We’re about to begin our Scandanavian/Baltic adventure. As I write this, we are sitting in the airport in Las Vegas, having left our home in Bellingham, Washington, 7 1/2 hours ago, yet being no closer to Stockholm, Sweden, than when we left this morning. Why, you might ask, have we traveled so long to merely … Continue reading
Tag Archives: Home Exchange in Sweden
2016 Home Exchange in Sweden
Karlbergsvägen
We landed safe and sound in Stockholm after a 10.5 hour great-circle route flight over Canada, Greenland, Iceland and Norway spanning 1/5 of the globe’s circumferance. The plane was new and comfortable, but we never seem to sleep when we fly. It was a 30-minute taxi ride from the airport to our home for the … Continue reading
Trash Talking
Tomorrow is the annual Stockholm Marathon. Nearly 16,700 runners have signed up. We are not among them. Without knowing it, however, we completed 1/3 of the course today, hiking from our apartment in the Vasastan district down to Gamla stan, literally, the Old City, and back. Yesterday, after morning coffee, we found the grocery store … Continue reading
Off Road
We decided to put off a tour of the Parliament Building until next weekend, but stuck with our plan to avoid the downtown streets and buses, assuming the marathon would be causing gridlock throughout the city. Consequently, we spent the day off the streets by going first underground and then on the water. Stockholm’s metro … Continue reading
Takin’ Care of Business
Yesterday, June 6, was National Day here in the Kingdom of Sweden (really, that’s the official name), which mainly seems to be a day of show and display for the Royal Family and, since 2005, an excuse to take a day off from work. I don’t really get this whole royalty business. It’s probably because … Continue reading
Nobelesse Oblige
Following our visit to the Royal Palace – and taking advantage of the fact that most of the crowds were on the other side of the building, awaiting the arrival of the King – we took another look around Gamla stan, the Old City. The streets were much less crowded this time, as you can … Continue reading
Vasa Matta You?
We visited Stockholm briefly 12 years ago with Dale’s mother and one of the highlights of that trip for me was a stop at the Vasa Museum. The Vasa was a Swedish warship built between 1626-1628 during Sweden’s imperial phase. It was one of the largest and most heavily armed warships of the age, but … Continue reading
Stockholm Pass
It’s not uncommon for us to spend the first week or so on a home exchange playing tourist, that is, visiting all the things tourists visit and riding the public transit to get the lay of the land (Dale says I “imprint” the local map in my subconscious). So, here in Stockholm we purchased a … Continue reading
Stormaktstiden
On occassion, I will upload a post before I have thoroughly proof-read it. Unfortunately, as soon as a post is uploaded, WordPress immediately converts and sends it to subscribers to my blog as an email, locked in time as originally written. I can still edit my posts after-the-fact, but most subscribers never see the revised … Continue reading
Hangin’ Out
Wonder how I found the time to research and write about so much of Sweden’s history recently? Answer: Laundry Day. The forecast was cold and drizzly and we had been here for 10 days, so we decided to stay in for the day to take care of domestic chores. You might think that doing laundry … Continue reading
Djurgården
Toward the end of this trip we will be biking for 12 days through the Baltic countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, averaging about 25 miles per day. So earlier this week we decided to take a practice run. We rented bikes in Östermalm, the eastern side of town, intending to ride the perimeter of … Continue reading
Sandhamn
When we lived in Miami, Florida, we sailed or motored a few times to Sands Key, an uninhabited island in Biscayne Bay at the far north end of the Florida Keys. A couple days ago, we took the ferry to the Swedish equivalent, Sandön (“Sand Island”), which lies 30 miles east of Stockholm on the … Continue reading
Ingvar Kamprad Elmtaryd Agunnaryd
Ingvar Kamprad grew up on a farm called Elmtaryd in the parish of Agunnaryd, Småland, in the south of Sweden, where, in 1943 at the age of 17, he opened a mail order business selling pencils, postcards and other small merchandise that he named IKEA, an acronym using the first letters of his name and … Continue reading
Looks Like Rain, Dear
Yesterday, we flew from Stockholm to Kiruna in northern Sweden. We arrived in 40° F, rainy weather, picked up our rental car, and, after a quick lunch, drove out to the Sámi Camp to see the reindeer. The Sámi are the indigenous people of the Nordic countries, today numbering about 60,000, one-third of whom live … Continue reading
Midnight Sun
There’s an annual astronomical event called the summer solstice. I know what it is, and you probably do too, but try as I might, I can’t describe it. I’m a visual thinker and this is one picture that I can’t put into words. It has to do with the axial tilt of the earth and … Continue reading
Can you say “Gearggevággi?”
Can you say “Gearggevággi?” No? How about “Kärkvagge?” Me, neither. Both of those are Sámi for “Stone Valley;” the first is the older way, following by the modern spelling. I think, but don’t know for sure, that they are both pronounced the same. Anyway, I’m going with “Stone Valley,” for reasons you’ll soon understand. Stone … Continue reading
The Norwegian Campaign
When we woke up the morning after our Stone Valley hike, the sky looked ominous. At the lodge, they make a point of telling you that Abisko is in the rain shadow of the mountains of Norway and they get very little rain as a result. Could be, but that wasn’t our experience. Sensing that … Continue reading
Njullá
Rested and ready after our driving day, we woke early intending to hike as much of Abisko nationalpark as we could in one day. The highest point in the park is the summit of Mt. Njullá at 1,164m (3,820 ft.). In the winter, Njullá is a ski mountain and there’s a single chairlift at 400m … Continue reading
Kungsleden
We timed our travels in Northern Scandinavia well with hikes on cool, dry days and driving on rainy days. As you saw, the best weather of all was when we most wanted it: for the vistas from the summit of Mt. Njullá. The weather held for the rest of the day as we hiked south … Continue reading
Never Mined
According to my GPS, as we were leaving Abisko for Kiruna, we apparently passed through the Twilight Zone; or, maybe the ground was subsiding: We spent a little time in Kiruna after we landed at the airport there a few days ago before visiting the Sámi Camp to see the reindeer and then continuing on … Continue reading
Fixit
While we were in Abisko, the United Kingdom held a referendum on whether or not to leave the European Union. With 72% of the electorate voting, the final tally was 52% declaring for “Leave” and 48% for “Remain.” That translates to 1,269,501 more people voting to leave than to stay. The world media labeled this … Continue reading
Just for the Halibut
We’re back in Norway for a few days, this time in the country’s second most populated city and former capitol, Bergen, which has been superceded on both counts by Oslo, to the south. We’re here to meet our friends, the Giles, whom we met through home exchanging several years ago. We arrived first, on Friday, … Continue reading
Ladies and Gyntlemen, may I present Edvard Grieg
On Saturday morning, as we were leaving the hotel, we were surprised when a taxi pulled up along side of us and friendly voices called out our names. Our friends, Bob and Johnna, had arrived a little earlier than we expected. We were all going together at noon to Troldhaugen, the home of one of … Continue reading
Sognefjord
Fjords are deep, underwater valleys that often extend far inland. They are created by glaciers so enormous and heavy that they compress and erode the land below before beginning to melt and float on the intruding ocean water. For this reason, fjords are normally deeper toward their middle or landward terminus than at their connection … Continue reading
Flåm Railway
After our boat trip through the Sognefjord, we took the Flåm-Myrdal railway, billed as one of the world’s great scenic railroads, back to Bergen. Built by hand in the 1920s and 1930s, it is an amazing thing. By the way, if you’re thinking of going, the right-hand side is the better view. The Flåm railway … Continue reading