
Today it’s the anniversary of my arrival in Switzerland. Its incredible already a year has passed… so fast. The past year has been filled with lots of trips and adventures, german classes and “lost in translation” moments, new friends and home sickness. Here’s a recap.
Trips.
We have traveled a lot over this past year. We figured since we’re here, we should take advantage of having a home base right in the heart of Europe.
In the last year we’ve visited 12 cities in 4 countries There’s still plenty we want to see, if only we had more money… For now, we have out trip to Munich for the Oktoberfest this Sunday, and the big trip to the US and Mexico in December.
Language.
We started taking German classes in October of last year, and made it through 2 courses (that lasted about 4 months each) It was hard and time consuming, but fun and a great thing to do together. We learned enough to understand bits and pcs of tv shows, and words here and there on posters and advertisements. We stopped attending classes last july, and planned to take other (less expensive) classes later. We still haven’t signed up for anything… I don’t know if we will, since we’re a bit discouraged by the fact that even learning German, we still wouldn’t speak the “local” language, which is a swiss-german dialect… a bit frustrating. We get by with what we know, and with English (even though a lot of people are reluctant to speak English to you unless you ask them in German if they do… weird).
Green, green, green.
This whole recycling thing is hard core! I’ve mentioned this before, but I think its worth including on the anniversary recap.
So this is how the trash-recycling system works:
-Trash is picked up once a week and you have to buy special bags from the city or it won’t get picked up. (like $1.50 US per 30 lt bag). This gives you an incentive to recycle all you can so you only put actual trash in the bags.
-Paper gets picked up twice a month, and you have to bundle it up really nicely and put it on the curve the morning of pick up. (paper sheets, paper packing, phone books…)
-Cardboard gets picked up once month (egg cartons, cereal boxes, toilet paper tubes…)
-Clothes and shoes are picked up about once every 3 months. You get a special bag in the mail and you leave it out the day of pick up (or drop it off anytime at designated locations)
-Big items (like furniture, mattresses, garden things) are picked up about once every 2 months. You bring them to your neighborhood collection point.
-Glass bottles and aluminum you bring to the nearest collection center (separate glass by color)
-PET bottles are collected at the grocery store.
-garden waste is picked up once a month on a special green dumpster.
-Batteries and electronics you bring back to the store.
-hazardous waste (paint, paint thinners, chemicals) is picked up about twice a year at a neighborhood collection point.
Always on time
The public transport system is unbelievable reliable. Buses and trams arrive and depart on time (to the minute) and you can always count on it. When accidents happen and lines need to be diverted, you can always hear announcements on the speakers on every tram, bus and stop so you plan your route accordingly. I just renewed my one-year pass for about 650 CHF (around $550 US). I am sure this is one of the things I will miss the most when we leave Switzerland.
Prices
Yes, everything is Switzerland is expensive. Food, clothes, everything. Eating out is really not even an option (for us), and going out to bars is an activity that does not happen often. And everybody notices, not just us. But that is how it is, and people just deal with it. So do we.
Friends
We met some people in our German class, and hung out with them a few times. But ever since we stopped going to classes, we haven’t kept in touch. I met a couple of Mexican girls online (through a zuri-mex forum) and we hit it off right away. We are close friends now and get together once a week for lunch and conversation. There’s 4 of us now, and we have a good time talking about mexico and about living so far from home. We have special (evil) fun talking about the swiss, hehehe. Gera’s lab is not nearly as “active” as its predecessor, so contact with them is pretty much a work thing for Gera.