Ups and Downs

(Editorial note/FYI: I wrote this post over the course of several days, so it might seem a little disjointed and the title might not reflect the content as much as I had originally intended.)

Confession time: I hate blogging. That is the main reason why I keep posting inconsistently and changing my timelines for posting. Oh, trust me. I have the time. (Seriously. No one should have this much free time. It’s just bad for you. The Norwegian university system is not set up well—but that is another blog post, if I ever get around to it.) But I can think of like 20 things off the top of my head right now that I would rather be doing than sitting down and reflecting about my life right now. Yet at the same time, I don’t want to come across as an asshole, because I appreciate your interest in my life, although—and let’s be honest here—you probably have better things to be doing right now than reading this.

I’ve spent almost all of the time since my last blog post in Oslo. The hectic craziness of traveling that I was just finally getting used to has been replaced by schoolwork, running, hiking, a desperate summer internship/employment hunt (more on that later), trip planning, and a seriously unhealthy amount of Netflix. (Send help!).

My plans to go to Tromso (the northernmost “big” city in Norway, located in the Arctic Circle) two weeks ago fell through at the last minute due to a strike on the airline that everyone in my group had booked on. I had booked my flight on a different airline, so I was unaffected by the strike. Unfortunately, the group cancelled the reservation that they had made for the cabin that we were going to stay in, so I had no place to stay. Looking into my options for accommodation, I found that I couldn’t afford any of them just being by myself, so I ended up cancelling my flight a few hours before departure, getting only the taxes back as a refund. Not-so-fun-fact: the taxes were not that much of what I paid, and I lost a lot of money :(. Not. Cool. At least I was able to have a fun night out in Oslo playing beer pong in a bar. But I would have much preferred to have seen the northern lights in Tromso. Oh, well. Sometimes life is frustrating—no sense dwelling on that.

After the Tromso incident, I spent an uneventful weekend in Oslo trying to maximize my productivity. I did my taxes online thanks to the help of my dad via the magic that is Google Hangouts. I got my schoolwork done (mostly). I watched Netflix. I went hiking. I went for a run. (Trying to get back up to at least 20 miles a week [should probably be like 30 miles by May] to get ready for when I am going to start training in June for the Medtronic Twin Cities Marathon in October!) I essentially repeated that same procedure the next week.

Just a quick note about the hiking and running situation: it’s great in Oslo. The north/northeastern part of the city simply stops. Like there is nothing developed there at all. It’s all forest (the Nordmarka), with nicely signed (in Norwegian, obviously) hiking trails that are awesome for hiking and trail running. I am looking forward to developing some more strength in my running with the amount of hills that I have been running, which is definitely for the best. I am fortunate to have found a running partner (Nathan—also from the U of M); it’s easier to push yourself when you run with someone else!

I have been spending much of my time over the past few weeks (and months) trying to secure an internship for this summer. I’ve especially been looking for opportunities that have field work associated with them, as I don’t really have any environmental field work experience, and it’s important to have that experience for the type of work that I want to do upon graduation. Not wanting to return to my previous internship as a park ranger (because I learned through that experience that I wanted to do more hands-on environmental work and changed my educational plans accordingly—essentially being a park ranger, although a mostly positive experience, is just not relevant to me anymore), I applied for many, many internships (at least 25). After I had a few Skype and phone interviews and some rejections (and no offers), I naturally started freaking out. And when I freak out, I don’t half-ass it. I mean like straight I-will-not-find-anything-and-I-am-going-to-be-miserable panicking. I spent a lot of time on the phone with my mom venting and making worst-case-scenarios. I also messaged many of my siblings and close friends with my frustrations. Shout-out to my awesome family and friends for countering my insane whining and frustrations with support and encouragement—y’all are the best and I miss you all greatly! So excited to see you all again in May! (Which is coming up really fast, whoa! Past the halfway point now!)

