Tandeming: For those people who don't know what a language tandem is, it's where two people who want to learn a language practice speaking with each other. One person speaks German and wants to learn English, the other party speaks English and wants to learn German. I find it really helpful because I get to learn new words all the time and be corrected without embarrassing myself too much. Plus it's a good way to meet local people if you're in a new country. I actually have two language tandem partners and they are both really lovely (especially if they're reading this!) and very patient when I say extremely odd things auf Deutsch. It's pretty easy to get one-post an ad in a cafe, go to a language tandem night or post an ad on a specific tandem website. I really couldn't recommend it enough! :-)
Brunch: Every cafe I walk past on a Sunday in Berlin is doing some kind of brunch deal. Every single one smells/looks amazing and so this week a few of us headed out to Friedrichshain to try some. Most of the cafes in the area around Boxhagener Platz do an all day brunch, which usually involves an all you can eat buffet of some sort and a pretty obscene amount of food. We chose Elfida and ate and relaxed there for quite a while. The food was really good with lots of fresh salad and fruit, bread rolls, vine leaves, different egg dishes, muesli and a pretty scrummy cheesecake. Will definitely be on the lookout for more brunch places this weekend so if anyone has any suggestions please send them my way!
Museums: Berlin has pretty much every type of museum you could possibly want to go to: art, ancient history, modern history, natural history, zoo(if it counts as a museum) and even a museum dedicated to the Ramones... (it has a good cafe!).
I decided to pick a few I was interested in and concentrate on visiting them before I began work(particularly as it can get expensive!). A lot of the museums sit on Museumsinsel, near Friedrichstrasse/Unter den Linden so its pretty easy to find them all. The Pergammon is one of my absolute favourites, from the Asisi Panorama to the Ishtar Gate-everything in here is so cool. The Neues Museum was also really good and good value for students at only 5 euros. Plus audioguides for both were included in the ticket price of each and good(particularly at the Pergammon). The Deutsche Historiches Museum is good at presenting the history of Germany if you are interested and there is a lot information there, so make sure you are wide awake! The DDR museum was very fun and interactive-definitely worth the entry price, despite it's small size and a good way to spend a rainy afternoon.
The following three museums are free to enter: the Stasi Museum was quite good although a bit heavily reliant on the free audioguide(there is a amazing waffle shop opposite called Kalter Krieg though!). The Topography of Terrors is also information loaded, with lots of reading and listening, but it is really good and very sad. The same applies to the Museum in the Jewish Memorial, although that is much larger.
Bis spater!
Shachi x
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