Monday, September 5, 2011

Natural Disasters : My First Week of Work

I started at APT on August 22nd. On August 23rd, there was at 5.8 magnitude earthquake while we were in training on the 11th floor.

I've lived in Seattle area for six years, and never felt an earthquake. Now that I move away from the Ring of Fire... there's an earthquake? Really? I didn't believe it at first (but it quickly shook me out of that disbelief.)


Two minutes after it stopped, we were back doing the training. Sigh.


However, my exciting first week experiences weren't over. Hurricane Irene was headed up the coast, and we were in the way. And the best way to ride out a hurricane? With friends. (We were thinking of pulling out flashlights in case the power went out, but never got around to it.)

D.C. is inland enough that there was just some rain and heavy winds, with very little damage. So it was another natural occurrence, thankfully with no "disaster" involved. Just a little spice for my first weekend in Arlington.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Food that Exist : Central Pennsylvania Visit

I visited my boyfriend up in Pennsylvania for a few days before I headed to Northern Virginia to start my grown-up life. So it was a bit of childhood fun before I left.


I almost didn't make it though. To cut down on traveling (and money), I decided to fly from Birmingham (an airport with 15 gates) to Scranton (an airport with also not many gates). It was fine and dandy until an hour-and-a-half ground delay into Charlotte due to thunderstorms. We made it to Charlotte, two minutes after my Scranton flight left. Instead, I ran to get onto a Harrisburg flight (thankfully, Alex lives pretty much between the two, and there was enough time to call and have him change his plans).

So, after an adventurous trip there, had to have an adventurous time too, right?


We started on Sunday with a family reunion.


Monday dawned drizzly (as predicted), so Alex and I drove an impressive trip through central PA. We hit a few of his favorite state parks, as well as the cheapest diner I've ever been to for breakfast. They also served scrapple, a food that I had never eaten until going to Montour County.

Tuesday was much nicer than planned, which meant that our afternoon at Knoebel's, "America's Best Theme Park", was remarkably pleasant. It was only slightly chilly on the log flume, but wonderfully breezy on the flier (where you could control the height with a fin on the plane!)

That night was the Montour-DeLong County Fair Pie and Cake Auction, where I finagled some Hersey bar brownies for a steal at $2. There was also a tractor pull, with a hillside full of spectators.


Wednesday, we had to pack in everything that was left. First was the Falls Hike, with an amazing amount of amazing waterfalls. Next was a stop at the Mennonite store for a shoo fly pie. It was a notable event, since I didn't know shoo fly pies existed until a month ago. (Then I ate a piece of the molasses deliciousness.)


We spent the remainder of the afternoon at a local lake, kayaking. I still have the blister to prove it. Two deer, a few herons, three turtles, and a raptor catching a fish proved that it indeed housed nature. (Then, when we got back, I ate another piece of pie.)


My final Pennsylvania experience was going out for some good ole bluegrass. Anyone who brought an instrument could play, and I recognized some of the songs as hymns. Drinking the Yuengling Lager, too.


On Thursday, we drove to my grandparent's house outside D.C. Goodbye, my former state home! Hello, new home, Virginia.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Georgia Peaches : Family Vacation

The time has been filled with a bunch of events since my mom, sister, and I got back from Europe. The day after we got back (to the East Coast, mind you), we drove down to North Carolina for a cousin's wedding, where we met up with Dad and Deanne who drove up after flying into Atlanta. The next day (Saturday) was the wedding.

It was at a beautiful plantation house an hour from our hotel. The service lasted only ten minutes or so, but the rest of the evening was a fun get-together with family. A lot of this family I'm going to be much closer to now, so it was fun to reconnect and realize that I could see them more often. 

The wedding was on a hot (though not quite oppressively so) evening, so we dipped our feet in the pool before dancing. The photographer when in up to his chest to get the picture he wanted, so he was already wet when he waded into the knee-deep fountain nearby. Soon, four of us cousins were splashing around in there too. 

The next day, we set off for Georgia. Val and I got dropped off at the condo. Deanne got taken to the airport. We made tacos. 

The following days have been making our own excitement in a condo in rural Georgia. We bought a peck of peaches (yum). We have a puzzle out. We went to the Bavarian Village of Helen. We climbed up and down Tullulah Gorge. We made dinner. It's the right kind of vacation. 

And today's adventure to the gorge was pretty awesome. We didn't know that there was a sliding rock waterfall at the end of the trail, but when we got there, we jumped in despite our lack of swimsuits. It was super slippery (guess that's why they call it a sliding rock) so Dad and I have little scrapes and awesome memories. 

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

One Mom, Two Daughters: (Another) Europe Trip!

For the next few weeks, I'll be blogging with my mom and other sister at 1mom2daughters.wordpress.com. And it will have pictures!

Friday, July 1, 2011

How Many Days Until Corinne Gets Bored?, or Home Again

So I'm back in my hometown, living with my parents for a month before heading to the East Coast via Europe. (I should make this a trend... can't go cross-country without going international.)

And I've been back for 11 days. And today was my first day of stir-craziness. It makes sense, because I haven't been home for 11 days since I left for CMU in 2007. (Exaggeration, but not by much.)


I started going through some boxes I left behind, and am thinking I'll still probably leave behind. They contained yearbooks, journals, and letters, so much of my time today was spent looking through those.


I wasn't a constant journal writer like my older sister, Maria. I found a years' worth of entries from third grade (where I spelled "actually" as "acculy"), then a constant stream from sixth to seventh grade (where we moved and I spelled "actually" as "acualy"). I spent quite a while reading them, and was entertained, frustrated by my handwriting, and reminiscing about some of the people that I'm still friends with (and some that I'm not).


I'll probably still leave those with my parents, since I feel like whatever apartment I move into probably won't be a place I'll want to store pounds of old memories. It is nice to have a free storage space in Mom and Dad's house.

In other news, yesterday Mom and I went to the Sculpture Park in Seattle. (I loved it. Sculpture is one of my favorite kinds of art.)

And in final news, one of my first entries about being in the Pacific Northwest from 2001 was the indignation that it was August and we were wearing sweatshirts. Today, I went jogging. And I could see my breath. Thank you, June.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Delay, or Day 31 in London, Vancouver B.C., and home!

My flights were actually scheduled very nicely for today, with a flight straight to Vancouver than a quick hop to Seattle. What wasn't as convenient was the hour layover (that was shortened by a late plane, then further made useless by going through all of the American customs rigamarole).

So the bus went smooth, the strike that threatened earlier this week was resolved, and the first flight was slightly delayed. I enjoyed my nine hours of quality entertainment (Justin Bieber's "Never Say Never" and a comedy called "Cedar Rapids" among them). The trick, so I've heard, is to stay awake going west. The meals, snacks, and drinks all certainly helped.

Our flight was delayed by five minutes, which is usually not an issue, but with an hour of customs proceedings, no one from the London flight made it to the Seattle flight. There were about ten of us, and we all got seats and a lovely additional hour-long layover, plus an another hour due to technical difficulties.  

However, the plane eventually got off the ground with me on it, and in Seattle I was. My parents and littlest sister picked me up in their day-old Nissan Leaf, and we had a Fathers' Day dinner with my old exchange student and her husband. He's a chatty one, and also named Alex, so we commiserated about their similarities.

I was on my fourth or fifth wind at this point, and the final leg of the drive back to our house was a feat of awakeness. I brought down gifts to bestow, and with that, I gave up the sleep fight (it had been 22 hours of sleeplessness at this point).

Saturday, June 18, 2011

On Death, or Day 30 in Oban, Glasgow, and London

Our 7:45 bus was an early wake-up call, but with our early bedtime last night, it was pretty bearable, made even more so by the cold breakfast and packed lunch from our B&B hostess. We had all sorts of treats hanging on our door this morning to enjoy later in the day.

We didn't have to run to this bus, for the first time in a while. It was a pretty, quiet (and pretty quiet) ride. We woke up before getting to Loch Lomond, so were able to see one area of the country that wasn't on our itinerary (but the surrounding national park is definitely worth exploring in the future).

This was one of the few travel legs that was planned out before we left from the US, since we had to get to London tonight for our flights in the morning (well, afternoon for Alex, but he's probably headed to the airport at early o'clock with me tomorrow).

 
We had a five-hour layover in Glasgow that was originally for sight-seeing. However, we got to Central Station from the bus terminal, and both of us just sat, a bit exhausted with travelling.

The snacks we still had left from Ben Nevis gave us a boost, and we headed to the cathedral in Glasgow, meandering through a few other pedestrian streets and squares in Glasgow on the way.

Our trip was made a bit more urgent by bodily needs, so we got close to the cathedral, and I saw a free exhibit and ducked inside without really seeing what it was.

Turned out the museum we used so indiscriminately for a bathroom was St. Mungo's Museum of Religious Life and Arts. Doesn't sound so interesting, but on the first floor was an exhibit on rituals of life and death in a variety of cultures.

The second floor was a temporary exhibit that was on death and the belief in afterlife. The artist took a research approach to the exhibit with people filling out questionnaires, speaking into a recorder, or getting interviewed. One of the most interesting videos was the artist's son (8 years old) interviewing a grief counselor. He thought of the questions himself, and they were really intense in their inquiries. The one that was most innocent was what is one thing you have to do before you die?

After a laugh, the interviewee answered that it is most important to live. He expressed that every moment he is living is like his last, so he gives it his utmost attention. This was a spark of a conversation between Alex and me, and taking about really, it's the balance of the past, present, and future that create a full life, not the exclusion of any of them for the maximization of another.

It then also seemed appropriate that we next visited the cathedral next door, with a very intense necropolis on the hill by it. We gazed a bit at the massive columns before heading back to Central Station.

We made sure to stop by Gregg's, our bakery of choice, for our afternoon nourishment.

