Mitch Mahoney

Mitch Mahoney
Geneva, Switzerland

Thursday 17 December 2015

Klausjagen & Host Family Change

Hallo schöne Leute!

So recently, a few cool things have happened. First of all, there was the Klausjagen, which is basically a giant traditional festival in the village of Küssnacht. Also, I have moved to my second host family!

Klausjagen:

On Friday, December 4th, was the annual "Klausjagen" festival in Küssnacht. My host mom is originally from that Village so my host parents go almost every year. Before we went, my host mom showed me many pictures from the festival and told me all about it. I learned that it's one of the oldest festivals in all of Switzerland and the idea of it was to make as much noise as possible to scare off evil spirits (I swear I'm not making this up). Also people dressed up in white jackets with hoods, which made my host-father refer to it as the "KKK festival".

So anyway, on the Friday after school I headed home quickly and we left the house shortly after. When we got to Küssnacht, we had dinner at my host-mom's mother's house before heading out into the street. As we were walking towards the main area, we could hear loud cracks that sounded like really close gunshots. I had no idea what was going on but when we got to the main square I could see that there was a bunch of people dressed in white, cracking whips in the air. It was super loud but definitely very cool to see (even though it did hurt my ears)!

After a few minutes of that, the actual festival started. All the lights in the village went out and the banging on the drums started. It was super loud, just like the whips. Then eventually people wearing giant light up bishop's hats that looked like stained glass windows started walking down the streets. It was very cool to see and I was able to get some great pictures:










Host family change:

Last Friday I moved to my second host family. For those of you who don't know, exchange students with Rotary move families at least once or twice in their exchange year. In total, I will have three families. My second host family lives in the village of Sagogn, which is about 20-30 minutes by car from Chur, and about 50-60 minutes using public transportation. It's definitely quite a bit farther from school than my last family was, however its not a very big deal. The family I'm staying with now has a mom and a dad named Christian and Ingrid, and I also have a host brother who is my age named Noah, and a cat named Woody. They also have another son named Jan, however he is away on exchange in Canada right now. So far they have all been super nice and very welcoming to me.

That's all for this post! If theres any questions feel free to leave a comment or send me a message on facebook. Tschüss!

PS. heres some more random pictures of some stuff I did recently :)










Tuesday 1 December 2015

Matterhorn Weekend

I hope you are comfy ladies and gentleman, this post will be long...

This past weekend was the big Matterhorn weekend with Rotary, and I can honestly say it was one of the best, if not the best, weekends of my life. 109 exchange students all together in one small village is the best recipe for a great time. Throw in cheese fondue and a few mountains and it becomes something awesome! So anyway, here's the story:
First view of the Matterhorn
Saturday morning I woke up at the crack of dawn (actually two hours before that) and got myself ready. I threw some last minute things in my bag then my hostmom drove me down to the train station. I caught the 7:19 train headed to Zürich and met up with my friends Claire and Jacob on it. On the way to Zürich we just relaxed and talked about how excited we were for the upcoming weekend. We got to the station around 8:30 and grabbed some bread and coffee to wake ourselves up. The train we needed to take was the 9:02 train headed to Visp. Once Claire, Jacob and I were on it, we walked through about five cars until we found a seat. The train was super busy but luckily we found some other exchange students in one of the cars with some extra seats. On the way to Bern there were only a few of us so we just chatted about random things, but once the train picked up more people in Bern,  our car was filled with exchange students. On the way to Visp, I spent the entire time going from car to car with friends meeting everyone I could possibly meet. While doing this, I met some awesome new people and made some great friends! Once in Visp, we boarded our tiny train to Zermatt. The train was absolutely filled with exchange students (and some very annoyed other people) so it was quite the Journey. There were 109 of us on the trip so I'm sure it's easy to imagine how packed the train was... On the train I spent the entire time socialising and got to know my new friends pretty well.


Train ride from Visp to Zermatt

After spending an hour on this train, we finally arrived in Zermatt! Once there we all walked together to the hostel. The street was so pretty and I honestly fell in love with the village less than five minutes into walking down the street. About 3/4 of the way to the hostel, we came around a corner and finally saw the Matterhorn in its full glory.

