some organisational stufffiled under germany organising by Florian
Babsi, my personal travel assistant for international flight affairs just told me that the flight has been booked completely and the tickets are ready to be fetched from her office.
Another information for all students who are looking for an ISIC (International Student Identity Card): If all Asta-bureaus you know are closed, try asta-reisen.de – here you find besides various other information a form to order an ISIC.
3 - 2 - 1 - airbornefiled under tasmania organising by Florian
Just booked my flight for 1.300 Euros (2-way) – of course with the happy little stewardesses from Singapore Airlines.
Tassy get ready – I’m coming! ;-)
pics.downdownunder.netfiled under germany organising by Florian
Gallery is set-up, all pics according downdownunder are available on pics.downdownunder.net
downdownunder.netfiled under tasmania organising by Florian
Now it’s official: Jochen and me will settle to Tassyland! It’s not just downunder, it’s down-downunder:

Just grabbed a domain, setup a blog and there we are – on these pages we’ll inform you from now on about everything the tasmanian bush-drums proclaim…
Again as a summary:
Jochen and me got a common job for our second internship (official 6th semester) at two antarctic research labs: On the one hand at AWI (Alfred Wegener Institut) in Bremerhaven, on the other hand at the AAD (Australian Antarctic Division) in Hobart/Tasmania. According to the current information we have I’ll be in Hobart from 2004-09 until 2004-12, Jochen has to suffer in Bremerhaven until the end of November. In December he’ll fligh downdownunder, we’ll have one month together to “sync our project states” [...], he’ll stay until March 2005 while I’ll enoy the herb northern climate of Bremerhaven from January 2005 to March 2005.
once upon a time...filed under germany organising by Florian
To give a short summary: Even weeks before the receipt of the email you see below, Mr. Karduck gave some hints of a practical internship or a diploma semester at an “antarctic research lab”. A nice option that noone took too serious – until this memorable 30st of June 2004 when everything started with an inconsiderable email:
