The past week or so has been very exciting! In the space of about 36 hours we were knee deep in snow which was very good timing because shortly after that, our first guests arrived! A Ranger group of 21 from Hastings, Sussex. Their arrival meant us vollies got to go out on programme with them at the same time in order for us to be trained in that activity. The Rangers got to christen our powder on Baby Chalet Hill using our vast selection of sledges and tobbogans, inlcuding something called a ski-bock which at first I considered to be the most mental invension ever but now I realise it's fun! It's basically a ski with a small chair/bench stuck on top.
We also took our guests on a hike to Engstligen falls, which are slowly but surely freezing, and had a snow bbq in the forrest there. Other highlights of the week include a hike to the woodcarvers shop, with whom the Chalet have been working since seemingly forever. We have also been a part of several evening activities, inculding Swiss night, which includes chocolate fondue, and WAGGGS night, which involve quizzes and activities based around WAGGGS. We also had a camfire under the crystal clear night sky which was full of stars - a scene which I still remember from the first time I came here is just how perfect the night sky is here.
Round all this we have also managed a staff trip to Bern and had time to make this video. So on that note, here's hoping you had a very merry Christmas and einen gute Rutsch ins neues Jahr! (Nappy New Year!)
Online diary of my time as a Vollie (Volunteer) at Our Chalet. These are my own opinions and not those of Our Chalet or WAGGGS.
Saturday, 31 December 2011
Sunday, 11 December 2011
High up, high on the mountain...
I have now been in Switzerland for a week, I think, maybe…possibly. It’s hard to know what day it is as there’s work to be done at the Chalet 7 days a week and we started training on a Wednesday. There are six ‘Vollies’ or volunteers at the moment, we are expecting our 7th at the end of next week. There’s Gaenor and I from the UK, Cata from Costa Rica, Mary from Tassie, Anna from Finland and Brooke from the US. Considering we’ve only known each other for about 4 days we seem to be getting on like a house on fire! But then again, that’s hardly surprising seeing as we all come from a Scouting/Guiding background. Most of us have lead units, all of us have been on international trips and like hiking, climbing and being outdoors. There was also a lot of excitement on our first day for the snow that was falling - to the extent that during lunch we took the sledges out in the grounds.
Our training so far has been in house, which is the usual stuff like making beds, cleaning bathrooms, and washing up. We’ve also had the more creative task of making posters about our selves and writing about ourselves for the website, making paper snow flakes…very much like a week at Guide camp! Training continues for another week, (we have catering and programme to learn about!) and then our first Guests start to arrive. We are also having a Christmas party for the locals (and Jon the Scone and LongJon who will be my first visitors) where all the kids get to sleep over in the Main Chalet attic.
Our other sessions of the week have been WAGGGS (the structure of which still baffles me) based. The most eye opening thing I’ve learnt is about just how influential they are. WAGGGS sit in on UN meetings and WAGGGS representatives are currently at COP17 where all countries who signed the Kyoto Protocol will be discussing their progress. WAGGGS's involvement in all this is focused on how climate change affects girls and young women. In developing nations, global warming means that the land is getting drier meaning water sources are becoming more scarce. This means not only having to walk further to find a clean water source, but also that simple things like fire wood and crops are harder to find and farm. For girls and young women in these countries they then spend more time collecting water, for example, and less time in school. For people like this, WAGGGS provides a platform for their voices to be heard. (Yes, Guiding is pretty big in Africa)
In developed nations, WAGGGS provides non-formal education of global issues such as climate change. Guiding provides the opportunity to learn things that aren't taught in school and for Guides to be pro-active and take an interest in the world around them. One of our activities along those lines ('cos lets be honest, we're hardly walking miles for fire wood!) was to make a video sending a message of support to those at COP17. I still don't know enough about climate change to be able to form my own opinions, or to know if I really 'believe' in climate change, however these past few days at this WAGGGS World Centre have definitely brought the matter to my attention.
Apart from the sessions on WAGGGS, one of ways in which Our Chalet is taking action against climate change is with its recycling. The Chalet has an extensive recycling programme including a large compost pile for all raw foods and a heating system which burns wood pellets that produce about a bucket of waste product a year. On a very basic level, for example, this means that the bin men have to drive up to the Chalet less often equalling fewer carbon emissions. Our lights can hardly ever be left on, too, because they're all on timers thus saving electricity when the forgetful Guide doesn't turn the light off!
