Saturday, September 26, 2009

Auf Wiedersehen Article on raiders.at

The following article was posted on the SWARCO Raiders website as we left Austria... very kind word from our team - DANKE!!!  Jason and Christie

Auf Wiedersehen Jason & Christie Johnson!

On Wedesday afternoon the charismatic Quarterback Jason Johnson and his charming wife Christie took off from Munich and headed towards Edmonton. After a short stop in between he will continue on to his home in hometown in Seattle. Jason Johnson was the most successful QB in SWARCO Raiders history, his numbers are nearly unreal: in 12 AFL and Eurobowl games he threw for 2,554 yards and had a completion percentage of 72%, he threw 34 TD's and only 4 interceptions.

More than just a Quarterback
Jason was more than an efficient and successful playmaker on the Tyrolean football field.  As a photographer he can hang the word 'pro' next to his resume, his reworked pictures are nearly works of art or worthy of a postcard.  With his interactive blog 'Really Playing for Pizza' he chatted with his world wide football-community and informed them about his slight addiction to travelling (21 countries in 3 months, Jacob's way, etc.)


His enduring work with the team outside of the football field should be seen: he engages himself as a youth coach and leads the 'Quarterback-School.'  He also worked in the morning with Sport-BORG youth QB Phillip Brugger.


The adorable and very active wife, Christie 
The advantage was that Jason came with a double pack through his absolutely charming and engaging wife Christie.  The SWARCO Raiders recognized immediately how much they appreciated her work: together they were instrumental in the implementation of a completely unique European online show 'Beyond the Field.' Christie Johnson carried a very special tune with her appearances on the show.  Additionally, as a former cheerleading coach, she was able to on the Cheerleader-Orginization improve in many different ways.


Jason Johnson is thankful
'I am incredibly thankful to the SWARCO Raiders for giving me the opportunity to play with one of the best football programs in Europe. It was a pretty unbelievable experience to play in Innsbruck this year, there's so many great fans and the Raiders mean so much to them. The fans were supportive both on game day but also away form the field.' Says Jason Johnson to the season this year.


Future still unclear
His future still hasn't been decided, 'Christie and I have been talking a lot and trying to decide on our future.  We would love to come back to Innsbruck if we decide that this is the best situation for us. We will come to this decision roughly in the coming month.'


Headcoach Santos Carillo full of praise
'Jason isn't just an exceptional football player, he is a personality and a big win for our organisation.  We would of course love to have him back as a player and coach in our team. He and his wife Christie are really something special, but I understand their situation and their family.  They know that they will always have a home in Innsbruck.' 

Dear Jason and Christie!


We are unendingly thankful that you were here with us this year and we look forward to a 'Wieder-sehen!'  (Seeing you again!)

Have a good trip,


Your SWARCO Raiders

Friday, September 25, 2009

The 176th Oktoberfest


Welcome to Oktoberfest, the world's largest Festival.

The word OKTOBERFEST means a lot of things to a lot of people... and has grown to be everything from a world-wide celebration, an excuse to drink excessive amounts of beer, or just a clever marketing gimic. I even got an email the other day from a restaurant in Puyallup, Washington offering a special Oktoberfest beer.  But WHAT IS Oktoberfest?  Whatever the interpretation, we decided to experience the REAL THING ourselves by making a trip up to Munich to attend the 176th installment of Oktoberfest.

The roots.

But before we get carried away in a liter-sized frenzy, let's stop for a minute to explain a little of the history.  It all began with a wedding. Back in 1810, the crown Prince Ludwig - later to become King Ludwig I, was set to married to Princess Therese of Saxony-Hildburghausen on October 12th.  But this was a royal wedding, and the citizens of Munich were invited to attend the festivities held on the fields in front of the city gate.  But this wasn't just a one day affair, with horse races marking the close of an event that would represent all of Bavaria.