I continued with my interviewing, getting another rejection, and right as I was about to launch a final full-on, last-ditch internship application extravaganza (with a plan to apply for almost 20 more internships that I didn’t really want but were willing to jump on the grenade for as a means of gaining experience), I got some VERY unexpected and happy news. I was offered a position that I had applied for in early November and had interviewed for in late December. This was just days after I had [finally] given up hope on this opportunity and was feeling incredibly pessimistic about my internship hunt and life in general (strong negative feelings can do that to an individual). I had been pestering my HR contact at this organization literally for months about the status of my application, and I am so thrilled to have had my persistence pay off! I accepted the position and am incredibly excited to start it in late May! I will be working as a Regulatory Student Trainee (student trainee=intern) for the US Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul District, where I will be doing environmental regulatory work (jurisdictional determinations, compliance, and enforcement) from an administrative side as well as in the field. And the position is located in downtown St. Paul, meaning that I can live in my school housing (no stressful housing hunt from abroad!) and that I can spend my first-ever summer in the Twin Cities! I’m so freaking excited and happy that everything worked out! And, funny story: I was offered another position that I also wanted a day later; I weighed my options and politely declined the offer. As my mom told me: “When it rains, it pours!” Things have a funny way of working out sometimes! (BTW, want to network with a young professional in the environmental science field? Check out my LinkedIn profile! #shamelessplug)

My “Environment and Society” course had an optional overnight field trip to Sweden earlier this week. We left Oslo on Thursday morning, heading for the Glava Solar Energy Center, which is a research center on solar technology. It was really interesting to learn more about the solar industry in Scandinavia and Europe, and I got to see some of the technology that I had read about up close in person, which was really cool! It was also really weird because this center is located in a very rural area of Sweden, so that was a little unexpected. From the solar energy center, we went to Karlstad, the city that we would be spending the night in. We stopped on the way to get some late lunch at a truck stop/restaurant/candy store. Not being very hungry, I opted for candy. Being in Sweden, I naturally bought and ate some Swedish fish. I was pretty excited about that, but then again I’m a total dork, so it really wasn’t a big deal, haha. When we arrived at Karlstad, we checked into the hostel and got situated. Then we went to a restaurant for dinner and drinks with the other students and the professors (which was not something that I have ever done before, so I was a little amused by that). There were around 20 students in total, of which 6 or so were international students. With international students being the minority, much of the casual conversation at dinner (and throughout the rest of the field trip) was in Norwegian, which was a little disheartening (I wanted to make some new Norwegian friends!), although I am generally pretty used to not being able to understand what is going on by now. After dinner we headed to a bar, grabbing a few drinks before heading back to the hostel for the night.

Friday morning we left for Storaenso, a massive papermill operation in Karlstad. We got to learn more about the forestry industry in Sweden, the Storaenso company, and the processes that they use to make liquid paperboard packaging (the stuff that is used for milk cartons) at their plant. Then we toured the factory. Large industrial processes have always been really fascinating to me, and this proved to be no exception. Two GIANT machines make ENORMOUS rolls (45 TONS each!) of this liquid paperboard packaging material. And it only takes an hour to make one of these rolls. Incredible. I’m really glad to have been able to learn some more about the processes behind turning trees into milk cartons. Before this field trip I only had a very basic understanding of how paper is made, and it’s always good to learn more about the processes behind the production of items that we use every day! (I have some pictures from this field trip that I will be posting on Facebook sometime soon, so watch for those.)

On the way back from Sweden we stopped at a liquor store (on a field trip!!! Hehe!) so that we could take advantage of Sweden’s significantly cheaper alcohol prices compared to Norway. It was pretty nice! We stopped again at a shopping center (that was built near the border pretty much specifically for Norwegians to come and buy cheaper stuff than can be bought in Norway). I was told by some Norwegians to buy meat and cheese here, as they are two of the items that have the largest price differences. They weren’t kidding—meat was soooo cheap compared to Norway, and I ended up buying more meat yesterday than I have probably bought since I have been here, haha. Cheese was also pretty cheap too (and they had cheddar cheese, which I haven’t been able to find in Norway and have been missing dearly, so I was thrilled!), so I stocked up.

