At Sea, North Sea enroute to Hamburg Germany

August 12

Today we were invited to a special Scandinavian lunch for world cruise travelers. Each table was hosted by a ship’s officer. We sat with one of the three first officers, Stephjan from Croatia and 3 other couples.  We learned a lot about the ship, for instance, the leftover food is ground up and emptied into the sea while we are moving – food for the sea life.  The first officers do a 4 hour day shift and a 4 hour night shift every day and they are on for 10 weeks. Stephjan has 2 young sons, 7 and 9, at home and although he loves his job and decided on it as a career at 14, he wouldn’t encourage his sons to do it.

IMG_1647

A few thoughts on leaving Norway:

Any country that welcomes us with a moose is on my happy list!

IMG_1550

Arrival in Kristiansand, Norway

This is one of the charging parking lots for the electric cars.  The owners also do not pay for parking or the tolls on the toll roads.  As I mentioned before, the government wants to encourage electric cars.

IMG_1579

This picture of a cobblestone street on a hill leading to the fortress in Oslo (Akershus fortress) has different cobblestones in the middle.  This was to make it easier for the horses to climb and descend. I am not sure it does the same for people!

IMG_1582

This picture of the empty chairs sculptures facing the Oslo harbor is to commemorate the Norwegian Jews who never returned home and were killed in Auchwitz.

IMG_1578

There have been lots of fires in Norwegian cities, as well as in other European cities.  So the corners of the buildings and most of the streets are not real corners, they are rounded so that fire equipment can make the turns. This has lessened the losses.  Most of the buildings are also not wood any more, except the ones kept for historic reasons.

So we say goodbye to Norway and on to other European adventures.

Building on a corner in Oslo

Building on a corner in Oslo

Posted in At Sea, August, Europe, World Cruise 1 | 3 Comments

Oslo, Norway

August 11

We arrived in Oslo this morning at 8 AM.  What a beautiful city!  In the morning we took the hop on hop off bus all around the city. There are beautiful forests, parks, museums and lakes that make the sights awesome no matter where you look.

Oslo is the oldest of the Scandanavian capitals and its history goes back 1000 years. About 600,000 people live here, and of the 454 square kilometers, 242 is forest. One of the first sights we saw as we left the port is the beautiful modern opera house made to look like an iceberg with the “iceberg” sculpture in the harbor that turns and twists with the wind. It has won many design awards.

 

IMG_1555 IMG_1557

 

We heard that the wealth in Norway allows many people to own 3 homes and 2 boats, there are a LOT of boats in the harbor and a lot of Teslas in the towns.

We saw many of the historical buildings, including the Parliament.

IMG_1560

 

We also could spot the Holmenkollen Ski Jump which was opened in 2010 for competitive ski jumping. It is huge!  I couldn’t get a picture, though.

The Nobel Peace prize is given out here each year on December 10. The ceremony is in city hall, but there is a museum called the Nobel Peace Center.

IMG_1572

We loved the beautiful statues and flowers.

IMG_1614 IMG_1601

After lunch, we went on a hiking tour along the Akerselva River. We started by taking the Metro subway (which is modern and actually beautiful) to the  Nydalen neighborhood and then hiked back to central Oslo along the river.  There were originally industries along the river, but now they have been converted to shops, loft style apartments and offices.  The old buildings stand near new ones and the effect is really wonderful.  There are many waterfalls as well. We walked over 9 miles!  Luckily we don’t leave this port until 11 PM tonight, we had plenty of time to explore.

University students started here this week and were out in groups with upperclassmen showing the newbies the city.  Probably not much studying going on this week.

IMG_1606 IMG_1610IMG_1616IMG_1619

When we got back to the center of Oslo, we were tired but couldn’t resist a trip to the famous ice bar.  Here they give you ponchos and gloves and you enter the ice bar.  Everything, the glasses, the tables, the bar and the sculptures are made of ice.  You get a drink of cranberry liquor with white wine and get to sit on the benches, chairs or at a table or you can wander around and take photos.  Here are a few:

IMG_1641 IMG_1633 IMG_1629 IMG_1626  IMG_1635

 

Tonight, we leave after our 3 days in Norway, and we have decided that it is a place we want to come back to.  We will have a restful day at sea tomorrow, then on to Hamburg Germany.