The next year, in 1811, the event was held again but this time with the first Agricultural Show.  You can guess what the featured crops were. The horse race again was the centerpiece, but the beer was important too.  The tradition was born, and it slowly began to grow.  In 1818 the first carousal and swings were set up.  The beer stands began increasing exponentially, but it took until 1896 for the first tents and halls set up, backed by local breweries.  It has now been celebrated 176 times, only breaking for war and cholera... which in my opinion are two good reasons to sober up!  

Catching the 7:35am train to Munich...

... Rush Bowers, assistant coach with the Raiders and avid Oktoberfest advocate, was giddy with excitement.  He attended his first event back in 2001... but has a special reason for coming this year (more on that later!)

The modern Oktoberfest is called by its website as the largest festival in the world, although I'm not sure the person who wrote that has ever been to the Indy 500.  It is also not held entirely in October!

FUN FACT #1: OKTOBERFEST mainly takes place in SEPTEMBER.  This year it runs from September 19th to October 4th.

There are now a large program of official events, and an international flair that is fitting in the 21st century.  But who am I kidding, its really about the BEER.

The group happily takes their place at 10am (to beat the crowds of course.)  Clockwise from left Nick Johansen, Hannah, Santos, Carlos, Rush, and Christie.  I don't know why only Nick gets a last name on that list but its the way its gonna be!

There are no sizes at Oktoberfest, just THE MASS.  This is a 1 Liter mug of beer, costing around 8.60 euro per drink.  A little more than back in 1810!

The first PROST of the day!  Approximate time: 10:17am.

Our goal was to get there early and experience a few of the different tents.  We began at "Spaten" before heading to the world famous Hofbrauhaus.  It was a hopping good time!

Rush is in the running for "Mr. Oktoberfest."  Pictured here at the Hofbrauhaus tent.

The Tirolean Eagle... iconic symbol!

GOING TO WORK!!!

Oktoberfest attracts the young...

... and the not-so-young.

Around noon, we headed over to the bright green hall called "ARMBRUSTSCHÜTZENZELT." In addition to being the longest freaking word ever, it also has a great literal translation: The Arm Breast Protection Tent.  

The Arm Breast Protection Tent.

Ducking inside the hall, which proudly serves Paulaner, we were taken by the high ceilings and green & white streamers.  However, the decoration was not the reason we had come to this tent.  Rather, it was where Rush's girlfriend Sabine was working!  Yes, she was one of the beer girls of Oktoberfest.  Or as Rush so eloquently put it, "At this moment in time, at this one place in the world, she is like the focal point of the entire world!"  (Or something like that... things were not perfectly clear by midday.)

Suddenly, there she was across the room - Rush's girlfriend Sabine! After working smaller events before, this is her first year she has been called up to "THE BIG SHOW." 

Tirol's cutest couple.

It was awesome to see Sabine, and she looked so perfect in her uniform.  (Then again, the Dirndl is quite flattering on women of all descents.)  So perfect, that Christie felt the inspiration to join their ranks.  She disappeared for a little while, until suddenly appearing as a true Bavarian!

But hold on a minute... what do we have here?

Christie arrives in a fabulous authentic DIRNDL!  (Yes, there is no 'e' at the end!)

My wife, the rockstar!

Christie attempting to lift 6 mass - not an easy task!  Some waitresses (yes, waitressES) can do as many as 12! 

Nick and Carlos finally get around to smoking their Eurobowl victory cigars... Cuban of course.

Later we decided to walk around and go on a ride.  I don't think this was our best idea...

WHO SAID THE SWINGS WERE A GOOD IDEA????

This apple would come back to haunt Nick...

Glad we didn't go on that one!

Rush gives a Michiganite (Michigonian?  Michiganer?  What is the preferred nomanclature?) opinion on Oktoberfest.

Later we returned to the tents for the late afternoon.  By this point, the tables were all fall and the oompa bands were rocking.  It was an awesome vibe... and finally I felt myself catching the Oktoberfest spirit.  Unfortunately, we had to leave around 6pm to catch a train back to Innsbruck, but if I have any advice for the future, it would be to make a reservation for a table in one of the big tents for the late afternoon!