We headed back to Oslo and I spent a kind of lame Friday night working on some school stuff and then this post (which I didn’t finish then, unfortunately). I also got a chance to Skype with my friends Mary and Jessi (along with a brief appearance from my friend Forest), which was really great! It was so nice to talk to some classmates/UMN friends on Skype for a change and not just my family—not that I am at all sick of talking to my family, but I like hearing from friends too! (UMN friends who are reading this, you should Skype with me sometime—it will likely make my day!)

And now it’s Saturday night—I better get to enjoying myself before it gets too late; I have a bunch of schoolwork to get done tomorrow. Lots of deadlines are coming up on Monday/Tuesday because Easter break begins for me next week! I’m so excited for what I’m doing over break, but more on that when I get my stuff done…

As always, thanks for reading!

-TJS

Copenhagen and Berlin

Well, shit. It’s definitely been much more than a week since I last posted. It turns out that traveling almost constantly while being a student is harder than it sounds. (I’ll try to post once a week from here on out, but don’t take it personally if I forget! I’ll keep doing bi-weekly posts at the bare minimum.) I’ve been spending most of the time that I’ve not been traveling over the past three weeks catching up on readings and working on assignments, doing summer internship hunting/interviewing, and trying to get settled back into things here in Oslo. (As I basically have been all over the place for the past few weeks.) Since my last post, I have been in Denmark, Sweden (only for 3 hours, but I’m counting it anyway!), and Germany with my sister, Laura. It was so great to have her over here in Europe with me, and I am so blessed that she was able to visit and travel with me! I have been feeling very homesick lately, and she helped me feel much better in that regard (at least temporarily). I just recently uploaded my pictures of Copenhagen (with a few pictures from the brief amount of time we spent in Sweden, haha) and Berlin to Facebook. Links are my Photos page! I’m not going to be as detailed with travel descriptions for this post because I have new episodes of “House of Cards” to watch on Netflix yet. 😉 Also, Laura promised that she would write a guest blog post, which I am sure will be more detailed and engaging than what I have to say. Look forward to that soon!

17 February 2015-21 February 2015: Copenhagen, Denmark!

Laura got to Copenhagen one day before I did, so she was able to get familiarized with the city a little quicker than I was. After being a total idiot on several fronts in the airport (I somehow ended up going through passport control twice when I didn’t need to go through it at all and then I couldn’t figure out how to get out of the airport, haha), I finally got myself a ticket to the central train station to meet Laura and head to the hotel.

My initial impressions of Copenhagen were that it is very similar to Oslo, albeit much busier and much grimier. Also, there were bikes EVERYWHERE! I loved that aspect the most. So many bikes! It was fantastic. We actually decided to rent bikes for two days while we were there so that we could explore the city better and not have to rely on the public transportation (which I found very disappointing and very expensive compared to Oslo). Biking around the city was definitely a highlight of the trip. Copenhagen has excellent cycling infrastructure (makes Minneapolis/St. Paul look like a total joke), and it was great to have the freedom to bike around. I contacted my buddy Alex who had studied abroad in Copenhagen for some advice on what to see, and he asked a girl he knew who was from there for some suggestions; she sent a huge list, so it was awesome to have some local insight into what to see!

Highlights:

• Biking around
• Seeing the Danish crown jewels in the treasury and the surrounding palace
• The Round Tower (a tower on a church that had a very cool observation deck)
• Having to run to find an ATM after learning that the restaurant we just ate at didn’t accept cards
• Amagerfælled, a really cool park that we biked through
• The Danish Museum, which was overwhelming with history
• Taking the train across the sea to Malmö, Sweden for dinner and the most expensive drink I have ever purchased (on accident—I don’t want to talk about how much it was, ugh!)
• Kastellet, a really unique star-shaped fortress

21 February 2015-24 February 2015: Back to Oslo for School, Then Back to Traveling

Laura heads to Berlin while I head back to Oslo for reading and classes. (She had more fun than I did.) After class on Tuesday, I head to the airport and fly to Berlin. As part of my ongoing theme of being an idiot in airports, I naturally somehow buy a 35EUR public transit pass on accident for my 3.5 days in Berlin. (Man, I’m scared to check my online banking—traveling is so expensive! Especially when you’re as stupid as I am.) After a brief stressful period wherein my phone (which had my directions on it) almost died in a country where I can speak like 5 phrases in the native language (one of which is asshole-ish and another is part of a family joke that would be weird to explain), I managed to find Laura and meet up with her at a Vietnamese restaurant. After eating, we went to a grocery store, where I consequentially FREAKED OUT at how inexpensive everything was. Norway is a super expensive country, so I loved being in Germany, which was the cheapest country that I have been to so far.

