Norway
Vippetangen

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    • Day 2

      First day

      April 28 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

      Départ ce matin à 7h 30 pour un décollage à 9h 35; difficile pour maman . Arrivée à Oslo vers 11h 30.
      Ensuite repas typique puis visite de la ville . Le musée national galerie a été long mais assez beau et mal organisé, on a même assisté à un spectacles de plusieurs dances devant l'opéra. Puis pique nique à l'hôtel ,pour un départ demain matin 5h.Read more

    • Day 45

      Jour 41 & 42 - Pause à Oslo

      September 25 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

      Réveil hier matin un peu plus tard que d’habitude car nous sommes arrivés de Bergen par le train de 00h05 et nous sommes couchés un peu tard, nous mettons un peu de temps à partir de l’hôtel car le temps n’est pas au beau fixe.

      Nous prenons la décision de longer la rivière Akerselva qui traverse Oslo du Nord au Sud, ses rives sont agréables car bien aménagées pour une balade et arborées. Cela nous permet de découvrir le quartier de Grünerløkka, ancien quartier ouvrier avec de nombreux bâtiments réhabilités et qui est aujourd’hui le quartier artistique et underground d’Oslo (on a l’impression de retrouver Pantin par endroit). L’atmosphère est paisible en ce mardi après-midi mais la pluie refait son apparition, nous devons donc pressé le pas jusqu’au musée Munch.

      Ce musée, récent, est dans un grand gratte-ciel sur le port. Le quartier est recouvert de bâtiments neufs et on y trouve aussi l’opéra d’Oslo, très imposant et géométrique. Le musée regroupe des centaines d’œuvres de l’artiste réparties en 5 expositions sur 4 étages. On en apprend plus sur la vie de ce fameux peintre/sculpteur du début du XXe siècle et nous avons pu admirer son œuvre célèbre : Le Cri. Edvard Munch a réalisé plusieurs versions du Cri : 3 de ces œuvres sont dans une pièce sombre et chaque œuvre apparaît au public pendant 30 minutes successivement afin de ne pas surexposer ces tableaux qui sont à l’épreuve du temps.

      La soirée se déroule tranquillement : nous testons un bar à bières avec un choix de plus de 50 brevages puis allons dans un restau vegan. La vie nocturne est animée à Oslo, ça change !

      Aujourd’hui marque la fin de notre voyage en Norvège : nous prenons le bateau à 16h pour Copenhague. C’est donc en vélo que nous allons cette fois-ci nous déplacer dans Oslo. Nous commençons notre tour par le parc Fogner, un parc avec 212 sculptures réalisées par Gustav Vigeland. Les détails de chaque statue sont impressionnants. Nous longeons ensuite le port et grimpons jusqu’au parc de Ekeberg dans l’Est d’Oslo. Des installations / sculptures contemporaines ont été installées dans l’ensemble du parc qui surplombe la ville. Beaucoup d’écoliers se promènent parmi ces étonnantes installations.

      Nous redescendons dans le centre-ville pour prendre un café et faire quelques courses avant de monter sur le ferry qui nous emmènera jusqu’à Copenhague où nous arriverons demain matin à 10h.
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    • Day 78

      46. NY Post article-Europe train travel

      August 11 in Norway ⋅ ☀️ 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.
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    • Day 7

      Bjolsen Student Village

      August 5 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 72 °F

      Finally. Another nice lady helped us find our way to the correct building. By the time we got there, we were an extremely hot and sweaty mess. The room is not exactly what we hoped for. The students who live here already - we haven't met them yet - are co-ed (we think, based on the decor in the shared living space). The kitchen is a bit of a mess: The food stores are well-organized, but the floor is disgusting, and there's a soccer ball left out, but there are some flower decals and girly lights on the windows. Who knows? We haven't heard anyone yet. The room itself is fine.

