• Bruce Winters
  • Karen Winters
Jun – Jul 2025

Europe

Our FIRST visit to the U.K. Read more
  • Flam, Norway - 1 of 4 The Town

    June 24 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 45 °F

    Flam may have only 350 full time residents, but it gets 450,000 visitors a year to explore the area, visit the cute picturesque town that looks like a Hollywood set but mostly to ride the RAILWAY!!!

    The Flåm Railway is the steepest standard track in Northern Europe with a 12.6 mile gradient of 55% through winding valleys and tight curves going from 6 feet above sea level to 2,600 feet. It goes through beautiful mountains and fjords from Flam along the river to Lunden and climbs up the valley and through the Furuberg tunnel to the fun Rjoandefossen waterfall where we were entertained to music and dancing. We then passed the Geisme and Vidme farms on the mountainside and the only place that two trains can pass as we continue to Myrdal. Here the Flam and Bergen Railways meet for connections to Oslo.

    From 1871-1923 plans were made for a branch of the Bergen railway so that freight, mail and passengers would not have to come by sea or horse. Construction was from 1923 -1929 where they overcame the issue of the incline by digging a “turnaround tunnel” with 180-degree bends to give the train more distance to climb the slopes and then the valleys and river. It took 500 men continuously working at the peak. In 1940 parts of the track were opened to steam engines but were totally electrified by 1944. Until 1969 the passenger train ran 115,000 runs a year increasing steadily until the1980s. A new station in Flam was built in 1992 and more comfortable cars were added. By 2000 Flam became a popular travel destination.

    One of the best highlights was when the train pulled over for a couple of minutes to see the waterfall and we were treated by a “mythological” woman in red (the Hulder people) who sang and danced from an adjoining perch. We captured some of this in a couple of videos before departing.

    A very scenic hour up and hour back, although some people opted to ride bikes back down!
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  • Flam, Norway - 3 of 4. WATERFALL

    June 24 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 45 °F

    See video

  • Stavanger, Norway - 1 of 5

    June 25 in Norway ⋅ ⛅ 57 °F

    Stavanger (Sandes)
    We began our visit to Stavanger, the 12th century city in SW Norway and Norway’s 3rd largest city (and the administrative head of the Rogaland County in Norway) with 150,000 people (240,000 in the extended area) with a surprise docking in Sandes a town about 15 minutes away from Stavanger and then we took a bus to Stavanger Central.

    Before we met our guide we found a large sculpture by the Iraqi-American artist Michael Rakowitz outside the Stavanger Cathedral. The sculpture (see photos) is a recreation of a guardian figure from an ancient Assyrian temple. The temple has been subject to looting and destruction since the 1850s, when British archaeologists first began removing parts of its artworks to send them to the West. Several waves of colonial plundering followed before ISIS destroyed the remaining structures in 2015.

    The invisible enemy should not exist (Lamassu of Nineveh) (2018) represents a lamassu—a protective deity with the head of a human, the body of a bull, and the wings of a bird. Once found in the ancient city of Nineveh, The 3,000 year-old guardian figure is made from the packaging of empty tin cans that once contained Iraqi date syrup, recalling the original colors of the sculpture, while the choice of material serves as a commentary on the devastating effects that war and imperialism has had on the once legendary Iraqi date industry.

    We met our guide Andrea and the 7 of us did a long walk around the city as we visited a city filled with art and museums. We began with the history of the city at the Alexander Kelland memorial – who in the 1850s was a very progressive author and businessman and became the mayor. We visited the “broken chain memorial”, representing the 1980 disaster where an oil platform capsized and over 100 men lost their lives.

    We learned about Norway’s Independence in 1814 from Danish rule for a “short time” before becoming ruled by Sweden. It wasn’t until 1905 that Norway achieved a FULL independence when its union with Sweden dissolved.

