Hello Everyone!,
It has been 3 weeks since I have arrived in Belgium!I have experienced a lot and am learning so much. Since I didn't know much French at all before I came here I am finding it very exhausting to concentrate, but they say I am learning fast which makes me feel great! I get along pretty well with my host family. I have 3 younger sisters, and a host Mom: Vero and a host Dad: Luc. They are wonderful they include me in all the family activities and keep me active. I am playing soccer on the towns club team and might start doing track too. Sports are not big at all in Belgium especially for girls, which is one thing that is difficult for me because thats what I do all the time at home.
I just finished my first week at school which was an experience. School is so different here compared to home. You don't necessarily pick classes you pick a track. For example I am in Math-Sciences, so I take a lot of science classes and since I didn't want to take math classes I go to the library during that and study French. Every year, based on their "track" students have a certain number of hours of courses so instead of having Biology one year Chemistry another year and Physics another year, a certain number of hours of those courses are taken every year. It's very different! There are 3 other exchange students at my school. One from California, one from Arizona, and one from Brazil. Don't worry I do not speak English with them :) At school you don't go inside and stay inside like in my school at home. You wait outside for a lot of things. For example between classes sometimes there is a break kids go outside and it is very cold! In the mornings when school starts at 8:00 it is only about 53 degrees F. So you have to dress warm, but at around 3:00pm it starts to get warm, maybe 75 degrees F or so. A big difference from the morning. I have learned wearing a ton of layers is the name of the game.
To get to school and back most people take public transportation, there are no school bus's! Another thing that is different here is that kids can't drive until they are 18!
I am having a lot of fun though and time is already going so fast! I am meeting a ton of awesome people from all over the world.
Thanks for this opportunity :)
Alyxe Perry
District 7190, Southern Rensselaer Rotary Club
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Aubrey Racz -- Ecuador
September 8, 2012
Aubrey Racz
Host: 4400 Portoviejo
Sponser: 7190, Southern Rensselaer Rotary
Host Family: Medina
Counselor: Pepe Lara
Ecuador is AWESOME!!! I am doing great, and my health is really good too. My host family is super nice and we get along really well. I have met almost everyone in their family and they have taken me to the nearby beach!! I am very comfortable here. I have my own bedroom and bathroom which helps a lot! The school I go to, Cruz del Norte, is great too. My classmates are a little bit crazy, but they make being at school fun. The first week I was here, the school took a week off from classes and did their own version of the Olympics. I was on team Italy...we came in 5th out of 6 teams :[ but it was still really fun. The next week we had classes, I have been to all of them. I will however miss next week because I have to go to the language camp. I definitely feel accepted by the students. They are all really nice and patient with us (there are about 12 exchange students in my school) since we don't really know the language that well. As of now, I have not participated in any activities outside of school, but my host mom mentioned something about playing basketball at night at the school so I am looking into that.
The first Friday I was here, I attended a Rotary party. The next Sunday, I spent the day with my counselor and his family at his parents beach house. The last time I saw him was at the Rotary meeting on Wednesday the 5th. At this meeting on Wednesday, I got my first allowance of 80 dollars. I think my relationship with both my counselor and host club is excellent.
One Saturday night I had a cool experience. My family and I went to a "funeral." It was very different from home. Everyone sat in chairs and recited the whole rosary. Then they give a plate of food to everyone. And then that was it. Much different from home and it was really cool to experience.
I have no concerns!! Hope all is well in New York!!
Aubrey Racz
Host: 4400 Portoviejo
Sponser: 7190, Southern Rensselaer Rotary
Host Family: Medina
Counselor: Pepe Lara
Ecuador is AWESOME!!! I am doing great, and my health is really good too. My host family is super nice and we get along really well. I have met almost everyone in their family and they have taken me to the nearby beach!! I am very comfortable here. I have my own bedroom and bathroom which helps a lot! The school I go to, Cruz del Norte, is great too. My classmates are a little bit crazy, but they make being at school fun. The first week I was here, the school took a week off from classes and did their own version of the Olympics. I was on team Italy...we came in 5th out of 6 teams :[ but it was still really fun. The next week we had classes, I have been to all of them. I will however miss next week because I have to go to the language camp. I definitely feel accepted by the students. They are all really nice and patient with us (there are about 12 exchange students in my school) since we don't really know the language that well. As of now, I have not participated in any activities outside of school, but my host mom mentioned something about playing basketball at night at the school so I am looking into that.
The first Friday I was here, I attended a Rotary party. The next Sunday, I spent the day with my counselor and his family at his parents beach house. The last time I saw him was at the Rotary meeting on Wednesday the 5th. At this meeting on Wednesday, I got my first allowance of 80 dollars. I think my relationship with both my counselor and host club is excellent.
One Saturday night I had a cool experience. My family and I went to a "funeral." It was very different from home. Everyone sat in chairs and recited the whole rosary. Then they give a plate of food to everyone. And then that was it. Much different from home and it was really cool to experience.
I have no concerns!! Hope all is well in New York!!
Keith Roscoe -- France
September 11, 2012
Hello All,
Update: I am alive! The voyage here wasn't horrible. it was long, but it could have been worse I suppose.
I
have already done so many things with my host family. In an attempt to
list them: gone sailing, gone to the beach house, been ice skating, bike
riding along a canal commissioned by Napoleon, bike tour of town, and
toured the local castle. With Rotary I have already been to a few
events, the most notable being my orientation at Le Pouliguen. Le
Pouliguen is the largest beach in Europe, and it was awesome. There I
had my first crepe in France! And, it was with a frenchman might I add.