The train ride went through some beautiful countryside, both Scottish and English. We dinnered on filled rolls, fried chicken, crisps, and other things in our packed lunches from the morning. Margaret was a good "mom" to us, but I think we're both excited to get back to our real families tomorrow.

We arrived at London Euston (on the north end of town, I think) at 9:31, 7 minutes ahead of schedule. A trip and a transfer on the Underground and a bus later, we were at the hotel at 12:37am. Doesn't seem like it should have taken that long, does it? Tomorrow will be my last day of "travel" blog before I go back to my typical blogging (aka, probably not daily).

Travelers' Curse, or Day 29 in Oban, Mull, and Iona

The travelers' curse. Anytime you want nice weather, it rains, and anytime the weather doesn't matter (like on a travel day), it's sunny.

So we planned our trip to the islands of Mull and Iona today. And, as the curse would have it, we had a lovely drizzle to start the morning.

The daytrip, put together by Bowman's Tours, is a 45-minute ferry from Oban to Mull. Mull is the third largest of Scotland's islands (excluding the fact that Scotland itself is part of an island). The ferry was less windy and cold then others we've been on, so I appreciated being able to go on deck to see the coastline and the castles with minimal frigidness (and only a few Germans). Alex was giddy, pointing at islands saying, "Can we go there?" Clearly another location we have to return to.

We got to Mull, and got on a bus to take us across the island (maybe 40 miles). The driver, Alastair, was a local, having grown-up on the island and raised his kids there. He slowly chatted throughout the hour-and-fifteen bus ride to the next ferry. We were told to look out for otters, seals, and deer, but on the way there, the only thing we saw was sheep.

Around noon, after trying not to drift off during the bus ride, we got to the ferry to Iona. In the first three minutes, we saw a seal disappear around the bow. And then we just watched as the ferry coasted back and forth between the islands. It didn't tie up to a dock when it got to the slipway, so either the gangplank (which was big enough for cars) or some underwater anchor held it in place as we got off on the island.

Iona is about 3 miles by 1.5 miles, so instead of touring the abbey, as most people were apt to do with their 2.5 hours ashore, we started walking north.

Staffa Island was nearly in sight, through the haze that covered everything. Fingal's Cave, with basalt columns and puffins is that islands claim to fame, but neither could be seen, even when we walked through a sheep pasture at the far north end of the island.

The pasture was treacherously covered in sheep and horse droppings, but the wind got intense once we got out of the shelter of even the few buildings and up on a knoll in the middle of it. My raincoat hood was snapping at my ears, and the rain became driving. On the west side of the island were sand dunes with sea grass and crashing waves over black, sharp, volcanic rock. We stood there as long as we could before heading back.

The rain had picked up, and the light sprinkle had developed into sharp droplets that pelted through our jeans and hoods. The mile or two back to the village was head-down, hood-up. We fell bedraggled into a hotel for some warm drinks and a bit of slow Internet. We felt human again before heading back to the village for some browsing and ferrying back to Mull.

Our bus driver welcomed us back, chatted a bit, pointed out some deer, and then let us nap for a bit. I was trying to stay awake to watch for otter and waterfalls, but did my fair share of nodding off. We got back to the original ferry, and waited in line (with me jumping for warmth) to get back to Oban.

We were actually nearly dry (except our feet) when we got back to Oban around 6. The thought of going out again wasn't appealing, so we looked at half a dozen places for dinner before choosing an empty Irish pub. It seems that every menu has to have macaroni and cheese and lasagna on it. We split some nachos, a burger, some lasanga, and had probably our final Scottish beer of the trip, a nice smooth Belhaven.

After chatting with the owner of our B&B, Margaret, and her dog, we dried and went to bed. I think I was asleep before 10:30pm. 

Grass and Barley, or Day 28 in Fort William and Oban

We woke up again on couches, but this morning, it felt like a friend's place instead of a strangers. We decided last night that, sadly, without a car and trying to make the 11am bus to Oban, Glencoe was not going to happen. Just add that to the list of things to see next time in Scotland. (That list includes climbing Ben Nevis and taking the actual Quirang hike, instead of the crazy one we did.)

Alex also woke up with Sooty, the cat, by his face. I was only getting in the way of that relationship.

We got out a bit late, again, so ran down the hill to High Street (which we speed-walked through) and got to the bus with minutes to spare. The bus ride was pretty, but not quite pretty enough to prevent us from getting sleepy.

We got to Oban, and immediately started enjoying the quaint seaside feel. Oban is the "seafood capital of Scotland," and some parts definitely smelled like it. Alex mentioned that every place we've been to in Scotland has had its own feeling, and it's no different with Oban. We locked up our luggage at the rail station and headed for some lunch.

The past few days we've been eating a balanced but similar diet of raisins, peanuts, fruit, and granola bars (and chocolate). Today we treated ourselves to a hot lunch at a cafeteria-type restaurant. We then headed to the Oban Distillery.

Going to a distillery to see the Scotch whisky process has been on our list for a while, but this was the first (and will be the last) that was open and accessible. Our tour guide stepped us through the malting process of the barley (dried with peat smoke to add some smoky flavor), then the mashing (rinsing out the sugars in giant vats), then fermented, then the distilling. Theirs is distiller twice, then the first stuff that comes out is too strong ("the head"), then it is the correct strength ("the heart"), then it is too weak ("the tail"). The head and tail are put back in the storage container with the "low wines" (coming from the first distillation) and distilled again, again creating the "head", "heart", and "tail". Then, it is put in recycled bourbon casks of American white oak for 14 years. We got some ten-year-old cask strength (so about 58% alcohol, as opposed to after they add the water to bring it down to 43% when the bottle it), which was surprising smooth, for whisky. We then got to try their standard 14-year-old, which they've been making for over 200 years.

We stopped by the bed-and-breakfast, caught our host to give us keys, and then headed up the hill to a lawn bowling club!

Alex and I sat in the sun (yay, sun!) and watched the veterans play. I went inside to see if we could, but no one was at the booth so we contented ourselves with watching. The games were to 21 points, with your score each round being the number of balls closer to the jack, a small white ball, than your opponent.

After the afternoon games wrapped up, we headed further up the hill to McCaig's Tower. The story that Alex told me was that McCaig wanted to build a museum with a sculpture in every window, but he died before it was completed. Now it is a shell, albeit a pretty shell, and on the top of a big hill, with pretty overlooks onto Oban.

We headed next to dinner, though we got a bit sidetracked with a nap... well, at 8pm we were looking for dinner, and came out right before sunset (so, 9:30). We walked down along the water, and around the bend saw a run-down castle. Alright, last adventure of the evening!

Dunollie Castle had been built in the 1200s (like many of them), then abandoned and now was a fun walk up the hill in twilight. It was extra spooky from the time of day, but a good walk up and back.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Cloudy Days, or Day 27 in Fort William

So the grand plan for today was to hike up Ben Nevis, the tallest mountain on the British Isle. We have been thinking about it a lot in the past few days, figuring out what we'll take and what clothes to wear (since neither of us have completely appropriate hiking gear).
We woke up, and couldn't really see outside. It was kind of nice for the morning, since the sun gets up a good four hours before we want to, and with the clouds (and no curtains), it was just a gradual wake-up call. However, the amazing view across the water was blocked by the extremely low-lying clouds. The rain didn't help our conviction either.
So around 10am we decided that the Ben was a no-go. Sad, but my shoes are dying, so it is probably for the best.
We hung around our Couchsurfing hosts' flat for another hour or three before heading down to try to catch a bus to Glencoe. We were a little late, so we did some shopping again.
And, getting caught up in our shopping, we got to the bus stop while the bus we needed pulled away. Then I misread the bus schedule as 4:37 instead of 14:37. So we waited... and no bus. We wandered inside to the Morrison's (something like a grocery store plus a bit), wandered back out, re-read the bus schedule, and decided to give up.
We walked two miles to the Inverlochy Castle, poked around the ruins as the rain started, and got wet as we climbed the impressive hill back to our hosts' place.
Our suggestion for dinner was the same pub we met our host in yesterday. I had my first steak-and-ale pie (very filling for a day of not doing much).
When one of our hosts came back for the evening, he and Alex pulled out the guitars and jammed for a bit. Marjk taught Alex a song, the two of them came up with one about a happy Highland cow named Hamood (s/he mooed), and we all have a good laugh. We kept Marjk up past his bedtime, then turned in ourselves for somehow getting to Oban tomorrow.