    We also learned about the evolution of the Stavanger Cathedral (see photos) from the Middle Age that with its original architecture is in continuous use since the 1300s. Built in 1125 after Sigurd Jorsalfarer named Stavanger a cathedral city, this is considered the date the town was founded and has just finished a major renovation for its 900th anniversary. There were many people there today to visit the fully renovated inside of the Church. So we only viewed the outside of the original Roman design Stavanger Cathedral. After a fire in 1272, they made an addition and on the outside you can see the newer section in a Gothic style. Interestingly, what came first, the city, or the Cathedral? Since there is no record of the city before the Cathedral, I’m guessing the City built up “because” of the Church being there.

    Then we went to see the “Leading Gazelle” which was originally a statue by Marshall Fredericks in 1936 in Detroit and later in 1958 was dedicated to “Norwegian Emigrants" as a symbol of friendship between the United States and Norway and presented it to King Olav V. The work commemorates the men and women of Norwegian blood who have contributed to the building of America (see photos). See two videos
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  • Stavanger, Norway - 2 of 5 Colorful City

    June 25 in Norway ⋅ ⛅ 57 °F

    Fargegaten (street of colors) is one of the most colorful streets in Norway. It was hairdresser Tom Kjørsvik who came up with the idea of completely renewing this previously quiet and rather dull street, Øvre Holmegate. Previously all the homes and buildings were white and Kjørvik's vision was to pump some new and much-needed life into the street, a process that proved to be a lengthy one; it lasted more than four years. The artist Craig Flannagan created the color scheme for the painting of the houses and the plan had to be approved by landlords and the city council. It became a great attraction for locals and tourists.Read more

  • Stavanger, Norway- 3 of 5 Harbor & Older

    June 25 in Norway ⋅ ⛅ 57 °F

    We saw the “Broken Column”, 23 identical rusty steel men sculptures mounted outdoors and indoors in public, based on a cast of the artists’, Anthony Gormley, own body. They relate to each other through their elevation above or below sea level and the direction in which they face. The sculpture at the fish market looks out from the harbor and faces 8 degrees west of true north. It is this sculpture that determines the orientation of all the others. The idea is that all the sculptures look out to sea. They are at altitude intervals of 1.95 meters; with the placement of the statues continues down towards the city center. The artist thinks of the sculptures as “uninscribed objects" … they don’t memorialize anyone in particular. Each one simply identifies a human space in space and shifts attention from the intrinsic qualities of the sculptures to the context that contains them. It is an art project that explores its surroundings and through it, we are encouraged to explore and investigate our own surroundings more closely.

    We saw the water supply in Stavanger and Lake Breiavatnet (see photos), that always supplied water to the area since 1863 and is now more efficiently filled from Lake Mosvatnet that supplies to the city and then out to sea. This beautiful lake is right in the middle of the city.

    We then visited an area with the oldest high school, Kongsgård, specializing in music, dance and drama as well as natural and social sciences, and foreign languages. Many famous artists attended here (including Alexander Kelland). There is an interesting statue in front of Lars Hovland Lende (1882–1971), who lived most of his life in Stavanger where he sold a self-produced magazine he called "Fagamatøren " and an advocate for children, helping them with vocational education and work. He always dressed quite distinctively, so that, he was easily recognized in a larger gathering. He also bought ponies for the children to enjoy by riding and carting. He lived in Old Stavanger, our next stop. He spoke up against child labor and protected children. On Liberation Day, May 8, 1945, Lende hung out a huge Norwegian flag from his living room window on the second floor with his famous saying “Everything for the Kids”.

    Gamle “Old” Stavanger is a historic area of the city consists largely of restored wooden houses which were built in the 18th century. After World War II, a new city plan was created for Stavanger including taking down the old wooden buildings in the city and replacing them with new modern structures in concrete. Gamle Stavanger owes its existence to the one person that spoke up against it and saved these beautiful little white structures, Einar Hedén (1916-2001). See the photos of the streets and the neighborhood of 170 white wooden homes which are now a UNESCO site (and home of the Canning Museum).

