Days 41 – 46: St Petersburg and home to Helsinki

WARNING:  This post is a biggie …. make yourself a vat of coffee!


 Day 41:  We think…..and Friday

Tram into Helsinki to retrieve repaired bikes – James punctured pride will take a little longer….Our new neighbours on the campsite are a lovely Australian family, Nick, Liz, Tye and Shay – I hope  the boys names are correct guys… We led Nick and Liz astray supping wine until midnight last night – but they did not take much persuading :). K somewhat dehydrated in the morning!   They like us are off to St Petersburg by cruise ferry today – another adventure…

Cruise ferry Princess Maria – enormous – 10 decks ! We decamped to cabin 6629 and dropped our bags – quick deck tour and then drawn by some kind of magnet – to the Funny Rabbit bar!  Nothing to do with sex aids!  Thought we would down a minor glass of wine pre-prandial….. but the Lady K spotted that there was a Happy Hour just starting – but only for cocktails! We forced ourselves to imbibe x number of cocks tails – or was it tocks sails!  Or even socks tails … my socks could tell tales after walking for 3 days with blisters !s Suffice to say, we sailed to our cabin, had some food and were in medieval sailors bunks by 8.30 pm!

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Would that be ONE dry martini?

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Would that be two Long Island Iced Teas?

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Round 1

 

Picnic in the cabin - knives got through the boarding scan!

Picnic in the cabin – knives got through the boarding scan!

42.  Saturday:  Sunny St Petersburg at 9.30 am in the morning, walking tour and the Hermitage

The route into St P passenger dock is through numerous islands with aging and semi scuttled ships.  Evidence of fortifications from the wars with Sweden and Finland.  Then a narrow channel through the largest commercial docks we have ever seen.  The horizon filled with dock side cranes and ships for scrap metal, wood, containers … you name it.

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Offshore fortifications

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Biggest docks - ever

Biggest docks – ever

We stood on deck and watched the dockside fork lift trucks manoeuver the heavy guys / stays / ropes as we docked.

Shuttle bus to St Isaacs Cathedral after going through Russian Passport and immigration control – not too onerous even with 5,000+ tourists from the Occident….  K foot navigated to our apart-hotel near the Kazan Kanal – nice bedroom, shared kitchen and bathroom facilities – good and cheap.  Now to meet our tour guide, Natalia – lovely lady.  She met us outside the hotel and we started on a quest for Rubles!  Having nearly purchased £200 worth of phone top up and several bank queues later, Euros were exchanged for Rubles.  Despite us expressing surprise that ATMs would not work for Euro bank cards, we did establish later that they do; our guide just did not know how or where – surprisingly 😦

Once we got going on the walking tour, Natalia was extremely knowledgable about facts of construction, why, who, height etc.  We started with the Cathedral of our Lady of Kazan.  Inspired by St Peter’s Basilica in Rome and built in 1811.  Constructed to house the icon of our Lady of Kazan, which disappeared during 1917 and was repatriated from New York – people queue up to kiss the icon …. needless to say, we did not.  During the Communist era, sac-religiously it was used as a museum of atheism!

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Our hotel was 3 mins walk from here

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Saw the Church of the Spilled Blood, a cacophony of colour with over 7000 sq m of mosaics and numerous types of coloured marble covering the exterior and interior.  Built in 1881 as a memorial to Alexander II who was assassinated on this site.  During WWII and the siege of Leningrad, which lasted a phenomenal 900 days, this and many (most) other buildings were heavily bombed / destroyed by the Germans.  St Petersburg / Russia has spent billions on restoration works … all done, as our guide would say, by ‘Russian master craftsmen’!  This opened to the public in 1997 after 20 years of restoration.   The icon stand in the nave, a glow of gold, had only just opened.

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Gilded icon stand

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The assassination spot

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View down the canal to the Church of Spilled Blood from the Little Bank griffon bridge right outside our hotel

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The final church of the day was St Isaac’s Cathedral.  This is not the original one – the one commissioned by Peter the Great in 1710, and several of its successors, slid into the river as a result of flooding and the whole of St P being built on marsh land.  This version was opened in 1858 and was the design of a French architect, de Montferrand, who won a competition and was the chosen architect based on a book of drawings and little experience.  Whilst he may have had the vision and made it his life’s work, he was not technically good:  work had to keep stopping and be redesigned to deal with his mistakes.  Hundreds of serfs lost their lives, crushed by huge chunks of falling marble.  The gilding process of large dome, where 60+ died from inhaling mercury fumes, must have been worth it as it has not needed re-gilding since!