Modes of Transport, or Day 26 in Portree, Armadale, Maillag, and Fort William

Alex and I needed to get from Portree, on the northern half of Skye, to Fort William, about 150 miles away. We started with a bus, to get to Armadale, the port on the southern side of Skye.
We were supposed to get into town center a bit early for some shopping, but we got there right before the bus was about to leave, so we just hopped on instead.
It was a good final tour to see Skye, and we were both lulled by the movement of the bus. Even with the gorgeous scenery and impressive mountains, there is something about a moving vehicle that puts me to sleep.
We got to Armadale ten minutes before the ferry, so bought our (pretty cheap, $8) tickets across to Maillag on the "mainland" (or Britain proper). Alex "made" me sit outside in the wind, but that was one of the few times I had to put my fleece jacket on today! Otherwise, it was a remarkably sunny day.
The point of getting to Maillag was to take the Jacobite Steamer to Fort William. It is an actual steam engine, which some folks might be excited about, as well as the train that is featured in the Harry Potter movies as the Hogwarts Express, which some other folks might be excited about.
We didn't get tickets ahead of time, but got some seats on the way back into Fort William. It is good we were going that direction, because apparently some people going from Fort William to Maillag that morning couldn't get seats or tickets!
After having our lunch at Maillag (though not the intense prawn dish we saw coming out of the kitchen), we sat on the train across from a couple from Minnesota. They had to stand on the way to Maillag, so were happy to be able to sit. They also alerted us of closing the windows during tunnels to prevent the cars from filling with smoke. When we left the tunnels, the windows were all fogged us with, you guessed it, steam! The ash flying in the window got a bit taxing on my throat, but the chugging made it feel like a real train.
We got to Fort William, and we were set to meet our Couchsurfing host at 6, so we wandered High Street (their pedestrian thoroughfare) for a bit. We asked at the tourist information center about hiking up Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in Britain, and got some good information about that and our other options.
We next went to the pub, had a drink with one of our hosts, and headed up the big hill to their flat. There were another two girls staying there as well, but a mix-up had them heading over to his friends' place instead. We had a chatty, interesting evening, watching some bad TV and talking about American/Scottish differences. Then, it was off to sleep on the couches with Sooty, the cat.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Corinne's Unhappy Hike, or Day 24 in Portree and Dunvegan

Yesterday, we explored the Trotternish Peninsula of Skye, which is the northwest of the island. Today, we attempted to explore the western side.
There was only one bus that took us to the west that ran on Sundays, so we hopped on, hoping to get to the Dunvegan Castle and the island's distillery. The bus driver informed us that the distillery was closed on Sundays, so we had a 45-minute trip out to the castle, a 70-minute tour of the castle, and a 45-minute trip back to Portree.
Alex couldn't be as thorough as he wanted (and usually is) in the castle. A few of the cool artifacts were a "fairy flag" that dates from the 10th century with some legends ranging from the Crusades to, obviously, fairies. There is also a bull's horn that holds half a gallon of claret (wine) that the heir to the clan chiefdom must drink to prove his worth. (Thankfully, it seems the female chief of the mid-1900s didn't have to do that.)
We sped through one of the gardens, then got back on our bus and into Portree. We had tea time, with some yummy shortbread and chocolate.
This whole trip, Alex has been pointing at mountains/hills and said, "Let's climb that." We had a bit of time, and Scotland has a free wandering law (basically, don't disrespect anyone or their herd animals, and you can go where you want). So Alex pointed out the mountain just south of Portree and we started up.
We first headed up a road that ran alongside, then found a logging road and went up that. It ended in a faint path through waist-high brush, but I egged him on, since there didn't seem to be other ways to go.
I was not very smart about this hike, and woke capris since it was a pretty warm day. The branches and bugs were attacking my shins, so I was a bit unhappy. I ended up splitting said capris while trying to climb on a log, so that just continued my not-so-rosy mood.
We went through the brush for probably half an hour before another logging road appeared. A woman just happened to be walking her dog along it (and looking very un-scratched), so Alex asked her how to get up the mountain. She gave us pretty clear directions, and we were off again.
If I was in a sour mood, Alex was ecstatic. We set off again, keeping an eye on the storm in the distance.
Every ridge we climbed over, there was another one higher that Alex wanted to get to. I was still concerned about the storm, and it got increasing windy as we went up. I asked him to pick out a final ridge, and, undoubtably, when we got up there, there were three more to be climbed.
I stopped walking there. Alex bounded up the next ridge or two to try to find the real summit, but he resigned himself that we weren't going any further and started headed back down with me.
So I ended the hike much more happy. We didn't have to scramble through the brush again. Alex ended the hike "90%" happy, since we didn't quite reach the summit.
We changed, went into town for dinner and some live music, and passed out before 11. 

Wet Shoes, or Day 25 in Portree and Elgol

With a full Scottish breakfast (which might or might not mean eggs, toast, potato scones, bacon that's more like ham, and sausage), we got to the bus just in time for our two-hour journey to Elgol, on the southwestern part of the island. As we got on the bus, an American girl asked if we were going to do the boat tour of the loch by Elgol. We started chatting about our vacations, and made it to Broadford, where we had to switch buses. While we were waiting at that stop, I was talking about how we were couch-surfing the next leg of our trip, and a French woman started talking to us about her couch-surfing experiences! Two friends in the course of an hour!

We "convinced" the Frenchwoman to come on the boat tour with us, and we all got our tickets.

We walked along the rocky beach for a bit to an over-cropping of porous rock. We figured it was volcanic because it looked like a solidified sponge.

The weather this morning was wet, drizzly, and rainy, so the additional ponchos Misty Isle Boat Trips gave us right before we got on the boat were a welcome additional protection. We cruised out to the entrance to Loch Coruick, and saw some seals on the way!

It was still kinda gross, but we had an hour and a half until the boat went back, so Alex and I and the American girl headed up the loch.

We started on a path, but turned off it once it became too muddy. We continued around the bend, and kept going and scrambling along.

Our shoes were getting wetter and muddier, and we had quite a few paths that were pretty close to going straight through water. After a little under an hour, we were at a lookout over the the loch. It was still pretty misty, but it was pretty pretty.

We cruised back, then slogged with our wet shoes back to the bus and Portree. We dried and headed to dinner. 

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Running and Buses, or Day 23 in Portree and the Trotternish Peninsula

We had a lazy start to the day (deceptive). We had our breakfast at our B&B, then looked at a few bus schedules and suggestions before passing by a fun run on the way into town. (I hear there was a half-marathon today, which will continue their tradition of following me around.)

We stopped at the tourist information center and got some other bus schedules and our first idea for the day: hiking up to Old Man of Storr. Our bus wasn't for another hour, so we went to the grocery for some victuals. I handed the cashier a 2-pound piece for a one pound purchase, and was halfway out the door before I realized he didn't give me any change. I went back inside, and he said he would have to count the whole register to give it to me. I felt pretty bad, and we had twenty minutes before our bus at this point, but I watched him disappear into the back. Alex bought another Irn Bru, and the cashier came back ten minutes later with my pound. Hey, that pound is worth $1.75! We caught the next bus out and began our hike.

It was a steep but hikeable mile or two up beyond the forest, then another half mile or so above the "treeline" to the rock formation that was the Old Man. However, we ended up walking between the Old Man and the cliff wall behind it (which was "not advised", but we felt safe about it) before approaching the Old Man itself.

We started up there with a group of young Chinese tourists (which seems slightly rarer than seeing middle-aged Asian tourists). They  headed down, and the outcropping got a lot quieter. There was another couple up there, so when Alex said "hi, Old Man", the woman turned around. Thankfully, Alex was pretty obviously talking to the rock and not her husband.

We had a bit of time before the next bus, so Alex and I took to wandering the hills. We ran into more sheep (including a sheep skull that transmitted its powers to Alex) before heading back down to the bus.

We weren't quite sure where we were going next, but it was still early enough for another hike (or "walk" in the Scottish parlance). We decided on a location, and the bus driver suggested a route. Thankfully, Alex had a rough map so we could sort of have an idea of where we were going.

We walked through some rolling hills up by some lochs, with only the scrubby grass and heather (and sheep, always sheep). We made it up to the base of Quirang ("queer-ang"), a cliff-structure that we followed for a while. However, we were just crossing a stream when we realized we had 35 minutes until the bus came. We spent ten of it following the stream out of the mountain, another five getting the the road, and then the final twenty walking/running the 1.7 miles back to the main road where we could hail the bus. I was pretty tired on the bus ride back to Portree.

The roads around the Trotternish Peninsula, where both our hikes were, and where the bus circled around, are single lane with turn-offs every fifty feet or so. Mostly cars pulled off for the bus, but in addition to the two-directional traffic, there were also the sheep on the roads that a driver has to look out for. They are pretty good at running from the bus (opposite of us).

An easy meal of takeout, a shower, and I was out before the sun went down. 

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Off to the Island, or Day 22 in Inverness, Eilean Donan, and Portree

We had two choices for this morning. One was to take a bus at 9:30. The other was to take a train at 11:00. We made the right decision and grabbed enough food for breakfast and a partial lunch after we checked out at 10:00.

I was asleep for the first half of the train ride, but the scenery when I woke up was already more hilly than when we left Inverness. We were in the Highlands before, but we were really in them now. (And sheep all over, to complete the picture.)

We arrived at Kyle of Lochalsh (don't know what a kyle is, but Loch Alsh was right there), and hopped on a bus to the most romantic castle in Scotland: Eilean Donan. It was rebuilt from 1912 to 1932 by a pair of Macs, then became a summer home. It was the most lived-in castle I've seen yet, which can really inform the rest of what we've seen. We chatted with one of the docents, then caught the last bus back to Skye.

We are staying at Portree, the northern most village on Skye. The only bridge to Skye is about 3/4s of the way south, then the ferry back to the mainland is at the very south (and where we'll be departing from on Tuesday).

We spotted our B&B from the bus, so it was a short walk back to it from town. It is a cozy pair of houses, but the one we are staying in doesn't have Internet (which is why I'll most likely be posting in the mornings for a bit).

We ate at the "cafe" (not with the accent, so they rhyme it with "laugh") at the Caledonian Hotel. It's run by a well-known chef, but it has good prices since it's a cafe. We ate a bundle (including more haggis for Alex and a venison burger for me) before picking up some sweets at the grocery and turning in for a blessfully early night. 

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Ness, Ness, and More Ness, or Day 21 in Inverness, Culloden, and Loch Ness

Oh, it was painful to get up before 8 today. We wanted to catch an 8:45 bus to get to the Culloden Battlefields as early as possible so we could also do Loch Ness this afternoon.

And we made it! With minutes to spare (which I used to grab granola bars, which actually exist in this country). We got to the high tech visitors' center and spent an hour or two watching and listening to the audiovisual. The Battle of Culloden was the last stand of Bonnie Prince Charlie, when the Jacobites (made up of many Highlanders) were sorely defeated by the government supporters. The government supporters lost 50 men on the battlefield; the Jacobites lost 1,500.

