Sunday, May 17, 2009

Biking the Zugerberg


Mountain biking is relatively popular here in Switzerland, I'm guessing because the country is like 75% covered with Alps. Sitting above the town of Zug is a small (by Swiss standards) mountain called the Zugerberg. It offers beautiful views of the town, the lake, and the surrounding peaks, like the Rigi and Pilatus. We've taken several visitors to the top of the Zugerberg by car, to give them a small taste of beautiful Swiss views. While driving up the Zugerberg, we've always marveled at the crazy souls who were biking their ways up. Something like 600 vertical meters (the Zugerberg's peak is over 1000m) is a long way to go without a car, ski lift or airplane. Seemed crazy to think how difficult it would be to get all the way to the top on a bike. Crazy.
Well, this past Wednesday, inspired by a colleague, I made the self-propelled journey up the windy trails to the top of the Zugerberg. Phil, a teacher friend from school, who lives on the side of the hill (mountain?) invited me and another friend, Mark, to bike up the Zugerberg last Wednesday evening. The journey started out relatively painless, as I realized the advantages of a bike with 27 gear combinations. There were some steeper parts, which burned the legs, and some longer, less-steep parts, some of which offered ridiculous views of Zug and Zugersee. About 2/3 of the way up, we got drenched by a 15 minute thunderstorm, but were able to resume our trip with sore legs the rest of the way up. Once at the top, we rested for a few minutes before taking the fun part of the trip: the downhill. Though a bit trickier given the recent rain, we got to enjoy the downhill at decent speeds and with beautiful views of the town below (kinda like the pic above).
The plan is to make this a weekly event. I hope my legs can handle it...

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

A Swiss Day


jigsawed some play props...played a tiring hour of handball during 8th grade PE...biked into Zurich...sat on a bench looking over Zurichsee and the snowcovered Alps...used the extra flap in my new Freitag bag to fit all the groceries from Coop. Tired and happy.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Skiing in Champery


In an effort to keep track of specific places visited, foods eaten and drinks drunk, (and because sometimes I have no idea what to write about, but I know I could document cool experiences) I've decided to ad a bit of format to my vacation-related posts. I figure "Hotel, Restaurant/Food/Drink, Cool Stuff Seen/Heard/Enjoyed" should do it. So here goes:

Spent last weekend in Champery, a town in southwestern Switzerland near the ski resort of Port du Soleil.

Hotel: Le Chalet de Champery, cozy little chalet, made infinitely better by the open bar sans barkeepers all weekend
Food/Drink: Enjoyed good food all weekend, but the aforementioned open bar made drinks the highlight: enjoyed some decent ports, and took my first shot of Appenzell, a Swiss digestiv. Tasted a bit like anisette (sp?), with a medicin-y aftertaste. Then at lunch Sunday, after a few wines, got a free shot of 43% abv pear schnapps. Apparently "no thanks, I'm driving" means "give me a shot of 86 proof liquor" in French.
Oh, also had an awesome meringue dessert at lunch Sunday...see the deliciousness in the pic above
Cool Stuff Seen/Heard/Enjoyed: again, the aforementioned open bar; skied some nice bump runs

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Vote for Beaver Stadium

Click here to vote for Beaver Stadium against Texas A&M's Kyle Field. Don't know too much about the site or the competition, but anytime PSU's competing, it's worth a click.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Benelux Minus the "ne"


Just back from a weekend in Belgium & Luxembourg. Decided to drive the 8+ hours each way, as plane tickets were steep (CHF600 for an hour flight) and Kristina was already scheduled to fly up for the week with her job. Long drive for just a weekend, but in the end, worth it. A few thoughts:
-loved the drive through Switzerland, France, Luxembourg & Belgium; lots of beautiful countryside with some interesting sights along the way--plenty of castles & wind farms captured my attention
-laughed as I passed a little French town called Bitche...and I just laughed again as I typed it
-Antwerp is a pretty lively little city; we arrived around 11pm Friday night and immediately felt a fun/hip/alive vibe
-enjoyed two strong beers (~9% abv) after breakfast on Saturday...when in Belgium...
-drank some AWESOME Belgian beers...Westmalle Trappist Tripel, Kapittel, Grimbergen, Brugge Tripel, a fruity Kriek, and a few others; definitely heading back to Belgium at some point just to enjoy the beers again...
-first time ever in Luxembourg, and probably the last; not too exciting; interesting-looking old "walled" city though
-the yellow street lights in Lux & Belgium made the highways look like airport runways on Mars
-Brugge is a fun little town near the northern coast; sometimes referred to as "the Venice of the north" is what I hear...

Friday, February 13, 2009

Frantic February

It's been a hectic month here in the Zurich area...after returning from a teaching conference in Paris two weeks ago, I've been working daily to figure out how to implement all the new ideas I discovered into my teaching/school. So far, so good, I'd say.
Boys basketball and playing bball on my own has also kept me busy.
Booked three different trips (Brussels in March, Copenhagen in May, and Scotland/Ireland for a golf vacation with my college buddies in October). Very exciting.
And finally, I found out this week that I could be teaching math AND humanities next year, an opportunity I'm VERY excited about. Nothing is set yet, but just to know the possibility is out there has got me "juvenated" (credit to Bill Simmons for that one).

Right now I'm getting ready to meet my family at the Zurich Flughafen before heading down to Zermatt for a week of skiing and checking out the Matterhorn. I need a break after the whirlwind last 2+weeks. Hope to post some photos after the trip.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Ning, Jing and Social Networking as a Collaborative Ed Tool

Went to the European League of Middle Level Educators (ELMLE) Conference in Paris last weekend, and my brain is overflowing with seemingly awesome new ideas. But I'm in a place right now where I'm not exactly sure how to use them all in my 6th & 7th grade math classes...so I'm just throwing all the ideas out there for the kids to play with, and hopefully some of these new ideas will stick. Here are a few...
Ning - This is a social networking site (similar to Facebook in layout) where you invite "friends" to collaborate with you in various projects. On the recommendation of Alan November (novemberlearning.com), a developmental psychologist and education professor, I created Nings for each of my 4 middle school math classes with the intent of creating and sharing content on our site. Just threw them out there to see how they react...here's hoping for some positive results over the next few weeks...
Jing - jingproject.com offers a free download of screencast software that can be used to create instant "vodcasts" of work created in classrooms. Hopefully I'll get clearance to download this app onto our school computers. I see big possibilities with this tool...
Google docs - I was familiar prior to the concert, but had only used it for personal stuff (mostly sharing football stats with friends...), but I've learned tons of possibilities for using this collaborative tool in education...again, we'll see how willing some colleagues are to implement this into our practices.

Tons more ideas, but I'm tired from staying up until 4am watching the Steelers win the Super Bowl, so I'm going to bed. More to come...