      There's a grocery story, pharmacy, and hairdresser right next door. We'll go to IKEA tomorrow to pick up odds and ends. We'll probably also go back to the University just to check things out, find the Student Union...that sort of thing.
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    • Day 2

      Pünktlich in Oslo angekommen ☀️

      August 28, 2023 in Norway ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

      Das Schiff war der Hammer 🤩
      Jetzt wird Oslo erkundet, bei Sonnenschein am Hochzeitstag ☀️❤️💙❤️☀️

    • Day 6

      Day 6, Oslo

      September 6, 2018 in Norway ⋅ 🌧 15 °C

      The last stop of the holiday today in Oslo, Norway. The weather forecast today wasn’t so good, lots of rain in fact. However, although very cloudy and slightly cooler, we did avoid any rain whilst docked. It was an early dock, we were at the berth by 7am and being the last stop we set the alarm for 6.15am. Cor blimey did we know about that !! Anyway we got up and headed for the front of the ship. Once again a nice quiet glide in. To be fair, to take full advantage of the approach we would have needed to be on deck for about 5am, needless to say we didn’t bother.

      We’ve been here twice before so didn’t really have anything planned, and the weather could have scuppered things. But as it was dry we decided on a 2hr Fjord cruise run Independently from the port. It was ok, not brilliant but ok. It was overshadowed by the fact it was Baltic, windy and 2 whole hours in the cooler breeze. We would have also seen just as much on the way out from our ship, but there you go, you live and learn.

      Due to the fact I thought I was going to die from hypothermia when we got back, we got straight back on our ship and had some lunch before getting off yet again to look around the shops. I was armed that time with a thick fleece and a jumper. It was an early sail-away so we had to be back on board for 3.30pm which thankfully cut the shopping a bit short. We decided to stand on top of the bridge for the sail-away and we were up there for about an hour before wandering to the back of the ship for a cuppa. We sailed down quite a narrow fjord out of Oslo for about an hour and a half with some very nice sites, before joining the North Sea.

      We were invited to the Captains Cocktail Party tonight, formal dress and plenty of canapés and drinks. It’s always nice and we decided to attend tonight. We got chatting to some lovely people. As the party was finishing, Eddie the Eagle was behind us, so we went and said a quick hello and got a selfie. He was a really nice bloke, very chatty and very friendly. Sharon went up to him and said “Hi, you are Eddie aren’t you?”, I just wished he’d have said “No, I’m Dave from Birmingham why?”. He didn’t, he said yes and started to chat. Next we graced the formal dining room with our presence, Sharon had snails to start and Lobster for main, Beef Wellington for me. We were lucky (in one way) whilst we were in the handbag shop (that’s the not so lucky bit, being in the handbag shop), the captain 👨‍✈️ came in had a look around and just started talking to us. Sharon asked him if he got a good discount 😂😂, he said he didn’t buy handbags. Again, a nice bloke. We told him how much we enjoyed Skagen yesterday and how welcoming they were. He told us they were very excited and thankful for our visit and that the mayor had come on board to thank him personally, it was quite nice. So we’ve had a very sociable evening.

      We were going to go out on the open deck to watch tonight’s movie, but due to heavy precipitation in the atmosphere (Its pissing down), we had a cuppa at the back of the ship and are now off to our cabin to possibly watch s movie or more likely to fall asleep 💤 .Last day on board tomorrow so will be busy, we’ve been told to prepare for some stormy waters, lovely, just how we like it.

      So until tomorrow folks.....
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    • Day 14

      DFDS ⛴ nach Hause

      August 16, 2020 in Norway ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

      Nun geht es unweigerlich wieder nach Hause. Die Fähre liegt schon am Kai. Es geht über Fredrikshavn nach Kopenhagen.
      Nach dem Bording wird die Stimmung wie immer etwas wehmütig, die Eindrücke entlang der Küste des Oslofjords tun ihr übriges dazu 😔
      Ein Schauspiel der besonderen Art hatten wir dann noch durch 3 Jetski Fahrer, die in unserem Heckstrahl viel Spaß hatten und richtig rasant immer wieder die Wellen gekreuzt haben.
      Das Wetter war uns auch hold, so dass wir fast einen Sonnenbrand an Deck bekommen hätten 🌞
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