• 50. Home sweet home & final thoughts

      17 augustus 2024, Verenigde Staten ⋅ 🌙 73 °F

      Flying home Sunday. I'm so happy to be back on US soil. Best country in the world. God bless America.

      So, 82 days later, a few trip statistics:

      We hit 21 countries in 12 weeks - a frantically paced whirlwind tour for sure. We never spent more than 3 nights in one place, and that was a rarity. Excluding transportation for periodic tour group activity, my travel stats include:

      7 Planes
      35 Trains
      19 Buses
      7 Ferries
      55 Taxi/ubers
      37 Different Hotels

      And a few notes:

      Words spoken most often during the trip:
      Where's my phone???

      Lots of smokers and vapers in Europe. Including in restaurants.

      Trains experience - Read post # 46, which is a NY Post column entitled "Do not Romanticize European Rail Travel".

      Language:
      When you go abroad, people in the US always say dont worry about the language difference - everyone speaks English. This is not true. But I used my translation app successfully in many situations, including with a blind guy.

      Food:
      If you don't eat flour and sugar, you will starve. Processed meats and cheeses plus many types of breads, croissants, pastries and cakes are a staple at breakfast. Everyone drinks tiny little espresso coffees. (Cafe "largo" was like 4 ounces). While everyone in the US walks around with a Starbucks in their hands, coffee to-go is a rarity in most of Europe.

      Hotels:
      We generally stayed in 3 star hotels, but occasionally a 1 star or 4 star as well. We found that customer ratings & reviews were a more helpful predictor of what our experience would be. For me, most important features were
      1) a/c that works
      2) space to put both our bags down and still walk to the bathroom without tripping over something
      3) space in the bathroom to put your toiletries (a rare find)
      4) a shower that is bigger than an airplane seat, with a shower door or curtain. (Several showers had neither, and the entire bathroom became a large puddle.)

      Massive tourism!
      We experienced excessive tourism in many places and locals are struggling to deal with it. Some locals are picketing against tourists, some locales are placing restrictions on the # of cruise ship passengers descending upon their town, some places are placing a tarrif on day trippers. I heard this was one of the worst years at Tahoe for overtourism as well.

      People:
      Talking to people about their lives and experiences was one of the best parts of the trip.

      Places I'd go back to & spend more time in:
      Andorra
      Scandanavia, particularly Norway
      Austria - they have a lake district in Salzburg

      And that's it. The end.
      Meer informatie

    • 49. You know you are a redneck when...

      16 augustus 2024, Verenigde Staten ⋅ ☀️ 79 °F

      I stopped in the Shenandoah Valley area of Virginia on my way home to visit my sister. The Rockingham County Fair was in full swing, and she had tix to the ever-popular demolition derby event. Watching people smash up their cars into other cars until only one car can still move is not really my thing, but if you get the chance, do this at least once. Its hilarious to watch.

      You know you're a redneck when... your favorite event of the year is demolition derby at the fair. Coupled with deep-fried oreos, full sugar sodas, and the always popular sugar covered funnel cake.
      Meer informatie

    • 48. Bergen Fjords

      12 augustus 2024, Verenigde Staten ⋅ ☁️ 79 °F

      We took a tour from Bergen Harbor to see the fjords. Honestly, after spending time in Lofoten, even though this gave us the perspective from the water as opposed to land, it ended up being a bit redundant, but it was our "last hurrah" before grabbing the train back to Oslo to fly home.Meer informatie

    • 47. Bergen

      12 augustus 2024, Noorwegen ⋅ ☀️ 61 °F

      Bergen is a city on Norway’s southwestern coast, about 290 miles west of Oslo. It's surrounded by mountains and fjords, including Sognefjord, the country’s longest and deepest. Bryggen area (translates literally to the wharf) features colorful wooden houses on the old wharf, once a center of the Hanseatic League's trading empire. The Fløibanen Funicular goes up Fløyen Mountain for panoramic views and hiking trails.

      We wandered the wharf & surrounding area, including the fish market, local parks, & university.
      Meer informatie

    • 46. NY Post article-Europe train travel

      11 augustus 2024, Noorwegen ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F

      This post is a copy of a column from the NY Post newspaper that caught our eyes as we were traveling, and we had to laugh. It mimicked so much of our experience. It is spot-on accurate.

      DON'T ROMANTICIZE EUROPE'S CROWDED, TARDY, UNRELIABLE HIGH-SPEED RAIL

      With Paris closed this vacation season for the Olympics, what could be more fun for a train-lover like me than riding Europe’s reliable high-speed trains across the rest of the continent?

      Instead of enjoying spontaneous, easy travel, though, I’m getting an education.

      It turns out, one reason high-speed rail “works” in Europe is that its customers will put up with inconvenience and uncertainty that Americans would never tolerate.

