Wednesday 19 March 2014

Positive Aspects of Travelling Alone

Each summer break during University I worked for Siemens as part of my scholarship scheme. However, the summer after graduating, I was given off to commence work full time in the September. So between graduating in July 2011 and starting work September I decided to go travelling. I had exactly 6 weeks to do whatever I wanted and because I had worked for the past 3 summers I had a bit of money saved to enable me to have a good trip. I have always been a fan of the USA and had been 3 separate times as a child to Orlando Florida. The last time being age 10, the only time I actually remember. I always wanted to do the west coast of America with it being the land of dreams. I also knew I wanted to do LA specifically. So I went about organising my trip for the whole 6 weeks. I didn't really know exactly what I wanted to do. All I knew was that I would spend 5 weeks on the west coast and spend he final week in the Detroit Area of Michigan seeing my good University friend Danniella, as she was doing her masters there. It was also great as I didn't know when I'd otherwise see the city of my Idol Eminem. So that decided, I booked my flights to LA, then to Detroit then back to Manchester. I also under the guidance of the guy in STA Travel agent booked 3 days in a hostel in West Hollywood, LA to get settled. Now this was something that I wanted to do and also nobody had stated they would also want to do this as well, but to be honest I never really asked. Just told a few friends I was doing it. In my opinion travelling alone was the best thing I could of ever done.

Travelling alone allowed me to be in complete control of what I did, where I went and how I did everything I did. It also made it so I didn't have the concern of someone else should flights be delayed etc. Just me and my iPod - no stress. But little did I know, travelling on my own would have a much more positive aspect on my life than just benefits on the trip. Now I've never not been confident, I always get involved with things and try new things. The biggest issue I did have though was that I was sometimes a little shy, mainly making a move to speak to people. If they would speak to me I would be fine. But I would always be scared to make the first move of speaking to new people as I had this preconception of if I did they would think 'who is this weirdo just talking to me'. Now once arriving in LA, especially around the hostel, I was alone. If I wanted to know stuff how would I find out? Looking back this lack of confidence was evident on my arrival in LA. I went outside and saw a bunch of shuttle buses waiting but I was unsure if they had to be booked or if you could just take one. I was also unsure if it went to where I was heading. I had this huge urge inside me to go over and interrupt the groups of people both working for the companies and the people waiting to take one. I had a feeling that this would be a lot cheaper than taking a taxi and even with the urge to ask burning inside me, I didn't have the balls to ask, so instead took a taxi costing me $50. At the end of my trip I took a shuttle bus back, costing me only $10, so it was a significant difference in price.

So continuing my trip - Day one I went around and got to know the area and I asked the girl on reception for information in regards to what to do and where to go etc. However I would see some people or small groups of people and I wanted to talk to them, but I just nodded to them as to acknowledge them, then go on my way thinking that they wouldn't want to waste their time on me. But not after long I thought I cannot go the whole 6 weeks and not interact with people, make new friends and have a good time. So I grew some balls and approached people in the hostel and just spoke to them, not realising how easy it actually was and the fact I didn't come across as a weirdo. The further the trip went on the better I felt and the more people I spoke to. Not afte rlong I had completely come out of my shell and became this super confidence person I always potentially had inside me. This continued so much upon my return to the UK and completely changed me as a person. So the first positive aspect to travelling alone was that it made me make the effort to speak to other people and in turn it brought a whole lot of confidence out in me. I know if I had travelled with a friend, it would of been just me and them talking and not interacting with anyone else.

After a week in LA, I had exhausted most of the stuff you can do and see there, so decided to spend a week down at Santa Monica to see the beach, go to Malibu and do a little bit of surfing (by do I mean try, with very little success), after that I decided on San Francisco and after that Las Vegas before onto Detroit. All these places were places that I decided to go to, I travelled in the ways most appeasing to me and did all the things that I WANTED to do. Travelling with someone else, there is always compromise and having to do a bit of the things that maybe just one of you wants to do, whereas travelling on your own, you are your own boss. Also I could imagine that discussing what to do next would of caused a few arguments and extra stress. Something that you don't need on a travelling trip as travelling is supposed to be fun and relaxing. So another positive of travelling alone - FREEDOM!

So next time you are thinking of travelling, be it a year or just a few weeks. I strongly recommend considering travelling alone. If you feel it will be scary and you don't have much confidence in yourself - Granted, but a solo journey could be the one thing that changes you and eradicates these traits you feel you possess. You will meet loads of great people in the same position as you so therefore you are not alone!
















Saturday 15 March 2014

Beer Festivals in Germany




When the word 'Beer Festival' crops up for the likes of Germany one thing comes to mind... Oktoberfest. This is the world wide known German beer festival based in Bavaria's capital and largest city Munich, or München as it is called in Germany. Oktoberfest although being the beer festival of Munich is in fact imitated in lots of different countries around the world from Monaco to Brazil. The question is though, is Oktoberfest the best German beer festival in Germany? Now with its world wide recognition you would think so, but having lived in Germany for over a year I have had the opportunity to attend a handful of beer festivals including Oktoberfest and these are my thoughts...


