12/03/2013

Lapland


Lapland

It was the only trip I really wanted to do here in Sweden. Not happy enough to be in the north, I wanted to go further, discover a land where the humans have less right than wildness and where every landscape seems to be infinite.

I haven't been disappointed!

We left Sundsvall with most of my group of international student, two Swedish from the student union and a couple of student from Stockholm and London. 50 students, for 12 hour in a car with a very strange, funny, really nice guide (forgot her name again, sorry): memorable trip!








Day 1: arriving in Kiruna, dogs sledges and snowmobile.

We arrived at 8 in the morning in Kiruna, one of the most northern cities in Sweden. We had a few minutes to prepare our room and have a great breakfast before the first activity: Dogsledges. I wanted to do this since I was a little girl.

We were four by sledges, trailed by eleven dogs. But not Huskies or whatever polar dogs. It was Eurohound dogs. A new European breed.  The dogs were fast and made the sledge jumping sometime. Funny and scary!   


Right after having a coffee rest in a sami tent, I put my ass on a snow mobile for the first time of my life. Of course, I was the only one to get bogged down. Poor Christelle who was stuck on the snowmobile with me.






Then, in the evening, we went to a bar (where I didn’t drink anything, not rich enough! Can you believe it?) before trying to see the northern light. We didn’t, or not a lot. Too cloudy. Even if we spent a few hours to watch the dark sky, we had to go back in the hotel, disappointed!


Day 2: Jukkasjärvi and the reindeer farm.

The second day, we went to the famous ice hotel Jukkasjärvi. Even if it’s wonderful, I will never ever sleep by -5° and pay that much for that. Freezing! The hotel is made every years differently. Each room is designed with a different architectural style. Lovely. Some of them seem to come directly from a fairy tail.






In the afternoon, the entire group moves to a sami reindeer farm. We had the chance to feed the animals and learn a little bit of the sami tradition related to the reindeer which are considered more important than human in the sami culture. The woman gave us reindeer soup. But I couldn’t eat this. Indeed, impossible for me to eat an animal right after seeing it alive.






In the night, we had a barbecue in a big sami tent, with all the student. A happy and friendly atmosphere. And suddenly, something happen outside: A high and impressive sky activity, the northern light. Everybody was screaming and taking pictures. One of the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen in my entire life.      
We spent the night in Abisko National Park, near one of the biggest lake in this part of the world.



Day 3: Narvik and the artic swim

For the third day, let’s go back in the bus for a short trip to Narvick, in the fjord area of Norway. One of the thing I really don’t like in these kind of organized trip, is that everything is…organized, even the “taking picture views”. The concept is quite simple: the guide decide to stop the bus and the travelers have 5 minutes to take as much pictures as they can… so Asian!!  Anyway, the fjords are truly exceptional.




We spend 2 hours in Narvik. The tour “offers” us to pay 150 SEK (18 euros) for using the ferry to get to the top of the mountain and ... take pictures of the beautiful view! Boring! With Thibault (a French guy), we decide to economize our money and climb by feet… for going down by sledges. Hilarious moment!












The last activity was a sauna followed by an artic swim in the frozen lake… By night! If you think that you had the opportunity to find out what cold is in your life, it’s nothing compare to jumping in a -3° water, right after leaving a 80° room when it’s -30° outside. I swear!







Day 4: Mooses

The last day was a day off. We had free time to walk a last time in the national park!

After a few minutes, when Christelle said something like “I saw something in the forest”, nobody truly believed her (to be honest, I was the one who didn’t believe her). With a more careful look, we realized that it was really something. At the first I thought it was a tree, then, maybe a very big horse. But in fact, it was a moose with her baby. These animals are bigger than I expected. For a few minutes, Christelle, Maureen, Jolanda and I turned into hunters to go closer to the animals and…. Take pictures!

Picture by Maureen Gayet



It was time to go back in Sundsvall. We left the amazing landscape to find our routine back.         


