Friday, May 3, 2019

Coming Full Circle


     We were in Oslo partly to see the paintings of Edvard Munch. However, the National Museum, where many of them hang, was closed. We went to the Munch Museum, only to learn that many of the paintings there were not on display. The galleries were under construction. At least entrance was free because of it. And we got to see large murals that probably would not have been able to travel.
     So we didn’t get to see Munch's famous The Scream.
      But in the men's room I got to see The Smile.

     The next day we went to the Nobel Peace Center. It was heartening and depressing at the same time. The cycle of hope and progress followed by steps back. This generation holds hope again. 

There was an installation about their demonstrations about climate change, inspired by 16-year-old Greta Thunberg of Sweden.






     We walked home via the National Palace, which was being decorated for May 1, Labor Day. 
      We rode around on the trams all day because most places were closed, then we caught the ferry back to Copenhagen.

    I thought this blog would be a good rainy day activity. I expected to post more. But in the first 29 days of the trip, we had only four days (give or take) of rain, and most of those were when we were on a train. We actually were regretting bringing so many winter-weight clothes. Then on our return to Copenhagen, it was 38°F/3°C. The high winds made it feel a lot colder and caused a cycle-one (or bike-lone).

      The weather worked out perfectly also because we had planned for this part of our stay to be a recovery. We stayed in a hotel connected to a water spa and got massages today. No worries about missing out on another gorgeous spring day or having to sightsee Copenhagen, which we had done on our first two—day stay here.
    

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

You will travel over water

3 days after Easter on the Traunsee, we were along the Rhine with its famous hilltop castles.


















2 days after that, we took a cruise through the Norwegian fjords, and a train ride back through the gorgeous mountains. 






















Now we are in Oslo.




Monday, April 22, 2019

Check the blog website

Hi, all! To those that subscribed: I just learned that something I have been doing makes the blog too big to send you notifications. Please go to https://marykevintravel.blogspot.com/ to see the most recent posts. In future, I will stop doing what has been preventing notifications from being sent, so I hope you will get them in future.
Thanks for your patience!
- Kevin

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Catching Up

     The next day started cold with art in buildings designed by Hundertwasser
    
     and ended warm with drinks along the Donau Canal.
    
     BTW: It may appear we drink more in Europe (and we might), but it seems more a part of the culture here, as this sign on the pub across from our hotel shows.
    
     I had never heard of Hundertwasser before my first trip to Austria in 1995, but I have been a big fan ever since. He designed a block of public housing units that I nicknamed the Fred Flinstone building because they are so interesting, off-kilter, and (if you ask me) fun.
    
     But his rationale was, "Why should these people have to live in boring buildings?" We also visited a museum whose building he designed that also housed his art. There was a photo show of rural life, its positives and negatives. Here are a couple of our faves.
    
     Along the way, we went to an Apotheke (Pharmacy) whose sign in the window explained that the owners' grandmother had worked in the same pharmacy in the 1930s.
    
     We finally found the Jewish Memorial, which we had tried to find earlier but failed three days in a row.
 

     The next day involved another train ride, this time to Gmunden, a small town on a big lake where people come in summer and winter for outdoor activities and indoor spas. When we told people in Vienna that was our next stop, they asked, "Why?" The main reason was to ride out Easter (as big a holiday as Xmas in Europe). But we also wanted a smaller quieter place mid-vacation and a nature experience to balance our city ones. All our hopes came true as we wandered the town on the first day.   

      The weather was magnificent (26C/70F and sunny each day).
      The views were fantastic.
 
   
     And the attic studio just out of town that we rented made for a great retreat.
     The next day we went up the lower near mountain, Grunberg.
     We took a cable car to the top and immediately rode back down on a "summer toboggan," a sort of monorail.
     (Not Mary! Or Kevin)
     We then set off on an hour hike to Laudachsee, a mountain lake.
   
     That made for a full day. The next day, we stayed closer to home. Mary had a recovery day, and Kevin explored the town by foot.




    






     The next day was Easter (today! And I'm caught up!). We took a boat ride on the lake.
   
     Then we came home and took a long nap. It's been relaxing and invigorating.
    
     I summarized the last few days to catch up to my pictures. Remember there is a comment tool at the bottom of each entry on the blog's web page. Please let me know what you want more or less of. Thanks!
   


Coming Full Circle

     We were in Oslo partly to see the paintings of Edvard Munch. However, the National Museum, where many of them hang, was closed. We ...