A weekly thing


The crazy thing is, virtually every other week there is a different beer festival in the different towns of Germany, well at least so in Bavaria. They are sort of town celebrations. They generally start around May time and go right through summer until Oktoberfest. Last year I had the opportunity to go to 4 beer festivals.



Bergkirchweih (The Berg) - Erlangen


The first one of which was in my current town of Erlangen, Bergkirchweih. This is a beer festival that lasts a total of 12 days. As this was my first ever beer festival and I had been assured it was amazing by German work colleagues, I got myself a lederhosen at 200€ for the complete outfit. It is the Frankonian costume of Munich so shouldn't really be worn, but in recent years it has become popular at the Berg in Erlangen. So under advice of how good it is, I decided to book the entire time off to be able to go to the Berg every day. . In the end I managed 10 out of the 12 days in a row, consuming a total of 92 Litres of beer along with a number of schnapps (shots to normal people). It got the best of me and completely destroyed me. But it was the best time I've ever had. For the Berg, there are a number of different beer kellers ran by different breweries from around the area. They all make up one long strip and each sell 1 Litre Maß of either full strength festival beer (around 8% alcohol content), a watered down with lemonade shandy version called Radler or Alcohol free beer.
















Obviously I never parted from the full strength stuff and the Berg was a challenge which I was more than happy to accept. Every day consisted in waking up around 9am, throwing on my must have Lederhosen and heading straight to the Berg. A bite to eat on the way or up at the festival was a must if you were going to survive the whole day. Then straight to one of the kellers to get the first Maß, where you were served almost immediately all day every day - very dangerous. The whole day involved drinking, dancing and trying not to lose your friends in the mass of people there. Plenty of bands playing throughout the strip with the normally reserved Germans singing along to every word of the, as it seemed, usual festival songs - both in German and English. So there we were, beer in hand making our way through the crowds trying to find a free table to dance on.

Despite hearing the previous week from a German friend that she broke her ribs the previous year falling off one of the super thin tables we proceeded to get on a table, jump up and down with beer in hand and sing along to the bands playing. It took only 3 days until the risk of injury came apparent. The third day of the festival i lost my footing on the table and banged the ceramic Maß on my tooth, chipping it, leaving my once perfectly natural straight teeth looking like those of a hill billy. Absolutely gutted I felt sober again. However not long after realising there was nothing that could be done and the fact my best mate was a dentist and he could fix the mess I had made in two weeks time I continued to party like I didn't have a care in the world. Also to my surprised the ugly teeth didn't seem to put off the ladies, but maybe they were too drunk to notice. The Berg was completely mental. I was drinking beer at 8€ a litre - a bargain for the strength, I was with good friends, dancing and having an absolute blast to some amazing live music, chatting happily about absolute bollocks to the normally reserved German people, people trying to buy beer from me because I apparently looked so German. Prosting every 2 minutes. Seeing hot girls in Dirndls... Boobs everywhere! Kissing 14 different girls in the first 7 days of the festival. This was to me, better than Vegas!!!






















Annafest - Forchheim


So a month or so after the Berg started, Annafest was on the cards. Annafest is the beer festival for the next town north of Erlangen, Forchheim. Now this beer festival was a bit more spread out and the beer kellers were right at the top of a hill which involved a long walk up. Also with this festival being in mid June when the weather was reaching temperatures of around 40degC it was horrible. I wanted to wear my Lederhosen, but wearing leather in this heat and having to walk up a steep hill in it was a definite no go. Now again, it was very easy to get a beer without having to clamber over people, queue or have any other stress of waiting for a beer. The beer here though wasn't as good as at the Berg. So with the layout, the beer not being the best and the fact that the heat was so extreme that it made it feel like a lot of effort to be there, I didn't really like it and so only went for a day. I won't be attending this beer festival again in the future - Not unless for some reason the temperatures plummet when the festival is on.

Sandkerwa - Bamberg

The last beer festival I went to in the summer was the Sandkerwa which was the next main town north, so after Forchheim. Now this beer festival occurred in the actual town of Bamberg rather than in surrounding woodland. This made it easily accessible. The beer was a lot better and luckily the day I went it was reasonably cool for the end of July. Again with friends that I had recently met it made it incredible. The beer was reasonable and I drank a lot again. Luckily there was no tables for me to dance on as with how drunk I got I probably would of. So an early Saturday morning of the beer festival, a few of us took the train from Erlangen with a crate of beer to warm up (very common on the way to beer festivals). We then had a drinking session within the train station to wait for the rest of the crew who had missed our train and were getting the next one. Once united, we headed for the main town of Bamberg. Being a large group of boys and girls there was lots of noise and we attracted the attention of other by goers in which we made general chit chat with. Beer festival days are very relaxed between the mix of people - Not like England where everyone would probably fight as they can't not after a lot of alcohol. Finally at the main town we went between different bars with outside tents and drank, danced and had lots of fun.


With such a big mixed group I decided not to pursue girls outside of the group, but turned my attention to the hot Brazilian girl in the group. I don't know if it was the alcohol or me, but I striked lucky and got my prize and somehow she is now my girlfriend. So as the night went on, we stumbled around the town as if it was any other night out to then finally take the last train home. A complete mess I fell asleep to be woken up in Erlangen, which was brilliant as I didn't have to experience the horrible 40 minute journey. The Sandkerwa isn't your typical style beer festival. But it is one that is enjoyable being on level ground and not having to clamber up a hill to get yourself a beer.