      Germany’s Deutsche Bahn ICE — intercity express — trains seemed like a great place to start: The country has several cities a few hours away from each other, and a short ride from other European capitals as well.

      And the Germans must apply their world-famous precision to DB, the largest global railway, no?

      The German system, more than three decades old, rivals France’s high-speed lines for global status among railfans.

      The first ICE trip I take — a two-hour jaunt from Brussels to Cologne — goes well enough, although not without an ominous sign: It’s 10 minutes late departing and a few minutes late arriving, with no explanation.

      It’s most unlike the Japanese train company that, a few years ago, apologized for departing a few seconds early.

      But what should have been a four-hour journey from Cologne to Hamburg is a katastrophe.

      We arrive at the station and check the departure board; our train is nowhere to be found.

      It finally pops up, listed as about to leave five minutes late, and then 10 minutes late, and then 15 minutes late.

      Good thing I splurged the extra $60 or so for the first-class carriage, to relax in the DB Lounge for a bit.

      (That, and not sitting on top of strangers, is the only benefit you get in first class.)

      But no — the lounge is being “fixed,” replaced by a temporary lounge in a separate building that’s a 10-minute walk from the station.

      Unlike New York’s Penn Station, DB offers no waiting-room seating for passengers who wisely haven’t paid for the closed lounge, so you just stand around in the heat and noise.

      Finally, we get going.

      But the on-board screen — with no acknowledgement by train staff — informs us that our arrival will be 20 minutes late.

      Then 30.

      Then 40.

      Then an hour and five minutes.

      Then two hours.

      Then close to 2½ hours.

      A four-hour trip has turned into a nearly seven-hour odyssey.

      The only thing we get for this, the on-board café manager informs us, is free water.

      Not the chilled bubbly water that costs $4, but a warm box of water.

      Worse, the train silently takes on a mind of its own.

      It skips an important stop, causing people to miss a Berlin connection.

      It adds suburban stops, making us later.

      It terminates short of its scheduled final stop, so people heading there must find alternative transit.

      The strangest part is that nobody on board questions any of this.

      If Amtrak’s four-hour Acela train from New York to Boston were to run nearly three hours late — and, in decades of regular Acela trips, I’ve never had such an experience — passengers would demand an explanation.

      Why is the train delayed?

      Broken track, operator shortage, weather, sick passenger . . . give us a reason.

      But the weather has been perfect for days, and not a single reason is proffered.

      People accept this tardiness and diversion as normal.

      Yet a delayed, rerouted train is better than no train.

      Part of the fun of a rail-based vacation is that you don’t have to plan; when you’ve seen enough of one city, book passage to the next one.

      Nope: For three days straight, all trains from Hamburg to Denmark’s Copenhagen are booked.

      Our various legs of the journey also demonstrate that efficient, cheap rail travel requires packing people into cramped, uncomfortable spaces, to a degree that’s uncommon at home.

      Eurostar from London to Brussels crowds its ticketed passengers into a sweltering waiting room with inadequate seats (at least there are seats).

      An hour-long commuter-rail trip from Brussels to the medieval Belgian town of Bruges is mostly spent standing in unventilated heat.

      Passengers open windows for DIY ventilation, so it’s also deafening.

      Things are no better in Italy, the European newspapers report, with vacationers complaining of long delays and crowding.

      Long-distance rail has its place in the transportation system, of course, in both Europe and the United States. Acela service has improved East Coast travel, for example.

      But high-speed rail is never going to rival the car for flexibility and cost on medium-length trips, or the plane for speed and cost on longer ones.

      If you’re able-bodied and non-elderly, and don’t have children to attend to, relying on rail may be a bemusing adventure.

      But it’s easy to see why most Europeans take summer trips by air (54%) and car (28%); only 10% rely on rails.

      Unless two seats open up on a train from Hamburg to Copenhagen soonish, I’ll be joining them.
      Meer informatie

    • 45. Journey to Bergen

      11 augustus 2024, Noorwegen ⋅ ⛅ 54 °F

      42 hours after leaving Lofoten we arrived in Bergen. Posting a few sites from the trip.

      Fri 6A - 9:20A. Ferry from Lofoten to Bodo. 10 minute walk from ferry to train station. Shopped for food for the next leg.

      Fri 12:27P - 10:13P. 10 hour train ride Bodo to Trondheim. This train is pretty comfy, but 10 hours is a long time.

      Fri 11:17P - 6:50A. Overnight sleeper car Trondheim to Oslo. They give the sleeper car travellers a room key while you are waiting on the platform for the train. But there is no queue or line for this, the room key person just strolls down the platform asking people if they need a key for their room. Asking in Norwegian. Hmmmm. That didn't work out too well for us.

