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When I was awarded the opportunity to represent JFAO on an exchange to
Switzerland a few months ago, I was very excited.
I had no idea what to
expect upon my arrival because I would be the first JF delegate to go,
and before I left Canada I had no time to do any research on what I would
expect to find in Switzerland.
I was met by Ursula from the IFYE (International 4-H Youth Exchange)
organization which organizes the Swiss exchange program.
I arrived just
before the beginning of the 50th annual IFYE Conference, and since this
year it was being held in Switzerland, all incoming delegates were able to
attend the week long affair.
This was where I got my first impressions of
the country, and I must say that Switzerland is by far the cleanest and
safest place I have ever been - and you had better be ready to eat cheese
with every meal...
On our arrival at the conference I was given the job of showing people to
the dormatories, which happened to be what I would call a nuclear fallout
shelter.
That's right -
we stayed in an underground bunker complete with
a decontamination chamber and two solid 10'' thick concrete doors.
So
yes, very safe indeed.
{gallery}travel/simon2008{/gallery}
My first week at the conference was very interesting. I was able to meet
all of the other incoming delegates, as well as many people from all
across Europe and the USA who had been on an exchange in the past.
It was
amazing how many people I met who had either been to Canada on exchange,
who knew someone from JF who had been on an exchange, or knew someone who
had been to Ontario on exchange.
It was really an amazing experience and
I learned a lot about Switzerland and many other countries around the
world. I had a really great time and I am definately looking forward to
attending another IFYE conference.
The IFYE exchange experience is quite a lot different from what I
expected.
I will be staying with three host families - three weeks with
each family.
After the conference ended I met my first host family in a
small town called Leontica, which is in Ticino, a canton (province) of
Switzerland where the main language is a dialect of Italian.
I was
greeted by Lilo and Anita Gianora, and their three sons Pascal, Matteo,
and Remo.
The first thing that I learned about Leontica is that farming there is
very different from anything in Canada.
Leontica is in the Alps and is
about 900 meters above sea level (approx. 3000 feet), so the scenery is
definitely a little different.
I arrived just in time to help gather hay, which happens to be the only
crop the farmers there are able to grow.
I decided to call this adventure
Black Diamond Haying, mostly due to the fact that on one field we had to
cut around the chairlift tower that was in the middle of the field.
When the hay was finished there was little left to do around the farm,
because the cows are kept high in the Alps (approx. 2000 meters or 6500
ft. above sea level) and the farmers have hired help to milk the cows and
make the milk into cheese.
Lilo and Anita's farm was really interesting
to see because I have definately never seen farming like that, and I am
still not quite sure how farmers here are able to make a living since most
of them milk between 15 and 25 cows.
My time with the Gianoras has wrapped up, and I'm moving on to my next
host family.
They live in a small town near the German border, just north
of Zurich, so hopefully I will not get lost while changing trains in
Zurich.
Photo 1: The entrance to the "Bunker."
Photo 2: Gathering hay in Leontica.
Photo 3: Raking hay on the ski slope, note the chair-lift in the background!!!
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