Oktoberfest - Munich


The last beer festival in the year, the world famous Oktoberfest - which actually starts at the end of September. Now Oktoberfest is huge with a great beer tent layout and plenty to see and do. But its popularity lets it down by not making it feel as authentic as the other smaller beer festivals mentioned above. In other beer festivals you will find probably 90% of the people there are German and this is what makes them. Oktoberfest is full of people from all over the world. Its popularity therefore causes accommodation prices at that time to go sky high, which was a pain for us as on the standard train it is at least a 2 and a half hour journey from Erlangen. For my first Oktoberfest experience I only had the opportunity to go for one day. So with an early start of 6am we all got ready and took a train down to Munich. Due to the fact we had to catch more than one train this caused issues. The first train was delayed meaning we missed the second train from Nuremberg to Munich. So to the shop it was to buy some more beer for the journey down. Luckily being a big group this killed the time and the boredom as we made good chit chat and drank lots of beer.

With a group pass costing around 9€ each all day, that made Oktoberfest more attractive as we could travel there and back and not have to fork out 50€ each for a Hotel or even a Hostel room, which would still more than likely be booked up. 

After a long pain in the arse journey we finally arrived at Oktoberfest around 11am, much later than we wanted to. It was therefore impossible to go in one of the beer tents, even though I think generally you have to book a table in there. However we found a couple of benches outside a tent where we could still order beer. The place was chock a block and it took around 2 hours to finally get a beer. By this time I had sobered up from the beer on the train. Beer was costing about 9€ for a Maß so that was good surprising it was Oktoberfest, however you couldn't order beer quick enough to get drunk quickly - maybe this is a good thing though.

Throughout the day we wandered about a bit and got bits and pieces to eat and went to the outside areas of the other tents to drink. But here I didn't like the fact that you couldn't take your beer outside the tent area. All in all, Oktoberfest was too busy and it was too stressful and took too long to order a beer. However after only one day I feel I need to give Oktoberfest a second chance to redeem itself. Especially as we went on the opening day of it. Maybe next time I shall go mid week.
















So my conclusion on German beer festivals is that the Bavarian towns outside of Munich that host beer festivals unknown to the rest of the world are the best. There is still a huge range of beer variety but you can get served quick and easy. The people at these beer festivals seem to get along with everyone. The music is amazing. It is just on a whole, less stressful and more fun. The Berg is the best I have been to in the area around where I live, just north of Nuremberg. It is a small walk up a hill to get to the main area. But once there, it is flat and you can't really miss a beer keller like you can at Annafest. The music and the atmosphere is amazing and I will probably go every year for the rest of my life now, no matter where in the world I am living.


The Weeknd - An amazing artist

A few weeks ago, I stumbled across an artist called 'The Weeknd'. I was watching many of Amy Gaertner's amazing dance videos and one in specific was choreography to a song called Next. So I looked up this song to get a cleaner version to listen to properly. I thought this artist was super talented and wondered why I'd never heard of him before. It turned out he is featured on some of Drake's tracks. Still I don't know why non of his own music has been entered into any of the charts. My musical taste is quite broad, but the music which I'd say I'm 'into' is generally Hip Hop and RnB. From the age of 11 when I first properly got into music, it was all about Hip Hop for me, specifically Eminem. Now even though I'd still state Hip Hop as being my favourite genre of music, as I grew older and also became fond of and quite good at street dancing my music taste shifted towards the likes of RnB, a genre of music which I would class as a type based on Hip Hop but with more flow that you can dance to. So through my University years, I was listening to a lot more RnB than Hip Hop. Now I'm at a stage in my life where this sort of music is still my favoured, but I am now very keen on artists with pure talent and possessing a good strong, deep soulful voice. The Weeknd fits this description perfectly. Darren Hayes of the pop/rock band Savage Garden I can safely say has a lot of talent, from his song writing to the perfect sound his voice makes, being both beautiful and soulful. The Weeknd is the perfect combination of RnB and a voice like Darren Hayes. 

The Weeknd has a number of amazing tracks with clever meaningful lyrics. The music is slow paced but with so much power, mainly from the punchy bass which gives it the RnB vibe. I could listen to the Weeknd all day and not get bored. His albums Kiss Land and the Trilogy (3 CD album) have an endless amount of listening. I don't know why it has taken me this long to find him, but I'm glad I finally have. His top 5 tracks are as follows:
  1. The Morning
  2. Next
  3. Wicked Games
  4. Montreal
  5. Pretty
So listen to them to be intoduced. Then if you like it, I urge you to go out and buy or download his album and have hours of listening pleasure. Whether it be driving music or just music to chill to. I guarantee it to be both pleasurable and relaxing.