A little rest

A little rest

 

Front view with massive marble columns

Front view with massive marble columns

Gilded domb:  a cupula within a cupla and many upturned pottery pots inside for acoustics

Gilded dome: a cupula within a cupla and many upturned pottery pots inside for acoustics

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We also walked up the Field of Mars, named after the Roman God of War.  Used for military parades previously, it now has the eternal flame 1957, dedicated to those who lost their lives in the 1917 revolution.

Field of Mars

Field of Mars

Eternal Flame

Eternal Flame

K's Eternal Flame

K’s Eternal Flame

Lilacs planted everywhere as Peter liked them

Lilacs planted everywhere as Peter liked them

It is adjacent to the Summer Garden, which was one of Peter the Great’s projects … he imported all sorts of trees and shrubs, which was then lost to flooding.  Catherine the Great then had it redesigned as an English garden.

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It was close to Mikhaylovskiy Castle, built for Paul I in 1797.  He feared for his life and had a moat, drawbridge and a secret tunnel, but was murdered only 40 days after moving in!

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We also walked several bits of Nevskiy Prospekt:  the main artery with shops and some interesting buildings.  There remains a blue warning to inhabitants that this side of the street is more prone to bombings; a relict of the siege of Leningrad.  Interestingly, this long street is also home to numerous churches of different faiths – all restored!

Views down side waterways and roads

Views down side waterways and roads

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Multi faith Churches

Multi faith Churches

And only recently restored

And only recently restored

Singer sewing machine building

Singer sewing machine building

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Set of 4 horses being tamed on the 4 corners of a bridge.  So popular, the sculpter made them twice more for other cities

Set of 4 horses being tamed on the 4 corners of a bridge. So popular, the sculpter made them twice more for other cities

And onto the Hermitage.  This museum is housed in 4 huge buildings … they had to keep extending to accommodate all the artifacts!  Apparently, it would take 11 years to see every exhibit.  We had 2.5 hours and it was whirlwind to see what we did.  The blue Winter Palace was built for Tsarina Elizabeth from 1754  and all the Romanovs lived here – opulent does not half describe it.  The use of white and gilt and mirrors makes a dazzling display.  Particularly of note were the main staircase, a throne room and a room with 100s of portraits of the officers who successfully overcame Napoleon’s invasion (if they could not obtain a portrait, the picture frame is left blank).  There are also the Old Hermitage, the New Hermitage and the General Staff Building make up the other buildings around the Palace Square.

Some of the key works of art that we saw were:

  • Leonardo’s Madonna Litta
  • Rubens’ Baccus (only sold after his death as he liked it so much)
  • Michelangelo’s marble crouching boy
  • Houdon’s statue of Voltaire
  • Peacock clock

We missed out on the Impressionists due to lack of time 😦

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The Palace Square is also interesting.  The Alexander Column, dedicated to Alexander I and erected in 1834, is the world’s largest free standing single piece of marble.  The square is the site of the Bloody Sunday massacre January 1905, when ordinary people in their Sunday best had a peaceful protest about their living conditions and were gunned down on the orders of tsar Nicholas II.  About 1000 died.  The aftermath led to the 1905 Revolution.  The square is now used for political meetings and concerts.

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Having walked our socks off … J developed a massive blister underneath his foot and needed a pain killer … we found a bar / restaurant near our hotel and had a beer and a SMALL meal … cheapest options.  Picked up some more sustaining food items in a tiny corner shop and ate these back in the hotel, with the litre of red we had bought with us.

 

43.  Sunday:  Peterhof and Peter and Paul Fortress

9.00 start and met outside the hotel by Natalia and the driver.  30 mins or so and out of St P.  Interesting to see more of the architecture, such as a Triumphant Arch (Napoleon’s defeat), Metro buildings that could pass for classical temples, ordinary apartment blocks (few semis or detached houses) and the Palace that Putin uses when in town.

