Friday, July 17, 2009

Insbrook Austria

Our final night in Switzerland we had a fondue party.
These three Swiss sisters have been yodeling and performing for the Ambassadors for 12 years.

The swiss cows wear these bells when they graze in the hills and the hills are truly alive with the sounds of music


Insbrook Austria at the ski jump from the Olympics



downtown Insbrook Austria


Gelatto in Insbrook

Yummy.


This is the sign in the park announcing the concert





Seefeld Austria Concert.

We are now in Austria and staying in a winter village that hosted some of the 1964 and 1976 winter Olympics. The concert was in an awards ceremony pavilion. We went to Swartski's main crystal showroom, three floors. I told Janell see what you want and we will look on ebay for it and we left. German is the official language here. When I walk into stores and look they say "German or English" to me. I guess I look local? Thought for the day. How would you like to be a six year old learning to spell things like Wohnungseigentumsgemeinschaft? You've got to feel for a little German speaker trying to learn to spell.
Voyagers is the group that organizes the Utah Ambassadors of Music that we are with. They have 14-20 High school musical groups coming each summer. they have planned advertised performances for bands (outside in band stands) and for choirs (usually inside churches). They are very organized. Each city has a local couple and an American host. They love Utah because of the high standards, friendliness and respect. The city leader said the southern states don't care about time and they are frequently late. The Hawaii group is worse and don't wear shoes! The California groups are streetwise and disrespectful so they love us. We have 75 band members, 150 choir and 100 adults/chaperons.








Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Zermatt Switzerland

We went to Zermatt. It was a two hour bus ride, then because Zermatt is a gas free village, we had to park and take a train in. Only a limited amount of electric cars are allowed there. We then shopped a little, took a train up the mountain,

or should I say inside the mountain) to get a better view of the Matterhorn which was fogged in. The train was shaped like the mountain on a steep incline. We ate a picnic lunch and went back down to the village to shop. You are cool in Zermatt if you are over 70 and have really expensive hiking boots and walking sticks. You know all those elastic gadgets on the back of back packs? They are for walking sticks. We are having a fondue party in the city town tent. Fondue is Swill as is milk chocolate. Hope I can get some pictures on my blog sometime. WE are off to Austria tomorrow.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Switzerland

Here I am once again stealing the Internet. I am sitting on the ground behind an apartment building a few yards away from the concert tent where they are performing tonight in Crans-Montana Switzerland. I think Park City/midway area were inspired by the resorts in Switzerland. The choir goes first and then the band for a 2 hour concert.

Today was a free morning. We got up and walked to a ski lift where we rode the tram up the mountain, figured out where we could take a 40 minute hike. I timed us and we were 55 with stops for pictures. The hike was a very narrow trail across the alps to another tram stop where we were trammed to the top, at the very top of the ski resort we played in the glacier and took two trams back to town, and walked 20 minutes to out hotel. We were the only ones to go on the whole adventure. I was the one to pick up the hiking map and ask 3 different workers... painters if we were going the right way. Janell, Nicole, Megan and I went. On the trail we met a couple coming from our destination. I asked how long... he said 2 hours. I said what?! It should be 10 minutes. He said for him it was but for Americans (He was from Zermot- tomorrow's destination)it was 2 hours, it was just around the bend. There was one spot we had to descend that had a lovely rope for us to use and it was much needed. We felt like we had the true adventure. Our group had 4 and a group of 8 followed us but their bus left earlier than ours so they had to skip the glacier.

We then went to a medieval castle along Lake Geneva where Lord Chillton wrote his famous castle dungeon poem. Truly cool to hear and see medieval traditions.... did you know that clinking glasses started in medieval times? They had metal cups and the liquid was supposed to spill into others cups so you knew the drink was safe, you wouldn't be poisoned. The fork was invented later so the fancy collars could get bigger and you could still eat. Hands are to be seen at all times in Europe while eating so your enemies can keep an eye on you and when you traveled you brought your own trunk which was your own chair so you literally sat on your jewels. Cool stuff. We then walked along Lake Geneva and had 1.5 hours to walk 40 min so Janell and I took our shoes off and sat at the lakes edge watching people swim.....We had our Switzerland concert in the evening with a fondue party. Here they invented fondue and it is just cheese and bread. Americans have made it fancy fyi.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Paris

Janell and Megan at the Paris Opera house- the inspiration for Phantom of the Opera.










Louvre headset tour at the Mona Lisa




Guess how many steps to the second landing about an inch over hour heads? about 42 stories tall. We climbed it and took an elevator the rest of the way to the top. We were told we had just enough time to go to the top, then right after I bought my tickets we were told we didn't have time. We noticed a staff member going so we went with them and guess who was on top with us? the one that told us we couldn't go........

Arc de Truimph, Notre Damme


At the Luxembourg park Janell is shoveling down a chocolate crepe before the concert. A record crowd attended the concert about 300 people.









Saturday, July 11, 2009

Janae and Janell in Europe







































Here we are in Europe. Janell is on a music trip with Utah Ambassadors of Music. I am a chaperon.

We flew on Delta and they had free Internet so I used my lap top and sent a few emails before my battery went low. In England we saw the usuals... Tower of London, British Museum, Victoria and Albert, etc. They had a concert at Embankment Park and had a outdoor packed crowd. Apparently this is the same core that went to Caleb's concert including a guy in red boxer shorts and mostly old English gentlemen. Passers by stopped and stayed for the concert. Some danced in the isles. One English Gentleman got out of his seat and parked himself right in front of me in the isle. He took out a black tape recorder in it's original box and was recording the concert. Then he got out his old vivitar camera from it's original box and took some pictures and went back to his place.

After the concert I spoke to him. He had a sheet of paper he had copied off from the Internet about Utah facts so he went over why do we have a trash bird for our state bird and do Mormon's believe in war? It was good.

We have taken Lauren's advice and bought Crepes everywhere they are found.....ummmmm

We took a ferry across the English Channel to Paris and went to the Louvre, Paris opera house(the site that inspired Phantom), a small village and took a boat ride down the seine river. Tomorrow we have another concert in a park. At the Louvre I stepped out of line and bought headset tours for Janell and her friends so we could zip around to the important stuff. It was perfect. Who knows if we will have Internet at our other destinations. We do London, Paris, Switzerland, Austria, Venice, Germany. I can't work the spell checker... sorry