    Looking over the harbor at the end of Old Stavanger, we stopped at the statue of Admiral Thore Horve. who from 1946 to 1949 headed the entire Royal Norwegian Navy. When Nazi Germany attacked Norway in April 1940, Lt. Cdr. Horve was the commander of HNoMS Draug. During the night of April 9, the Horve was watching shipping in the Karmsund (strait in Norway) and found an unknown enemy force in the Oslofjord, leading to the crew being ordered to full combat stations. The ship refused to stop and Draug had to give chase and capture the vessel. After leading the unknown ship into Haugesund, its identity was found to be the 7,624 ton German vessel Main. The two ships soon came under attack from a Luftwaffe bomber around 40 nautical miles (74 km) off the Norwegian coast. The bombs, aimed at the Main, missed but the German captain immediately ordered his crew to abandon ship. Main was sunk and Draug proceeded to the United Kingdom with the German crew as prisoners!!!

    Our last stop was outside the impressive Norwegian Petroleum Museum. The museum was built in stone, glass and concrete focuses on offshore petroleum activity especially in the North Sea. The museum shows the technological development from the beginning of the Norwegian oil history in the mid-1960s, from the first North Sea drilling platforms, through steel and concrete platforms developed and built in Norway, to modern, flexible production ships and subsea systems. We did not go in, but admired the outside. Believe it or not, that was just our morning.
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  • Stavanger, Norway - 4 of 5

    June 25 in Norway ⋅ ⛅ 57 °F

    We then “literally ran” over to our afternoon tour which was a RIB (Rigid Inflatable Boat) TOUR of the 26 mile Lysefjorden fjord. Rib tour is a fast speed boat (44 knots/hour). We were entertained by our helmsman, Alex, who has been living in this area his entire life and boating around this fjord since he was 8 years old. He “flew” out of the harbor area with the song Danger Zone blasting (see photos) as we passed beautiful scenery and learned about the area. We then went to Whisky Falls, the Vagabond cave and heard the stories of the outlaws that hid there and the famous Pulpit Rock which goes up (and people climb, not us) 1,982 feet above sea level. The cliff was formed during the Last Glacial Period, approximately 10,000 years ago, when the edges of the glacier reached the cliff. The water from the glacier froze in the crevices of the mountain and eventually broke off large, angular blocks, which were later carried away with the glacier. This is the cause of the angular shape of the plateau. Along the plateau itself there continues to be a deep crack. Due to these cracks, the plateau will at some point fall down, but all the geological investigations have revealed that this will not happen in the foreseeable future (our guide thought it could happen any day), and geologists have confirmed the safety of the plateau.

    Beside being in the final scene of the TV program Vikings, in the final fight scene in Mission: Impossible – Fallout, Tom Cruise and Henry Cavill hang from the face of the cliff at Pulpit Rock (although in the movie it is supposed to be in Indian-administered Kashmir).
    (see 2 videos)
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  • Bruce’s Birthday!

    June 26 in Norway ⋅ ☀️ 55 °F

    It was a great birthday celebration from early morning until late into the evening.

    Yes, see two videos!

  • Kristiansand,Norway- 1 of 5 WALKING Tour

    June 26 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    Kristiansand
    We took the tender from the ship and at the landing we were treated to beautiful Norwigen Opera singing. This very interesting city which is the 5th largest in Norway and is a mix of some very old houses (Posebyen area) that were saved from a fire and some old buildings with a very modern city. We walked around before our first tour began and immediately said we could have an extended vacation in this town. It is on the South Coast of Norway and surrounded on 3 sides with water and takes up only .5 square mile so very walkable. 83,000 residents are in this city and it has its share of businesses and wealth (see PwC) due to its strong role in International shipping. It is a very clean and very green city in every way.

    The first site we saw which was very obvious was the 1120 seat the Performing Arts Center (Kilden) where there is opera, music and ballet and was the most expensive building in this town built in 2009. It has many shapes to the building and its covered with wooden walls made from local oak strips that also help with the perfect acoustics, which it has won awards for (oak was a major export from here in the 1700). It looks like waves (although we were told some say it’s a nod to ballerina’s skirt). Next door to it is the Modern Museum (Kunstsilo) which was recreated from grain silos and has won many awards for its design and contains the Tangen Collection, regarded as the world’s most important collection of Nordic modern art with more than 5,000 works.

