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Brazilian foreign exchange student Bruna Moratori is playing tennis for Coupeville High School this spring. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Moratori and teammates stretch before a practice.

Talk about a change of pace.

When Bruna Moratori traveled to America to become a foreign exchange student, she swapped life in the most populous city in the Western Hemisphere for a town with one traffic light.

Back home in São Paulo, Brazil, she lives with her parents, brother and dog amid a sea of humans in “a big, beautiful, and dangerous city.”

This year, though, Moratori has swapped a bustling city which never sleeps for a much more laid-back Coupeville, where she’s attending high school and preparing to play tennis with the Wolves.

While she’s spent a little time on the courts, this will be the first time she’s been part of a competitive team.

“I don’t play any sports at home, just sometimes for fun,” Moratori said. “I played tennis a few years ago but it was just for fun; I’ve never played against someone.

“I decided to join because I really like it and I had a lot of free time, so why not.”

When she was thinking about trying out for the tennis team, it was support from back home which made it an easy decision.

“One of the main reasons that I joined tennis was because my father encouraged me since the moment that I told him that I was thinking about it,” Moratori said.

Taking time to enjoy new opportunities has been a key part of her American adventure.

“My mother always had the dream of me going somewhere and learning a new language, so she always talked about it and I said that it would be a good experience,” Moratori said.

“I like how right now I’m in sort of a “break” from my life and I get to know a lot of different things,” she added. “Also I like to learn new cultures and the new language.”

Moratori, who turns 18 in early April, spends her free time “listening to a lot of music, reading, watching TV shows, and many other things.”

When she returns to São Paulo, she plans “to enjoy the summer; that is actually at the end of the year.”

After that she will either start college or plunge into a job.

Coming to America has helped Moratori develop new skills and find new confidence in herself.

“Here is learning English and learning how to be on my own without my family,” she said. “I still want to know other cultures and maybe learn other languages.”

Whether at home or abroad, Moratori draws inspiration from those closest to her.

“I guess I’m a little bit of every woman that have been into my life and all the books that I’ve read,” she said. “But my biggest inspirations are my mother, my grandmothers and my godmother.”

Of all the memories she will take with her, one of the biggest will be how unique her new home away from home turned out to be.

“Coupeville is a very small and quiet city and I live in a huge city with a lot of people, a lot of things to do, a lot of noise, traffic and all of that,” Moratori said. “I miss there, but I really like here, it’s beautiful and people are so nice to each other.

“I wouldn’t say that I’m completely adjusted because it’s very different from there, but I’m sure that when I go back I’ll have to readjust to there,” she added.

“Coupeville reminds me a lot of our countryside, so it’s kind of what I expected, but a few things were very weird for me, like people waving at me, even though I don’t even know them.”

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   German foreign exchange student Charlotte Nölle has embraced the chance to play volleyball during her time in Coupeville. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Every day is a new adventure for Charlotte Nölle.

The graceful, friendly young woman from Germany has only been a foreign exchange student for a short time at Coupeville High School, and yet she is already enmeshed in American sports culture.

Playing volleyball for the first time (other than a brief dalliance with the sport in PE class back home), Nölle is embracing life with her new teammates.

“I really enjoy being a part of the volleyball team,” she said. “Every teammate helps me a lot and supports me.

“The best part of volleyball is all the time the team spends together; I really enjoy to be with all those amazing people.”

Nölle, who was a horse rider in her native country, chose volleyball as a way to experience something new in America, and she seems to be enjoying the opportunity.

Whether in the thick of on-court action, where her height comes in useful, or cheering for the Wolf varsity along with her JV teammates, she is a bright presence in the CHS gym, a smile always gracing her face.

“To play volleyball in a team is new for me,” Nölle said. “I have no experiences in that sport, except for playing it one or two times in a PE class.

“I decided to play volleyball, because I enjoyed to play it in my PE class in Germany and I wanted to do a team sport at school.”

Nölle, a 15-year-old who hails from a small town in the north of Germany, has settled in with her host family, which includes fellow CHS sophomore Megan Thorn.

The family has welcomed a stream of foreign exchange students over the past several years, and the fit has been an ideal one.

“It was important to me, that they find the perfect host family for me,” Nölle said. “To have a nice host family is the most important thing in an exchange year.”

While in Coupeville, Nölle, who rode horses four times a week in Germany, will join Megan Thorn in the local equestrian world.

A veteran of horse-jumping and dressage, the Wolf newcomer will try Western-style riding for the first time.

“An interesting time is waiting for me,” Nölle said with a smile.

In her free time, the world traveler enjoys reading and listening to music, and hails the Julia Stiles romantic comedy “The Prince and Me” as a favorite film.

Her journey to the US has been one she started planning early in life.