25 February 2015-28 February 2015: Berlin, Germany!

After an uncomfortable night’s sleep in our bizarre hotel/hostel, we got to work in exploring Berlin. (Seriously, our hotel was weird and frustrating in many ways. It was cheap, so it was super popular among German teenagers on field trips, so that was really strange. And there was no WiFi in the room, which was so annoying.) As Laura had already been there for almost 3 full days before me, we had prioritized attractions/places to visit to maximize our remaining time together. Laura is really directionally-savvy, and she had a great understanding of the new places we were in during the time we spent traveling, which saved a lot of time. We spent much of our time on my first full day there at the Jewish Museum, which outlines Jewish history in Germany and Europe from its beginnings to the present. I found much of the museum to be incredibly sobering (like much of Berlin’s history), as Jewish peoples in Germany were decimated by the Holocaust. Berlin has such an interesting history, and I am glad that I was able to get to see a decent amount of it through museums and historic sites (although there is so much to see there that it would be impossible to see it all).

My second full day was spend walking around through the Tiergarten (an awesome and huge park near the city center and the capitol), visiting more historic sites and museums, and GOING TO THE DECEMBERISTS IN CONCERT!!! Ever since I knew that I was going to be in Europe during The Decemberists’ 2015 European Tour, I had planned on seeing them in concert. They are one of my favorite bands and I actually was able to talk Laura (who also loves them and introduced them to me) into changing her trip dates to align for when they were going to be in Berlin. Unfortunately, we both somehow were expecting the other person to buy the tickets and the concert sold out by the time that I finally went to buy the tickets. After months of Craigslist-searching, Facebook event posting, and whining, we realized that the situation might be hopeless. We decided to go to the venue before the show started to try to get some last-minute tickets. After standing around like desperate idiots for over an hour and another frantic ATM run on my part (which was much more intense and panicky than in Denmark, lol), we managed to get two tickets to the show! We were literally freaking out to the point that it weirded out the men who had sold the tickets to us, but we didn’t care. We got into the show and enjoyed the hell out of it! It was my favorite part of the trip, and it was one of the best concerts that I have ever been to. The next morning I said goodbye to Laura (:(), who headed back home to Minnesota, and explored some more of Berlin by myself.

Highlights:

• The beautiful weather! (At one point is was 50F/10C, which felt incredible! Not that Oslo is cold compared to MN, but warm weather is so invigorating after winter)
• The Tiergarten (We had a picnic there and I also went for a run there the evening that Laura left, which was very cool!)
• The Jewish Museum
• The Topography of Terrors (exhibit/museum on the atrocities committed by the Nazi SS)
• Berlin Victory Column (cool statue/observatory with a great view of the city)
• Brandenburg Gate
• The Decemberists!!!
• Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe (and the museum, which was heart-wrenching)
• All of the history that I was able to experience and learn about
• Downloading the series finale (:() of “Parks and Recreation” on my phone in a McDonald’s because the hotel WiFi was awful
• How cheap everything was compared to Oslo

It was a great time traveling with Laura, and Copenhagen and Berlin are very cool cities that I am glad to have been able to experience! As I mentioned, Laura promised a guest post to my blog, so look for that soon!

I might go to Tromsø, Norway tomorrow (the uncertainty stems from an ongoing logistical disaster that I don’t want to talk about) for the weekend, so I might have that to report on next time. Otherwise, I will be writing about time spent in Oslo for next time. As always, thanks for reading!

-TJS

Exploring Norway with My Sister!