    We then met our private guide (3 of us) took us through the park to the Christiansholm fortress which was finished in 1672 by King Christian IV to defend the city. Close by was the lighthouse, Odderoya, at the point of the Island that was used to protect the town from the Germans before they were eventually occupied. We walked through the Ravendalen park with beautiful fountains, public fruit and vegetable gardens and sand art.

    We visited Kristiansand Cathedral (from 1884) and right in the middle of the city. The cathedral is in the same location as three previous buildings. The first, Trinity Church, a small wooden church, was built in 1645. When Kristiansand was appointed the seat of the diocese in 1682, construction began on the town's first cathedral, called Vor Frelsers Kirke (Our Saviour's Church), consecrated in 1696, but burned down in 1734. The second cathedral, Vor Frues Kirke (Our Lady's Church), consecrated in 1738, was destroyed by a fire that affected the whole city and then finally the current church was built in its place.

    See two videos
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  • Kristiansand, Norway - 3 of 5 OLD & NEW

    June 26 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    -continued

    Here you see the modern apartments (one just sold for $3 million) as well as the older white protected structures where locals live. You can see the mirrors attached to the windows so that peeking outside you could see who is coming from each direction (very clever). We also walked a few blocks to the main square where there was lots of activity by the time we left with stores and booths opening. There is a big heart (see photos) with an X in the middle marking the dead center of town.Read more

  • Kristiansand, Norway - 4 of 5 Downtown

    June 26 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    See photos of the Church and town and then we finished our tour, walked back to the harbor and went to our next tour.

    We had an afternoon Segway tour of the city. YES, we ended with a tasting of the town top premium salmon at Rieinhartsen (which has been there since 1931). It was salty .... and not exactly to my taste but everyone loved it.
    continued-- 2 Segway videos!
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  • Skagen, Denmark - 1 of 2

    June 27 in Denmark ⋅ 🌬 59 °F

    Skagen is the outermost point, Jutland, where Denmark's land ends and 2 seas meet as well as Denmarks largest fishing port. We did our own strolling around this town since it was mostly a shopping mecca and art haven and not our “cup of tea”. It was very windy (usually is windy, so we heard) and a challenge to go too far but we took a shuttle to town and then walked back to take in all the sites. Many shops and many places to eat local and International (sadly, American) food too. We spent some time in a beautiful art gallery and the oldest church here (unique with model ships hanging from the ceiling).

    The area is “known” for the Grenen, the northernmost part of one of the world’s largest splits (formed since the ice age 10,000 years ago (still growing about 25’ per year). The two seas, Kattegat and Skagerrak, meet here and people go to stand with a foot in each sea. We would have gone there but it was much too windy this day for anyone to easily get out there.
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  • Oslo, Norway- Day1; 1 of 5 WALK to OSLO

    June 28 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 57 °F

    We spent 2 wonderful days in the busy cultural city of Oslo. It was a great time and just as we got there, we were welcomed by their annual pride parade and got to experience 3 or 4 hours of floats, music and people sharing love! We were also very lucky with the wonderful weather, so we purchased their Oslo pass and decided to take on their more than 30 museums not to mention trains, buses, trams and ferries. We only got to visit 8 Museums, but they were all wonderful and unique. See the photos from our walk from the dock to downtown Oslo.

