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Day six of our trip found us flying to Bergen, Norway, a lovely old city.
Although I had intended to keep a daily diary, the sights and experiences were so overwhelming that I decided to "live in the moment" and just enjoy what I was seeing rather than to keep a strict record. Therefore you will see few specifics and lots of impressions in my report. We stayed at the Strand Hotel on the waterfront, directly across the street from the FishMarket, an outdoor shopping area with many fish, fruit-and-vegetable, souvenir and Norwegian sweater and knitwear stalls. I have never seen so many varieties of marine life, ever, from mussels to whale meat and everything between on beds of ice. The fruit was gorgeous, with huge raspberries, small, juicy strawberries, piles of chanterelle mushrooms, beautiful grapes, and other fruit and vegetables from all over Europe and Africa. We only had a day there, and wandered around the old waterfront which is being beautifully and authentically restored. We also took the funicular (a very slant-y railroad) up the high hill overlooking the city. We had some nice meals in the waterfront cafes but it was drizzly much of the time so we didn't eat outdoors as often as we would have liked. Neil ordered whale one meal despite my rant about the evils of whaling. I had a small taste. Ugh. It was fibrous and sweet and salty at the same time--not like beef as the waiter had promised although it did resemble beef in color. We boarded our ship, the 2 year-old Midnatsol (midnight sun) at 6PM Tuesday for an 8PM sailing. The Norwegian Coastal Cruise Lines run 12 ships up and down the coast, year round. These leave daily and combine car ferry with cargo on the lower decks and passengers in cabins and suites on the middle decks. Ours, the newest and largest, had a capacity of 1,000 passengers and included two outdoor hot tubs, saunas, an exercise room, and even laundry facilities. I loved the heated tile floor in our bathroom. (It doesn't take much to make me happy!) Our ship had multiple stern and bow propellers which could rotate 90 degrees and allowed it to turn on a dime, silently. It was also able to pull up near a dock and glide sideways until it was touching full length in order to offload cargo with onboard forklifts. The engines were very quiet and nearly vibration free. The schedule for coming into ports was very precise, to the minute, and the ship managed to meet every stop on time. Although the ships are clean, perfectly maintained, and attractively decorated, they make no pretense of being luxury cruise ships. Three meals are served daily in two seatings. Breakfast and lunch were open seating buffets, with a served dinner menu and assigned seating. The food and wine was good and plentiful. There was a cafeteria for food between meals or if you had not bought the meal plan (some of the passengers were just using the ferry between ports and only embarked for a few hours or a day.) The two upper decks were nearly all glassed-in lounges with comfortable chairs and small sofas for scenery viewing, playing cards or board games, reading,or just socializing. Two bars were open most of the time. We met some very interesting, friendly folk. Each day the boat would dock a few times, anywhere from 10 minutes to 4 hours. (I believe 28 stops in all in the 7 days) Shore excursions were offered each day. We chose to walk through the port towns instead, and saw interesting slices of local life everywhere plus lovely old and new architecture. One spectacular example is the Nidaros domkirke, a cathedral in Trondheim which has a huge rose window and ornate Wagner organ plus lovely flower beds. Trondheim was described to us as Norway's third largest city and appeared very liveable. The two major fjords on the coast are Geiranger and Trollfjord. Both were spectacularly scenic with forested walls rising out of the ocean. We spent something like 4 hours each way in the Geiranger to reach the port and back out to the coast, and it was spectacular. Lots of waterfalls and old farmhouses which are mainly vacation homes now. The staff did a good job on the intercom pointing out significant sights. I was quite surprised to note that there were usually chains of small islands to our west, keeping water very calm. It also surprised me that the coastline changed from thickly tree-lined to nothing but rock, and then back again. I thought briefly when we were in the rocky areas that we were too far north for trees, but a few hours later, there they were again. Another thing that surprised us is that we were above the Arctic Circle for a couple of days (Our final stop was in Kirkenes, on the northern coast just a stone's throw from the Russian border.) and the weather was really not very cold. When we were in open water on an open deck it was chilly, fleece jacket weather, but on land it was mid to