Hello everyone! For once I am not kidding when I say that this is going to be a quick post. I’m leaving for the airport in 7 hours and I haven’t packed anything yet, so it would irresponsible for me to do otherwise. Naturally, I made up for my written brevity with an insane amount of pictures on Facebook. So, without further ado:

My sister Laura came to Norway to visit me, as I mentioned at the end of my last blog post! After meeting her at the train station on Wednesday, I managed to force her into overcoming her jetlag by doing tourist things throughout Oslo for the day. After I showed her UiO’s campus, we explored Vigelandsparken (a really interesting sculpture park), went to the Viking Ship Museum, explored Akershus (an old fortress), walked on the roof of the Oslo Opera House, and more. I finally let Laura go to bed at 8:30PM; she had been awake for like 30+ hours, so props to her!

On Thursday we went on a fjord cruise at Nærøyfjord, located near the Bergen Railway. What an incredible day! The railway from Oslo to Bergen runs through a mountainous region of Norway, so the scenery is amazing. It made the 5 hour train ride seem to go by much quicker (although the train was so comfortable that it didn’t really matter anyway). We took a bus from Voss to Flam (the railway which we were supposed from Myrdal to take had technical issues, unfortunately) where the fjord tour began. I am not exaggerating when I say that the fjord landscape is the most beautiful natural landscape I have ever seen. It felt almost magical–my inner nature lover and environmentalist were losing it over the mountains, glaciers, waterfalls, and jagged rock faces. Look at my pictures, but the pictures don’t do it justice. If you ever get the opportunity to do a fjord cruise, DO IT! Simply incredible.

After the fjord cruise ended (much too soon for our liking), we headed back to Voss on a bus to catch the train to Bergen. We checked into our hostel and ate some dinner and had some drinks at a local pub. We went to bed early, ready to explore our few hours Bergen the next morning.

We spent the morning exploring Bergen. Situated on the edge of the mountains on Norway’s west coast, Bergen is beautiful. We took the Fløibanen (a train thingy) up the mountain to catch a few of the city from the mountainside. Great views! We went down from the mountain and used our remaining time to explore a fortress, check out some shops, and buy some fresh fish from a super friendly fisherman at the Bergen Fish Market. We even got to sample whale meat! We only had until noon before we headed back to Oslo on the Bergen Railway, but we managed to see a decent amount of sites in Bergen and it was great time.

On Saturday we went sledding at a toboggan run (Korketrekkeren) in Oslo, which was fantastic. The run is 2km long and descends 255m. Both ends are near subway stops, so you can just ride the subway back to the top! It was so much fun, but felt incredibly dangerous (and as someone with a history of sledding accidents, I was slightly concerned). But we managed to escape with only some bruises and soreness the next day. Totally worth it!

On Sunday we went to the National Gallery and the Museum of Decorative Arts and Design. I enjoyed both, although art museums aren’t my favorite. We saw several paintings by Edvard Munch, one of Norway’s most famous painters, which was really cool. The design museum had a ridiculous amount of chairs on display–evidently chairs are a common thing to redesign. I also took Laura to Sognsvann, a local lake with skiing and walking trails. It’s one of my favorite places in Olso, so it was cool to be able to show that to her!

Earlier today (technically yesterday because now it’s after midnight *sigh*), Laura flew to Copenhagen, where she is continuing her northern European adventure. Having class today, I stuck around in Oslo to get some stuff done (obviously I procrastinated on all of it, and here we are!). Because it’s “winter reading week”, I have tomorrow and the rest of the week off, which is great for being able to explore Copenhagen (I’m there until Saturday morning). I better start packing. I have to leave for the airport in 6.5 hours now and I need to at least attempt to sleep! Another update about Denmark’s adventures after Saturday! Thanks for reading!

-TJS

More Exploring, Norwegian Academics, and Free Time

Whoops, I forgot to write that follow-up post regarding the content that I had originally written about and then lost in my previous post… Sorry, y’all. I’ve been busy settling into my life here in Norway, and despite the fact that my phone has been constantly reminding me every few hours for the past week (which is so annoying—why do I do that to myself?) to write that follow-up post, I have not done that. Oh, well. You can’t miss what you’ve never known, so there… But I will be talking about most of that stuff in this post anyway, so you’ll know, ‘ya know?