Tuesday 11 March 2014

Nightlife in Newcastle

Nightlife in the north of England is by far the best in the country. I think its because us northerners are much more wild and weird. Now Manchester and Liverpool both offer amazing nights out. But I tell you now. Nothing gets better than a weekend out in Newcastle. Since leaving Uni one of my best friends has moved to Newcastle with his girlfriend as he landed himself a top job there. Since then the rest of us Uni group have made several visits for some mental reunion nights out. These nights out don't get any better than when its boys only. This way we don't get held back by our female companions who can't drink half of what we can. Also, we can get a little bit silly and have a cheeky flirt with the older generation.

Now one thing I've noticed the most in Newcastle, is that every nightout we've had, we always end up bumping into a hen do, and they generally consist of the whole family. The most wild of these groups is usually good old Gran. She may be pushing on 60 but she definitely still knows how to party and she likes taking advantage of us young boys. What's even better is each hen do do a fancy dress theme and even Gran goes all out in a Naughty Navy outfit or of the such.

These Geordie Lasses are so much fun. They really know how to party. They sure as hell give us young men a run for our money, even Gran who states she could do the splits on our face! Incredible! The crazy grannies aside, (who also offer us the irresistible go of motor boating), the booze is so cheap in Newcastle. I think you can in some places buy a quadruple vodka mixer for around £3 or £4. Cannot go much wrong there. Also typical northerners, everyone is just so friendly. There is noone who you can't have a laugh with be it by the bar or just walking down the street.

Apart from University nights out, I would definitely say Newcastle has been my best night outs within the UK and I'm always eager to know when our next gathering is. Even though me and the boys are dotted all over the UK and me now abroad, we all still agree to make Newcastle our party city of choice. All I can say is bring on April 18th. I'll be seeing you Newcastle Nans.





The Average Man's Hairdresser/Barber

In recent times I have found myself getting in with fashion, so to speak... Well in particularly with how I have my haircut. Keeping it long on top and going for the posh/suave sort of look. Now I'd say I was really going for the Justin Timberlake current style, however the hairdressers or barbers I have tried in the past 8 months in the UK, Germany and now Holland still can't seem to master it. Even after showing them a picture. This exact picture here to be precise.

Now ok, I'm not paying top dollar, but how hard can it be? I mean to me it looks a 2 back and sides (6mm) with it long but neat on top. I've also noticed that on pretty much all occasions that the person doing my hair basically ignores what I ask for and generally does what they want, I mean who is the customer here seriously? It reminds me of a time in first year of University when me and my friends went to a certain barber and requested for it to be cut a certain way, and he straight out said 'I'm not doing that, hair isn't meant to be cut that way, it would look stupid'. This with my friend asking for his fringe to be cut shorter. Complete joke. And I mean a hair cut isn't cheap, at an average of £9 - it maybe me just being stingy being a value for money sort of person.

Another thing that worries me, and it is generally with female hairdressers. But they will cut my hair, and I can see in the mirror it doesn't look right, sometimes they cut my hair sort of square. And I can see the panic in their eyes thinking 'why won't this cut right?' or 'I don't know what I'm doing'. Then rather than stand back for a second or two and assess what they can do to get it right, they just continue to chop more away and hope it improves. Luckily for me the most recent time I had it cut it did. So I generally have a rule of thumb when it comes to getting my hair cut and that is to not have a woman do it! I'm not sexist, I just feel that women are better at cutting women's hair whereas a male barber always seems to know what he's doing with a man's hair. But sometime I sit down in the chair for then a woman to come and ask me how I want it and I am just too polite to say I want a male hairdresser.


Another thing with the average kind of hairdresser and barber is once they have finished and they ask if you want it styling. Well I don't know where they learnt to style, as I doubt they would ever do their own hair as terrible as they seem to do mine. It starts by using the cheapest wet look hair gel ever! they have this huge like litre tub that cost about £1 and it is so crap. It stinks, feels horrible and makes your hair look terrible. I mean with my style of cut you would never use wet look gel, so I don't know why they are so stingy in buying the crap. Then they just seem to brush it in some terrible direction and make you look like its a first ever attempt at styling your own hair.


I don't know why I tell them yes, I sit there watch them put so much in and slick it back and I look absolutely ridiculous. I then have to endure an embarrassing walk home where I inevitably wash it all out and style it properly with some more expensive VO5 putty which adds good hold and a sleek more natural look.

Anyway, like I said before maybe I'm being stingy and I'm now earning good money, so I think next time I shall spend a bit more money and go to more of a professional. In the UK I'd spend about £8, in Germany it was 12€, my latest haircut in Rotterdam was 15€ and I would always complain about my haircut, ok its not bad, but its not good either! So enough is enough and I have now found a very suave hairdresser who does the classic cuts and it is 30€. So to me this is like women's territory of haircut prices and yes I'm paying double what I normally pay, but hopefully I won't have anything to moan about. Only time will tell. But if I've learnt anything, its that being stylish is expensive. I should just go back to being a skinhead and buy myself some clippers, much cheaper. But I'm always told (and I agree) I have very good hair. So may as well make the most of it, especially if I end up with hair like my father in the future.