It was rainy when we headed out on the battlefield with our nifty GPS audio guides. The battlefield had been drained a bit, so wasn't quite the moor that it was in 1746, but we got the idea (cut down by half or so by the road in the middle). Around the field were the stones memorializing the clans that fought and a cairn to memorialize the battle.

We grabbed some lunch stuffs then hopped on a bus back to Inverness to head to Loch Ness next. We missed (or there wasn't scheduled) a bus for right when we came back, so we wandered over to the train station to check out transportation options for tomorrow to get to Portree, on the Isle of Skye.

We headed actually to the Urquhart Castle, on the shores of Loch Ness (which is just a lake named Ness, just like the river in the town we are staying, and the "inver" or entrance to the sea at Inverness). It had three changes in command that came with slightly interesting stories, but for the most part, I just enjoyed climbing around the castle ruins. And there was sun!

It was suggested that we walk the two miles back towards the town with the Nessie craze, and so we did, passing a bunch of sheep and cattle along the way. We waited for the bus again, and got back into Inverness.

It was about 8pm by this time, so we were ready for dinner. We ended up at an Irish pub that served Scottish food, so I had a chicken breast stuffed with haggis. We also had a black pudding for an appetizer and a toffee pudding for dessert. How much more British can you get?

We were both tired from this morning's early start, so we were thinking we'd walk the block up to the castle at Inverness, see the sunset, then head home. And we did that... but heading back to the guesthouse was actually an hour or two of walking along the river, skipping around the bridges between the islands, watching them get dazzlingly lit up by incomprehensible Christmas lights, then, somehow, ended back up at the guesthouse.

Another travel day tomorrow... Hopefully with another castle too!

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Chants, Drunks, and Fish, or Day 20 in St. Andrews, Edinburgh, and Inverness

 We were up and at 'em all early this morning. We had to browse the golf stores (since Alex is a golfer, and after my fabulous round yesterday, I'm nearly there), then get our "cakes," as the cashier called them (read: donuts). We had either fifteen minutes or an hour and fifteen minutes to check out of our hostel and get to the bus stop, so we rushed and caught the bus back to Edinburgh.

Yesterday (and the day before), we were trying to figure out how best to get from St. Andrews to Inverness. It seemed the best way was via Edinburgh (again), so we had about an hour of deja vu (even eating apples again) before our 3.5 hour bus to Inverness.

I fell asleep half way through the trip, and when I woke up, we had gone through our stop in Perth and were fully in the Highlands of Scotland. There were sheep, and hills, and scrub, and maybe even a hill with some snow.

We got off at Inverness and trekked to our guesthouse on the opposite side of town. Dragging suitcases to somewhere unknown is never quite fun, but it is better than carrying them (and Alex has it in his head that we are too cheap and too healthy to take a cab or bus around towns... just means I'm tired every night).

We tried the doorbell before realizing there was a key inside the first doorway hanging up for us. We let ourselves in, ditched our stuff, and headed to the cemetery across the way.

We looked at the mostly Scottish last names, recalling people we knew with those last names. Upon exiting the cemetery from a different entrance, we were soon wet from the drizzle that started and a bit unknowing of our location, besides knowing the cemetery was remaining on our right. We made it back to be introduced to our host before the reception area closed. After some bad British tv ("My Super Sweet Sixteen UK"), we ventured out to forage.

After a few days of quick food and fruit, we treated ourselves to a sit-down meal at an Indian restaurant. Alex fed me a green hot pepper (and then he had to eat one in retribution).

So we were full, with no curfew, and quite a bit until the sunset, so what do we do? Go on a four mile (at least) hike.

Alex wanted to see where the Ness River met the firth, but then one thing led to another and we were by the Caledonian Canals, passing a fisherman, someone chanting, a railroad crossing, and a drunk guy asking for directions. And you are lucky I made it this far through the post, because my eyes feel like closing and not opening again, which isn't good for our 7:30 wake-up call (think monsters and battle cries for tomorrow).

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Hitting the Links, or Day 19 in Edinburgh and St. Andrews

We just barely got checked out by 10am this morning, then walked to the bus station across Old Town. We stopped at Greggs ("our" bakery) and got a bit of food for breakfast.

However, once we got to the bus station, it was more like brunch. And once we got on the 11:40 bus to St. Andrews, it was more like lunch.

We drove past some horses, sheep, and hairy coos, and dropped off our bags at the station so we were unencumbered for our venturings.

It was pretty close to a nice day when we got here, so we hit the links right away. "The links" being the Ladies' Course (also called the Himalayas), a miniature golf course. I totally bested Alex (though he has a few years experience on me). We played a full eighteen holes at St. Andrews!

And it was good we did it then, because the rest of the afternoon wasn't fit for anything. We walked on West Sands, the beach right by the course, until it started raining. On the beach were these squirts of wet sand, like Playdough being pushed through a tube. Each was accompanied by an airhole a foot away. Our guess was razorclams, with an airhole and excavating their burrow.

We hid under a shelter for a bit, allowing me to dust off my sandy feet. After the first burst of rain, we made it dry all the way to St. Andrews University (and past Butts Wynd). However, it was too wet then (and getting a bit late) to go in and appreciate the castle ruins and cathedral ruins that we walked by.

We had a meal of fish and chips between attempts to find Internet or use a payphone to contact our CouchSurfing hosts. After failing on both counts, we checked into a hostel for the night.

Alex was still raring to go (though "Friends" was pretty tempting), so down towards East Sands this time we went. It was sunny (amazing for both Scotland and 7:30), and we made it to the harbor right by the sea pretty quickly (with only some slight cat-stalking).

Though we didn't know at the time, the tide was in, allowing brave souls to be out in sailboats, kayaks, and surfboards. We saw some especially brave (or stupid) people climbing out in their bathing suits). The water seems to be warmer than the air, but that's still impressive.

We looked out over the coastline, and, as we are now guity of doing for the second day in a row, pointed and said, let's go there.

The sun was on its way down toward the horizon, but we had a good two hours to make it a few miles on a trail on top of cliffs by the coastline.

It was remarkable. We stopped every hundred feet with a new angle toward St. Andrews, or the cliffs and rocks below, or the snails or trailer parks on our path. And the weather held nicely as we forged ahead (and through a less used and much more vegetative trail then the main one, at one point).

The journey was amazing, and I can only hope Scotland is going to continue to be as picturesque as this evening.

We arrived back into town at the end of dusk, or 10:30pm, for some Jaffa Cakes (I don't know, Alex has heard of them and wanted to try) and pizza. Feet again very tired. 

Monday, June 6, 2011

Hills, or Day 18 in Edinburgh

We woke up around 9 (though it takes Alex a bit to shake off the sleep, especially if he is partially jet-lagged) and, after a stop at a tempting bakery, headed to the Royal Mile. The Royal Mile is a stretch between the Edinburgh Castle and the Holyroodhouse Palace. It is about a mile, actually.

Last night, we went up to see the castle and such, so getting there wasn't a problem. Between the walk up all the stairs and the long ticket line, we were starting the introductory tour at noon.

The castle was comprised of quite a few buildings, including one that housed the crown jewels (hidden for 111 years). There was also St. Margaret's Chapel, the National War Memorial, the National War Museum, the Great Hall, and miscellaneous chambers and dungeons and towers. We poked in them all, which made for a good way to work up an appetite.

We walked back down the hill (see how hills are going to be a theme today) and got some lunch. Besides my regular tuna melt, and Alex's British steak pie, we also got a haggis roll, and discussed the finer points of the differences between scrapple (a Pennsylvania sausage) and haggis. Alex still thinks it doesn't count, but I didn't like it enough to have it served on a plate in front of me.

We walked back up the hill to the Royal Mile, and continued down. I was getting a bit concerned that we didn't have much time until attractions closed, but we managed to squeeze in to St. Giles Cathedral and The Writers' Museum (where we looked at stuff about Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott, and the philosopher David Humes). No wonder Edinburgh is called the Literary City.

We finished up the Royal Mile at Holyroodhouse Palace, peeking in for a quick picture before the gates closed. Rick Steves recommended a hike up to Arthur's Seat, a huge hill/mountain in the park next door, so we started up a path.  

We got up the (first) huge hill after half an hour, then started discussing the second and huger hill behind us. We weren't so confident that we climbed Arthur's Seat. Maybe it was just a foothill (or foot rest) instead?

With over two hours until our tour of a close, we decided to hike down our hill and up the even bigger one. We were high on adventure and not being in a city.

So we hiked more. We thought there was a gentler sloped hike up the north side of the Seat, so we headed up the trail. However, we started following the trails that headed more and more uphill. Pretty soon, we were at a 45 degree tilt, using our hands a bit to help us up the grassy and rocky mountain.

It got its most exciting when we were nearly rock climbing between two outcroppings of rock. A few minutes later, we reached the summit!

This was definitely Arthur's Seat. There was a plaque with the name on it.

We spent a bit of time cooling down and picture-taking. Then we headed on a better path downhill (though there was a bit of sliding down some gravel still).

We booked it back to our tour of Mary King's Close (which was not a small feat, considered with had just climbed a few mountains and it was yet another hill to get back up the Royal Mile).

Mary King was a widow and a seamstress back in the 1600s, and the alley ("close") was named for her. The alleys got paved over a while later, so we got to go underground and learn about her and her neighbors through the centuries. Fascinating, not terribly spooky, and we made it out for a glimpse of sunset and to wander and find something for our poor stomaches.

We avoided the hill on the way back to the guesthouse, but I doubt we've learned for good. 

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Coffee Shop Confusion, or Day 17 in Oslo and Edinburgh, Scotland

Today's was one of the best 5:30am's I've ever seen. It was bright and sunny, and I was almost glad for my four hours of sleep. Almost.

