Good Evening from France!
Almost February and its chilly here in Rennes. This past weekend was very exciting because Caitie Clarke came to visit and we got in a lot of activities. Friday we made breakfast at the dorm and shopped around town a little. Then we went to the Musée de Beaux-Arts in Rennes and spent two hours looking at some very cool art. After we took a little shop around the Soldes, sales here in France. Tried out some sushi at a restaurant near the square and I have to say its just as good here as it is in the US, if not better. The market on Saturday was another big success purchased my first kilo of mussels and made another trip to my cheese guy for some gruyere. Dinner was amazing, mussels in white wine, garlic and butter over pasta. We are enjoying the use of our new pots and pans after our big group trip to IKEA. Also I finally have bedding, its a little funky but will do well for a few months. This next week should be good, I finally have picked out my classes and sign my final class contract this week. Also I am attending the National Theatre of Bretagne to see La vie est un rêve with my theatre group. We also bought tickets for a soccer game in February Rennes v. Nice should be good! Enjoy the photos look for updates on the show after Thursday!
Cait being very excited about our trip to the market.
Cait taking gorgeous photos
Church down the way
Local church in our Square
Cait in front of our dinner, Mussels! (or moules in french)
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Notes from a small city
Salut!
Another week already gone from my great european adventure. Real classes started this week which was certainly interesting. Just as we all thought we had settled we had to run around trying to find new classrooms and listen to 2 hours long lectures of a french professor talking in monotone into a microphone. It is a bit of an intense experience at first but I think eventually I will get used it. I just have to get really good at taking lots of notes in french. All of my exams in my smaller classes will be oral presentations to the class so that will certainly be interesting. Some of the students who have been here since August were helpful with picking topics, some were not but I guess thats the french way. We have almost finished all of our paperwork missions, just a couple more this week and then I should be legal in this country (finally). Biggest news of the week is that Caitlin Clarke is coming to visit this coming Thursday, I am quite ecstatic. Look for lots of crazy shopping and food adventures once she gets here! Another big market day today, got my hands on some gruyere which will be gone in a day because it is even better than I remember. I met my marrain and parrian this week, my two mentor students at school who are both extremely nice and have already gotten me involved in the theatre group and made lunch plans with me. It is nice to have people at school looking out for all of us. Big task of the upcoming week is to find some places to take Cait to dinner and a decent laundrymat. All my love from France. For those of you in Burlington, stay strong the cold will pass eventually!
Our weekend hallway antics:
Guy from the market with his very strange instrument:
Mussels! Once I have a pan to cook them, I will eat them every day!
Fellow L'IEP students from left to right: Jennifer, Colin, Mariela, Tom, Jose and Ale
Jennifer, Tom and Colin
Rennes Opera
Have a great week!
Another week already gone from my great european adventure. Real classes started this week which was certainly interesting. Just as we all thought we had settled we had to run around trying to find new classrooms and listen to 2 hours long lectures of a french professor talking in monotone into a microphone. It is a bit of an intense experience at first but I think eventually I will get used it. I just have to get really good at taking lots of notes in french. All of my exams in my smaller classes will be oral presentations to the class so that will certainly be interesting. Some of the students who have been here since August were helpful with picking topics, some were not but I guess thats the french way. We have almost finished all of our paperwork missions, just a couple more this week and then I should be legal in this country (finally). Biggest news of the week is that Caitlin Clarke is coming to visit this coming Thursday, I am quite ecstatic. Look for lots of crazy shopping and food adventures once she gets here! Another big market day today, got my hands on some gruyere which will be gone in a day because it is even better than I remember. I met my marrain and parrian this week, my two mentor students at school who are both extremely nice and have already gotten me involved in the theatre group and made lunch plans with me. It is nice to have people at school looking out for all of us. Big task of the upcoming week is to find some places to take Cait to dinner and a decent laundrymat. All my love from France. For those of you in Burlington, stay strong the cold will pass eventually!
Our weekend hallway antics:
Guy from the market with his very strange instrument:
Mussels! Once I have a pan to cook them, I will eat them every day!
Fellow L'IEP students from left to right: Jennifer, Colin, Mariela, Tom, Jose and Ale
Jennifer, Tom and Colin
Rennes Opera
Have a great week!
Sunday, January 16, 2011
A Series of Fortunate Events
Greetings from across the pond!
This week has been another one of settling and learning the ropes. Finally made some progress on opening a bank account (even though at every turn came up against obstacles like banks being closed on Mondays?!) and should also receive (finally) my student ID card this week. French class has been good. We watched L'auberge espagnole, good film if you know anything about all the EU countries. Did not fully appreciate the movie the last time I saw it but now as an international exchange student myself so many of the jokes were incredibly applicable to my life here. In addition we did a unit on labor laws and professions in France and had a cool conversation between our French teacher, a student from Switzerland and some of us from the US. International relations at work. All of our elected officials should have to spend some time chatting with people from other countries on an informal basis, it certainly provides new perspectives. Saturday I was invited to a pick up soccer game (it was 54 degrees and pretty sunny) so I went and played with an extremely international group of players all of whom were guys except me. Learned a lot of new français familier, which is good because that is what we are working on in class at the moment. We have grown our vocabularies considerably, there are a lot of phrases they just don't teach you in the states. No pictures again, it has been kind of rainy and dark. Once the sky clears up I will hopefully post some pics of school and other places we go frequently. Definitely of our favorite little boulangerie (bakery) where I pick up our bread and daily mystery dessert. Thank goodness I walk an average of 3 to 5 miles a day or I would be gaining a ton of weight just from Pain au chocolat (chocolate croissants). Please post addresses those of you who want to get postcards. Finally found a post office and will be sending the first batch soon.