Kids and Marriage

So when I was a 16 year old lad, I thought I knew it all. I was very happy young man with my first proper girlfriend, in love with me thinking my future was set in stone. Back then I had very traditional thoughts and thought I'd go through education, get a good job get married, buy a house then have children - In that order. Little did I know that my vision was blurred by immaturity and inexperience of such a young man. Now thankfully I stuck to the first two stepping stones on my list, I kept my head down with my studies and worked hard throughout University to land myself a very good job. My first girlfriend however, the love of my life, decided that she'd rather be with my best friend at the time which now I'm so glad of and she's the one that's missing out - I'd of stuck with her forever, so thank god she left me... Anyway, that's another story. 

So through my progression into growing into a man, I have a complete new view on what marriage and having children means to me and how it should be. This view has also been amplified by the associated costs of things and the non stop world we live in these days. Now as a young man, I would have definitely said no to kids before marriage, I kind of had it in my head as that it is completely wrong and not the best introduction to the world for a child. However, despite my thoughts on marriage being important to show that you are in a life long commitment - I now feel in my mind that marriage isn't necessary and it sure as hell isn't a requirement for having children. I do though think that when having a child, that you and the person you are having that child with should be stable and happily in love and that you are in it for life. Marriage is at the end of the day materialistic and I think that children should be brought into a world by parents who both love the child and each other more than anything else in the world. Marriage does not prove how much you love someone, it is just a way of declaring your commitment to the world. I mean I hope one day I do get married with that one person that you can 100% say is the one. However if I don't, its no biggie. I also hope to have children and I would love them to come after a marriage, but with the cost of weddings these days and the fact that it is a struggle to afford a mortgage - I would rather be happy in love with a mortgage, a stable home with a child. Rather than getting married to have a child and then be £20,000 down from the wedding that could be thrown into a family home. 

My priorities have changed with age. I have seen many of my school friends have children not married, some of which have got married after having children. I see no difference in the happiness they have with their partners and children, married or not married. So to me it is not a priority, it is something I'd want and something that would be nice. But love and happiness should always come before a statement of marriage - especially when a child is involved.

Sound Hound, an incredible app

Being a huge fan of music and having a good sense of rhythm. I'm always looking for new tunes that have a good beat that makes me wanna dance or something that has deep and meaningful lyrics or if possible both these attributes. Since my mid teens I've always had my ears open to new tunes and old tunes that I haven't heard before, or even found myself in situations where I know of a song but know not of the artist nor the name of the song. As a teen this was quite annoying as sometimes I would hope that if heard on the radio they would state the artist and song name at the end of the track - this rarely happened. Or I would recite the memorable lyrics and jot them down as a text message and save to drafts. If I had no paper or phone to hand, it was a matter of trying to keep the tune in my head and reciting lyrics over in my head - this was easily forgotten. So back in the day as you can probably gather, this was quite stressful or I could no longer have the enjoyment of hearing the track again through not knowing what it was or who it was by. If I was lucky to recite lyrics, it was straight onto google when I got home and finding the song through typing the lyrics into the search bar. Then over to YouTube to then have unlimited access to the song.



Now since the introduction of smartphones there has been for a while now an app called Sound Hound. This app is probably one of the best apps out there for music lovers. when you hear a song being played in a bar, in the hairdressers or wherever you are, you simply pull out your phone, start Sound House and press 'click to listen'. The app will then listen to the song and then search a huge database for that song and if it finds a match, relays the artist and track name for you. It even offers you the option to go straight to iTunes to purchase the track. Incredible right? Better still, if you find yourself in an area with no network signal, or you're not well off enough to have mobile internet included in your pay monthly tariff, you can even record the track and find out what it is when you get home and connect to the WiFi. So no more lyric jotting for me. I simply 'click to listen' and I am notified of the name of an epic song withing seconds.


A further advantage of Sound Hound, I believe, is something some artists should thank the app for. The other day I heard a really nice RnB/Soul tune on the radio, so I initiated Sound Hound and it found the song to be 'Mr. Probz - Waves'. Now I urge anyone who is into RnB, HipHop or Soul to get on YouTube and have a listen to that tune, it is really good, the smooth slow sound and his deep soulful voice!... But going back to that discovery, the name, Mr. Probz - he has the stage name you'd associate with some crappy one hit wonder pop artist that chavvy teenagers would most likely listen to. But in fact he is an artist with an incredible voice with songs produced with some very good music. It is just the name that lets him down. So if someone said to me, 'you should really listen to Mr. Probz, he's awesome' I probably wouldn't of, due to how I perceive his stage name. But because first I heard the song, for then Sound Hound to identify him, I actually have more respect for the artist. So Sound Hound, hats off to your mobile app!

