Rural Youth Organisation of Tasmania Inc.
Study Tours
2008 Exchangee to Switzerland - Part I
Hi from Canton Thurgau,
I arrived in Bern by train after spending a couple of weeks travelling by train from Turkey.  My host father was working in Bern so I was able to meet him there and had the afternoon to explore the city.   My first host family were the Ludars.  Christoph, Manuela, Nadja 9, Adrian 6 and Matthias 3.  They live at Graswil, about half hour from Bern and near the town of Solothurn.  On the farm there are about 40 deer, a horse, a donkey, couple geese and some cats.  Christoph works away from home, so I was feeding the deer of a morning, cleaning out the horse and donkey stalls, helping around the house, and playing with the children.
 
On the Saturday I went with the neighbour to the national yodelling competition.  The        competition was over by the time we got there, but I got to see the fireworks and there were groups of people yodelling and playing the Alphorn at different times around the city.  There were a lot of people there, it was very difficult to move.
 
I attended the end of year concert the children had for school.  There were 6 students who   travelled to different countries and each class presented an act or song from a country.  One class was from “Australia” and sang the twelve days of holidays, based on the Australian version of the twelve days of Christmas, with twelve Tasmanian Devils.
 
The week after arriving, the exchangee incoming weekend was held at Erstfeld, in the Canton of Uri, on a working farm.   Upstairs over the barn is a kitchen bathroom and sleeping area for groups to stay.  There are 18 exchangees in Switzerland from countries such as South Korea, Taiwan, Northern Ireland, USA, Canada, Austria, Finland, England, Norway, Estonia and Cameroon in Africa, which is a new program.  The weekend was about finding out about Switzerland, getting to know the other exchangees, and having a lot of fun.  Certainly Saturday nights game of “honey I love you” proved to be a lot of fun, entertaining for those watching, and also provided some interesting photos.
 
Saturday we did a tour of the Gottard Tunnel.  This is a 57km tunnel being built through the Alps and will enable a flat route through the Alps, thus increasing the freight carrying capacity on the trains.  We didn’t get the English speaking guide we were meant to get, so the powerpoint presentation and tour underground were translated by Madlin, this also made the tour long and a bit boring.  Apart from that it was a good tour - it reminded me of the motto of the pioneers who built the Abt railway “we find a way or make it.”
 
Sunday was pack up and a BBQ with host families that choose to come.  After lunch the host families in groups had to complete activities the exchangees did the previous afternoon.  Three exchangees were in charge of each activity and had to explain to each group what they had to do.
 
Back with the host family for another 2 weeks, helping round the house picking cherries, feeding deer etc., we had Nadjas friend Erika stay a week.  Adrian decided he was sleeping in Nadjas room with Erika one night, and gave his lungs a good workout when the girls came home and found out what he had planned.
 
The international exchanges are organised by the International 4H (or farm) youth exchange, and each year there is a European conference for the alumni.  This year was the 50th conference and just happened to be held in Switzerland.  If the conference was as good as I have hear National Convention is, my fellow IFYE's and I were in for a real treat!   
   
After church on the first day (Sunday) we were greeted by a cowbell parade.  About 20 men and children each carrying 2 cow bells.  The little kids with the little bells were in the front and the bells and children got bigger, with the men and the biggest bells in the back.  They accompanied us back to Strikof.  In the afternoon we had Swiss Fest where we were able to try different Swiss activities.  This   included carrying the Swiss bells, learning to yodel, blowing the alphorn and Swiss wrestling.
 
Monday we had a choice of 5 tours. I did the farm and beer tour.  The dairy farm is near Basel and owned by an architect with a lot of money. The farm is rented out. The floor in the dairy can be raised and is perfect for myself, Aleta and any other person who is average height!! Also there is two stainless steel grain silos. The couple that rent the farm enjoy milking, so that is why there is no automatic milking (even through the owner could afford to have robotic milkers!).  After lunch we headed to the beer factory (they also made non-alcoholic beer and the Arabian countries are their main export market).   
Tuesday was exploring the Canton of Zürich on the public transport system in groups of 6.  Each group had 4 things to find in the canton, my group managed to lose one of it’s members.   Wednesday was more tours - I did the tour to the Emmi plant.  This is the largest dairy processor in Switzerland who makes yoghurt, cheese and coffeelattie, along with other products such as muesli and probiotics.  While the tour was interesting, I felt it was another company that has become so big it no longer really cares about the farmers that supply it.
Lunch was at a fellow IFYEs dairy farm. (Lukas, IFYE to northern Ireland 2007).  They have their own solar plant and produce their own electricity, they also have a little shop and make and sell their own produce.
 
Next was a tour of a dairy farm that also raises Ostrich for meat.  When the birds are 100kg they are slaughtered. 100kg of bird amounts to about 30kg of meat.
 
Wednesday night proved that with team work girls can achieve anything.  With the help of 3 fellow exchangees, we carried Lukas to his bed via the water fountain. It also took team work to prevent getting dunked into the fountain ourselves.  Kylie, this is the Lukas that was in Northern Ireland with you last year.  
 
Thursday was the general assembly of the alumni, a tour of the farm after lunch and team activities in the afternoon. Thursday evening everyone was dressed in their best for celebration    dinner for the 50th Anniversary.  Most of the IFYE Presidents were at the dinner and they were interviewed in groups.  There was also 25 year pins awarded to those who had been on exchange 25 years ago and certificates to about seven people for whom it has been 50 years since their exchange.    
 
My next host family was the Hubers, Martin, Margrith, Charlotte 18, Michael 15 and Johannes 13, who live on a dairy farm in Mattwil, an hour from Zürich and 15km from the Swiss German border, in the Canton of Thurgau.  Saturday was departure day and for me, and although it was exciting to be going to a new family, it was sad that a week of fun, friendship, laughs and meeting new  people was over.
Friday night was the last dinner together.  I have had quite a few people through the week ask if I know people from Tasmania that they were on exchange with.  Even a lady from France (Lucie) wanting to know if I knew a Brett Mackenzie (alias Boof) if anyone is talking to Boof, can they pass on the message that Lucie and her family are keen to hear from him. 
Friday morning after two and a half hours sleep I joined the farm walk.  This was led by Stefan who was also one of five of us that stayed in the bar until 5am.  The tour included a visit to three different farms in the area.  The first was a bio fuel farm, built by two farmers who also have 65 milking cows.  Next was a horse farm and riding school. The owner also raises chickens, but we arrived a day late for the chickens and the owner missed out on some extra help.  Then was a small 9 hole golf course, this used to be a dairy, but the owner decided to build the golf course when the agriculture industry was going through crisis ten years ago.
Accommodation for most of us was in the underground bunker located on the farm (bomb    shelter) or jail cell. Each big room had bunks three high and 8 beds across.  As Daniela and I were the only girls on the top bunks, it provided a perfect opportunity for Austria and Australia to have a missile war.  The conference was held at Strikof Agriculture Farm near Zürich. With the incoming exchangees, there were 19 countries represented.