The tents come alive in the afternoon.

Final proof: Bin Laden was a SUN DEVIL!  (That is 100% just a joke, but ASU fans know what I mean...)

What could be a better way to finish the day than with a cookie?

All's well that ends with a cookie

You can be sure we will be back to Oktoberfest... but next time with a little more mental preparation!


~ J. Twice

We're Home! Year 2 comes to a close.

Arrival in Edmonton - safely back to North America, and with all our luggage!

Our second trip to Europe came to end on Wednesday, September 23rd as we flew back to Edmonton.  The trip was easy - evidence that perhaps we had actually learned a few lessons from "The Great Luggage Debacle of 2008."  (Note to self: 13 bags actually are too much.) This time all of our checked bags met the 50 pound weight allowance, and we cruised through security.  Our hearts, however, weren't that easy to take with us as we already miss all of our friends and adventures back in Europe!   

One final visit to the Aldstadt of Innsbruck on Tuesday - we love this place!

Buildings like this are old, but never GET old to look at!

One final Nusssnecke... yes, that is 3 S's in a row for this great tasting cinnamon roll.

As for the journey itself, it wasn't the shortest trip.  First there was the two-hour shuttle ride to Munich airport, then a 9 hour flight to Toronto, a race through security, and finally a four hour flight across Canada to Edmonton.  Wheh!  (Or just 6 movies worth of travel...)

Glad to have "The Bus" on this day!

OK... we did actually bring a few extra carry-ons.  Christie used "Double Backpack" technology to slip through rigorous weight limits on checked bags!

Can you believe it - year two has come to an end!

~ J. Twice

PLEASE KEEP READING THE BLOG... I STILL HAVE A LOT TO SHARE FROM THE END OF OUR TRIP, INCLUDING A CRAZY VISIT TO MUNICH'S OKTOBERFEST, AND SOME OVERALL RECAPS FROM OUR TIME IN AUSTRIA!

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Berlin things that make you go hmmm....

That's his ARM... what were you thinking?

As we explored Berlin, we found a number of trendy areas, cool restaurants, and interesting historical sites.  But there were also PLENTY of things that just made you laugh, or shake your head... so without further ado, here's a few "Things that make you go HMMM" from Berlin.  Enjoy!


Tickets to the movies in Germany are all assigned seating, REGARDLESS of how many people are attending.  Case in point: our Berlin movie experience.  We caught a movie our first night - Quentin Tarrantino's "Inglorious Basterds" - which was ironically the same exact theatre that hosted the world premier, about Nazi Germany in WWII.  We watched the late show at 11pm, and there were only 4 people in the whole theatre... ALL SITTING SHOULDER TO SHOULDER!  Just when you thought it couldn't get worse, a 5th man joined the theatre, and get this, ACTUALLY ASKED CHRISTIE TO MOVE HER PURSE SO HE COULD SIT NEXT TO US... We're not sardines!  Scoot over! 


The American Section at KaDeWe store... Pop Tarts and BBQ Sauce, I love it!

The Berlin wall had lots of funny murals...

Japanese sector is a little further than the US and Soviets...

and the view can be a little hampered at times...

Now on to the economy...

Does this mean take it to a higher level or get rid of it forever?

Good ol' Socialism!  Such a happy utopia!

The TV tower in East Berlin went up just as crosses were being pulled from churches all over the city.  As an ironic twist, the reflection on the tower forms a cross that the Communists could not get rid of!  They call it, "Pope's Revenge!"

And in the fashion industry...

Leather pants are HOT...

But pink never goes out of style, does it Claudio?  SAC!