Metro

Metro

Metro doors

Metro doors

Peterhof is an extravagant collection of palaces, fountains and landscaped gardens.  Having come across the site in 1705, Peter the Great commissioned the building of a palace here in 1714.  He intended the estate to equal, if not rival, Versailles.  Elizabeth altered much of the interiors.  Although her changes were nothing to the Germans, who occupied the Palaces and then left them as charred ruins, merely walls half standing. This is another example of the massive restoration spend that has been completed by ‘Russian master craftsmen’ and it is still on-going, as more fountains, rooms and buildings are opened up to the public.  It is so busy that the rooms are by timed ticket, and when not being crushed by tour groups, you have to keep shuffling forward … no time to stand and stare as the Room KGB move you on.  No interior pix allowed.

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Sugar hit before we start the tour

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The cascades are just amazing … the Grand Cascade alone has 37 gilded sculptures, 64 fountains and 142 water jets.  There are fountains and cascades everywhere, all very different to each other.  Some are almost comedic.  There are buildings to entertain with elevating tables, baths etc.  Peter the Great mostly used to come by boat, but the main Peterhof / St P road had entertainment along it length for the nobility who had to follow the court.  It is a massive complex and you could easily spend a day, however, when I suggested that the grounds would be a lovely place for a family picnic, I was told absolutely NOT allowed!

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And this is just one of the Romanov palaces outside St P – all just as sumptuous.

Our driver was quite a character… he had lived in the States for a while and spoke really good English, and as more open about the post USSR / Communism era.  He explained that people now had mortgages they could not afford and that many had gone credit buying for goods mad … the Communist era had some merit.

We were dropped at the Peter and Paul Fortress.  First built from wood in 1703 and then reconstructed in stone.  It was Peter the Great’s protection for the new St Petersburg against the Swedes, however, they were defeated before it was completed so it became a garrison.  Again, 100s of serfs and Swedish war prisoners perished in the swampy build.  Most of the centre of St P is built on swamp:  timbers were laid down and then stone on top … the Hermitage is on St Basil’s island and this was raised 15 feet.

The main interest at the P and P Fortress is the Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral.  Peter commissioned it to be a burial chapel for the Romanov family.  The design is Baroque, rejecting traditional Russian architecture … so no onions here.  The whole complex is vast; the Mint still produces coins and medals and many buildings with temporary and permanent exhibitions.

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Toilet bus.  Pay, collect paper, sit with doors across aisle, leave by rear!

Toilet bus. Pay, collect paper, sit with doors across aisle, leave by rear!

One museum here we did go into was the Trubetskoy Bastion:  two floors of intact prison cells and the the isolation room with information about the prisoners, including Aleksey d.1718, as accused of treason by his father Peter the Great.  Others were from uprisings such as Maxin Gorky, Lenin’s bother and Leon Trotsky.  Most that came through the doors were hung and they are now finding mass graves in the Fortress complex from opposers to the 1917 revolution.

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It was here that we parted from Natalia, our guide.  She was worth every penny (paid in Euros!) as we would never have found our way around, pre-booked the tickets when needed and found the obscure entrances … we just would not have seen anything like what we did …. just wish she had a little more soul and would have been more prepared to talk about Russia today more.

Blisters, tired feet, hunger and thirst made it imperative that we stopped for respite, so we tumbled into a restaurant.  With wine at £40/bottle, we had vodka shots and a tasty small dish.  The nearby Information hut was very helpful and told us what time the hop on / hop off bus went, where from and where to find a cash point.  We were a little lost getting to the cash point, BUT found buzzing Aleksandrovskiy Park with its street performers and brass models of the main St P’s buildings.  Finally, we saw police men (not evident when you see motorbikes and cars racing at 60 mph + down Neviskiy Prospekt), no English but pointed us in the right direction to the Metro and the ATM … how easy to get cash when you know how!

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Onto the hop on / hop off bus.  Did a 1.5 circuit to get back to near our hotel.  Covered much of what we had seen but filled in some of the more mundane and fun detail.

