out the wazoo! It was a beautiful walk over there too, the river is very pretty and there are some sweet buildings up the hill on that side of the river. Of course I didn't take any pictures... that was really dumb... considering I even had my camera with me! Anyways, I didn't buy anything but I almost bought a trumpet! I also asked an old Swiss man how much the saxophone he was selling cost... in German! AND UNDERSTOOD HIS ANSWER. It was pretty fun. I have definitely become mUCH more confident with my German lately, and this weekend made me decide that I ABSOLUTELY have to keep taking lessons because I really want to learn more and practice more! I also realized that my German is not so bad. I can kinda understand people when they talk, if they talk slowly and in High German, not crazy Swiss German. I've learned how to figure out when people are asking me what happened to my knee... several nice old ladies on the bus have asked me if its broken and I can say "Not broken!" And today at the science center the cashier asked me if I wanted a wheelchair... so I had a good laugh. And then someone else helped me with my wrist band and said "This will let you go in and out! Have fun!" AND I UNDERSTOOD IT WAS SO COOL! Anyways, so I skipped some parts of the weekend.
After the Brokenhaus, where I decided I am definitely taking Kaley when she comes to visit) we headed back into town and I did a little bit of grocery shopping then came home... and headed right out again. Me, Aaron, Darren, Krispin, and Paul went to a birthday party in Zurich at some Swiss peoples house. The house was ABSOLUTELY INSANE! HUGE! AND BEAUTIFUL! AND THEY HAD A BARBEQUE! I haven't seen a BBQ here yet! Not a real one anyways, so that was quite exciting for me. Anyways, huge fireplace and sauna and beautiful loft etc etc... it was gorgeous. We didn't get to see the beach house by the lake... bummer! AND the best feature was that there was THREE WAYS to get in and out of the kitchen... most of the ones I have seen here only have one entrance/exit. EW! Anyways, they made us a lovely dinner... and then more food... and then cake. We headed out sometime after midnight, and ended up taking a cab to the Zurich trainstation because the trains had stopped! CRAZY SWISS TRANSIT. Anyways, I ended up getting home at about 3am and going to sleep exhausted. HOWEVER, several crazy intense people went out to a conert that went until 10:30 SUNDAY MORNING. INSANITY! They texted me at 08:46 and were like "still going." I thought they meant "are we still going to the science center today?" BUT they meant they were still partying. So when I got a call at like 10:30 and Darren was asking if we were still going I thought to myself "If Darren can party until now and then still want to go to the science center, I can get my lazy bum out of bed and go." So Krispin and I made a mad dash for the trian and got to Winterthur pretty quickly, and Krispin made the fatal error of having a huge sandwich on the train and almost fell asleep because of such intense food consumption. We arrived in Winterthur before Darren and I decided to find a coffee and I had the BEST cappucino I have ever had. And it was even better because I ordered it in German. Dunkel cappucino all the way. It was soooo dark and so delicious... mmmmm. So, sufficiently wired, we met Darren and took the bus to TECHNORAMA! WOO HOOO!!!!
The building itself pretty much looks like it is melting on the outside... weird mirror action going on. Inside it is equally as crazy. On the ground floor was the "physics" section, so there was lots of gyroscopes and magnets and springs and balls on strings and electro gadgets and pretty much everything I was ever supposed to learn in a physics class was embodied in a fun exhibit there. My personal favorite was probably the magnetic fluids that made CRAZY SPIKES when you turned the magnetic fild on. ALTHOUGH the gyroscope that was like a bucking bronco was sweet too. The second floor was even crazier! The "water, nature, and chaos" section was sooo cool! You could like make tornados and there was a waterfall with a strobe light on it that made it look like the water was falling up or not moving, and magnetically induced dust devils and generally just sweet spinning things. The next section was "Mathe-magic" and that was kinda cool too. Lots of puzzles and computery things go do...I think my favorite was a little arch thing I built. That is the only thing I took a picture of all day... dOH! It was beautiful though. Anyways, the last section on the 2nd floor was the optical illusion section... and it was prettttttyyyyy crazy. By the third floor we were all pretty tired, but the rest of the children that were there were still going strong so I missed a couple exhibits that looked kinda sweet, in the "automation" section. There was some gait analysis and some other camera stuff that looked pretty fun, but very very crowded. There was a huge section of wooden toys that were mazes for little red balls to roll through, and you had to push and pull on certain parts to get the balls through the whole obstacle course. Some of them were REALLY REALLY hard! I figured a few out... but was really more impressed that someone took all that time to build the crazy machines! I think probably my favorite part of this floor was the model of a human eyeball they had set up. Everything that I was ever supposed to learn in bio about the eye started to make sense as I was changing the shape of the fake cornea by injecting fluid into it. Moi HA HA HA HA! It was sweet. My LEAST favorite part of this floor was the exhibit that made you look into a mirror and shine a small light into one eye while you shone a BIG light in the other eye so that you could see how your pupil reacts to light... ouch. There was some VERY cool things about the eye there though, very well done. By this time I think Darren and Krispin had crashed on a bench, so I took a quick look through the lasers and light section and it brought back some nasty memories of my optics and acoustics course... so that was short lived. We were all pretty tired by now and decided to head out. Overall, it was a FANTASTIC museum, and I'm incredibly glad I went! The train ride home was pretty uneventful, aside from this little baby that seroiusly just WAILED the whole way back. It was impressive that something so small was making that much noise. I think it was probably crying at the end because it was so sore from crying so much! Poor little guy :( This evening was pretty low key, just did a bunch of stuff I should have done already and cleaned up a little... supposed to have finished up my resume but haven't yet... ugh. I need to find a job for next summer! |
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