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Total number of articles: 429

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SKS Germany: Intercultural Training in all Major German Cities

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***************** Featured City of the Month (August 2010): BERLIN, GERMANY

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Germany
Bamberg (7:46PM)
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Explore Bamberg


Narrow alleys, crozy corners, medieval and baroque building fronts, plus a distinct romantic flair: Bamberg is a great piece of art. The city mesmerizes visitors with its largest intact old city in all of Europe and it has been a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage Site since 1993. Today, Bamberg is a lively art and cultural center with a long tradition of beer brewing and a thousand year history. All together this makes it a very special place to visit. The city is best explored on foot, at a leisurely pace. Must see places include the imperial Dome with ist four towers, the New Residence and romantic rose garden, the Old Court, the Old Town Hall that sits in the middle of...

Posted on Tuesday 5 May 2009 by andreas (1292 Gunter Points - goGunter Team)
Viewed 353 times


Bamberg's Magic


In Bamberg, the motto on the third weeekend in July is „Bamberg Performs Magic“. During the festival, magicians, jugglers and street performers transform the entire inner city into a magic workshop. http://www.bambergzaubert.de

Posted on Tuesday 5 May 2009 by andreas (1292 Gunter Points - goGunter Team)
Viewed 363 times


Getting a mortgage in Germany

This (October 2008) is probably the wrong time for advice on how to get subprime mortgages in Germany, but anyway: As a foreigner, most applicants for mortgages will by default be subprime, because your real estate/assets overseas don't count for anything for a German bank. Just cash does (and yes, a few banks will analyse overseas income statements, but add to this translation costs etc). To save you time trapsing through 20 banks in your first weeks in Germany, here is a shortcut, the largest mortgage broker in Germany: http://www.interhyp.de/ They offer cordial and efficient service; after giving your details through phone, on the next business day you should have your first offers by the banks they represent, which...

Posted on Saturday 25 October 2008 by andreas (1292 Gunter Points - goGunter Team)
Viewed 357 times


Schrebergärten - German garden lots


This is a typical German thing and quite unique, I guess, where people have separate garden lots where they go to in summer evenings and weekends; they are allowed to build small huts on these (usually leased) lots, bot normally not to connect them to power, water or sewage - keeping those lots purely for enjoying spare time and holidays. The lots can be in the middle of cities, along rail tracks or a bit further out of town; done up to the nines, with beautiful pedicured lawns, fruit trees, and yes, the ubiquitous dwarf figurines.

Posted on Wednesday 10 September 2008 by andreas (1292 Gunter Points - goGunter Team)
Viewed 372 times


Instant German Hausfrau! Toll!

Ok, it's not something to be proud of, but if you need to prepare a foolproof German meal, help is at hand. Head for the Maggi and Knorr packet selection where you'll find things like Schweinebraten, Schnitzel and Spaetzle. The instructions are really easy and you know exactly what to ask the butcher for (or just give them the packet in shame!). For dessert just throw berries and a tub of quark or thick cream into a pre-made flan base or make a packet vanilla pudding. With a little bit of help you can even impress Oma - until your own Hausfrau credentials are fully polished.

Posted on Monday 1 September 2008 by Rachel (414 Gunter Points - goGunter Team)
Viewed 362 times


Immigration in Germany

As our kids and I are German, when we arrived in Berlin only my wife had to register as a foreign citizen at the Ausländerbehörde, the local immigration authority. We first had to register our place of residence at the local "Bürgeramt" (after we had found our flat to stay - we needed passports, birth and marriage certificates for this), then had to arrange (via email) an appointment at the local Ausländerbehörde to register my wife so that she gets a residence and work permit. We had to do this within the first 3 months of our arrival. The appointment itself took ca. 30 minutes, and again we had to bring passports, marriage certificates, birth certificates, and the "Meldebescheinigung" from the...

Posted on Sunday 31 August 2008 by andreas (1292 Gunter Points - goGunter Team)
Viewed 353 times


Looking for property and flats to rent


These links were useful when we looked for apartments after we arrived in Berlin: http://www.immobilienscout24.de/ http://www.immowelt.de/ http://www.immonet.de /

Posted on Tuesday 12 August 2008 by andreas (1292 Gunter Points - goGunter Team)
Viewed 401 times

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