~ J. Twice

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

A walk through Berlin



A walk through reunited Berlin is like walking through a living history book – or more precisely, an onion, with layers upon layers of complex history built on top of each other. On one hand, there is the basic story of the growth of a northern European town and capital of the Prussian empire.  Then came a pair of World Wars along with the Nazis, followed by the city’s division and attention as the focal point of the Cold War.  And while the city is essentially new (over 90% was destroyed in WWII and rebuilt), even to this day the city is reinventing itself seemingly overnight with new attractions, hip districts, and a culture that is still banding together after a brutal 20th century.

 

The following outline is taken from a fascinating guided FREE tour of the city that we took on our first morning in Berlin, led by Adam Greis, a knowledgeable & comical grad student from Atlanta, Georgia.  Over the course of 4 hours, he painted an in-depth picture of Berlin, and I believe a lot of what he told us you will find interesting, or at least make you the most en vogueperson at your next cocktail party.  Enjoy!



PARISER PLATZ 

 

Just before 11am, our English-speaking tour group fittingly assembled in front of the Starbucks at Brandenburg Gate.  With my Grande Non-Fat Hazelnut Mocha in hand, I was ready to see what Berlin was all about.  I didn’t have to wait long – for we found ourselves in Paris Square, the center of Old Berlin.  To the naked eye, it looked pretty much like any other modern square in a European capital.  However, on this spot there is  much more than we could have ever assumed – such as our very position would have been a part of the “death strip” of the Berlin Wall just twenty years ago!

 

Towering over the square to the west stood the Brandenburg Gate, the icon of the city.  Its shiny white columns were completely restored in 2002, but its history dates back much further.  The gate was built in 1791 as one of 14 gates in Berlin’s old city wall.  A statue of a four-horse chariot that was originally called the Goddess of Peace crowns the top of it.  When Napoleon conquered the city in 1806, he liked the statue so much that he took it with him back to Paris and plopped it in the Louvre.  The Prussians – the German empire of the day – won it back in 1813 and to spite their longtime rivals renamed it the Goddess of Victory and placed it back on the Brandenburg Gate. (They also changed the name of the square to Paris Square.) In a touch of even more irony, the statue today looks slightly down and to the left, directly at the French Embassy.  It was under this gate that Hitler passed in a torchlight parade as newly crowned leader of Germany on January 30, 1933; and where thousands of Berliners would gather on November 9, 1989 to celebrate the tumbling of the Berlin Wall.

 

Not to be outdone, the rest of the square consists of the American, French, British, and Russian Embassies and a number of other notable sites.  One such site is the DZ Bank Building, designed by Frank Gehry, the American architect that designed Seattle’s Experience Music Project and Bilbao’s Guggenheim Musuem.  Further from the gate is the Hotel Adlon, which Michael Jackson fans will recognize as the site of the now infamous “baby-dangling incident.” Oh yeah, and did I mention there’s a Starbucks?

 

RIECHSTAG

 

Looking through the Brandenburg Gate, you see the Tiergarten – Berlin’s answer to Central Park – and further afoot the golden-topped Victory Column and eventually the Olympic Stadium.  But just steps away to the north lies the head of the German democracy, the Reichstag.

 

As far as interesting parliamentary buildings go, I have to believe the Reichstag is near the top. The last Prussian emperor, Kaiser Wilhelm II, built it in the 1890s.  He did it to seem progressive, then became annoyed that those working there were actually talking about issueswhen he was the emperor after all.  He pleasantly referred to it as the “house for chatting.” After World War I, the German Republic was born here in 1918.  This is where it gets interesting. 

 

After losing the First World War, Germany was in a very bad place.  Not only had they lost millions of men, but they were also forced to pay back huge war reparations to the victorious parties a la the Treaty of Versailles.  The tried to do it the easy way – by just printing money – but that led to hyperinflation and a horrible economy.  The only ones who were really helping were the Americans, but when the Great Depression hit in 1929 it couldn’t get much worse. Then came a little man called Hitler.

