Cambridge - Nuremburg. joss Langford, 29, snowboard designer. In Germany, I feel European. In England,' I feel English says Joss. Every two weeks, Joss leaves his farmhouse home near Cambridge for another farmhouse near Nuremberg. 'Both places are really flat,' says Joss. It's a strange choice of landscape for a snowboard designer. ' I design in England, build in Germany, then drive to Switzerland to test the boards.' The distance between my homes in England and Germany is almost 1,000km door-to-door. He knows this because he sometimes drives. It makes a nice change from flying. Joss flew 100 times last year. He doesn't mind all the air travel, but there art disadvantages. 'It's exhausting, and I've always got a cold', he says. 'People think it's glamorous, but I don't fly first class.' In each country he has a social life and a local pub. Although Joss speaks German, people in Nuremberg always want to practise English. In Cambridge, he lives with his partner, Kate. She travels a lot in her job too. ' I call her before bedtime. Sometimes our planes cross in the skies.' In Nuremberg, he rents a room with his colleague. 'There, I eat more meat and drink more beer. I watch TV because I don't have on at home. I know all the German celebs! I'm not lonely. I have a second home, not a hotel room. I have a German life in Germany, and an English life in England.'