 

 

 

Posted in August, Europe, Excursions, World Cruise 1 | 3 Comments

Kristiansand, Norway

August 10

We had a lovely visit is Kristiansand today – we did a walking tour of the city, about 5 miles.  Our guide shared lots of information.  Here’s some of it:

  • There are 5 million people living in Norway, and 5 million Norwegians living in the US!
  • Minimum wage here is the equivalent of $20/hour US
  • One of the foods Norwegians like a lot is pizza, it costs about $30 US for a pizza and $10-$12 for a beer, which sounds like a lot but when you consider their salaries it isn’t so much
  • The average tax rate is 37.5% and the rate goes up as your income goes up, millionaires pay about 50% but they get a lot for their tax money
  • Health care is free, including all hospitals, doctors and dentists, etc.  So is education except for college which sad to say….costs all of $300/year.  All transportation, bus, etc is free
  • Their unemployment rate is about 3 1/2% and in Sweden it is about 30%, so a lot of Swedes come to Norway to work

The town is Norway’s 5th largest city and this is where Norwegians like to come on vacation.  The town center fits within one square kilometer, making it easy to walk around. It is on the south coast and stays temperate pretty much all year, but what bothers residents the most isn’t the weather, it is the dark. The main shopping street is closed to traffic and is heated so there is never a worry about snow there.  Also, our guide, John, said that when the young people get drunk, they can sleep it off on the warm street!  There is only one liquor store for each city, it is controlled by the government.  Salaries are pretty even, the person who cleans the street makes just a little less than a doctor. So it is a socialist society.

They say they have the world’s prettiest McDonalds, what do you think?IMG_1488

There is a tax on cars, so whatever you pay for a car, you pay the equivalent in tax. So the Tesla costs $100,000.   Right now is a good time to buy an electric car, which have the license EL.  This is because there is no tax on them, this will change next year and the Tesla will cost $200,000.  EL license plated cars also park for free.

IMG_1459

We visited a church during an organ concert, enjoyed the charming buildings and many flowers and walked through the fish market which is really for locals, not for tourists like the one in Bergen.

IMG_1430 IMG_1435 IMG_1442 IMG_1445 IMG_1460 IMG_1463 IMG_1466 IMG_1476 IMG_1479 IMG_1480

Posted in August, Europe, Excursions, World Cruise 1 | 4 Comments

Bergen, Norway

Norway

August 9

We toured the second largest city in Norway today, Bergen.  There are 250,000 people living here and it is really like a living history museum.  It is considered Norway’s most international city and most prices in the shops are shown in many currencies. When you sail into the harbor, there are houses on the hillsides, most with the distinctive red roofs.  IMG_1351IMG_1350

We took the hop on hop off bus (which had wifi by the way!) all around the city, then got off in the most historic area and also where the wonderful fish market is.  You can pick your own crabs, lobster, or almost any other type of fish and they will cook it on the spot for you. Notice the huge pot of sauteed peppers to go with your dish.

IMG_1367 IMG_1370 IMG_1372 IMG_1375 IMG_1376IMG_1364IMG_1382

Those crabs are enormous.  As you can see above the fish market sign, they sell bologna type sticks of moose, elk, reindeer and whale.  We had samples but didn’t buy any!

IMG_1388

The other thing we saw on one of the side streets was this stand selling hot dogs made from every type of meat you can imagine, lamb, reindeer, etc.  You get the idea.  We didn’t have one of those either.

IMG_1378

One of the most interesting areas is the Hanseatic wharf Bryggen.  There is a row of the old wooden structures that house wonderful shops of all kinds and if you wander in the alleys between them, there are even more working shops.  There was a lovely purse made of moose skin, and I almost bought it but then I felt sorry for the moose.  As I said, they take all types of currency!

Norm fell in love with a troll.  They are plentiful here.  IMG_1389 IMG_1395 IMG_1397 IMG_1400

St. Mary’s church is one of the oldest buildings in the city, it is from the 12th century and survived the many great fires that took place here.

IMG_1385

There are some lovely little narrow streets that are cobblestone and wind down between the houses. And beautiful parks and gardens.

IMG_1353 IMG_1358

Posted in August, Europe, World Cruise 1 | 1 Comment

Interesting signs we have seen!

IMG_0945

This is a clothing store in Quebec City!

 

 

 

 

 

 

IMG_1170

All the information you need to boil an egg in the hot springs, Hverageroi, Iceland

IMG_1193

Here is how much it costs to boil that egg. 100 Icelandic kr = $.75

IMG_1223

The top of the gate has about 10 single gloves. Not sure how it works! In Reykjavik. 

 

 

 

 

No caption needed

No caption needed

box3

From the penis museum in Reykjavik, Iceland. Yes, really.

IMG_1224

I don’t know what to say about this one.