  

   

07/03/2013

Live and Study


Don’t forget, I’m here to study

Well, yes, when I will have to explain my Erasmus to my future employer, I’ll will probably skip the fun part of my life here and focus on the university, which is actually nice too. I subscribed to four courses here: Writing for mass media, graphic design, magazine project and Swedish language. Opposed to Belgium, the course works with modules. You start a course and you have for example five weeks with only one topic, ending with a test before start the next module.
I feel that courses are very interesting. We evolve fast and learn a lot. Those consist of many practical exercises and challenges. Sometime, I feel like I already have to act like a professional. 
The university is very well equipped. One of the buildings is full of media and communication’s technology. It is very impressive when you come from a university that has only five Mac
The university is big and really beautiful. It looks like a small village. The greatest thing is the library.  With its tree floor, all these plants and these special corners for group works, it’s perfectly designed for study.  


Now I (nearly) know how to live

For the first time of my life, mummy and daddy are not here to help me and tell me what to do. I have to cook, to clean, to make my laundry and to live in a shared apartment with someone who’s not my sisters or another part of my family. Someone I didn't chose.
Having an Erasmus experience is truly a life lesson, wherever you go. But you have to choose it well and be prepared. Far away, little troubles can became big problems. But you will always find someone to help you.

  

Sundsvall, dear Sundsvall


Sundsvall, dear Sundsvall.

The first impression was weird. I’ve already start to hate the snow and the street didn’t look like what Google map told me. The city has a completely different appearance with its white cover.
Naturally I was lost. Here come my first advices for the future students: Don’t forget to take the pickup service. It’s free and really useful.
I like the city. Even if there is a quite ugly industrial area, Sundsvall is very charismatic. If you take the time to look around, you’ll quickly find somewhere to take a Fika (the Swedish kind of English tea), shopping or a walk in the so beautiful nature. Even visit the residential area can become a nice walk. Houses and buildings are in typical Swedish architecture, colourful, covered by wood and with small gardens. 
Personally I live in Nacksta. It’s an area in 30 minutes to the centre, with a thousand identical and without personality big buildings. I love it. But only because it is full of international students. 

More International than Swedish

Exception made of my teachers; the only Swedish people I've met can be counted with a single hand. I can say that there are nice, rarely friendly and often shy. They are always happy to help you, but never ready to answer to your happy “hello” if they don’t know you. No, really, the only friends a truly have here come from all around the world and they make my Erasmus band of bros.



I know what your are thinking about: ”You make party all the time and be drunk every day”. Well, we make party quite often, it’s true, but it’s not to most important. We are from many countries, far from home and from all the people we love. It brings us together and creates real friendships.




Ski and Outdoor

Everybody have his way to fulfilling his day. My pleasure here is to enjoy the beautiful Swedish nature by skiing or walking in the forest. There’s two ski slopes here in Sundsvall. One is really close to Nacksta and I’m used to go twice a month.  From the top of the mountain, you can have one of the most beautiful views of Sundsvall and the lake, according to me. I advise you to go there for the sunset. During this instant, the sun colours the sky with a variety of all kinds of pink and orange
I’m passionate by nature. Even during winter, the Swedish wildlife is diversified. I’m used to walk ones or twice a week and look around me in the middle of the forest. I hope that ones, I will be lucky enough to see a wild Swedish animal during one of my walk.  





Here I am, Sundsvall



My Life in Swenden 


Do you see the little girl lost somewhere in the middle of a snow mountain? Crazy isn’t? It’s me, Céline, 24-year-old Belgian student who decide to make her Erasmus in Sundsvall, Sweden. And I’m not that crazy, I’ve just made the biggest choice of my life.

So here I am, staying five month in the north of Europe to study communication and journalism. I’m already imagining your interrogative faces. Why didn’t I chosen a more common country like Spain or France? Why so far, so cold, so dark? Well, exactly because it’s far, cold and dark. Exactly because it’s different. And this is the way of my life.



It took two days to come in Sundsvall from Brussels. I made one tourist day in Stockholm before discovering my new town. And then, first chock: all the girls are not blond, you can not breath when it’s minus 25 grades, people are not wearing snowsuit and snowshoes like I do and the worst: Suitcases with wheels do not roll on the snow. Damned!