“I was about 10, when I decided to become a foreign exchange student,” Nölle said. “And the interesting thing in being an exchange student is, that you learn more about other countries, their cultures, to become more independent and of course to improve your language skills.

“And that are things I am and were interested in.”

Part of the adjustment in coming to a new country is getting used to the differences in the school system, such as Coupeville’s class schedule.

At home, German students often stay together in the same class, studying all their subjects as one group.

“Our school system is very different to that one here,” Nölle said. “It’s more like a family in the form of one class.”

When she returns to her home after this school year, she’ll rejoin her high school and then “go to university, but I don’t really want to think of it right now.”

For the time being, Nölle is quite happy to focus on her adventure abroad and get the most out of her 10 months in Coupeville.

“America is very different to Germany,” she said. “But I think I did pretty good at getting used to it.”

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(Submitted photo)

   Sophie Furtjes has made the jump from Germany to Coupeville as a foreign exchange student. (Submitted photo)

“I love America!”

German foreign exchange student Sophie Fürtjes is still settling in to her new home in Coupeville, but the 16-year-old who hails from near Düsseldorf, is already embracing her surroundings.

“It’s way bigger than my country but the people are all so nice that it is easy to get used to it,” Fürtjes said.

“It was kinda what I expected,” she added. “Of course there are a few surprises, but these are just little and that doesn’t really matter to me.”

Fürtjes, who has an older sister, has long wanted to visit the USA. She just didn’t know she would be doing so in this manner.

“I always wanted to go to America or live in America one time but I actually never wanted to be an foreign exchange student,” she said. “But then last year in August I was thinking about what to do after school and because I want to see the world I started the process to be a foreign exchange student.

“And I knew this year will be an experience for my life.”

The year-long trip offers her a chance to “learn the language better, to live in a different culture and, of course, to meet new people and make new friends.”

Landing in a small town on a rock in the middle of the water was a bit unexpected.

“Coupeville was definitely a surprise for me, but I love it,” Fürtjes said. “It reminds me at my home because it’s so small and everybody knows everybody. So it’s easy for me to live here.”

A swimmer and dancer in her homeland, Fürtjes jumped at the chance to join the high school cheer squad.

“I’ve never been a cheerleader before, but I danced for eight years when I was younger, so it’s not totally new for me,” she said. “When I was thinking about doing a sport at school I directly decided to be a cheerleader.

“I missed the dancing so much and now I can do it again,” Fürtjes added. “Also I knew I can do all the other sports in Germany too and I wanted to try something different what I can’t do in my country.

“And I love my cheer team!”

After her American adventure ends, Fürtjes plans to return to school, with plans of becoming a cosmetician.

“I want to be a make-up artist and to work all over the world,” she said. “I’m really interested in makeup and fashion.

“I spend a lot of time trying new makeups and designing new outfits.”

A big Beyoncé fan, Fürtjes enjoys “spending evenings with my friends and just to talk about random things.”

Through it all, she knows that, near or far, she can always turn to those closest to her for support.

“Definitely my family made me to the young woman I am today,” Fürtjes said. “They always supported me in everything I wanted to do.

“I am so thankful for my family that they are always there for me and that they support and love me in everything I do.”

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Julia Borges (John Fisken photos)

Julia Borges cheered on the Wolves through two seasons. (John Fisken photos)

Borges and teammates Jazmine Franklin (left) and McKenzie Bailey listen to Wolf tennis coach Ken Stange during an early practice.

   Borges and teammates Jazmine Franklin (left) and McKenzie Bailey listen to CHS tennis coach Ken Stange during an early, blustery practice.

Parting is such sweet sorrow.

As she nears the end of her year on Whidbey Island, Brazilian foreign exchange student Julia Borges is fondly looking back at her time on The Rock.

After arriving from Sao Paolo, she immediately became a huge part of Wolf Nation, joining the Coupeville High School cheer squad, where she participated through football and basketball season.

When the spring arrived, Borges picked up a racket and joined the Wolf girls’ tennis team, teaming up with Julianne Sem to form a dangerous doubles duo.

With her run as a CHS athlete having reached an end, Julia took a few moments to reflect on the experience for us:

Last week was my last week playing for the tennis team and I already miss it so much!

I can definitely say I had the best experience I could have with both activities I joined this year: doing cheer or playing tennis, both with awesome teammates and amazing coaches.

Coupeville can be a small school, but the dedication, hard work and love everyone puts into sports are the biggest ones I have seen.

It is awesome how most of the students are involved in at least one sport during the year and they all really care about it.

It can be something very normal here, but it does not happen everywhere.

This is one in a hundred reasons about why I love Coupeville so much.

It is going to be hard to leave all of this in a month, the place I can call my home!

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