 

One ill-fated night in 1933, the Riechstag nearly burned to the ground.  Someone had to be blamed, and good ol’ Adolph pointed out that conveniently it was the communists.  Collective groan.  Using this as his own little Firegate or whatever the tabloids of the day called it, he convinced the 80+ year-old leader of the country to grant him emergency power to save the country from these evil-doers.  The rest, as they say, is history as he quickly arrested all his political opponents and consolidated all the top offices in the land into Nazi central with him as supreme dictator.  The Nazis would actually make their final stand against the Allies at the end of World War II in this building.

 

Today, the Reichstag is topped with a glass cupula (isn’t that fun to say?) that rises 155 feet above the ground.  It is made of glass and steel, and stands as a symbol of transparency in government, something that was completely lacking during Hitler’s time.  Admission is free and offers spectacular views over the city.  In fact, from the top you can see down into the actual parliamentary building that is home of the Bundestag (Germany’s lower house.)  I think this is good for checking the politicians’ toupees. 

MEMORIAL TO THE MURDERED JEWS OF EUROPE

 

Just a stone’s throw south of the Brandenburg Gate is the new Holocaust memorial.  It was completed in 2005 and consists of 2,711 grave-like pillars.  It was designed by a Jewish-American, who hoped the central site and non-descript nature of the pillars would make everyone who visits the city contemplate what happened during the Holocaust and come up with their own conclusion.  We found the site a moving tribute… and I personally thought it fitting that it was the only place in all of Berlin I did not see any graffiti.  It is also fitting that just 200 meters from this huge memorial lies a barren parking lot that was Hitler’s bunker, sitting forgotten without a single sign.  (We were told that parking lot is a place many Berliners like to walk their dogs… without doggy-bags if you know what I mean.)

 

Under the memorial is a good – and free – information center.  There are 6 Holocaust victims in particular that are featured at the end of one passageway.  It blew my mind to try to imagine that standing behind each of these six individuals would have been one million more victims.  How could that happen?

 

CHECKPOINT CHARLIE AND BERLIN WALL

 



After World War II, the Allies realized that they couldn’t do the same thing to Germany as happened after the last war.  Instead, they split the city into 4 sectors – Soviet, French, British, and U.S.  The first section would eventually become East Germany (DDR), and the last three would be in West Germany.  When the “Iron Curtain” fell in 1952, taking Eastern Europe into communism behind Soviet control, the city of Berlin remained an “open city” where people could still move freely.  However, Stalin and Co. weren’t too happy as 2.6 million people decided to get out of there via the Western sectors between 1949 and 1961, so eventually they decided to do something.

 

Literally overnight, the East Germans decided to build a wall.  The citizens awoke on the morning of Austust 13, 1961 to find the Western section circled in barbed wire.  This made me realize something else I should have known but for some reason was never exactly clear on:

 

THE BORDER BETWEEN EAST AND WEST GERMANY LIED 100-MILES TO THE WEST OF BERLIN.  THE CITY ITSELF DID NOT STRADDLE THE ACTUAL BORDER, IN FACT, BERLIN AS A WHOLE WAS DEEP IN EAST GERMANY.  IT IS THE CITY ITSELF THAT WAS DIVIDED IN TWO, WITH THE WEST BERLIN TIED TO THE WEST VIA AIRPORTS AND SECURED RAIL/AUTOBAHN.

 

The new wall – built by the East and kindly referred to by the Soviets as the “Anti-Fascist Protective Rampart” – was really geared at stopping this free escape of Easterners to greener pastures in the West.  (You know a government is for the people when it has to build a wall to keep people from leaving.)  The wall would go through 4 stages, each increasingly complex and deadly, with the final version containing a 16-foot wide tank ditch, an approximately 100 foot wide no-mans-land or “death strip” where snipers could pick off defectors, and 300 sentry towers. 

 

Some stats:  There were 5,043 documented successful escapes – 565 of which were by East German guards.  Border guards made over 3,000 arrests during the 28 years of the wall, and I’m not sure that many of those ended pleasantly.

