Category: Uncategorized
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Fjords of Norway
Everyone knows the fjords of Norway. The fjords are long, narrow inlets from the Atlantic, bracketed by steep mountains. We went on a boat tour – electric of course! – on the Gudvangen fjord all the way to Flam. Once again, perfect weather. Most of nature here is untouched but there are a few villages…
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Bergen, Norway
Bergen is Norway’s second-largest city, after Oslo, It’s the gateway to several very scenic fjords at Norway’s Atlantic coast, but it is a very pleasant place to spend a few days in itself. The fish is fantastic, my best salmon ever. There is a mountain with great views, reachable with a short cable car ride.…
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Oslo, Norway, 2022
Oslo, like all of the Skandinavian capitals, is a beautiful, well-organized, friendly, exceedingly civilized, and restrained city. Nobody has anything to prove here. It’s a pleasure to stroll through the avenues and streets, enjoy the sights, and relax. They still have a king and queen; their park and parts of the palace are open to…
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Marseille, France
I spent about two and a half years living in Marseille, at the Mediterranean coast, at the boundary between the Côte d’Azur and the Côte Bleue (which both mean blue coast). Beautiful place, We had no time to hike in the Calanques, the Côte d’Azur’s most stunningly beautiful limestone min-fjords in the mountains at the…
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Luberon, France
The Luberon is a hilly region in France, southwest of the French Alps. It is stunningly beautiful and captures everything you have read about France except the Eiffel Tower. Very green, ancient villages built from rough rocks, cobblestones, flowers, Lavender. We spent two days traveling to the villages of Lourmarin, Saignon, Roussillon with its ochre…
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Avignon, France, 2022
There hasn’t always been a single pope. On occasion they couldn’t agree who gets the hat and ended up with multiple popes fighting each other. During this period, from 1309 to 1376, when they had up to three popes and they clearly couldn’t all be in Rome, Avignon was a papal seat for seven successive…
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Hiking on Tenerife
There really are remote places on Tenerife. One is around the Taganana mountains in the northeast. Getting there isn’t easy – a bus from Puerto to San Cristóbal, then an hour-long taxi ride up the mountains. The taxi ride was ridiculously cheap so I had to over-tip. The forest is occasionally steep and rugged, with…
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Tenerife, Orotavo, 2022
Tenerife is a island, one of the Spanish Canary islands, off the Atlantic coast of Morocco. In March, northern Europe is cold, but the Canaries are always warm. Corona isn’t quite over yet so I still don’t want to leave the EU. The south and east coast of Tenerife are very touristy, but the north…
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Malta 2021
Malta is an island in the Mediterranean sea, between the Italian island of Sicily and the African coast. It is a member state of the EU. Its location was strategic, it controlled trade between the western and eastern Mediterranean. It was under the control of the order of the Knights of Malta, which were involved…
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Breslau 2021
Brelau is in the south of Poland, and rivals it’s more well-known, and much more crowded, neighbor Cracow. Since 2016, when Breslau was culture capital of Europe, a “culture train” connects Breslau to Berlin, with presentations and talks on the train, so it’s easy to reach. Breslau has been completely restored since my first visit…
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Little Venice
Another sunny weekend in the winter 20/21, in Little Venice. That’s a neighborhood in the east of Berlin, just east of Berlin’s largest lake, the Müggelsee. It’s called Little Venice because it’s built on a system of canals, all houses have direct water access. It was unusually cold this year so most rivers and lakes…
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Winter 20/21 in Berlin
The winter in Berlin was unusually snowy. We normally don’t get much snow, or when we do, it melts quickly. This year winter looked exactly like winter is supposed to look like. The photos are from Grunewald forest, one of largest and forested parks in Berlin, between the Havel lakes and the western suburbs. At…
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Boats in Spreewald
Spreewald (river Spree forest) is a large region in Brandenburg, southeast of Berlin. The river Spree widens into a maze of small rivers and canals in the forest. There are a few villages where small hand-rowed boats run tours, or kayaks are rented. It’s incredibly scenic and calm. Most families here have lived in the…
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Cycling Saale-Unstrut
Saale and Unstrut are rivers in Sachsen-Anhalt, a few hours southwest from Berlin. The main city is Naumburg, best known for its Unesco-listed cathedral. From here, the countryside with its vineyards and numerous castles can be explored by bicycle. We even brought a tent to extend our range.… Read the rest
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Beelitz Heilstätten
Southwest from Berlin, a short train ride away, is the town of Beelitz with its Heilstätten hospital. It’s like a lost place, except that they have built a skywalk over it and do tours. Trees now grow in buildings and on partially collapsed roofs, and much of the facilities are open to the public. In…