Alisa joined me at this hour to head the quarter mile to the central station to catch our respective modes of transportation to our respective airports. She wasn't flying back until this afternoon, but felt more comfortable spending her time at the airport than alone at the hotel. Besides, she could fill our her tax rebate on some pricey things that she got and theoretically get some money back.

I flew Ryanair, a super budget airline that makes you pay for everything and bombards you with ads during the flight. But, it got me safely to Edinburgh.

Alex and I were supposed to meet up at a coffee shop right out of arrivals. There were only a few wrenches in this plan. The first was that he was on a domestic flight (because he transferred in London) and I was on an international one. The second was that there were at least (as I found out later) four Costa coffees in the airport.

An hour of waiting and an hour of Internet and a lot of hand-wringing later, Alex came out into the international arrivals area where I parked myself, and all was again good with the world.

As he said, he was just wasting time so we could check in to our hotel right away when we got there.

And that we did. I got lunch, Alex got a nap, and we both breathed a sigh of relief to be in Scotland.

After our rest break, we headed out in the dreary to see our first bits of Edinburgh (that weren't from a bus). We had our climb up closer to Edinburgh castle, then a walk to Greyfriar's Bobby, then some wandering back to our guesthouse. Back to the chilly weather too.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Ski Pole Church, or Day 16 in Olso


With yet another (and our final day) of remarkable sun, we (with our convenience store breakfast of yogurt and orange juice) headed to the pier to take the ferry to Bygoy, or "museum island" (not literally, that's just what they call it).

We had to walk along a row of houses to get to our first museum. Just after I mentioned it'd be a good place for a lemonade stand, we saw two young entrepreneurs selling candy on a corner. Good for them!

The Viking Ship Museum was our first taste of the Vikings this whole trip, besides the knick-knacks in every souvenir shop. There are three boats that were found in burial mounds, all from before 1000AD. One wasn't restored, so we could see how much had disintegrated or shattered. The other two boats were restored to a sea vessel and a pleasure vessel. It wasn't hardy enough to survive disturbed waters.

We next headed to the Norwegian Folklife Museum. It was another outdoor museum (like Skansen, in Stockholm), so we wandered and saw some farms and a few farm animals. There was one farmhouse that was making lefse, which I know as a potato pancake. However, they were using wheat flour and charging $5 a slice. I'll take Grandma's lefse, thanks. They did give us a free porridge tasting (but that was gross, so I'm glad they didn't charge).

The museum also had relocated a stave church onto their property. "Staves" are the upright logs used to support the church (unlike most period buildings where the logs are horizontal). "Staves" is also used to refer to barrel wood and to ski poles (in Norwegian).

Besides having a cool name, it was intricately decorated with cool wood-carvings. We saw more of them at the indoor museum with folk art.

Also at the indoor museum was an exhibit about the Bydoy Boy's Home, a reform school (and child prison) for boys from the 1890s to the 1950s. They made a movie about it ("King of Devil's Island") that I want to see now.

We left the museum and walked back to the ferry dock. On the way to the peninsula, we asked if we could buy tickets onboard, but ended up needing cash, which we didn't have enough of. The attendant said we could just buy the tickets later. However, on our way back, there wasn't a ticket booth or ATM in sight. So we asked a different attendant, who just told us to ride back for free.

Alisa used this as rationale for our evening of random food and drink locations. We had sushi, then the most disappointing milkshake I've ever had (it was chocolate milk with ice), then a pizzeria called Dimple Dolly's, then a pub where we watched Norway lose against Portugal. Our last night together and in Scandinavia! But a 5:30am wake-up call...Ski Pole Church
With yet another (and our final day) of remarkable sun, we (with our convenience store breakfast of yogurt and orange juice) headed to the pier to take the ferry to Bygoy, or "museum island" (not literally, that's just what they call it).

We had to walk along a row of houses to get to our first museum. Just after I mentioned it'd be a good place for a lemonade stand, we saw two young entrepreneurs selling candy on a corner. Good for them!

The Viking Ship Museum was our first taste of the Vikings this whole trip, besides the knick-knacks in every souvenir shop. There are three boats that were found in burial mounds, all from before 1000AD. One wasn't restored, so we could see how much had disintegrated or shattered. The other two boats were restored to a sea vessel and a pleasure vessel. It wasn't hardy enough to survive disturbed waters.

We next headed to the Norwegian Folklife Museum. It was another outdoor museum (like Skansen, in Stockholm), so we wandered and saw some farms and a few farm animals. There was one farmhouse that was making lefse, which I know as a potato pancake. However, they were using wheat flour and charging $5 a slice. I'll take Grandma's lefse, thanks. They did give us a free porridge tasting (but that was gross, so I'm glad they didn't charge).

The museum also had relocated a stave church onto their property. "Staves" are the upright logs used to support the church (unlike most period buildings where the logs are horizontal). "Staves" is also used to refer to barrel wood and to ski poles (in Norwegian).

Besides having a cool name, it was intricately decorated with cool wood-carvings. We saw more of them at the indoor museum with folk art.

Also at the indoor museum was an exhibit about the Bydoy Boy's Home, a reform school (and child prison) for boys from the 1890s to the 1950s. They made a movie about it ("King of Devil's Island") that I want to see now.

We left the museum and walked back to the ferry dock. On the way to the peninsula, we asked if we could buy tickets onboard, but ended up needing cash, which we didn't have enough of. The attendant said we could just buy the tickets later. However, on our way back, there wasn't a ticket booth or ATM in sight. So we asked a different attendant, who just told us to ride back for free.

Alisa used this as rationale for our evening of random food and drink locations. We had sushi, then the most disappointing milkshake I've ever had (it was chocolate milk with ice), then a pizzeria called Dimple Dolly's, then a pub where we watched Norway lose against Portugal. Our last night together and in Scandinavia! But a 5:30am wake-up call...

Friday, June 3, 2011

Naked People, or Day 15 in Oslo

We woke up and opened the curtains, and I was overjoyed with sunshine. Oslo has the best weather! At least for today, and forecasted for tomorrow.

We wore flip-flops and capris and t-shirts. First, we visited the fortress and royal reception rooms in the castle there. Guess what? Christian IV helped build it and it burnt down at one point. Big surprise.

We did get audio guides that allowed us to listen to ghost stories about the castle. There was a hound of death, little witch-y "vampires of the night" that caused fires, a Swedish tease that got shot, and a starved maid.

We next wandered to the actual royal palace, for the less than a century that has been a sovereign Norway. After circling, we realized there weren't any tours or anything, just a cute park around it.

Not really interested in any of the museums in town (and still wanting to soak up sunshine), we decided to walk the final half mile to Froggner Park.

After grabbing some luscious red strawberries for a snack, we got to the park and admired the statues that were meant to symbolize birth to death (all of them naked).

While we were walking along a path, two workmen were conferring over a large baby bird one of them had discovered. We rubber-necked for a bit, then, not wanting to leave it in the middle of a pedestrian path, we tried to shoo it off to the side. A minute into our futile effort, a man walking by just picked it up and set it by the trees. Small problem solved. The whole surviving problem probably wasn't, but there was only so much we could do.

Out of ideas, we sat (me in the sun, Alisa in the shade next to me), playing cards and gawking at the Norwegians that were down to bikinis and bras (in addition to cooking and drinking in the park). An hour or two of this, and I was parched, and we were ready for some food.

We made it halfway back to the hotel, found a sidewalk cafe to have some combination of lunch and dinner, and regained enough strength to make it down Karl Johans Gate, the big pedestrian thoroughfare. We both had chafing sandals, so a walk back to the hotel was in order.

A television with seven channels doesn't leave a good chance for English programming, so we watched "A Walk To Remember," dubbed. Part way through, we realized it was dubbed in German. Alisa and I managed to work up some tears anyway, then we were off for a sunset drink at the harbor.

There's a juicier story that has to do with tonight, but we'll save that for in-person storytelling. 

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Fjord and Field, or Day 14 in Balestrand, Flam, Myrdal, and Oslo, Norway

This morning dawned grey (and also probably dawned at 4am, but these Scandinavian countries have great curtains). We spent a bit of time at the hotel, then out taking pictures, then hopped on our ferry to Flam.

The ferry was a stunning ride through impossibly tall cliffs by the longest fjord in the world (I think, but you might not want to quote me). We got whipped by the wind, then stayed inside where it was dry for the rest of it.

We had a few hours at Flam before our ticket up on the railway. We had some food, bought some souvenirs (including a coat for Alisa... only about thirteen days too late), and readied ourselves to head up the mountain valley.

The Flam railway is world-famous. It climbs 864 meters in about twenty kilometers, with it's steepest incline being 1 meter up for every 18 meters. Not to mention its gorgeous views of the Flam Valley.

We made it up to the top, and as we were walking to the building in Myrdal that housed travelers between train transfers (as we were doing), Alisa spotted our Italian friend from the sunset in Bergen!

She was overjoyed, and I was happy for a bit of giddy fun and socializing. We cracked jokes about nettles (since apparently Italians eat something like them too) until our train to Olso arrived.

It was another picturesque ride, and we finally rode out of the clouds enough to see the sun! This threw my body way out of whack (lunch? dinner? naptime? all of the above?).

We passed through more green countryside, and more farmland as we descended from the mountains. I also finished my book.

And then, we got to Oslo. We met up a final time with Italian Friend and his colleague before checking in to our hotel. The next few days will be our adventures in Oslo before I head to Scotland early early on Sunday!

Snowballs, or Day 13 in Bergen, Askwall, and Balestrad, Norway

We woke up at the crack of dawn (well, here the sun was well up, but somewhere, it was dawn) and headed for our first boat of the day. Today we were doing our first half of one of the "Norway in a Nutshell" tours. And by tours, all it really means are all the modes of transportation are set up for you, but you kinda guide yourself.