In summary, that's what we've done this week! Oh, and the skiing - just one of the highlights of living in a world class ski resort...it's a hard life!
Bis zum nächsten Mal :-)
Saturday, 3 December 2011
Not Quite at the Chalet
I realise I’m getting a little ahead of myself with the title of my blog however I have been waiting for this moment for about 6 years. I first went to Our Chalet, the WAGGGS (World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts) world centre in Adelboden, Switzerland, in 2005 as a Young Leader with my Guide unit. We arrived in cloud (and left in cloud, but that’s another story!) and I distinctly remember going to the bathroom just after waking up on our first morning and my jaw dropping as a casual glance out the window revealed the most stunning mountains I had ever seen – the type I had seen in pictures but didn’t realise actually existed. Needless to say we had a week I haven’t yet forgotten, a real eye opener and a week of firsts. We swam in a glacial lake, we hiked up to the summit of the Bundesspitz in time to watch the sunrise (my first proper peak!), we went horse riding, I turned 16 and we visited the Cailler chocolate factory which had an all you can eat tasting room at the end. However, the one thing that stands out to me the most is a comment one of my leaders made to me: “I could imagine you working here…” At that age I had hardly given a thought about what A-levels I wanted to take, let alone what career took my fancy or whether I would ever work abroad.
Which ever leader it was who made that passing comment to me has a lot to answer for. Since that trip I have grabbed every opportunity to climb every mountain, ford every stream, follow every byway…errm hang on, so yeah since then the idea of working at the Chalet has always been at the back of my mind. Their summer season runs from too early in May to be compatible with the British school and university systems which is the only reason I haven’t done it yet. In the meantime though I discovered SSAGO (the Student Scout and Guide Organisation) and have been camping up and down the country with them. The Yorkshire branch made their first international trip this year. We spent a week in Slovakia and did some incredible hiking in the High Tatras. We also took my Leeds unit on the Girlguiding UK’s centenary trip to Our Chalet in February 2010.
International trips aside, my Guiding ‘career’ has gone from strength to strength since that first morning at Our Chalet. I became a qualified leader just after my 18th birthday and have been an assistant leader with a Guide and a Brownie unit in Leeds and whilst I was in Austria I did my best to help with the Wichtel and Wölflinge (8-10 years) group in Zell am See – leading in German is tough, leading in Pinzgauerisch (the local dialect) resulted more to the WiWö leading me! The Cheshire Border ‘Get Wet Team’ have also successfully taught me to sail and thanks to them I got my Royal Yachting Association Dinghy Instructor qualification in 2009. Since leaving university I became Guider in Charge for a unit briefly which has been a pretty big learning curve, too – and, involves far more paperwork than I imagined!
I see my time at Our Chalet as my next Guiding adventure and although I’m still not entirely sure what it will involve, I am very much looking forward to Guiding on an international level and being a Waggg. I can’t wait for the snow to arrive and to spend my days off skiing, sledging or discovering the rest of Switzerland and particularly ‘Schwytzerteutsch’ a.k.a. Swiss German, but what I think will be the best part is the unknown – I’m almost certain that the long term staff and the guests will provide many unexpected challenges for us short term staff.
I realise I’m getting a little ahead of myself with the title of my blog however I have been waiting for this moment for about 6 years. I first went to Our Chalet, the WAGGGS (World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts) world centre in Adelboden, Switzerland, in 2005 as a Young Leader with my Guide unit. We arrived in cloud (and left in cloud, but that’s another story!) and I distinctly remember going to the bathroom just after waking up on our first morning and my jaw dropping as a casual glance out the window revealed the most stunning mountains I had ever seen – the type I had seen in pictures but didn’t realise actually existed. Needless to say we had a week I haven’t yet forgotten, a real eye opener and a week of firsts. We swam in a glacial lake, we hiked up to the summit of the Bundesspitz in time to watch the sunrise (my first proper peak!), we went horse riding, I turned 16 and we visited the Cailler chocolate factory which had an all you can eat tasting room at the end. However, the one thing that stands out to me the most is a comment one of my leaders made to me: “I could imagine you working here…” At that age I had hardly given a thought about what A-levels I wanted to take, let alone what career took my fancy or whether I would ever work abroad.
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