Supper was a tourist restaurant, but K got to eat Russian Soup and tried a meat pie and J had a burger and it was close to the hotel.  On the walk to the hotel we spotted a booze shop:  vodka and a bottle of 7Up 🙂   Bed at 1.00 chatting to our fellow resident, John from Oz who shared pretzels and travel stories.  J spotted skinny dippers from our bedroom window into the canal … too dark to see!

 

44.  Monday:  Greeter and Russian Market

Up and out – to meet our Greeter (Greeters.com – free local people who welcome you to their city), Victoria – definitely the star of the St Petersburg trip!  It was bound to go well as she met us with gifts of a Griffon <our hotel was by the griffon Bank Bridge> magnet and local (delicious – did not last long – chocolates).   She took us on the Underground to the Macken Russia – the escalators in the Underground are miles steeper than the London Tube – James managed to stay upright!   Macken Russia is housed in a long warehouse style building – it is a scale model of all Russia – accurate down to the last detail. We walked from St Petersburg in the west, through Moscow, via the Urals, Siberia, Steppes – all the way to the east coast – 9 hours of time zones!!!  Using a large wall map, Victoria was able to indicate where different areas are, and explain the industry, mining and agriculture of each area.  She also helped us to understand more about living in apartments, Dachas, the industries etc.  We loved her openness and warmth.

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Victoria recommended a restaurant specialising in traditional Russian meat pies – delicious and nothing like the one K had tried in the tourist restaurant.

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Running out of time, V guided K through a ‘hidden courtyard’ to a local supermarket and recommended items  for our evening ferry picnic and which brand of Vodka to buy.

We checked out of our aparthotel, Tatiana was our host, we made our way circuitously – well K is the master navigator (NOT always!) – to the cruise ship Princess Maria.  On board in cabin 6017 this time – the Funny Rabbit bar was screaming for our business – we had rabbit pie for lunch after all…  Guess what K made us drink ? Tocks Sails again….


45.  Tuesday and back ‘HOME’ in Helsinki

Slightly fatigued and outwalked in St Petes, this was a down day – that is to say we – K mostly, cleaned our vanhome – spit and polish like you never saw in your life…  BBQ in the evening – and all is well. A nice Turkish man let us use the remains of his BBQ coals – he seemed to be in charge of about 30 young men on a tour…


46.  Wednesday:  Limited walking and ‘free’ tram tour

A leisurely start …J just managed to see our neighbours, Liz and Nick, off and exchange blog addresses … they are heading for Turkey, Croatia etc … so may be a useful info source!

Decided to start using our transport cards today, which we had bought with the help of Irmeli, our Helsinki Greeter.  Metro into the main station, walk to Tourist office to get the route for the trams 2/3 tour.  Basically, these trams do a figure of 8 and cover some of the main areas.  Picnic by the main market place and a visit to the main Lutheran Helsinki cathedral (sadly seems very plain after St Petersburg excessive opulence).

View of Russian Orthadox  church with Aldos Av>>> building

View of Russian Orthadox church with Aldos Av>>> building

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Then a random tram (making the most of the transport card) on Line number 6 … stopped at a small shopping centre and found chain Cinnabon:  coffee and Finnish cinnamon buns …. Beth told us to hunt them out and these were bloody good … warm with melting frosting!  We watched some being made …

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Back to the campsite for K’s minimalist packing for her trip back to see her Munchkin … can’t wait…..

 

 

 

 

 

Days 18-19 Stockholm and Aged Ps

Wednesday

Drove in completly the wrong direction (west) to fill up LPG which we is we use for the habitation (cooking, heating and fridge) for 40 mins to find a small one man band who was not even in residence.  Ho hum.

Drove east to the airport to collect the Aged Ps.  Slight detour to SE Stockholm to a garage that did sell LPG (apparently only 35 LPG stations in Sweden) and could not work out which Autogas attachment to use and how to make the pump actually deliver the gas … 30 mins later with a little help we were on our way again.  Another learning curve, but a vital one.  We’ll know for next time.