So we got on our express boat, and went up the coast to Askivall, where we jumped across the dock to a fjord cruise. We spent a little less than two hours going up the Dasafjord, and being amazed as the cliff got higher and the rocks got more sheer.

The mountains, at first, weren't cone-shaped, like one normally thinks of them. They were bulbous mounds sticking out of the horizon or off a cliff-face, defying gravity it seemed.

We got off our boat, and were pointed to a local restaurant (probably the local restaurant) for lunch.

It was a fixed dish of salmon, apple-butter sauce, and nettles. Yup, like the stinging kind, except they had been cooked and mashed (and flavored deliciously) until the "tickle" went away. We were all pleased with the meal, including the couple from Utah that we got to chat with.

We transferred to a bus to take us up some windy, one-lane roads to Sognefjord, where we are staying the night at Balestrand on the water.

On the bus, we saw a bunch of cute clusters of houses with smokestacks, and piles of wood, and sheep in the (sometimes unfenced) pastures. As we climbed, the woods became thicker, then sparser as we hit the point where snow was still on the ground.

The driver let us off at a pull-off where he told us to walk a bit to find a waterfall. Not only was there rapids where we walked to, but a tiny but sturdy metal bridge to go across it. It was roaring and load and the spray woke me up from the lull of the bus.

Next stop was to look down from the sheer height we were at (which was incredible) and throw a  few snowballs.

We got to Balestrand a bit cold and soggy, so after getting to the hotel, it was looking at the view out the windows here and a pilgrimage to the grocery store for lox and cream cheese. And chocolate. And bad TV ("Supersize vs. Superskinny", "Cops", "Dating in the Dark").

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

10:30 Sunset, or Day 12 in Bergen, Norway

I woke up at 4am this morning. On a train. Surrounded by snow. I wondered why it was so bright out.

After ten minutes of marveling at it (and a much nicer ten minutes watching it retreat back up the mountain as we went downhill), I was back asleep. Apparently, Alisa wasn't quite so lucky and got a bit less beauty sleep.

We arrived at the station in Bergen, Norway, at 6:30am. I had a stomachache, and our hostel reception desk didn't open until 9am, so we got our tickets for the next few days from the counter and sat and read at a coffee shop.

Our only day in Bergen, today was a shopping adventure, as well as this awesome fort. We visited Rosencratz's Tower (an awesome wind-y maze of a thing), spied on little children who were being cute, and threatened to push each other off the tall retaining wall.

After that morning, we had a luscious, sumptuous lunch of mussels. The bowls were huge, and our shells filled up a bucket (and then some).

We rolled ourselves out into the sunshine (yes! it happens!) and back to the hostel for an afternoon of repacking for our harried next few days and recovering from our red-eye train (which had nothing to do with sleeping and everything to do with reading).

We went out again at 8pm, trying to find some food and to go up the funicular to catch the sunset.

It's a good thing the sun sets late, because between the bookstore and getting dinner, it was 10pm when we got up the mountain.

And wow was it spectacular! We watched for an hour as it dipped below the tree-lined horizon across the bay. I took a picture for a boys' choir, then an Italian guy took a picture of us. Afterward, we started chatting with a different Italian and his escort, a member of the board of tourism.

We compared travels, gushed about Norway, and learned a bit from each of them. By the time we were headed back down the mountain, Alisa had developed a little crush on the Italian. Sorry, Erik, new country, new boys!

And we saw the mayor. The tourist board officer, she pointed him out to us before we walked a few blocks together towards our hostel.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Magical Train, or Day 11 in Stockholm, Olso, and eventually Bergen

I was able to post this thanks to magical train Internet.

We checked out of the boat hotel this morning. (Rygerfjord, for those that might be thinking, hey, I'll be in Stockholm, what's that boat hotel Corinne stayed at?) We walked our stuff up and down a few sets of stairs and over a few bridges to central station. (Yay for packing light!) Thankfully, not rush hour, so we could move and not be swept up by the human riptide.

We deposited our suitcases and headed to the Riddarholmkirkan (church of the city hall island, I think). The kings and queens and royal families had been buried here from the 1600s to 1950. (Now I think they have some more picturesque spot out in the countryside.) It was our first church in Stockholm (that wasn't attached to a palace), and we were commenting that it isn't nearly as ornate as the Catholic ones other places in Europe. Also, graves everywhere.

We next wandered by the Slottsholmen (Royal Palace) and saw the changing of the guard. Blue uniforms with shiny silver helmets marched around, sometimes leading horses, sometimes riding them, sometimes playing an instrument, sometimes actually relieving another guard.

Next to the palace was the coin musuem (technically the museum of the economy, but most of it was coins). We saw the biggest coin in the world (a plate of copper), a Nobel medal (actually, quite a few), and a lot of text in Swedish. It is good it was free on Mondays!

We wandered for the last time around Gamla Stan. There was an incident involving not enough cash (which was solved by finding a coin on the ground), and some grocery buying for the train trip, but mostly I was enjoying walking around in the nearly 70-degree weather with my jacket off (though I wasn't nearly warm enough for the shorts and strapless tops I saw some wearing.)

Our first train was mediocre at best. It was an older car, with more people, including one very shrieky three-year-old (and his sometimes waily little sister). There was a drug-sniffing dog at the border, but other than that, it was just six hours of sitting and wasting time.

We made use of our slight layover at Olso to figure out how we are going to our respective airports on Sunday. Alisa has a train to get to Guardemon (or whatever hers is called) and I have a 6:30am bus to get to my 9:55 flight to Edinburgh.

Now, just time to rest easy in our luxurious seats (we were too cheap to spring for the bed compartments) and be in Bergen in the morning!

Sunday, May 29, 2011

BABIES, or Day 10 in Stockholm

Sunday. Not this morning. Definitely a gross drizzle followed us as we walked to the ferry to the island that has Skansen and the Vasa Ship Museum.

We walked through the abandoned stalls of a fair that was happening this weekend to the entrance to the museum. There were probably a couple tours groups with thirty or so in each waiting outside the museum. We got inside the museum and put our wet stuff away before it got miserably crowded.

The Vasa was a ship that set sail in 1628. It hadn't gotten far from its mooring when a squall tipped it. Because of its lack of ballast and thin design, water began coming in through the gunports and it sank.

Some three hundred years later, a historian and a diver began looking for the ship. They found it in 1959, and dug tunnels underneath it to run wires through so they could bring it to the surface. And I'm making this sound like this wasn't a ten-story-tall ship that could hold hundreds of people and was tons heavy.

The museum talked about the restoration of the ship, the life and times of Sweden when the ship was being built, and even about the skeletons of the thirteen people (out of thirty or so) found.

We had some delicious shrimp smorgasbords from the restaurant  (we might call them open-faced sandwiches), then went out into the sun to find Skansen.

Oh, Skansen. The delight of my Sunday. They make you pay a bit to get in ($17), but they deliver. We were a bit disappointed at first when the houses that made up this outdoor, open-air (though I kept accidentally calling it the "outdoor air" museum) were closed. We found one that was open, and went inside to find the postmaster's wife (of the 1800s, of course), who gave us fire-oven baked cookies. That got our juices flowing.

We travelled from building to building. We happened to be at the chapel just in time for a youth choir singing madrigals. We wandered more, hid from a slight cloudburst, then watching folkdancing in the field where people were trying to walk on stilts.

This is going to be a hard story to relate, but the best part of the day was when the children's folk dance group was doing a dance where the four boys, of about 6 to 10 years old, sat on a bench and the girls danced then were introduced to one of the boys and sat on his lap.

One of the boys, either the clown of the group or just obstinate, wasn't finding this much to his pleasure. The girl went to sit on his lap, and he opened his legs. She was clearly experienced at this trickery, because she spent the whole rest of the dance smiling cheerfully as he tried to buck her off his lap. Alisa and I were in tears in the audience.

Additionally, the Swedish have a foot fetish, because quite a few of the dances involved partners tapping toes together.

Skansen also delivered in the animal section. We heard it had a collection of Scandinavian animals, but didn't chalk it up to much. However, not only did they have an extensive collection of farm and wild animals, they also had BABY ANIMALS.

We saw baby owls, baby goats, baby reindeer, baby ducks, baby bears, baby sheep, baby wolverines, baby geese, baby moose, baby bison, baby chickens, and I very well might be missing some. Spring! I love it! (Except for the random chilliness...)

In fact, I think those were practically all the animals they had there. Only the otter, the wolves and lynx (which we didn't see, so there could have been babies), the seals and the cows were babyless.

One thing we did find littered around the park, though, were pacifiers. What? After a couple that seemed purposefully placed, including a bag with a note, it was clearly a trend. Youngsters from all over Sweden make their trek to Skansen to "give" the baby animals their pacifiers now that they are big enough to not need them anymore. I think it's an adorable ritual (though not sure I'd pay to get my kid to Skansen when it reaches that age).

We wandered around the park for a few hours before taking our ferry back. (More boats for Corinne!)

We had dinner in some nondescript place with Viking in the name (and got pizzas with curry and kebab) (two different pizzas, in case you were wondering.) Back aboard the hotel ship, I found the only two English books on the boat. One was a book from the 50s about some sea adventure. The other was a 900-page romance vampire thriller. There was a reason (right around page 158, when there were seven men and one woman, and most of these men were vampires and shapeshifters, and the thriller portion had one scene thus far) that this book had been left behind.

Tomorrow, my blogging is going to get thrown off schedule because of an overnight train (in fact, over eleven hours on a train tomorrow). You'll probably hear from me in two days, but I may try to post our arrival in the morning. Last night in my awesome boat hotel...

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Royal Bobbleheads, or Day 9 in Stockholm


It is the day of the Stockholm Marathon! We've had a marathon every weekend for a month now. We decided to get out of the city and see the palace that the Swedish Royals actually live in (as opposed to the one yesterday, where they just work).