      Needless to say, when everyone else was tucked away in their room and the train was on its way, Craig was left standing in the hallway watching our bags while I searched from car to car trying to track down our key. With that eventually accomplished, we managed to smoosh our 2 bodies & large bags into the room, (with not an inch of space to spare until I climbed into the top bunk), and get some sleep. And I only cracked my head twice on the ceiling.
      🤕 😁

      Sat 6:50A - 4:23P 9.5 hour layover at the Oslo train station. Craig hadn't slept well and wanted to hang around the station, but with the thought of another long train ride ahead of us, I decided to venture out and see a bit of Oslo. I wandered down to the harbour, grabbed some food, did some window shopping, saw some political demonstrations and most importantly, just stretched my legs.

      Sat 4:23P - 11:17P. 7 hour train ride to Bergen. Delayed from the start, and further delayed b/c some people got on the train at one of the local stops who shouldn't have been on the train, and the train reversed back to the station to drop them off (or kick them out). Dont really know what was going on there.

      Sat midnight - arrived in Bergen & grabbed an uber to the hotel. We were exhausted. I celebrated our arrival with my pillow.
      Meer informatie

    • We drove from Svolvaer to the end of the road - A
      Lots of hikers & campersWe share the roadHow would you like to live in this house?This boater has the Norwegian Sea all to himself

      43. "A" - Lofoten Islands

      6 augustus 2024, Noorwegen ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F

      The Lofoten Islands are an archipelago located off the northwest corner of Norway, and are famed for their natural scenic beauty. I'm attaching pix here, but take a moment and google it. Its stunning.

      "A" is pronounced like "out" without the "t" sound, and is the end of the road that weaves amidst the fjords and mountains of the Lofoten Islands. We drove about 2.5 hours from Svolvaer to A, and hiked around the area.

      On another note, what a joy to be in a place this extraordinary without the feeling of being a sardine in the tourist sardine can. There were tourists, mostly backpackers and camper van people, but plenty of free space to wander and find solitude. I'm not sure about this, but I attribute it to the remoteness of the location, the cost of getting / being here, as well as the unreliable weather patterns. The people here are largely campers, and who wants to camp in the rain? According to the locals, we lucked out with pretty good weather.
      Meer informatie

    • Flying in to NarvikSights from the plane

      42. Narvik to Svolvaer Norway

      6 augustus 2024, Noorwegen ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F

      James Joyce is quoted as saying " A man's errors are his portals of discovery."

      Our mishaps trying to get from Rovaniemi to Svolvaer Norway included booking a flight to Narvik Norway and taking a 4 hour bus ride to Svolvaer the next day, instead of getting a flight directly to Svolvaer. (Don't ask)

      What a delightful mistake. Narvik is a charming small town of 20k people on the mainland coast of Norway. Its pretty far north, over 100 miles above the Arctic circle, where winters are long, cold and snowy, but we laid over there on a 70° sunshiny day. There were minimal tourists around, and the town had a very attractive feel of mostly locals. The flight in was quite picturesque.

      Our actual destination of Svolvaer is the central point from which we would explore Lofoten. The 4 hour bus ride there (that I begrudged having to take) turned out to be a highlight. The ride took us around the sparsely populated fjords which, by definition, are deep narrow waterways mostly surrounded by mountains. The stunning views were enhanced by the lack of humans, except for the small towns, more like villlages, that occasionally dotted the shore or hillside. The ride ended up being chicken soup for the mountain/lake lovers soul. A few pix here.
      Meer informatie

    • 41. Santa Claus Village & Reindeer

      3 augustus 2024, Finland ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F

      We made a trip to Santa Claus Village, the entrance to which is located directly on the Arctic Circle, and which houses the reindeer farm. Although we're obviously out of season, the farm gets 200 visitors a day in August, compared to 5000 a day in December, so it was easy to move around, ask questions, and get time with the reindeer. It was really fun!Meer informatie

    • 40. Helsinki & Rovaniemi, Finland

      31 juli 2024, Finland ⋅ ☁️ 57 °F

      Finland has yet again been ranked as the happiest country in the world, according to the World Happiness Report. This is apparently due to "strong feelings of communal support & mutual trust".

      We didn't really see much of Helsinki, as the time allocated to travel planning got extended exponentially by lack of train availability to our planned destinations. We considered and researched many options before, as a last resort, booking a flight from Rovaniemi Finland to Narvik Norway, from which we'll catch a 4 hour bus to Svolvaer in the Lofoten Islands, which are pretty remote and which we're really excited about seeing.

      Rovaniemi is located on the Arctic Circle, and the tourism here is minimal compared to everywhere else we've been. The town is quiet and unpretentious, and for me, despite the lack of typical tourist attractions (or perhaps because of that) it was a welcome reprieve from the big cities we've been frequenting.
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