Posted in August, Europe, World Cruise 1 | 1 Comment

Faroe Islands

Faroe_Islands

August 7

Today we docked in the Faroe Islands.

IMG_1260

First a few facts we learned:

The Faroe Islands are made up of 18 different islands, 17 of which are inhabited.  Two of them only have one family living on them.  They believe strongly in local education here, so for primary grades, each village has a school.  What about those families that live alone on these two islands, you ask?  Well, there is a teacher that spends two weeks on one island with those children, then a helicopter transports her to the other island for two weeks.  And she goes back and forth all school year.

Taxes are 45% here but everything is free, health care, elder care,  education, transportation in the bus system, etc.  Yes, even those helicopters and the teacher.

The population of the islands is 48,000 and there are 70,000 sheep.  And they wander everywhere.  The guide says there is a hefty fine if you hit a sheep with your car, not so if you hit a human!  I am sure he is using a little Faroe Island humor with that one.

There are very tall cliffs here and one sport is to climb up on the cliffs and hoist a sheep up with a rope.  The sheep grazes there for months and then the men climb back up and lower the sheep down. They say the grazing up there makes them taste better, but really the sport of it is what attracts. Incidentally, there are no trees on these islands, the sheep have destroyed them all.

Cliff that looks like an elephant. These cliffs are where you see sheep graze

Cliff that looks like an elephant. These cliffs are where you see sheep grazeIMG_1287

We went on a boat trip to Vestmanna Sea Cliffs where we saw puffins, arctic terns and many other bird species.  Also, lots of those sheep on the steep cliffs. We sailed right up into the grottos, including one that was a dark cave.  It was spectacular!  That’s the reason for the hard hats

IMG_1298IMG_1291

 

We then explored the capital, Torshavn, which is named after the Norse god Thor.  It is one of the world’s smallest capitals. They do kill and eat whales here, and everyone, even a newborn, gets equal shares of the whale meat.

It is very windy, and you might think they get a lot of power from wind, but no, only 10% because the wind keeps knocking the windmills down.

It is a very safe country – there have been 5 murders and 3 bank robberies in the last 300 years and no one locks their doors. Our guide has only seen a gun twice in his life.

There are wonderful houses with grass growing on the roofs.

IMG_1327 IMG_1326 IMG_1320

95% of the economy here comes from fishing and fish farming. We saw lots of salmon fish farms in the bays, salmon ladders for the wild salmon fishing and lots of fish was being loaded on to our ship.

 

Posted in August, Europe, Excursions, World Cruise 1 | 2 Comments

At sea – cruising the Norwegian Sea enroute to Faroe Islands

“Adventure before dementia” has to be our new motto, maybe I should have named the blog that way!  This is certainly an adventure and I do hope we have many more before dementia. Actually I hope we never have dementia.  🙂

Last evening we were invited to have dinner with Andy Heath, the cruise director, and his wife Tammy, who was the assistant cruise director for the first leg of the trip and now she is the social hostess.  There is a new assistant cruise director – Evan Bosworth – who has an amazing voice.  He can do Frankie Valli but with much more of a range. He did a terrific show and I hope we hear more from him.  Tammy and Andy will be with us until Dubai, then will leave and join a sister ship, the Marina, in Cape Town.  3 other couples joined us at this table for 10, one from Australia, one from Arizona and one from Arkansas.  All are on world cruise, one from Singapore and the other two joined when we did.  Tammy and Andy are living in Kansas City.  It was a really interesting dinner – we each told some stories about ourselves and the almost 3 hours passed very quickly.

I never heard of the Faroe Islands before booking this tour.  They are situated between Iceland and Norway and were settled in the 9th century by Norwegian farmers in search of new land. The islands are part of Denmark, yet they have their own currency and their own language.  Many residents do speak Danish in addition to Faroese.

The capitol is Torshavn where we will dock tomorrow and it is one of the smallest capitol cities in the world.

Posted in At Sea, August, World Cruise 1 | 2 Comments

Reykjavik, Iceland

Iceland

Wonderful trip to the Blue Lagoon last evening(August 4). We left at about 6:30 and stayed until 10. The sunrise was at 4:27 and sunset at 10:47, so we saw it from the bus.  I snapped the picture from the bus, so it isn’t the greatest, but you get the idea.sunset

They have a unique system at the Lagoon (which is a renowned geothermal spa)  You get a magnetic bracelet which lets you in the gate, opens your locker and also serves as payment for the cocktails you get while immersed in the water – it records your purchases and you pay on the way out.  Now why don’t they do this in the US?