Know it alls who don't actually know a thing at all

I'm the sort of person that generally isn't easily annoyed, but if there is one thing I do hate. It's people that make comments or remarks and claim they know what they're talking about, but actually they don't have a clue. Now I've known or worked with a small handful of these people and I'm sure a lot of people can relate to this. You get some of them who on a regular basis just come out with stuff that is blatant crap and you just think where do they get this stuff from. These are the sorts of people you suss out as idiots straight away and not after long, you just begin to filter out anything that comes out of their mouth. On the other hand you get some which will either challenge a statement you have made or better still will say something that to you doesn't sound completely right, so you question it and they then riddle off a who load of nonsense to back themselves up and basically say you're wrong. The funny thing with this though is the fact that they will come out with something in such a way that it makes you question your own factual knowledge and spend a while thinking 'hmmm maybe they're right'. But after 5 minutes of being put in this trance and a Google search for some facts just to be 100% sure, you laugh to yourself again thinking, where the hell have they got this crap from. It's as if they were the kind of children to always tell fibs and they have been doing it that long they actually believe their own bullshit to be factual. Now not meaning to sound arrogant or big headed, but I am a very intelligent person, I have a first class masters degree in electrical & electronic engineering from a prestigious University to back this comment up. I am also the sort of person that isn't happy until I understand something technical or the way something works 100%. I'm not the kind of sort to 'kind of know' how something works. I know the fundamental physics behind how most electrical components work and the ones I work with I know inside out.  So because of this, when I hear someone speak of testing something in a certain way and they are doing a lot more than necessary - I will make a comment saying you don't need to do that (to get the results you need) and explain why, yet they will still make a comment to back themselves up. Then when I prove my point with factual evidence they some how flip it round to say - 'oh yea that's what I was saying/meant'. Infuriating! Another annoying thing is when people make comments on something you're talking about. But they have just assumed it is a correct statement, because it sounds right... Again, turns out to be a load of bollocks again and I can never imagine where they have got it from.

One funny example I have of a complete bullshit story which many of my college class accepted and I personally thought nothing of it until I went to University goes like this:
...So one of my A-Level Physics teachers, Trev he was called, was teaching us about electrical properties of different materials. Now at school it is very dumbed down for you and you are lead to believe that metals conduct electricity and insulators such as wood and rubber do not. Now the topic in this Physics class at the age or 17 or 18 was about insulators being able to conduct electricity - which is true as the most common electrical equation V=IR states. Ok so conductors have a very low resistance which is why we see electricity flowing at any sort of voltage whereas insulators have a very high resistance, meaning that for a low voltage we will have a negligible amount of current flowing, that is why we say that they don't really conduct electricity. However every material has a finite amount of resistance and even materials such as wood and rubber with resistance values up in the millions and billions of Ohms will conduct large amounts of current granted that the applied voltage is extremely high. An example would be that of a tree touching an overhead power transmission line. Now the example Trev gave, going off the fact that insulators can conduct at large voltages, was that of spark plug cables for car engines. Now for those that don't know, to create a spark across a gap, you need a large voltage - and this is exactly how car sparkplugs work, a voltage in the thousands of volts is generated in the distributor and sent along cables to the spark plugs that sit within the engine head. Trev told us that because of this high voltage the cables actually conduct electricity and I kid you not he made this comment to us -'I made the mistake once of grabbing the cables when the engine was running. It was horrible, I had damaged my hands that I couldn't hold a pint for a week' Now at the time we thought this was true as we were young inexperienced adolescents and the whole subject was about typically know insulators being able to conduct electricity. Now the facts are that yes, typical cable insulators that you find in household products would probably conduct at these voltages. But insulators are created from different materials to be used for different voltage levels. So in spark plug cables the insulation is constructed of super high resistance material and therefore on basic terms doesn't conduct. But to realise this a year or so after leaving college and looking back on it just made me laugh and think, Jesus the people providing the youth of today with false knowledge, Ridiculous.

The final know it alls that actually know nothing at all that I want to finish on, are the ones that you are explaining stuff to and they make out that they already know it. You will be explaining stuff in detail and they will butt in now and again with 'yea yea, I know'... No you don't know, it's why I'm bloody telling you. These people you will also find parroting what you say. As in you will tell them a fact and they will a few minutes later just repeat what you said but in slight different words, making them thinking they sound knowledgeable... Pain in the arse these people, but you seem to find them everywhere. Just another thing you have to get on with!

Monday 10 March 2014

An Introduction to European Beer

So since the start of my work delegation in 2012, I have now lived in Erlangen, South Germany (Bavaria) and also currently Rotterdam, Holland. Now like any typical British man I have quite an acquired taste for beer. Now aside from Guinness I'm not really an ale-type drinker. When it comes to beer these days, in the UK I'm a premium lager drinker - The likes of Peroni and Kronnenburg. I tend to keep away from lager I consumed as a teenager, such as Carling and Fosters, unless I'm in a shitty pub with not much else on offer.

So now after 15 months of living in Europe, I could say I'm quite the expert in a wide variety of beers. So let's start where it all began... Germany.

German Beer

Now if you're travelling to Germany and are hoping to consume the sort of beer you are used to drinking back home, forget it. Germany is a country that seem to only want to live off their produce and that's it. They are a country very proud of what they produce. What they produce is the best and to them, only the best will do. This is evident when driving on any German road and noticing almost all of the car are German. Being either a VW, Audi, BMW or Mercedes-Benz, 80% of the cars sold in German are made by German manufacturers. The story is no different with the beer. Unless you are in a decent restaurant in a major city you are only going to be able to order a German made beer, however this isn't a bad thing. There is German legislation which states that Beer brewers can only use certain ingredients in their brew so the beer is a lot more natural than general British beer you will normally drink; which is pumped with chemicals. Also, especially in Bavaria, there are many local breweries in the towns and villages, meaning the beer you will buy in a pub or more commonly, at the brewery is generally no older than 48 hours old. The vast amount of breweries also gives the rise to a large choice of different beer.