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Szczecin/Stettin 2020
This blog is about traveling in Asia, but Corona makes travel abroad impractical, as my difficulties escaping Bangladesh have demonstrated. So I’ll be traveling in the EU for a while, where I cannot get stuck. First was Sczczecin (German: Stettin) in western Poland, close to the Baltic Sea. It’s a pleasant city, beautifully restored yet…
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Bangladesh 2020
I have visited most east Asian countries, but not Bangladesh. Dhaka, the capital, is the most crowded, busy, and poor place I have ever been to. The old town is a maze of winding alleys, packed with colorful rickshaws and crowds of people. It was so crowded in some places that I could not move,…
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Bangkok
Final stop Bangkok. Good place to replace the polarizing filter I broke a few days ago. Bangkok is into refrigerated malls bigtime, perhaps no surprise in hot and humid tropical weather. Traffic somehow managed to become even more dysfunctional than last year, and pedestrians have no rights even at zebra crossings and the rare pedestrian…
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Muang Mallika
To hours west of banglok is a historic village that shows life in Thailand at the time of King Rama IV. The entrance is a wooden covered bridge with rows of stalls on both sides. Everywhere are costumed people doing period things, like theshing rice, and selling period products. They even have their own old…
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Hua Hin
Hua Hin, the beach town favored by the Thai Kings… I fondly remember a sleepy white city with wide boulevards and sandy beaches, where a rickshaw once took me to the train station. Well, no more. It’s a crowded mess of traffic and tangled power lines, and the beaches are mostly private and difficult reach.…
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Ko Payam
Ko Payam is one of the northernmost Thai islands off the west coast. It’s a little difficult to reach, which may be the reason why it hasn’t really been discovered yet except by Westerners who spend the winter here. No hordes of tourists, no fancy hotels, just a few quiet beach resorts. There isn’t much…
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Thailand
Change of scenery… I am following the sun and went to Ko Lanta. That’s an island south of the tourist epicenter of Phuket and Ko Phi Phi, and far quieter than these. The beach resorts are widely spaced along its west coast, and it’s all sand and not paved. To get there I had to…
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Quiet Bali
It happened that the hall of the my chosen villa was full of French and Quebecois people, including a couple who live nearby. They know all the best restaurants so we got on a flock of motorbikes and had an excellent lunch. Much of the afternoon we stayed at their place, a big house filled…
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Back to Bali
I seem to be having a lot of connectivity issues… Catching up. Diving on Gili Air, and enjoying the mellow atmosphere of the island that is so sadly missing on Gili T. Then on to a couple more days on Bali – but not in those frenetic southern towns, but in a villa out in…
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Gili Air
The idea was to head east, but since the weather is turning rainy (and tropical rain means serious business) and the forecast east is just awful, I am turning west. When my connections didn’t work out and I got stuck in Lombok for many hours, my moto driver turned out to be a professional guide…
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Sumbawa
It takes time to reach Sumbawa – a boat from the Gilis to Lombok, the crossing Lombok to a harbor on the other side, then a ferry to Sumbawa. I arrived at the Yoyo’s Resort at 2 o’clock at night, after many hours in a very crowded minivan. A guy with a flashlight was waiting…
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Rebuilding an island
The Gilis are three small islands off the coast of Lombok,a few hours east of Bali. All three were badly hit by a magnitude-7.2 earthquake seven months ago. All cement structures collapsed, no building on the beach survived, and all three islands had to be completely evacuated. But now you can barely tell. There are…
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Unspoiled
Nusa Penida is another island near Bali, easily reachable from Lembongan. But the infrastructure is virtually nonexistent. A few villages, a few deeply rutted roads running up and down steep hills, and almost no people. Motorcycles are the best way to get around. The views down from the limestone cliffs and and a deep lake…
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Mantas
Plenty of dive centers on Lembongan. The highlight is Manta Point, a place some 15 meters under water where mantas come for cleaning. It’s essentially a big manta car wash where mantas wait in line, slowly circling, for their turn to be cleaned by several types of small fish. So you hove there and watch…
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Not Bali
Off the south-eastern coast of Bali are three small islands, Nusa Lembongan, Nusa Ceningan, and Nusa Penida, that are said to be like Bali was 20 years ago / will be the next Bali. Quiet villages, white beaches, people who have time, no traffic, and no concrete resorts anywhere. From Bali’s Sanur harbor, Lembongan is…