We loved the experience and even used the white silica mud which is supposed to have positive effects on the skin. Of course the bus driver said we all looked younger when we came out.

blue lagoonpand n in lagoon pat with mud

August 5 – we had the same tour guide that went with us to the Blue Lagoon.  His name is Petur, and he explained the Icelandic way of naming.  His father is John, so he is Petur Johnson.  His son is David Peturson and his daughter is Tora Petursdaughter.  Women don’t change their names when they get married, and the phone book lists people by first name!IMG_1196

We went on a green focused tour today – first to the Hengill Volcano – it last erupted over 2000 years ago but it is still active. Petur says there are small earthquakes almost every day but they are really undetectable.  Still the houses are concrete and not very high so they won’t crumble if an earthquake hits.  We learned all about the numerous hot springs, and visited the town of Hveragerdi where we had lunch at a geothermal restaurant, all the food prepared using geothermal energy.  We toured the hot springs area and the greenhouse and I put my feet into one of the (very hot) springs.

IMG_1157 IMG_1159 IMG_1182

We also visited the Hellisheidi Geothermal plant – incredible that only 5% of the economy is based on fishing now, most of the economy is from energy, big industries are relocating there because it is so cheap.  And these plants supply 95% of the energy needed in the whole country so it is inexpensive.  But goods are very expensive here.

IMG_1200 IMG_1204

Also visited the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Thingvellir, where the world’s oldest existing parliament was formed in the year 930.  The fault (between the American and European plate) the runs through Iceland is very visable here. Also, it costs 202 Icelandic Krona (1.50 American) to use the restroom, but the tour guide gave us tickets!

IMG_1126 IMG_1132IMG_1151

Then we went to the city and explored it – a whole area devoted to Gay Pride, the Harpa Opera House and of course, the most famous hot dog stand!

IMG_1227IMG_1252IMG_1238

Posted in August, Europe, Excursions, Food, World Cruise 1 | 2 Comments

Enroute to Reykjavik, Iceland

August 4

We are scheduled to arrive at 3 PM, and we did secure a trip to the Blue Lagoon leaving at 6:30, so we will be there at night, tonight.  No worries about being able to see, it is still light here at 11 PM.  We will see some of the city today before the trip to the Blue Lagoon and have another tour scheduled for tomorrow, more about that on the next post.

Facts about Iceland and Reykjavik:

Reykjavik has about 200,000 people and is known as one of the most modern, forward thinking European societies. The city’s logo is Pure Energy and the geothermal energy is central to their heating, nightlife and culture.

Do you know what the Icelandic national food is?  Did you guess some type of fish?  Well, you would have been as wrong as I was.  The national food is the hot dog! or BAjarins Beztu.  If you want one with everything – you ask for “eina meo ollu”.

The Blue Lagoon is probably Iceland’s most unique and popular attraction.  It is a geothermal pool and spa with white silica mud, we are looking forward to the mineral rich soak although we have no stress to wash away!

As I mentioned before, there are staff and guests of all nationalities on the ship and this particular segment was so popular they started offering people money and other cruises with suite accomodations to change!  We met many who were asked by Oceania many times but didn’t change.

One of our waiters the other day was from Myanmar where we go later in the cruise.  I asked him the correct pronounciation of the name (is it MEEanmar, or MYanmar) and he answered – without missing a beat – “Burma”.  He then let us know how unhappy he is with the government, Fascinating conversation and one of many we have had about so many topics.

Posted in At Sea, August, World Cruise 1 | 2 Comments

Arctic Circle facts

August 3

Headed to Iceland – we have been north of the Arctic Circle and will head there again.  I didn’t know that the position of the Arctic Circle is not fixed, but depends on the Earth’s axial tilt, which flutuates due to tidal forces from the orbit of the Moon.  It is currently drifting northwards at a speed of about 49 feet per year.

Relatively few people live north of the Arctic Circle.  Sisimiut, Greenland has the largest North American community north of the Arctic Circle, and Barrow, Alaska the second largest. Norway and Russia have the largest.

There is no greater Naval tradition worldwide than a line crossing ceremony.  This was considered a rite of passage that tested the sailors’ ability to withstand a long ocean journey (appropriate for us??!!)

Seamen crossing the Arctic Circle become members of a fraternity known as the “Order of the Blue Nose”.  All of us onboard will receive a certificate commemorating having crossed the line, entitling us to proudly proclaim our status as a true and trusty brine-encrusted Bluenose!

Posted in At Sea, World Cruise 1 | 2 Comments