    Norway’s capital, oldest and largest city of 710,000 people is on a fjord and has Viking history going back 1000 years. The United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway had a common monarch and common foreign policy that lasted from 1814 until its peaceful dissolution in 1905 with separate constitutions, laws, legislatures, administrations, state churches, armed forces, and currencies. The Norwegian government was presided over by viceroys: Swedes until 1829, Norwegians until 1856. Norway had been in a closer union with Denmark, After the adoption of the new Constitution of Norway on 17 May 1814, Prince Christian Frederick was elected king and had been part of Denmark and at this point became part of Sweden. Norway didn't achieve full independence until 1905 when Haakon VII was crowned the King of Norway. The current King the grandson and 3rd monarch since Denmark became a nation is King Harald V since 1991. He and his wife Queen Sonja have been beloved by the population for the past 35 years.
    How do Norwegians currently think of their neighbors:
    -Sweden like a brother
    -Denmark like a mother
    -Iceland like a daughter
    -Finland like a strange cousin
    --- see photo captions and 2 videos
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  • Oslo- D1; 2 of 5 WALKING TOUR/PARADE

    June 28 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 57 °F

    We walked the city with our guide and learned about the history of Norway, its wars, its fires, why Churches are outside the city near the lakes where people go, and Norway's ties/unties to Sweden and Denmark over their history of 1200 years. We visited Akershus Fortress, which was a medieval castle and the 1299 military fort and the military headquarters are still located there. (Note: Disney Epcot has a replica of this fortress and the Disney Princess character restaurant is located there. Well at least they serve Norwegian food.) We also heard about life in Norway and that in general Norwegians don’t ever move far from where they are born and and have close friends they grew up with for life.
    ---see photo captions and 2 videos
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  • Oslo-D 1; 3 of 5 CITY HALL

    June 28 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 57 °F

    Oslo Radhus (Oslo City Hall) opened in 1950 and is incredibly decorated with works of art from Norwegian history and culture. Various contests were held to decide who would decorate City Hall in January 1937. In all, eight painters and 17 sculptors were hired. Most of the work was completed by the opening of the hall in 1950, though the sculpture park was not completed until the 1960s. The paintings, tapestries, reliefs and tilework are all fabulous, interesting pieces, We saw 4 weddings (they have over 2,000 per year here) and this is also where the world famous Nobel Peace Prizes are awarded and speeches by recipients are made on December 10 anniversary of Alfred Nobel’s death).Read more

  • Oslo-D1; 4 of 5 NOBEL PEACE PRIZE CENTER

    June 28 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 57 °F

    Nobels Fressenter (Nobel Prize Center)- Takes you though the history and achievements of Alfred Nobel and the evolution of the awards over the last 105 years. You then can’t help but get inspired by the stories of all 139 award winners over the years. This year alone there were 338 nominees for the award. And how they have changed the world!!! When you leave, after reading all of these incredible bios of what laureates have done, you can’t help but wonder what you have spent your life doing while these people are saving the world (maybe it was just me).

    There is also a focused exhibit regarding this years’ winner. Nihon Hidankyo whose organization of survivors of atomic bombing in 1945 does work for a world free of nuclear weapons. An exhibit, The Echo Chamber, shows you how to look at art from outside your normal world. Very interesting.

    Another exhibit was about how laureates have used dialogue to change the world and how WE can change our daily conversations to help communications worldwide. We also got to take a test to determine which Peace Prize Laureate we most resemble – Karen was like Jimmy Carter (The Negotiator) and I was like Barack Obama (the Team Leader)! www.nobelppeacecenter.org
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  • Oslo-D1; 5 of 5 MUNCH MUSEUM

    June 28 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 57 °F

    The Munch Museum has been open since 2020, and dedicated to the life and works of the Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. The museum had in its permanent collection well over half of the artist's entire production of paintings and at least one copy of all his prints. This amounted to over 1,200 paintings, 18,000 prints, six sculptures, as well as 500 plates, 2,240 books, and various other items.

    This 13 floor museum of primarily Munch’s work is broken up by time periods as his styles and interests changed. There were two other artists displayed there on the day we were there (Kiyoshi Yamamoto & Kerstin Bratsch). It is quite a depressing museum of his works but clearly most people come to see one of the 3 ORIGINAL SCREAMS stored here. They are so fragile (originals were done on cardboard) that even though they are temperature and light controlled and the slightest light will over time ruin them (they predict) they close off one painting every half hour and open up another one to be seen and that’s how they cycle through you seeing all 3 but never at the same time (giving two them a rest each half hour). Crazy, but true-see out video.