Village of Zermatt






The view was absolutely breathtaking and all 109 of us stood there in slack-jawed-befuddlement for a good 10 minutes before we had to keep going. However once we got to the hotel, the view from the room was also amazing and induced about 10 more minutes of slack-jawed-befuddlement-ism.
View from the room
I was rooming with three other guys for the night. My friend Cam from Canada, another guy named Luke, who we just met that day, also from Canada, and another guy named Migeul from Philippines. After getting settled in we headed downstairs and outside where most of the other exchange students were playing in the snow. Especially the ones from the warmer countries that have never seen snow before, and therefore have not yet learned how awful it can be... But us Canadians quickly showed them how cold it can make you by pelting everyone else with snowballs. After the battle we all headed back into the main part of the village where we started a scavenger hunt of sorts. We genuinely tried for about 10 minutes until pretty much everyone gave up to explore the village freely. I met up with some of my friends and we all went for a quick hot chocolate in a small restaurant.

After we all met back up, all the August inbounds headed back to the hostel for a quick information meeting on the upcoming "Eurotour" that will take place in the last few weeks of me being in Switzerland. After this meeting we all grouped up again and headed to a restaurant for Fondue which was absolutely amazing. I sat at a table with all of my good friends and we had a great time.
Walking to the restaurant




After dinner, all of us headed to a hotel in the middle of the village for a two hour disco. It actually turned out to be really fun and by the time it was over, we were all pouring sweat (imagine 109 exchange students dancing around for two hours in a disco the size of an average bedroom) but we still had a great time. After this we headed back to the restaurant for dessert and some more fun. Every country had to come up and sing a quick song from their country. The Canadians sang "Baby" by Justin Bieber and ended up laughing through pretty much the whole thing. When that was over we were all absolutely exhausted and headed back to the hostel for some sleep.

The next morning we woke up at 7, got ready, then headed downstairs for breakfast. It was just the typical swiss breakfast of bread, meat, and cheese, but it was super good nonetheless. After that we cleaned out our rooms then headed outside to get organised into groups.
Morning view of the Matterhorn


Village of Zermatt


Once into groups, we headed to the gondola lift that would take us to the top of the matterhorn ski area. The entire ride was about 45 minutes heading straight up, so I'm sure its easy to imagine how high up we were. Once at the top, we paused for pictures for about 10 minutes before catching the cable car up to the top of the Klein Matterhorn (Small Matterhorn).

New York







View from the top of the ski area. We were
about to get on that cable car.

Phillippines!

When we got off at the top I noticed two things almost right away. First thing: it was super cold. At least -15 degrees, which isn't so cold normally for a Canadian, however when you're not used to it yet, it hits you hard. Thankfully it was warmer in the ice tunnels... The second thing I noticed was the altitude. It was super foggy so I couldn't see that much from the mountain itself, but I could definitely feel it. It was a little bit harder to breath being up so high, and you would have to stop to catch your breath every few seconds. It wasn't so bad when we were walking slow, but as soon as a bunch of us started belting out Adele's "Hello", we felt the lack of oxygen... Anyway once at the top, we headed INSIDE the glacier for a tour of the ice tunnels and and to look at all the ice carvings on the inside, which was super cool!! There was even a small slide built in the ice that we could slide down.
Ice tunnel in the glacier





Ice carving of the Matterhorn carved
out of Matterhorn glacier ice inside the
Matterhorn glacier...
Matterhorn-inception...


Full size car, carved from ice
When we were finished in the glacier, we headed to a small restaurant to warm up quickly with some hot chocolate before catching the next cable car down the mountain.
Having fun on the gondola headed down




Zermatt from the gondola
When we reached the bottom we headed over to a restaurant for lunch. There we had spaghetti, which was so good after our busy morning. After lunch we had some free time in Zermatt. I went with some friends souvenir shopping and bought a sweater that says Zermatt on it, as well as some other things. We then headed to the train station and caught the next train down the mountain to Visp. At Visp we changed trains to one headed for Bern. When we got to Bern, some friends and I decided to get off the train to go see the light show that plays on the Parlement building on weekends. The show was about the history of the Matterhorn and a little bit about the history of Switzerland, so naturally I found it very interesting, and just all-round fun! After the show we did a quick walk around Bern then caught the train home.

The Swiss Parlement Building in Bern

In the end, I had an amazing weekend with some amazing exchange students and made some memories to last me a lifetime.




Thanks for reading! Check back soon for more adventures :)