But anyway, enough of that:

Yesterday marked two full weeks since I have been in Norway. Wow. Part of me finds that difficult to believe, but another part of me is surprised by how confident I am in my surroundings for only having been here for 15-ish days. Most of this confidence probably stems from how much exploring of the city I have been doing in my free time. Norwegian universities have a different way of conducting their courses (compared to US universities), so I basically have a ridiculous amount of free time on a weekly basis. (More on the course structure later in this post; keep reading.) I’ve been using this free time to get out and explore my surroundings. I’ve gone running (and accidentally discovered some beautiful forest trails!), walked around an outdoor sculpture garden, explored Oslo’s waterfront, hiked around an awesome lake, and explored Oslo’s incredible public transportation network. Earlier today I saw an incredible sunset over the Oslo Fjord from on top of a hill, which was incredible! (It’s the featured image on this post; check out the rest of my photos to see more.) And tomorrow I am picking up the cross-country skis that I am renting for the season from the student athletic organization, so I will be able to explore the outdoors like a true Norwegian! Seriously, SO MANY people ski here (and they use public transportation to get to the ski runs too, which is awesome)—I’m excited to have another way to get to know my surroundings while exercising.

Getting back to the academics that I briefly mentioned earlier: for a Norwegian student, 30 credits is typical for a full-time load. Each course is usually 10 credits, so most people take 3 courses (and that’s what I am doing). These credits will convert to 15 standard credits back home at UMN, so it’s equivalent to a pretty typical semester for me, at least in terms of credits earned. However, that’s where the typical part ends. (I mean, obviously this semester isn’t typical for me: I’m 4000+ miles away from home and on a different continent in a different country. Duh.) Norwegian universities are based heavily in independent learning, so there is only one lecture a week for most courses. And then there are a lot of assigned readings (which I’m told are not like in the US where you can usually get away without doing them). There is also no homework in the sense that I am used to. Course grades are based entirely (high stakes, much?!) on a written final exam, a semester paper, or a take-home exam. I have all three of those grading methods between my three courses, so I will get a good sense of Norwegian examination protocol.

So because of this, I only have three classes (and one seminar for one of my courses) once each a week. And my schedule is very compact, so I only have class on Mondays and Tuesdays here… Which is totally insane and not at all what I am used to. At UMN I always have class at least Monday through Thursday, and usually (but not always) on Fridays. Going from five days of class per week down to two has been really weird to adjust to, and I know that it will take discipline and effort on my part to be an effective student in the face of so much free time. But it also brings up an important question: What am doing to do with my free time?

It’s an interesting situation, to say the least. Obviously I am going to be spending a decent amount of this free time on learning the material via the assigned readings. But when I finish those each week, my options are wide open. Which is awesomely terrifying. I hope to spend a lot of this free time outdoors, enjoying Norway’s natural beauty via outdoor recreation. I am also planning on doing a decent amount of traveling throughout Europe—I already have flights booked for Denmark and Germany in February when my sister, Laura, comes to visit! (And I also might go to London next week, which would pretty awesome!) And knowing me, I will also be spending some of this free time watching Netflix. (Lame, I know.)

On a final note, I just realized that I talked about my academics but failed to tell y’all about the courses I am taking. (*facepalm*) As I mentioned, I’m taking three courses. I’m an environmental sciences, policy, and management (ESPM!) major, so naturally the course that I am most excited about is “Environment and Society”. This course will be analyzing the environmental science and the issues around this science from an international, human geographic perspective. Much of my coursework has focused on the scientific aspect of the environment, so I am really excited to be apply to apply this knowledge to view these truly global issues from a global, geographic lens. The two other courses that I am enrolled in aren’t really directly related to my ESPM major, but they count toward the liberal education requirements that I need to graduate from UMN anyway, so it’s cool that I can take them here. These courses are “Norwegian Music for International Students” and “Norwegian Life and Society”. The music course is not music-theory-based, so I am glad about that! And the life and society course will help me to learn about and more completely understand the culture that I am immersing myself in for the next 4 months. It should be an interesting semester, and all three classes have been going well so far!

Well, that’s all for now! There will be another post coming your way within the next seven days. (Heh, that rhymed. :P) Thanks for reading, and check out my photos if you haven’t seen them yet and would like to!

-TJS