Helles oder Weißbier

The two most popular types of beer in Germany are Helles Bier and Weißbier. Now I'm not a big fan of Weißbier and therefore haven't drank so much of that, so can only briefly go over this beer. Weißbier (translating to English as White-beer) is commonly known to Brits as wheat beer and this is a cloudy beer made from wheat in the brewing process rather than barley which is commonly used in beer production. It has an acquired taste and to me comes across a cross between a lager and an ale - somewhere in between the two. It generally has an alcohol percentage of 4.5% and costs around €3.50 in most German pubs and breweries. Erdinger is a popular type of Weißbier and can be purchased also in the UK - although it will have had a longer shelf life and therefore won't be as good as anything you buy over in Germany from the pubs.
Helles (translating to English as Light) is more of what I can describe as a lager, however it is a lot less gassy and has a much smoother taste - even the 8% festival beer versions. I can drink all types of helles however there are a few in Bavaria that are absolutely exquisite. To name a few of my favourite brewers, St. Geroges Brau, Zirndorfer and Tucher. These 3 brews of Helles are the best beer I've tasted in the whole world I'd say. Also at around €3 per half litre (a little under a pint) you could drink this beer all day and still have money in your pocket for when you go home. The alcohol content sits between 4.5-6.5%, but still you wouldn't expect this, as they don't give that strong after taste as from the likes of Stella.

Dutch Beer

The Dutch again are a fan of their own beer, however the names mentioned here will be already well known around the world. The Dutch have 3 main brewers - Heineken, Grolsch and Bavaria. Bavaria is the least popular manufacturer of beer, and to be frank it tastes like a very standard lager. The battle for the title of Dutch beers lies between Heineken and Grolsch. Now before moving to Rotterdam for my current spell with work, I would always turn down an offer of Heineken. It just never ever appealed to me. Out of a can in the UK it tasted bitter and for me, it was just a no go. However living in Rotterdam and occasionally going to Amsterdam, I didn't really have much choice. However for some strange reason, Heineken in Holland tastes a lot better than it does in the UK, whether it be my taste buds changing or the fact that there is some difference in what's sold in the UK, I don't know. But Heineken definitely has a good kick to it. At 5% you can taste the strength and it seems to blow my head off a lot more than the 5% beers I drank in Germany. However I have to agree now, it definitely belongs up there with world premium lagers. Grolsch on the other hand, my head can seem to handle. Again it has an exquisite taste for a lager and I find it hard to pick a true favourite between Grolsch and Heineken. I guess then the taste is in the tongue of the beholder. Half a litre of these beers in Holland will set you back around €5 which is normal for prices in Rotterdam and Amsterdam.

Belgian Beer

Another discovery from living in Rotterdam is that a vast variety of beer you can purchase in Holland is actually from Belgium. These beers are very different to any other beer I have drank before. It starts by being served at 0.25L and comes generally in something more of a chalice than a glass. When paying around €5 for a drink this small it comes as a shock at first. To then realise these Belgian beers are normally at least 7%. After a night on these bad boys you can more than expect a banging headache in the morning. Some of the Belgian beers that I have tried so far are from the likes of De Konick, La Chouffe and Duvel. The consistency of these beers are swaying more to be an ale-type beer. They are strong and they do have a lot of variation in taste between brews.

My Evaluation on European Beer

On a whole, the beer you can buy in Europe is definitely more superior to that that is on offer in the UK. Both Holland and Germany are a must if you want to spoil your beer loving taste buds to some truly amazing beers. Bavaria is known to have the most breweries per square km than in the rest of Germany and for amazing quality with lots of choice for as little as €3 a pint you cannot go wrong here. I would always recommend Germany for any beer lovers and even if the beer was priced at €5 like Holland I would still put German beer first. The fact that the beer is cheaper just means you can drink more... It never seems to give you a hangover either. A clear winner. Prost!

Saturday 8 March 2014

Internet Speeds and Wireless Router Settings

We live in world of hi-tech and almost everything we possess requires internet access with that connection being wireless. Now recently in my flat in Rotterdam I have been having a few issues with internet connection to my iPhone and iPad. The biggest issue is with getting a good connection in my bedroom. But not so much with signal strength, but more so with internet speed. Now many people think that your Internet Service Provider (ISP) provides you with an internet speed and that's it, that's what you get and it may slow down during peak times. Correct! What people don't realise is that performance is hindered a lot when connected via Wireless. Plugging my laptop into the router gave me a download speed of around 40Mbps (Pretty impressive eh? ;) ) However being sat right next to the router and connecting via wireless. This connection then went from 40 to around 30Mbps, still good I know... but slower! Now going to the bedroom (through 3 internal walls and in a flat built probably around the 1950s) this signal was dropping to around 3-4Mbps - bad isn't it. Now most people would just say, well hey that's life and just leave it at that. Luckily with my engineering background, I knew something could be done to improve connection and found out that changing the channel on which the router's wifi sends out signals can dramatically change your range and also your download speeds. Ok this is a slow, tedious process. But if you have range or download speed issues I would definitely recommend doing this before putting your hand in your pocket and upping your wifi equipment spec.