First was a boat to the island that it's on. We arrived five minutes after the boat left, and, because their server was down, were told to wait to buy our tickets until right before the next boat came in an hour. We sat along the pier (stone wall) for about half an hour. A crowd was at the ticket counter, so we decided to try our luck again. The server was still down, so they sent us to the nearest ATM (a five minute walk) fifteen minutes before the next boat left. Thankfully, we made it in time, or else Alisa would've given them a piece of her mind.

The location of the palace is superb, right along the water, with vast gardens in the back. We got nondescript (and slightly intelligible) tours of Drottningholm (the palace) and the Chinese Palace, where the royals would come during summer afternoons. It wasn't quite as big, but still three times the size of Alisa's house.

The inside was as it would have been in the 1760s, when the perception of Chinese art and decoration was much different. The tour guide was even saying that Europeans would send their designs to be made in China. (Actually, that sounds like what they still do.)

In a few of the rooms were really creepy porcelain dolls, and the tour guide said that their heads would nod if touched. Makes you wonder... how long ago were bobbleheads invented?

We got off the boat back in Stockholm (with our world still rocking a bit, but that has been happening ever since we checked into our floating hotel). I really enjoy Swedish design, and so we walked to one of the stores they suggested, DesignTorget.

Between that and the department store we went into afterwards, I want to outfit my apartment in Swedish design. Sadly, I'm only bringing back coat hooks. Darn luggage (well, how much I'm willing to carry) restrictions.

We treated ourselves to a fancy meal aboard yet another ship. Alisa had the "Swedish fish" (perch) and I had a reindeer steak. Yum yum Rudolph.

Finished up the night relaxing on the boat, listening to the Swedes on board raucously playing Mafia. 

Friday, May 27, 2011

The Royal Dance Party, or Day 8 in Stockholm

We spent most of the morning trying to walk to Stockholm Central Station (ending up in a dead end loading dock instead) then buying our tickets to Bergen for Monday night. We have a 3:30 to 9:30 train to Oslo, then a 11:40 to 6:50 am train to Bergen. We didn't splurge for the berths, so we'll see how much rest we get. (By the naps we can take, I'm thinking we'll be tired but fine.)

This afternoon was shopping along the pedestrian streets in Old Town (which is also an island), before spending a few hours taking really interesting tours of the Kungliga Slottet, or Royal Palace.

While we were shopping, I wanted to get something to eat, but I apparently get hunger decision paralysis and start shutting down when presented with too many options (or any options at all, really). That and the sticker shock had me sitting in the "glass" (ice cream) shop for ten minutes while internal debates raged. I ended up getting a muffin with ice cream, and I've already forgotten how much it cost (not quite true, and my credit card hasn't forgotten).

But on to the palace. We went into the Royal Gift Shop where we bought our Royal (student) Tickets, and paid for the Royal Loo (I don't feel so bad about the student ticket). We were in time to see the tour of the Royal Apartments.

If you've been reading along with all the palaces we've visited, you might have an idea about what happened to this one. In the 1690s, there was... a fire! The new wing had just been built in the square, French Baroque style, and the fire missed it, just destroying the old part.

Our guide said that the fire was well-documented because of the trials that happened afterward. The guards that were stationed to watch for fires were at a pub and in the kitchen. Instead, they smelled the smoke and began trying to rescue what they could from the flames.

In the process, they threw books out of the third floor library. The only casualty in the fire? A man who had a book dropped on his head. Books can be deadly.

We also saw the Royal Ballroom (or something). In 1999, over New Years, they had a discotheque in there. To see if the floor (and ceilings of the rooms below) were strong enough, they had the guards come in and jump on cue.

That was only the first of our intriguing tours of the Royal Palace and its different sections. We peeked into the Treasury (sparkly) and the chapel (regal) by ourselves, but caught up to the tour of the Museum of Antiquities.

Our tour guide entertained us for an hour talking about a dozen Roman and Greek statues. The king who collected them (and the collectors that sold them to him) wanted full sets, and when only pieces of statues were found, the other pieces were added (or, in the case of some of the heads, modified).

We were on our feet all day, so we decided to bask in the sun before heading to Medatraplatsen (again, a rough approximation) for some people-watching. We ended up sitting next to some soccer fans, who told us about the game that was happening a few blocks away. We heard a few cheers from the normally staid Swedish, and continued to sit and watch as it began to pour.

Thankfully, by the time we decides to migrate for dinner, it had slowed to a trickle. We followed a suggestion by Frommers to eat at Garlic & Shots. We found a very crowded bar, put our name on the list, and waited for a table.

My "chili" was a bit more like pulled pork plus nachos, but it was delicious regardless. The burgers looked delicious as well (and by the fact that Alisa ate it up, I would assume they were). Less garlicky than I would assume with a name like Garlic & Shots, but still an experience.

We walked back to our boat hotel as the sun was setting (at 9:30pm). We are enjoying the evenings of relaxing and reading or television. More touring tomorrow!

Thursday, May 26, 2011

I'M ON A BOAT, or Day 7 in Gothenburg and Stockholm, Sweden

For those that thought the countryside of Sweden was just acres of trees... we were partially right.

Before the train trip at noon, Alisa and I pried ourselves out of bed to go back into Gothenburg before we had to check out at 11.  We first went to the Fiskekirka (fish church).

Both of us assumed this building that we saw on the boat tour with Erik yesterday (oh, Erik...) was going to be a fish market, smelling awful with hawkers and fish everywhere.

Sadly (happily?), it was much more civilized, more like a mall than a market. We looked at the cases of seafood and fish, and made our way back for some window shopping before our tram back to the hotel (then back out to catch the train). Pretty sure Alisa was looking back the whole time to see if Erik was around.

The train was uneventful. Five hours of napping, with a bit of planning and puzzling.

We got to Stockholm Central Station in the middle of rush hour. It was very over stimulating. We got the T-bana, and walked to our hotel.

By the way, OUR HOTEL IS A BOAT. It's awesome. I love it. I was nearly rocked into another nap, but we got back in gear after creating a rough plan of our four days here.

I was starving (I guess the banana and drink yogurt didn't tide me over for lunch as well as Alisa's ciabatta and goat cheese), and so
we headed into the Old Town (Galmar Stan might be how you say it in Swedish).

Alisa and I have been learning all about each others likes and dislikes this trip. Her likes and my dislikes are: potatoes, olives, caramel, coffee, and Coke. My likes and her dislikes are: bananas and marshmallows. Anyway, for dinner, we got (appropriately), Swedish meatballs and salmon (as two different dishes, mind you). It was listed as inexpensive in the guidebook, but at $25 a piece, it is going to be a costly few days.

Now excuse me as I go to sleep IN MY SUPER AWESOME BOAT HOTEL. 

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

IKEA Spotting, or Day 6 in Copenhagen and Gothenburg, Sweden

We spotted our first IKEA in Sweden on our train ride from Copenhagen to Gothenburg. When we were booking these tickets, the agent told us that Gothenburg was beautiful and one of his favorite cities.

We definitely got to see more of the Swedish countryside on our travels to Gothenburg, and I love it. There were ocean views with kitesurfers and windsurfers. There were cute cottages with stone fences holding horses and cattle. And that was just during the short time I was awake!

We started off for where our hotel was according to the only map that would load on my phone the other day. It was right in the middle of a park, and we started getting a bit suspicious as we approached.

I decided to check at the tourist information center we passed, and was sad to learn that our hotel was a tram ride away. After getting a very cold Alisa from where I left her with the luggage, we bought our 24-hour pass (2 hours longer than we needed it, since we have tickets to Stockholm at noon tomorrow) and hopped on the tram for a 10-minute ride.

We got to the hotel, spent a few minutes strategizing our plan for the day, and quickly hopped a tram back into the central square.

First was a design museum that I wanted to see (and we got in for free because we were under 25!) It had lots of cool, random, designed things. My favorites were the chairs from the '20s to the present, and some of the crazy jewelry and lamps. We actually saw a horse lamp (like a full-size horse with a lampshade over its ears) that I saw later today on a balcony. And as the guidebook said, one of the few museums to display an Absolut vodka bottle.

We walked back to the main square to get a burger and tickets for a boat tour on the Padden boats. ("Padden" is the Swedish word for toad, because they lie low in the water.) But today, with the wind and high tide, they didn't lie quite low enough. They couldn't take their usual tour route  because the bridges on one side were too low, and the route they did take, we had to get down on the floor to avoid getting hit in the head.

We got sprayed with the cold river/harbor water once we got out of the canals. And got to see the once-biggest port in Scandinavia! (And I think it might still be... I forget. Not the part we saw, but up a bit further on a canal, not the river.)

Anyway, we got back, super cold (though super in love with our blonde-haired, soft-spoken guide, Erik... if only ever third guy wasn't named Erik around here.) On our speed tour through Gothenburg, our next stop was the Botanical Gardens.

Alisa took me on quite a hike, up some cliffs in the largest park in northern Europe. We ended up leaving the botanical part, circling around, and re-entering the park to finish up seeing the bamboo, rhododendrons, and rock garden with a majestic (if man-made) waterfall.

After all that walking and wind, we went to a restaurant recommended as cheap and Swedish. It was an adorable coffeehouse-type atmosphere, and the food (which was pasta-based, though mine had a bit of curry flare and hers had some goat cheese or something) was supposedly Swedish. A few desserts later (yum fair trade truffles), we were warmed up enough to head back to the hotel so we could rise early tomorrow. Our last (and only morning) in Gothenburg. 

