baia mare
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EVS stories: The glass half full (V) – by Martina L.
- 29 September 2017
- Posted by: Team for Youth Association
- Category: Volunteering Stories
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Dear new volunteer,
I’m Martina, from Italy. Right now I’m ending my long term EVS, I’ve spent 10 months in Romania, in a project called “Life skills for Rural Education”. -
EVS Stories: My perception of travelling – by Skaiste P.
- 12 September 2017
- Posted by: Team for Youth Association
- Category: Volunteering Stories
Travelling…What does it mean for me? For me it has always been what makes my heart beat more intensively and inspires you when you have to work hard to achieve something. In my school years it was a dream and later it became an aim. So, I suppose it is not surprising, that one of
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EVS Stories: On an adventure (II) – by Jorge M. A. Esteban
- 11 August 2017
- Posted by: Team for Youth Association
- Category: Volunteering Stories
Hi everybody! Almost three months ago I wrote my first blog, it was time to write a second and tell you how is going my life in Romania and more specifically in Baia Mare.
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EVS Stories: Accommodating to changes, learning, working, and loss (II) – By Rosa L.
- 19 July 2017
- Posted by: Team for Youth Association
- Category: Volunteering Stories
During my service, a lot of things happened so far: I stayed at a four-star hotel for the first time in my life, learned to speak in public with more confidence, met a lot of people, found a friend and lost him.
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EVS Stories: An (un)usual day (II) – by Inma Calderon
- 17 July 2017
- Posted by: Team for Youth Association
- Category: Volunteering Stories
Salut! This is my second post for the blog… and a lot of things have changed since the first one. If everything was new at the beginning, now I feel very comfortable in Baia Mare (not because I wasn’t before, but now all those new things are more familiar).
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EVS Stories: IN4EVS Blog Updates
- 15 June 2017
- Posted by: Team for Youth Association
- Category: Volunteering Stories
Q: How did your impression of Romania change during the first months of your service? Rosa: The dogs and the police turned out to be less dangerous than I thought. Learning Romanian is more difficult than learning Latin. At the beginning of my service, there were rumors that you can not drink the tap water,