high 60's. The Crossing the Arctic Circle baptism ceremony, for those passengers interested, was accomplished with ice water and lots of horseplay. We did not get to see the Northern Lights because the sky was cloudy most of the time. We also did not see whales, dolphins, or walruses which we had expected. There was so much else to see that we were not disappointed. One big disappointment: walking around the town of Bodo I dropped my camera. I tried it and all seemed OK. I didn't discover until we were in Copenhagen that the 1GB memory card had popped out and was still lying on a Norwegian sidewalk somewhere. No photos of the wedding and few of the rest of the trip. I was a little disappointed in Copenhagen. All of the historic and lovely places were still there, but the streets were crowded with tourists, much more than our last two visits there. In addition, the Stroget ("walking street") which had housed many shops with local art and beautiful clothing, jewelry, silver, china, etc. was now too high rent for many of the old shops which are being replaced by Starbucks, The Gap, Nike, and other U.S. chains. What a shame. We had planned a night at the famed Tivoli park, an interesting locale in the middle of the city. It contains many restaurants, beautiful flower gardens, a large number of outdoor and indoor concert venues, and many amusement park rides. Unfortunately it rained or drizzled every night that we were there. Does it prove that we're getting old when rain convinced us we didn't want to go that badly? We did hoist an umbrella one evening to stroll through Copenhagen's red light district (quite close to downtown) which seems to cater to straights and gays equally. We were surprised to see groups of people tucked into corners obviously sharing drugs. Interestingly it never felt dangerous to be there. For the foodies: Scandinavian breakfasts are traditionally lavish buffets containing hard and soft-boiled eggs, bacon, sausage, liver pate, assorted cold cuts, toast, hard rolls, croissants, sweet rolls, coffee cakes, tomatoes, cucumbers, carrots,peppers, lots of fruit, and a large, wonderful assortments of cheeses. Most also offered marinated herring and smoked salmon as well as small tubes of caviar. Tea, coffee, juices were standard. There were also a few items I did not recognize. As you might expect, fish was plentiful plus delicious shrimp from Iceland. Fruit was beautiful and very tasty, particularly berries. Pineapple from Costa Rica was the best I have ever tasted. Desserts were bountiful, artistic, and delicious. The whole trip was just a delight. I would strongly recommend the Norwegian Coastal Cruise Lines to anyone who wants a happy, relaxing voyage without frills. We both decided we would like to go again, but the 14 day round trip instead. It's one of our retirement dreams for now. |
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![]() Puester wrote: > Day six of our trip found us flying to Bergen, Norway, a lovely old city. What's to be potentially "offended" about? Lovely trip report, thanks :-) -- Best Greg |
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![]() "Puester" > wrote > Day six of our trip found us flying to Bergen, Norway, a lovely old city. > > Although I had intended to keep a daily diary, the sights and experiences > were so overwhelming that I decided to "live in the moment" and just enjoy > what I was seeing rather than to keep a strict record. Isn't that the best way, really? You see some people, they obviously have to wait to watch the video to see if they had a good time. Thank you for that fabulous story, Parts I & II. Breaks my heart about the camera. nancy |
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Greg wrote:
> What's to be potentially "offended" about? Lovely trip report, thanks > :-) I'm guessing it was the mention of whale meat. (Or maybe it was that part she wrote about Starbucks encroaching...) Gloria, it's just a crying shame about the camera card. :-( Bob |
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On Thu, 07 Sep 2006 13:36:34 GMT, Puester >
wrote: great report zapped! Thank you so much Gloria! I have always wanted to go up to Scandinavia and you have written so beautifully of the trip and scenery and cruise and food, that I am even more tempted. Sorry about your camera ![]() ![]() Thank you again for taking the time to post your travels! I loved them! aloha, Cea --smithfarms.com farmers of pure kona roast beans to kona to email |
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Bob Terwilliger wrote:
> Greg wrote: > >> What's to be potentially "offended" about? Lovely trip report, thanks >> :-) > > I'm guessing it was the mention of whale meat. > (Or maybe it was that part she wrote about Starbucks encroaching...) > No, it was actually in response to the recent rant about OT posting. gloria p |
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