Now I live right in the centre of Rotterdam and my devices pick up around 15+ wireless network connections. These connections all work on the same sort of equipment and the biggest pain is that most of them will be running the same wireless channels. This causes interference and again will hinder your download speed. Take this morning for example... I was trying to watch a few videos on YouTube and I was left frustrated and cursing at the fact my video was buffering every 2 seconds. So I went into the living room by the router, same issue. I ran speed tests and was getting results of download speeds between 0-1Mbps. So I went into router settings and saw that the router was using channel 1 which it had assigned itself as the router was running in auto config. I changed the settings from Auto to channel 6 and running a speed test again, I was now getting download speeds of 24Mbps. So obviously something in the vicinity was also running channel 1 and causing interference to my network. Now so many 'not so tech savy' people will just put the blame on some unknown reason, or curse the ISP. But one thing I say is there is always a reason for everything. If you are getting speeds of a fraction of what you should be getting on your wireless device, ok there could be a fault on the line. But 9/10 times it is configuration problems. I always find that any technology issues you may have, and you have no clue about what you're doing... Google is your friend and a knowledgable friend that can make you an expert over night. Always remember that.

Shop Open times in Germany

If anyone has been to Germany for longer than a week on holiday, or has had any experiencing of living and working there. They will more than likely be completely with me on how much of a joke Germany's Retail hours are. I cannot believe in this day and age - an age where we are a world eager to shop and spend and have access to what we want, when we want - that Germany still continues to have shop opening times of 8am-8pm Monday til Saturday. With Sunday a national day of everywhere being shut. 




I mean come on, it is bad enough in the UK the super market closing at 5pm on a Sunday, but even then I can pop down to a petrol station if I fancy a little nibble. 
Germany has got it all wrong when it comes to this, even Monday til Saturday I have to do my shopping before 8pm. I finish work, do my shop, get home cook my tea, then realise, oh I forgot to buy such and such. But oh no, by this time its 7.45pm and I can't get to the shop on time to pick up anything else I need. Surely Germany updating their retail operating hours to that of most of the rest of Europe will have nothing but positive effects on their economy. I just don't get it me, and even after over a year of living there. It still frustrates me and there is no getting used to it.

German Women - Eradicating the British Perception

So, December 2012 I got the opportunity with work to move to Germany on a three year delegation to set my career in a new direction. I never had any preconceptions of Germany and didn't know really what to expect. All I knew was that this was a very career-wise move for me. After a few weeks here the general questions I got from friends and family back home were "How are the German women there?". The key topic always coming up was if they were hairy or not, and generally the British perception of German women was that they were very masculine - being butch, hairy and generally not very attractive at all. I'm not sure where this preconception us Brits have of German women being this way arose from. However upon discussions with German women about this topic in Bavarian bars and pubs, they believe that this idea of German women being hairy may have come from the pop singer Nena, famous in the 1980's for her song 99 luftballons (in which she released an English version in 1984 called 99 red balloons), as she had hairy armpits on top of the pops back then. Now the person I am, I absolutely love women. The female anatomy and general natural female beauty astounds me, and I can tell you that on an average level German women are absolutely incredible. They are very naturally beautiful and don't require any of this fake crap such as caked on makeup, fake tan, fake eyelashes, hair extensions etc. that British women seem to have a need for these days. In fact, on an average Friday/Saturday night in my current town of Erlangen you will find most girls in a pair of jeans, a plain top, wearing flat shoes and wearing not much more than a bit of mascara and they look amazing. In the UK you wouldn't catch a single girl going out looking this way. Figure hugging short, bum length dresses and stilettos with a minimum of a 6 inch heel is the norm in the UK, along with a face that is that much altered with cosmetics that men are waking up the next day with a completely different woman to the one they took home.


Now I'm not saying German women don't like to doll up every once in a while, and yes quite a lot of them will wear heels. However it is very minimalistic and they can always walk in the shoes they wear (Germans are very practical people). The typical German woman will have blonde hair and striking blue eyes, she will be slim and healthy looking and best of all she drinks beer. 9/10 women in Germany are in good shape, you hardly ever see an overweight woman. In fact German people in general are in good shape, however the only down side is that also 9/10 of them smoke - which doesn't quite tickle my fancy on a personal level. The rest of Europe hasn't quite had the cultural change on the view of smoking yet it seems.


Now looks aside, German women are much more easy to understand than British women. There is much less game playing and German women will always be straight with you all of the time. It may seem quite blunt but if a German girl is not into you, they will tell you how it is. No beating around the bush, no working you to their advantage for free drinks and best of all, no mind games. This makes them even more so, easy to get along with and you feel there's no having to prove yourself to them, or going out of your way to impress them. It's just easy and straight forward with German women.

I hope Britain can put aside these false preconceptions of German Women, because I believe them to be some of the most amazing women in Europe, both in beauty and in personality. Furthermore I don't think German women get the status they deserve in the world. When you ask Brits about the beauties of Europe, they will mention the Italians and Spanish, however once Britain has its eyes opened to what Germany has to offer with its female nationals, I think they will be pleasantly surprised