I was taken there by a local, haha.
School, oh school. French school is very, very
different. After, numerous visits to the administration I believe I
have finally settled all my classes. I feel like this level of school
here is just like the AP version of everything back home. That being
said I am in the AP Economics French Version. Unfortunately, I decided
to not take AP Econ...Anyway, I will just have to read teh textbook once
I get it.
My host family has been super awesome! They are always really helpful and fun. So, that makes life easier.
Photos: ( in no particular order)
-One is me on my first day when we went climbing on the rocks on the coast
-Eating my first crepe with Hudson(Brazil) and Kirby (Arkansas)
-Le Pouliguen, well a part of it
-The castle
-Closing scene of a sketch we did at our orientation.
District 7190 Host Club: Cobleskill, NY
Chris Allison -- Venezuela
September 10, 2012
Host Family: Frediani; Coro, Venezuela
Host Club: 4380
7190 Sponsoring Club: Salem Rotary
I have only been here 3 days and as such have not participated in any Rotary or school functions.
I feel great.
I have only been here 3 days, but
its awesome. Venezuela is great. Caracas is a jaw dropping city built
into the side of the steepest mountain I have ever seen. Chavez's face
is posted everywhere and there are many political demonstrations for the
upcoming election.
On the way back to my town (Coro) we drove through tropical
jungles, around the edge of near vertical mountains, and past deserted
tropical beaches with no one insight for miles. In Coro I am 15 minutes
from the ocean, 1 hour from the beach (which is apparently much better
than the just the ocean), and 1 hour away from mountains covered in what
I can only describe as dry jungle. I am also only a few minutes away
from the Coro Dune National Park, a desert with towering dunes that
roles on for miles.
I speak better spanish than I thought I did and can
carry on a pretty good conversation if the other person talks slowly.
At the end of the day its hard to think or write complex sentences in
English.
I don't start school for another two weeks but
apparently there are sports and other activities to do beforehand.
Hopefully I will find out more about them sometime this week.
Kirsten Lomnitzer -- Brazil
September 10, 2012
Name: Kirsten Beth Lomnitzer
Sponsoring Club: North Creek Rotary Club District 7190
Host Club: Sao Luis, Sao Fransisco Rotary Club District 4490
I have been having an amazing time here in Brazil. I love the culture and the food that is so different and yet the same to the United States. I have been doing better in school but I stil have a heard time on tests. However, I am learning and I can already understand so much more than when I first arrived. On Saturday, I had my first (unofficial) meeting with the other Rotary exchange students in Sāo Luís. I had a wonderful time. I'm looking forward to the day I will understand Portuguese just as easily as I understand English and while that day isn't here yet, I can feel it coming.
Obrigada! Thank you!
Name: Kirsten Beth Lomnitzer
Sponsoring Club: North Creek Rotary Club District 7190
Host Club: Sao Luis, Sao Fransisco Rotary Club District 4490
I have been having an amazing time here in Brazil. I love the culture and the food that is so different and yet the same to the United States. I have been doing better in school but I stil have a heard time on tests. However, I am learning and I can already understand so much more than when I first arrived. On Saturday, I had my first (unofficial) meeting with the other Rotary exchange students in Sāo Luís. I had a wonderful time. I'm looking forward to the day I will understand Portuguese just as easily as I understand English and while that day isn't here yet, I can feel it coming.
Obrigada! Thank you!
Friday, August 10, 2012
Kirsten Lomnitzer -- Brazil
Name: Kirsten Beth Lomnitzer
Sponsoring Club: North Creek Rotary Club District 7190
Host Club: Sao Luis, Sao Fransisco Rotary Club District 4490
I
arrived in Brazil on the 31st of July and settled in accordingly. I
have been having a very wonderful time. I started school on Monday and
while I may not be able to understand everything that the professor
says, I get by. My host family and I get along very well, even if one of
the phrases I use the most frequently means 'I do not understand'. Last
night I attended a Rotary Club meeting and was able to thank them for
this opportunity. Thank you very much.
Obrigada.
Kirsten Beth Lomnitzer
PS Due to the fact that no Brazilian can pronounce my name, I am called Kiki.
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Amy Hayes -- Brazil
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Everything here is going well. This past weekend, all the exchangers in my district (one of the largest, I think, 50-something of us) had a conference. We took a bus trip to some amazing places I would not have been able to visit otherwise. We went to an amusement part called "Beto Caharro" which was SO much fun. This was my first time meeting all the other exchange students, since I came late, and before this weekend past, I knew only three or four of them through facebook. We also went to a beach for two days, and Curitiba as well. We stayed in nice hotels and ate amazing food.
The district is full of great people,and I love them all. I was thinking on the trip how absolutely amazing it was that we had literally, the entire world, in a bus.
Brazil is so beautiful, especially when you travel it. School is great, and I always take tests with everyone and have my school supplies there. I was talking to other exchangers, and they told me at their schools, they don't do very much. Sometimes I get bored, but for most of the time, they keep me occupied.
I switched families in mid-March. They are COMPLETELY different, but nothing for the better or worse, every family is different. I think this family fits my personality more. I am a bit reserved sometimes, and so is my new mother. I have a little sister, and although I am not so great with kids, she is seven, but we get along. I have no internet in my apartment now, which is a change.
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