Visited the Vasa Museum.  Bit of a drive through the city centre … cast London from your mind as nothing like that, traffic wise.  Parked and lunched in the large tourist bus parking.  Went to check with Vasa Museum staff if we could stay there … ticket man left his post, walked out with me, spoke to tourist bus driver and came to the conclusion that whilst the bus drivers did not mind as it is not high season and not busy, there was no guarantee we would not get a parking ticket.  Such helpfulness you would never encounter at home.  K wrote a windscreen note that we had asked about parking, and had a lame 78 year old with us (K’s Dad – fit as a flea!) with us.  No parking fine, but not busy 🙂

The Aged P’s and K had all visited the Vasa previously, but happy to revisit – truely amazing.  It went down in 1628 on its maiden voyage as too top heavy by far and ressurected in 1959 BUT what is so amazing is the cold and lack of salt mean it is 98% intact.  The details on the carvings etc are stunning.  Really impressive.

Incredible ornate carvings

Incredible ornate carvings

98% intact from 1600s

98% intact from 1600s

Very top heavy to keeled over on maiden voyage

Very top heavy to keeled over on maiden voyage

Campsite fine if a little faded – Aged P’s cabin basic but has necessaries.  Can park Chardonnay adjacent.  BBQ.

Thursday

Tunnelbahn into Stockholm City centre.  Wide open streets, government buildings and water, water everywhere.  Did a walk around the main parts of the city to see where some palaces which are now largely Gov buildings.  Crossed into Gamla Stan, the old city island. Hoped to join a walking tour, but no show on tour guide so used guide book and did our own tour.  More former palaces now Gov buildings and narrow charismatic streets.  Charming and attractive.  BBQ.

Water aand views at every turn

Water aand views at every turn

Buildings are painted red tp look like brick or yellow like stone

Buildings are painted red tp look like brick or yellow like stone

Not so distant shores

Not so distant shores

The Aged Ps

The Aged Ps

Typical corner

Typical corner

Wrought iron church steeple

Wrought iron church steeple

We knw what you were doing - Dad vacating public toilet

We knw what you were doing – Dad vacating public toilet

James' turn - told to "Pisoir Off"

James’ turn – told to “Pisoir Off”

Centre of Gamla Stan - the old town

Centre of Gamla Stan – the old town

Back of the Opera House

Back of the Opera House

Day 17: Up the coast

Tuesday

Stayed at Kalmar last night, left at 0800 hours and motored north towards Stockholm, stopped to see the spectacular Gota Canal with its seven locks, through central Stockholm rush hour traffic, and on to Skokloster Castle for a gin and tonic and minor Martini… now parked at the lakeshore and K preparing haute cuisine from a tin and gonic, sorry, tinonjonic, Swedish for food….. tomorrow we will meet Katherine’s parents who will stay for six days and bring food parcels and their excellent company…. then next week on to N Sweden and Findland….
Gota Canal / Bergs Slussar: series of locks

Gota Canal / Bergs Slussar: series of locks

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Days 14-17 Copenhagen by foot and bike and into Sweden

14 – Saturday

Easy bike to the city centre and it really is easy.  Every street, and I mean every single one, has a double width cycle track in both directions.  You follow the dedicated cycle traffic lights at junctions and stop to let people cross over the cycle track to get on and off busses.  Incrediably easy and safe.

Joined a free (tip what you think at the end) walking tour with Maria, a 6 foot red head from Yorkshire, quite a Viking look.  She focussed on the central part of Copenhagen and explained a lot about several fires flattening parts of the city, the Royals and stories from WW2.  All most excellent.

Indecisive gold lady barometer: comes out on a bike if fair and with an umbrella if not

Indecisive gold lady barometer: comes out on a bike if fair and with an umbrella if not

Walking tour coffee break

Walking tour coffee break

Bishop Absalon should have been on a pony, but the scultpr thought it did not look impressive enough

Bishop Absalon should have been on a pony, but the sculptor thought it did not look impressive enough and gave him a big’un