All my love from France!
This week has been another one of settling and learning the ropes. Finally made some progress on opening a bank account (even though at every turn came up against obstacles like banks being closed on Mondays?!) and should also receive (finally) my student ID card this week. French class has been good. We watched L'auberge espagnole, good film if you know anything about all the EU countries. Did not fully appreciate the movie the last time I saw it but now as an international exchange student myself so many of the jokes were incredibly applicable to my life here. In addition we did a unit on labor laws and professions in France and had a cool conversation between our French teacher, a student from Switzerland and some of us from the US. International relations at work. All of our elected officials should have to spend some time chatting with people from other countries on an informal basis, it certainly provides new perspectives. Saturday I was invited to a pick up soccer game (it was 54 degrees and pretty sunny) so I went and played with an extremely international group of players all of whom were guys except me. Learned a lot of new français familier, which is good because that is what we are working on in class at the moment. We have grown our vocabularies considerably, there are a lot of phrases they just don't teach you in the states. No pictures again, it has been kind of rainy and dark. Once the sky clears up I will hopefully post some pics of school and other places we go frequently. Definitely of our favorite little boulangerie (bakery) where I pick up our bread and daily mystery dessert. Thank goodness I walk an average of 3 to 5 miles a day or I would be gaining a ton of weight just from Pain au chocolat (chocolate croissants). Please post addresses those of you who want to get postcards. Finally found a post office and will be sending the first batch soon.
All my love from France!
Monday, January 10, 2011
Week two and finally some photos!
Hello!
Yet another eventful day here in France. Ran around for another hour trying to find a bank open on Mondays, apparently most banks here are closed on Sundays and Mondays ( I cannot imagine what would happen in banks in the states tried to do this) and we all needed to open bank accounts asap. So found one and spent a good half hour trying to sign bank contracts with a woman who spoke no English. Thank goodness I have learned the smile and nod. Surprising I understood almost everything. I will soon be outfitted with a french bank card and proceed with my blending in. I finally have some photos for all of you. These first few are from the Marche de Lices which is the big food market on Saturday mornings here in the town square and then there are a few of my dorm. Warning: the photos are legitimate and my room is, yes, about the size of a closet. In addition my mailing address is ( I believe):
Morgan E. Saunders
Cité Université Patton
125 A
12 Rue de Houx
35700 Rennes France
Love from France! Enjoy the Photos
Yet another eventful day here in France. Ran around for another hour trying to find a bank open on Mondays, apparently most banks here are closed on Sundays and Mondays ( I cannot imagine what would happen in banks in the states tried to do this) and we all needed to open bank accounts asap. So found one and spent a good half hour trying to sign bank contracts with a woman who spoke no English. Thank goodness I have learned the smile and nod. Surprising I understood almost everything. I will soon be outfitted with a french bank card and proceed with my blending in. I finally have some photos for all of you. These first few are from the Marche de Lices which is the big food market on Saturday mornings here in the town square and then there are a few of my dorm. Warning: the photos are legitimate and my room is, yes, about the size of a closet. In addition my mailing address is ( I believe):
Morgan E. Saunders
Cité Université Patton
125 A
12 Rue de Houx
35700 Rennes France
Love from France! Enjoy the Photos
Friday, January 7, 2011
Week One: Figuring out what on earth we are all doing.
Salut!
I hope that everyone had a good new year. I am now in Rennes France and have begun my orientation here at Institut d'Etudes Politiques. The rest of the students are in finals from last semester so only the international students have classes. As of right now we are only in one french language class that meets for a couple hours each day. When it falls in the morning it is extremely difficult to get up because it stays dark here much later in the morning than in the US. The rest of the time we all run around figuring out where to eat, how to open bank accounts and do all the paperwork so as not to get deported. I am living in one of the university dorms where I live with other international students and regular students from IEP, Rennes 1 and Rennes 2. Those are the three major universities here. I live in a single but it very small, trust the French to be economical. There is a pretty intense system of buses and metro here so we are all still figuring out how that all works. Postcards will start coming to people once I find the post office! A couple of the other American students and the Mexican students and I went out for crepes last night. Crepes are a speciality in Bretagne and dinner crepes are gallets. I had one with cheese, egg and ham. Amazing! I cannot wait to have enough room in my stomach one of these days for a dessert crepe, with nutella of course. I have some pictures and things on my wall but it is still a little bare so my only request from all of you is small things to hang up. It is very yellow at present. Once I get my camera batteries charged there will be pictures soon. Love from France!
I hope that everyone had a good new year. I am now in Rennes France and have begun my orientation here at Institut d'Etudes Politiques. The rest of the students are in finals from last semester so only the international students have classes. As of right now we are only in one french language class that meets for a couple hours each day. When it falls in the morning it is extremely difficult to get up because it stays dark here much later in the morning than in the US. The rest of the time we all run around figuring out where to eat, how to open bank accounts and do all the paperwork so as not to get deported. I am living in one of the university dorms where I live with other international students and regular students from IEP, Rennes 1 and Rennes 2. Those are the three major universities here. I live in a single but it very small, trust the French to be economical. There is a pretty intense system of buses and metro here so we are all still figuring out how that all works. Postcards will start coming to people once I find the post office! A couple of the other American students and the Mexican students and I went out for crepes last night. Crepes are a speciality in Bretagne and dinner crepes are gallets. I had one with cheese, egg and ham. Amazing! I cannot wait to have enough room in my stomach one of these days for a dessert crepe, with nutella of course. I have some pictures and things on my wall but it is still a little bare so my only request from all of you is small things to hang up. It is very yellow at present. Once I get my camera batteries charged there will be pictures soon. Love from France!
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