2019. október 21., hétfő

Sunday trip by Ádám Pilczinger


Today we visited The Castle of Walmer and Deal. We were at the train station at 8:30 AM and the journey lasted about 30 minutes. We got off the train and walked to Walmer Castle, which was the summer house of Queen Elizabeth I among many others. Then we explored the other parts of the castle and left for Deal. We found a café while we were walking and stopped there for a rest. After that, we visited the place finally and explored the lower parts of the castle as well. Then we were roaming on the beach and it started raining, but it didn't last for a long time, fortunately. We took the train back to Broadstairs.










Cinema – by Dominik Hagya


This was our first time in a cinema since our arrival. We watched Ad Astra in the Granville theater. This building is an old building with neon lights inside so it really has a retro vibe. Ad Astra the film was a utopian, futuristic film. The film is about fixing a problem which had happened without knowing it. Our main character's father was in a mission which went South and went missing. Our main character gets the mission to fix the problem maybe find his dad along the way. The problem in the beginning was the sudden power shocks which took from the universe's stability and by a counter power shock could neutralize the instability. Unfortunately, our hero found his dad but couldn’t come back to Earth with him.


Drumin' workshop by Attila Baracsi


Tonight the Kent School of English organized an exotic Drumin’ workshop which contained trying to play on a traditional African musical instrument called djembe. We were together with an Austrian group. The man who explained what actually a djembe is, where it came from and helped how to make a sound with this kind of instrument was very funny and tried to make us comfortable in this situation. He knew a bit German so he welcomed the Austrian group in their own language. But he hasn’ t learnt any Hungarian yet. Nevertheless he asked us to help him, so we told him some words in our language like ‘thank you, welcome’. But he had difficulties with the pronunciation. After that we started to play, he showed some rhythms and we had to do the same. When we became ‘professional’ djembe players he asked some people to show a rhythm and everyone had to do the same. I was the last one who had to perform something but I’m not as good so I showed a very easy one.




Barn dance by Anna Vadász


The dance took place at Broadstairs Pavilion. It started at 20.00 and ended at 21.45. There were probably100 kids in total, who came from all around the world. Students from Germany, France, Spain, Italy and of course Hungary. We danced to traditional country music with a live band and a professional caller who „sang” the instructions to us. We always danced in groups and one group had 4,6 or 8 couples. The movements were basic and simple like right hand spin, left hand spin, two hand swings and dosie-doe. Dosie-doe is when you cross your arms in front of you and go around your partner with your back to them. The KSE staff taught us their own dance. After that there was „The Best Dance of the Night”. It was two teams against each other and it was also in pairs. You had to stand in two big lines in one team and run as fast as you can. Run down twice in the middle than each side of the two lines and each of you had to be at one-one side but you had to hold your pairs hand the whole time. It was fun, everybody had a great time.




The jewel in the crown – Karaoke party in Broadstairs – by Levente Kovács


The karaoke party, we engaged in last Friday was more than enjoyable. The participants surely gave their best. The event took place in the local Baptist Church. Although I didn’t have expectations that the reckless entertainers could have lived up to, most of the acts were simultaneously brilliant and burlesque, moreover many of them had their own skeleton in the cupboard, since you couldn’t make early verdicts about the skills of the given participant. A girl, for one, felt seemingly really anxious on stage, albeit quite exhilarated as well. Not only did she seem zealous about being in the limelight, but her voice was also staggering, in fact, her performance was also so marvellous that I actually got goose bumps. However, a party would not be a party without the Hungarian. Singing classics like the Bohemian Rhapsody or songs from Shawn Mendes, moreover our teachers also showed us what they were really capable of, singing Imagine from John Lennon, which was welcomed with a pageant of mobile torches by the audience. It undoubtedly set the tone. Suffice it to say that the karaoke party was a really good pursuit and I really enjoyed it, making no bones about it.






Oxford by Zsanett Moravetz

We went to Oxford on the day we arrived in England. We went to the High Street of Oxford. Then we went to Christ Church Meadow and walked around the park. To go out of the park, you need to go through a really interesting gate, which only one person can use at a time. After that we wanted to go to a botanical garden, but we didn't have time for that. But we did have time for ourselves. The teachers let us go to eat something or just go shopping. Me and my classmates who came as well, went to Marks&Spencer's café shop and ate really delicious biscuits. Half an hour later we met in front of a Waterstones and continued our trip. The next and final destination was the Ashmolean Museum which is the University of Oxford’s museum of art and archaeology. We spent an hour there, then got on our bus. We arrived in Broadstairs at around 7pm and had a really delicious dinner with our host families.






2019. október 17., csütörtök

Bletchley Park by Vilmos Forgó

   On our first day in England we travelled to Bletchley Park. It happened in this place that genius mathematicians worked in secret to decipher the codes of the German forces. The most famous code-breaker was Alan Turing who built the first computer to break the so-called Enigma code. We saw where these people lived and worked during WWII and we've learned a lot about their significance in history.