At NyHaven

At NyHaven

Nyhavn used to be the red light ditrict, but now a humming cafe and bar area

Nyhavn used to be the red light ditrict, but now a humming cafe and bar area

Nyhavn

Nyhavn

After a Burger King lunch for J (missing his chips!) we cycled back to Chardonnay with the intention of spending the rest of the afternon in the Carlsberg factory. Slight change of plan …. we’d been robbed !!!  The buggers had got in through prising open and breaking the three fastenings on a window, broken into the laptop store and pulled loads out of cupboards.  So instead of sippling beer, we spent the afternoon in the Central Police station!  The very efficient police officer said on hearing our story, ‘thats a real bag of shit!’ They were very supportive and efficient. Thankfully it is only ‘stuff’ they have taken and we were not here, but it is inconveneint.  They left all the booze :).   We have now bought a Chromebook so we have USB to upload images and play DVDs, but it is  a poor exchange for the Mac Book Air, Ipod, Ipad, James camera, small cash… but they left our passports and our external hard drive with all our photos and our mifi internal wifi router…

For you Latin scholars, non illigitimi carborundam…..

We eventually found a lovely campsite just east of Copenhagen to hole up in until we could get the window fixed.

15 – Sunday

A profitable day – two loads of laundry, showered ourselves and did an exterior (much needed) wash of Chardonnay.  A walk to local shops and we bought:

  1. a six pack of Carlsberg, as we still needed to drink some
  2. meat for a BBQ – our first of this trip
  3. a wine box for £14, just to top up our supplies.

The really helpful young man at the desk also identified no less than 4 caravan repair / service companies for us to try.

Closed the day playing with the camera tripod, a BBQ and fire log.

Using the tipod for a selfie

Using the tipod for a selfie

Proud of our clean Chardonnay, and then it bloody rained and a tree dropped crap on her

Proud of our clean Chardonnay, and then it bloody rained and a tree dropped crap on her

15 – Monday

Early start and drove to the outskirts of Roskilde where the really lovely workshop chap only charged a tenner to replace the three window catches.  And then we were on our way …. off to Sweden as we have to be in Stockholm on Weds to meet the Aged P’s.

Despite the break in, we still really like Denmark and the Danes and will be back!

The Oresund crossing was a first for my very own bridge master.  First tunnel and then bridge.

Denmark and into the tunnel

Denmark and into the tunnel

Crossing into Sweden in the middle of the Sea

Crossing into Sweden in the middle of the Baltic Sea

Cable stay part of the bridge

Cable stay part of the bridge

Rather than bomb up the motorway, we hugged the coast as much as we could.  Changing scenery … flat and the best aggricultural land in Sweden ….  rolling hills and rocky outcrops … can tell is is damp here as the mosses and lichens are amazing colours … forests of pines and silver birches carpetted with spring flowers … beaches and holiday resorts / small fishing ports.

Sweden has a right to roam and you seem to be able to park up pretty much anywhere.  There are also a LOT of motorhomes around, predominently Swedish and German.  We spent the night in Kalmar, right on the sea, next to a beautifully maintained graveyard and fortress castle.

Captivating Copenhagen

Day 13 – Feck

Had read a lot that visitors thought Copenhagen was worth a visit but nothing compared to other EU capitals.  We thoroughly enjoyed our day and will stay another …. still parked alongside the Copenhagen factory, but yet to partake of their produce!

Bus to near centre and walk to Northern part of the city:  State Art Gallery, Botanical Gardens, Rosenborg Slot with the royal treasury (not a patch on the stones at the Tower of London, but a fraction of the population) and of course a walk to see the Little Mermaid, who has legs!!

Impressive State Art Gallery exterior - free entry :)

Impressive State Art Gallery exterior – free entry 🙂

Lewd faces caught my eye

Lewd faces caught my eye

Bad hair day!

Bad hair day!

What we think of most of the modern art!

What we think of most of the modern art

Know the Danes have long legs, but this is ridiculous!

Know the Danes have long legs, but this is ridiculous!

Botanical Gardens Glasshouse - we have been spoilt by RHS Wisely and Kew Gardens

Botanical Gardens Glasshouse – we have been spoilt by RHS Wisely and Kew Gardens

Very rare plant, thankfully only poisonous on occasion

Very rare plant, thankfully only poisonous on occasion.  J added needs to be watered regularly!!!

Lunch back at the Art Gallery

Lunch back at the Art Gallery

Rosenberg Slot

Rosenberg Slot

Interior Rosenborg

Interior Rosenborg

Little Mermaid

Little Mermaid