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

That's Some Mad Bling, or Day 5 in Copenhagen

Our last full day trying to be reasonable in the most expensive city in the world. We've definitely changed perspectives (a $20 meal is a good deal, and any alcohol that's less than $8... well, it doesn't exist. )

This morning we had an earlier start because we both wanted to take showers in the shared shower. We got in before the 9am traffic jam, so had some time to make it over to the botanical gardens across the Old City. There was a very steamy Palm House filled with a field trip full of children, so we dodges around the waist-high beasts to see titles of plants we couldn't understand.

As we were walking out of the grounds, the cloudy and cold day gave us a bit of sun (and hope!). We got to Rosenborg Slot (palace) across the street for a rather small palace experience. Only four floors high, and each maybe 50x20 yards, it was the summer home for (the prolific) Christian IV. He had a long reign, but he was also definitely the builder king.

The palace had all of the rooms decked out, but the treasury underneath was really where all the shiny things were. The christening stuff was at another palace, since it was used in April for the twins of the Princess. But the crowns and crown jewels... as Alisa said, "That's some max bling."

The grounds were teeming with more schoolkids (of a more annoying middle school variety), when we headed toward Nyhavn (New Harbor) for a more relaxing bit of touring.

The English couple that we met yesterday suggested a canal tour, and it was sunny enough to warrant one, so we toodled around the numerous canals. We had seen a lot of the sights before, but it was refreshing to take transport instead of walking everywhere.

It is our last day in Copenhagen, so I wanted to try to see Radhus again (last time, it was closed or something). We walked in, and it told us to get tickets, so we asked the staff at the ticket office. There was an astronomic clock we could see for $2, or something about a tour the next day at 11am. We asked which one we could do, and they said we could only do one. So we got the clock ticket, and went into the room across the way for... a very large clock in a room.

I mean, it's impressive that it's accurate within a second every 300 years. But it really wasn't worth $2.

A nap and we decided to finish our list and head to Christiania (on my request) and the JazzHouse.

Christiania was started when homeless and young people started squatting and stopped paying taxes. So now there's a community that doesn't pay taxes and is ok with marijuana (though not hard drugs... or cameras, apparently).

Getting away from the tourist center, we had one of the cheapest and best meals yet. A pizza that wasn't salty (so I think that last one was just because of the restaurant) and some kabobs (meat on a stick). However, Alisa didn't take a picture of it, so I have no idea how we'll remember it!

I forgot to mention that on our walk to Christiania, we tried out this drinking in public thing. We had our cans of Carlsberg ("probably the best beer in town"), and walked with them. In broad daylight. It was super weird.

Anyway, our last stop of the night (and in Copenhagen!) was JazzHouse. It was a loud, moody bar with a fog machine, lights, and DJs mixing some techno beats. I loved it.

A bit more American and British comedy, and it's bedtime here in Europe! Off the two blocks to the train station in the morning, headed for Gothenburg!

Monday, May 23, 2011

Get The To A Nunnery : Day 4 in Copenhagen

Though we got in earlier than normal last night, we were still up quite a bit past midnight planning for today and tomorrow, our final days in Copenhagen before heading for Gothenburg on Wednesday.

We decided today was our day trip day, and the Castle of Elsinore, as featured in Hamlet, was a short train ride away.

We got our train cards and accurately punched them, and headed to Helsingor. It is right across the sound from Sweden, and it has been the place where we've had the most "trouble" with English. (We had to point for our treats this afternoon at a grocery store's bakery.)

We grabbed a map at the tourist information center, and headed for Kornborg Slot (the castle's actual name.) We quickly joined up with a tour that tried to tie together Hamlet and the castle as much as possible.

The sad part is, Hamlet doesn't really exist (though an "Amlet" might), and he definitely did not live in this castle. (They were separated by a couple hundred years.) Shakespeare might have heard of or visited Frederick the Second when he was around, but the castle was fairly new at that point.

Though the castle was new, having a fort guarding the entrance into Northern Europe was anything but. Good old Bishop Absalon came up to Helsingor (we're guessing after he got kicked out of Copenhagen). Whoever had the channel could enforce the "sound dues," and get money from the traders going by.

Now, what have we learned about anything awesome in Denmark? It burns down. So in 1629, it caught on fire. The next king rebuilt it, but it is much simpler than it would have been. No garnished ceilings or fully tapestried walls.

After peeking around the royal apartments and the small cathedral, we took a brief (thankfully) tour inside the casements. I'm not sure I've ever really known what a casement was, but it's like a basement for soldiers, I believe.

We first went to an antechamber where there was a statue of Holger Danske, the legend of Denmark. It is said that when Denmark is attacked, he will wake up and protect it. (Didn't really work during the occupation by Germany, but there was a resistance movement called the Holger Danske that donated the statue that we saw.)

We kept going down, and we kept getting colder. The tour guide told us that it was 4 degrees and got down to -5 in the winter. That translates to cold and really cold in Fahrenheit.

We had a batch of disappointments after leaving the castle. The nunnery (ok, church with a monastery attached, but taking some creative license here) was closed Mondays. The other palace was closed indefinitely (darn scaffolding). There was a pretty park and a pretty overlook that made things better.

We tried herring the other day. Not too bad, but pretty salty. And it must be a trend (or we ended up at a really bad restaurant), because the pizzas we had for lunch were practically inedible.

However, a stroll down their pedestrian mall, and some rum balls (I think), and we were feeling good and ready to head back to Copenhagen.

After an hour or so of having our brains leak out our ears watching MTV in the hotel room, we were back on the streets of Copenhagen (though not in the sense of all the women we see on the corners near our hotel - but don't worry, it's perfectly safe). We headed to the Library Bar, in a posh hotel by the train station.

I enjoy talking to people, and having Alisa around is nice, but half the fun of traveling is having one-night-stand conversations with strangers. So I walked over to an old English couple and started a conversation. They invited us to join their table, and a few hours later, we said our goodbyes. They said they'd meet us at breakfast, and that's when we broke it to them that we were staying in a hotel in a far different budget... We still had a 7-11 trip to finish up our night.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

History Repeats Itself : Day 3 in Copenhagen

Copenhagen doesn't learn from its mistakes. We attempted to go to the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek first thing this morning, only to find that our guide was an hour off for opening times. So instead we went to the Christiansborg Palace and grounds, where we heard history repeat itself.

The palace itself isn't very old. About one hundred years at this point. However, there has been a palace there since the 1300s, when Abbot Absalon (who our hotel is named after) put up a wall and stuck a building inside. However, his was destroyed after a battle, and the victors put up their own castle. That one was torn down for a bigger, better palace in the 1700s.

But, less than a century after it was built, a fire was discovered from sparks from a stove into dirty pipes. Hours later, the entire palace was in flames.

So they rebuilt, as they should. They took precautions, such as adding more fire stations and adding iron doors. However, about 50 years later (mid to late 1800s), a fire was discovered, and, hours and half a century later, the castle was again burnt to the ground.

So we visited the third and most recent palace, which also houses the Parliament, horse stables, the Royal Reception room, ruins from previous castles, and a church that in 1990, had the roof burnt off from a stray firework.

After, we went to see the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, and got in this time. It had a casting of "The Thinker" by Rodin, the "14-Year-Old Dancer" by Degas, and a bunch of naked and loving couples. There was also a really pretty palm garden in the middle.

We found a great cafe to have a $16 lox sandwich (which is almost cheap) and then had a bit of a nap. (Yay vacation!)

We finished up the night with a stroll on the Stroget, and are actually in before midnight!

As for more about Denmark, there are some things they do well. They are very good at feeding people after a drink or two (mmm, falafel). They are not very good at telling people about crossing the street. You get a green, then after a bit of beeping that I don't understand, you get a red. We've had to scurry across a couple times.

Additionally, today was the Copenhagen Marathon! Last week, the Pittsburgh Marathon was on my graduation day. We read that if they finished in under six hours, they got a medal. We saw a few in the bar we were at tonight.

It's still being a nice, relaxing vacation.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Tivoli, My Happiest Place on Earth : Day 2

So today. We woke up this morning, shrugging off the last of our jetlag (though an afternoon naptime might still be the norm). The delicious buffet breakfast included meats and cheeses along with yogurts and pastries... We're going to be spoiled.

We tried getting into Radhus (the town hall) today, but it seemed that a private engagement shut it down. So we meandered through the flea market and marching and dancing exhibition in the 'platz' outside, and began roaming the side streets.

We glanced at Christianborg (and the 'slot' there, palace for you that forgot) from across the canal after seeing some old houses and churches (like, 16th century old).

I wanted to make sure we were in Tivoli for the Marching Boy's Band concert at 2, so we paid for our entrance to my new happiest place on earth.

The Tivoli Gardens was described as part amusement park, part botanical garden, part beer garden by our guide. I would agree. We've meandered past outdoor cafes with drinking Danes (and probably others joining suit), fountains, roller coasters, and patches of grass perfect for napping.

And we did make it to the concert. But underneath our sunglasses, pretty sure our eyes were closed despite the marching music.

So we found a grassy area to sit for a bit. Then we went to a beergarden where we played "count the blondes" and "admire the children." And Alisa's quote of the day: "You can't talk when I'm about to do something epic."

We saw a pantomime, then found another grassy area (this time with chairs) and had some hotdogs and "pomme frites" (French fries). Then we started getting really cold. So we slept again. 

So I had looked up a schedule of events, and there was a concert at 21:30 and a light show at 23:45, so we basically kept being cold, wandering, and eating between being entertained.

The concert was good. Quite a few dancing Danes this time. Nabiha was the singer, and, while she sang totally in English, we had no idea what she was saying otherwise.

And we also couldn't tell which songs (if any) were hers and which were covers. She did "Black and Gold", by Sam Sparro, and one called "Internet Love" that I might have heard before.

The light show wasn't anything impressive, and the heart waffle with "soft ice" (soft-serve ice cream, but a bit lighter, almost Cool Whip tasting) was yummy, but I'm probably too excited for the delicious breakfast buffet tomorrow.