100 best things in Scandanavia
#2
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Yep, trolls definitely are among the best things. But remeber that they don´t live in Denmark. <BR><BR>I believe not so many people here have travelled in Scandinavia (except the capitals and Norwegian fjords). They just don´t know enough to answer. Perhaps they could come up with 10 best things...
#5
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Stockholm is well worth visiting.It is a fine city with beautiful buildings and a long history.One of the things that really impressed me there was the Vasa Museum where a 400-year old ship of that name was taken from the sea and put in a specially designed building.I am not normally a sea-food eater but it was excellent in Stockholm.I liked the fact that English is spoken by everybody and the people are very helpful with tourist information.
#7
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100 best? I guess there will be thousands to make it just.<BR>Hence let us boil down to a few:<BR><BR>Denmark: Copenhagen. Tivoli, The Glyptotek museum and Gitte Kik's Lunch Bar, also the harbor Nyhavn.<BR><BR>Sweden: Stockholm?<BR><BR>Norway: Naturewise Northern Norway (Bodø-Lofoten) But that is disappointingly far. Nutshell: Yes, it is a fair way to get an impression.<BR>Bergen: Nice, nice, but rainy, rainy.<BR>Gudbrand's Valley: YES. Turn left at Otta to pass Lom and the Sognefjell mountains to get to the "Nutshell", or continue to Dombåa and down the Romsdal Valley to Åndalsnes and then south over the Trollstigen hairpins to Geiranger.<BR>Or just stay in Oslo and enjoy life, wethwetr bathing or skiing.<BR>Anyone ready for the top 100s of Oslo?<BR><BR>Bjorn, Oslo<BR>
#11
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I see Kalena has been to Finland ;o)<BR><BR>I agree. Best in Finland (although not actually Scandinavia) are pristine forests, thousands and thousands of lakes with even drinkable water, sauna, berry and mushroom picking, sailing in the archipelago, cooking fish in an open fire, outdoors by sea or lake. And skiing in early March, when sun shines brightly and snow`s surface is so hard that you feel you are flying.<BR><BR>Peace and quiet.
#19
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Here's an excerpt of my trip to Copenhagen with a side trip to Drager
Connie and I were trying to come up with an apt discription of Copenhagen. We thought it isn't as beautiful or romantic as Paris, it doesn't have the hustle and bustle of New York City, or the dignity of London, and the only word we can think to fit this lovely city is pretty. And that, by no means, does it justice. Visually, it's a marvel, old buildings dating back centuries, juxtaposed with modern archetictual ones which are not jarring and fit the general mix of the city.
It's exciting without being bizarre and it doesn't reek with the palatable tension of Manhattan. It's quiet, in the two weeks we've been here, we've not heard one siren or any people yelling in the streets.There's plenty to see here but it also serves as a base to see other places, out of the way places.
We took a day trip out to Dragør which is about thirty by a very convenient and frequent bus ride. Dragør is an old Amager Dutch village, a small old fishing village. I noticed that the houses outside of Copenhagen have a sameness about them. They are all basic boxes with a pointed roof or a basic "A" frame house, red, orange-red roofs (rooves?) different painted facades which add color, many of the window frames are a bright blue and or white. The more costly ones are the same basic home, only larger and small boxes tacked on to it to break up the sameness.
Most of them or all of them had chimneys, and carefully fenced in with a car in front, and often a garden and again a vegetable patch.
Dragør is find. There is no longer commercial fishing there but it is a vacation place for the Danes from all over the country. There is no beach to speak of, and you cannot walk directly to the water. The approach is blocked by a small bank topped by heavy stones.
The vacation homes are the biggest I have seen, although they followed the pattern I described, there were often many additions added.
The homes were about three or four hundred feet back from approach to the beach, and these homes had large fences or bushes protecting. Some marked with signs saying they were alarmed.
However, each and every house, had an octagonal cupola. They had large windows and could sit six with some squeezing but were made to sit four people, usually a small table in the middle. It was the place guests were entertained, intimate and it seemed to me inadequate by Long Island standards.
The grass was always trim, some had playthings, but no pools and the time we were there we saw about one or two families in the thirty plus homes.
They came here to take out there boats, and the old fishing piers were lined with boats of all sizes and an occasional yacht. They probably eat at home since there were few restaurants and the one we had lunch in was excellent, simple plain food and served with a great deal of attention.
I recommend making a side trip to Drager especially in the summertime
Connie and I were trying to come up with an apt discription of Copenhagen. We thought it isn't as beautiful or romantic as Paris, it doesn't have the hustle and bustle of New York City, or the dignity of London, and the only word we can think to fit this lovely city is pretty. And that, by no means, does it justice. Visually, it's a marvel, old buildings dating back centuries, juxtaposed with modern archetictual ones which are not jarring and fit the general mix of the city.
It's exciting without being bizarre and it doesn't reek with the palatable tension of Manhattan. It's quiet, in the two weeks we've been here, we've not heard one siren or any people yelling in the streets.There's plenty to see here but it also serves as a base to see other places, out of the way places.
We took a day trip out to Dragør which is about thirty by a very convenient and frequent bus ride. Dragør is an old Amager Dutch village, a small old fishing village. I noticed that the houses outside of Copenhagen have a sameness about them. They are all basic boxes with a pointed roof or a basic "A" frame house, red, orange-red roofs (rooves?) different painted facades which add color, many of the window frames are a bright blue and or white. The more costly ones are the same basic home, only larger and small boxes tacked on to it to break up the sameness.
Most of them or all of them had chimneys, and carefully fenced in with a car in front, and often a garden and again a vegetable patch.
Dragør is find. There is no longer commercial fishing there but it is a vacation place for the Danes from all over the country. There is no beach to speak of, and you cannot walk directly to the water. The approach is blocked by a small bank topped by heavy stones.
The vacation homes are the biggest I have seen, although they followed the pattern I described, there were often many additions added.
The homes were about three or four hundred feet back from approach to the beach, and these homes had large fences or bushes protecting. Some marked with signs saying they were alarmed.
However, each and every house, had an octagonal cupola. They had large windows and could sit six with some squeezing but were made to sit four people, usually a small table in the middle. It was the place guests were entertained, intimate and it seemed to me inadequate by Long Island standards.
The grass was always trim, some had playthings, but no pools and the time we were there we saw about one or two families in the thirty plus homes.
They came here to take out there boats, and the old fishing piers were lined with boats of all sizes and an occasional yacht. They probably eat at home since there were few restaurants and the one we had lunch in was excellent, simple plain food and served with a great deal of attention.
I recommend making a side trip to Drager especially in the summertime