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1 HOUR:80$
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Andreas Dittmer marked the history of sprint canoeing and inspired thousands of young athletes around the world. During his career, Dittmer dominated sprint canoeing by winning five medals at the Olympic Games, including 3 golds in C-2 and C-1 meters. He is also 8 times World Champion and has won a total of 22 medals at the World Championship between and Dittmer has long portrayed himself in photos as a sort of uber Native American, of indistinct national origins but complete with headdress and other feather adornments, and wearing stylized native garb and war paint.
I understand it: the German landscape is super-regulated. Walking around the German countryside, I was struck how every acre was planned, its use and purpose and life dictated to the nth degree.
Town limits were prescribed to exacting limits, separated from each other by postage stamp farms that seemed to claim to an ancient heritage of place. Even the forests were regimented: each patch of forest contained trees of exactly the same species and exactly the same age, followed by another patch of another age β the result of long range planning that has been in place for years.
I never saw a truly wild forest in Germany. So the unregulated mess that is the landscape of North America has immense appeal to Germans. At its best, that appeal is expressed in a profound love of the wilderness. I think of the van loads of Germans driving around the deserts of the southwest U. Pleasant, happy people, truly loving the experience. When my German friends came to visit, they drove around Atlantic Canada camping out in the woods; driving along the Cabot Trail, they saw a pod of whales, which was nearly a religious experience for them.
Or the many Germans who have moved to Nova Scotia, building or buying homes along the coast. We have much to learn from these Germans in terms of appreciating the natural world that we too often overlook or take for granted.