    Munch was often affected by depression, which is definitely visible in his work. His art deal with themes of anguish, melancholy, fear, death and pain. In his own words, he wanted to express “the most subtle states of mind” through painting.

    The Scream was created in 1893 followed by several subsequent versions in pastel and tempera and has been used in many setting, ads, books and merchandise to symbolize angst, fear, isolation, and inner turmoil. He was inspired by a hallucinatory experience in which the artist felt and heard a “scream throughout nature,” it depicts a panic-stricken creature, simultaneously corpselike and reminiscent of a sperm or fetus, whose contours are echoed in the swirling lines of the blood-red sky. WILD!
    - see 1 video
    - see 1 additional video
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  • Oslo-D2; 1 of 4 FOLK MUSEUM

    June 29 in Norway ⋅ ☀️ 64 °F

    Norsk Folkmuseum- We started our day with a visit to this open air museum which was very interesting as they relocated homes and building from all over Norway to demonstrate the history and times of how people lived in the16th Century. The museum includes 160 buildings from rural and urban Norway beginning in the Middle Ages up to the 20th Century. The overall collection contains around 160.000 artifacts representing daily life and work in Norway and are linked to home and domestic activities, farming, skilled labor, folk art and crafts. There are collections of folk dress, textiles, folk art, weapons, toys, musical instruments and church art.

    Some of the buildings we visited were: A 13th Century Church, working farms, homes, an 8 apartment house, an apothecary, Sami residence, a blacksmith, a bakeshouse as well as an English garden, and French garden. https://norskfolkemuseum.no/en
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  • Oslo-D2; 2 of 4 KON-TIKI RAFT MUSEUM

    June 29 in Norway ⋅ ☀️ 64 °F

    Kon-Tiki Museet- Remember Thor Heyerdahl, an incredible advocate for World Peace, who became world famous when he crossed the Pacific Ocean in 1947 from South America (Peru) to Polynesian Islands with his Kon-Tiki Balsawood Raft (and later sailed with Ra, Ra II and Tigris). We saw the raft!!! What a fun walk down memory lane from when I read about him and saw the movie. It was a great book and movie from 1950 and then in 2012.

    NOTE: See the TWO RED MEN TRAFFIC LIGHT! Why? There are two red men on traffic lights and only one green “in case one didn’t work”, they felt redundancy was important because lights and bulbs were unreliable. They have kept this design although bulbs are much more reliable now because they think it increases visibility and therefore reduces accidents. What do you think?
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  • Oslo-D2; 3 of 4 JEWISH MUSEUM

    June 29 in Norway ⋅ ☀️ 64 °F

    Jodisk Museum (The OSLO Jewish Museum) (in a former Synagogue from 1921) covers Norwegian Jewish History, Culture and Traditions, the Shtetl and The Jewish Year as well as the stories of how the Holocaust impacted this County.

    We spoke to two young people that belong to the current active Jewish Community of Oslo which was founded in 1892. The current Rabbi is Orthodox, however, the members religious observance is variable, with many different Jewish backgrounds and their existence ensures that Jewish life continues to be vital part of Norwegian society. There is no Jewish school because they want their children to be part of day-to-day Norwegian life and not separate (which they say would be dangerous).

    In 1940, there were roughly 2,100 Jews living in Norway. Most of these families originally came from the Baltic areas of Czarist Russia, and had lived here for several generations. During the 1930s, Jews fleeing from Nazism in Central Europe also began to arrive. In 1940, there were some 350 Jewish refugees living in Norway.

    Deportation and flight During the German occupation, a total of 772 Jews were deported from Norway, most in connection with two blitz operations in the late autumn of 1942. Only 34 survived. About 1,200 Jews fled to Sweden during the war. The exhibition we saw focuses primarily on the family histories and traces that remain. We spent a few hours reading all of these stories.

    Speaking to members of the current Congregation, there are about 750 families that belong to the Synagogue and an estimated 1300-1500 families in total in Oslo (which makes up the majority of the Jews in the Country).
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