 

Checkpoint Charlie was the most famous crossing point in the Wall, named after the army-slang for “C” not an actual person.  During the Cold War, this is the closest the US and Russia came to blows – as each had tanks on opposite sides pointed at each other.  Today it is more of a Niagara Falls type freak show of cheap souvenirs and corny stores, but there are some interesting photo exhibitions telling the history of the wall, and a good museum that gives insight into fascinating escapes.

UNTER DE LINDEN



Back north of the wall is the major avenue of Central Berlin, Unter de Linden (literally Under the Linden Trees.)  The sites come fast on this street, as if you are suddenly reading the history book faster to get to the end.  Humboldt University is found here, where Marx and Lenin both studied making it the de facto birthplace of communism.  A guy named Einstein also taught here before moving to Princeton in 1932.  Across the street is Bebelplatz, where in 1933 the famous book-burning exhibition took place when Nazi “Propoganda Minister” Joseph Goebbels ordered staff and students to burn 20,000 books.  Who seriously goes by the title of Propoganda Minister and is taken seriously?  The square also is home to the Opera House – destroyed not once but twice during WWII.  Just down from here is the moving memorial to the victims of war of tyranny – the statue Mother with Her Dead Son.  By this point you feel like the town needs to stop making memorials and actually do something to stop this from happening over and over.

 

MUSEUM ISLAND

 

The Cathedral of Berlin

At the end of Unter de Linden is Musuem Island, home to a handful of museums and the city’s cathedral, or Dom.  By this point my brain is fried, so I can tell you we didn’t go in the museums or set foot in the Cathedral.  (It was built only in 1905 and was criticized for showing no restraint.  Isnt’t that what buildings of that time were all about?)  I do however remember this story – the way the Wall actually came down, and quite unexpectedly I might add:

 

In the mid 1980s Gorbecev came to power in the Soviet Union and hoped to bring about a little reform and more openness.  Before long Hungary had opened their border to Austria, allowing a crack in the Iron Curtain for people to get to the West.  Those in Germany saw this, and thought they too would like to have this option.  Those on the East side began demonstrating – first 70,000 people, then 120,000 people, then finally almost 500,000 people in Alexanderplatz in East Berlin.  The Eastern government didn’t know exactly what to do, so they held a secret meeting to discuss the possible ways to placate the people.  A few days later a press conference was set to tell the media what they would do.

 

The only problem was this secret meeting wasn’t attended by their press secretary – the man giving the press conference.  It was a standard affair, with the usual pre-approved questions by the media.  Until an Italian went off the list to ask what the government was going to do about all these protests.  For this question the press secretary didn’t know what to say, so he began looking at his secretary’s notes from the secret meeting.  Not always the best thing to do while the world is watching.  He said – without reading ahead first to be safe – that the government was going to lift the travel restrictions from the East to go the West.  A buzz went off in the room – really?  An American reporter (I think Brokaw is his name) then followed up on this by asking if this included Berlin.  Why, yes it does.  Brokaw then asked the zinger – when this would happen?  At this point the press secretary should have maybe called a twenty second time-out.  Perhaps conferred with the serious looking dudes to his left and right.  Instead, he said two words that would change the course of history forever: EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY.

 

So completely unexpectedly, the Wall had fallen.  The people had never anticipated that it would happen on that day – November 9, 1989.  Immediately thousands flocked to the Wall, and the astonished Germans began singing songs, drinking (lots of) beer, and chiseling away their own souvenirs.  Within the month negotiations began between the two countries and elections were held.  (Shockingly, the communists did not win in the East.)  Just 11 months later, on October 3, 1990, German Unification Day was held and the country was back together again.  In 1991, Berlin re-assumed its role as capital.  Maybe that’s why my parents didn’t find it the most relaxing and developed place in 1992 when they visited?

 

And so ends our tour… danke!

 

~ J. Twice