The Vagabond Adventure Daily Journal

Where Are We Now?

Good to see you! Hope you’re enjoying the journey!

This journal provides you snapshots of our journey as we work our way around the world, never traveling by jet. It’s a chance to get a close-up view of the planet as we explore it the way people did 120 years ago.

Day 625 - Bodø, Norway
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Day 625 - Bodø, Norway

I continued to plow on with my efforts to find us a way to Svalbard (aka Spitzenberg), the northernmost human settlement on earth, located just 500 miles up the frigid waters of the Arctic Sea from Bodø. Despite being relatively nearby, it is an exceedingly difficult place to reach, assuming, like us, you were not planning to take a jet to get there. Cruise ships will take you to the islands from England, or Portugal, even the United States, but finding a ship from Bodø was tougher than finding a democrat in Alabama.

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Day 621 - Bodø, Norway
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Day 621 - Bodø, Norway

Up and at ‘em our first full morning in Bodø (pronounced buddha), and work is on our minds. We purposely booked five days in the Radisson Hotel and snagged a fine room with an excellent view of the harbor. I spend the better part of day one trying to catch up on my notes. Then we undertake our explorations of this sweet little city hovering at the lip of the Arctic Circle: a stroll through the rain and chilly temperatures.

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Day 620 - Nordland Train to Bodø
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Day 620 - Nordland Train to Bodø

Trondheim sits deep in the interior of Norway, but Stillfjord’s long inland waters link the city to the Atlantic. Its location makes Norway’s longest train – the Nordline – a fine way to travel the country's rugged mountains and valleys if you want to make it to the Arctic Circle. We did and so we boarded the train at 7:49 AM and headed to Bodø (pronounced Buddha) and the tip of the world.

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Day 617 - Trondheim
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Day 617 - Trondheim

We emerged from Vesteralen gangplank into sleet and whipping winds. Winter was coming. During our 10 minute walk to the Clarion Hotel, we felt the solid tick-tack of ice pellets on our hoods, yet just a few minute's earlier the city’s wharf had been bathed in sunlight. Now everywhere the sky was black.

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Day 616 - Ålesund to Trondheim
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Day 616 - Ålesund to Trondheim

We were sorry to depart Ålesund even if it was pouring rain and foggy. It reminded me of a Norwegian Loreto (a lovely town in Baja, Mexico). Beautiful and embraceable.

We tramped three blocks to the Hurtigruten Terminal, awaiting the arrival of the Vesteralen, one of Hurtigruten's older ferries (but renovated in 2022).

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Day 615 - Sunnmøre
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Day 615 - Sunnmøre

In parts of Northern Europe, there is a tradition of creating living, outdoor museums. The idea is that they illustrate what life was like in the past; a way to preserve a time that has otherwise been obliterated. One of these is the Sunnmøre Museum about a half-hour drive from Ålesund.

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Day 612 - Ålesund
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Day 612 - Ålesund

Ålesund is a small city with an unusual history. In the early 20th century its old and cramped wooden buildings and homes were burned to ashes in a great fire. Kaiser Wilhelm, the German king and cousins to the Czar of Russia and the King of England whom he would drag into War World I, was a big fan of the region, often taking extended vacations there. When the city burned down, he paid, out of his own pocket, to have much of the city rebuilt. The result was a brand new city where streets were lined with lovely Art Nouveau buildings that make it one of the prettiest in Norway, if not Europe.

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Day 608 - Bergen to Flåm
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Day 608 - Bergen to Flåm

Our first stop was the village of Skerjehamn, tucked along side one of the fjords in this part of the world. That would be after sleeping overnight on our snug ferry berth. We pass through Norways Sognefjord, it largest and arguably most beautiful. I think the photos say it all. The excursion to Fløm takes 24 hours $100 each plus $100 each for meals.

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Day 607 - Bergen
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Day 607 - Bergen

Bergen is ancient, a 1000 years old, founded in 1070 A.D.. It’s a big harbor and always has been. In the 1300s it was Norway’s capital. And it was here that the famous dried cod was brought from high up in the north and traded to countries in Western and Central Europe, making it an important and wealthy city.

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Day 604 - Oslo, Norway
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Day 604 - Oslo, Norway

We walked down from the heights to the docks into an area clearly favored by locals and towards Aker Brygg Lake. The throngs seem to swarm here out of the pavement, filling the harbor and its restaurants with patrons. Hundreds lined up at food trucks or ferry excursions that would take them among the local islands. As we walked the quay, I heard Turkish, Arabic, English, Spanish, Norwegian, and German. Norway’s demographics, and Oslo’s in particular, have been changing fast and we could see it all around us.

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Day 603 - Oslo, Norway
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Day 603 - Oslo, Norway

Oslo is home to 700,000 people but punches above its weight. It's smaller than Stockholm, but feels much bigger. Where Stockholm is cleaner, Oslo is more urban, grittier. Stockholm is vibrant, Oslo is busy. The people of Stockholm are caucasian, Oslo is more diverse. Over the past several years, its population has been rapidly increasing. Immigrants from the Middle East and Central Europe flock to Norway's biggest city for jobs, quality of life and higher pay, and the city is booming! Oslo has the feel of a practical, hard-working city. Stockholm seems something like Disney World. Neither is bad, just different.

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Day 600-601 - Stockholm, Sweden
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Day 600-601 - Stockholm, Sweden

Up and off to explore ... Located near the bottom of the country, Stockholm is Sweden's capital, financial, artistic and political center bustling with a million and a half souls across its small archipelago of 14 islands that sit clustered near Lake Märlaren a body of water that abuts the Baltic Sea. At one time the lake was part of the Baltic, but movements of Earth’s crust created a rock barrier that became so shallow by 1200 ships could no longer enter. The bay became a lake.

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Day 598 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Day 598 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

It was time to return to Pittsburgh to visit Nana and generally regroup. We stayed overnight at the Oslo airport, arose the next morning and boarded a Delta Flight that took us to Amsterdam, then Boston and onto Pittsburgh. It wasn't quite as painful as it sounds. Long day, but by evening, Pittsburgh time, we were walking into or downtown apartment, looking forward the next morning to sifting through bales of mail and visiting with our kids, old friends Pirate baseball, and, of course, Nana herself, still standing after 86 years on Planet Earth.

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Day 597 - Copenhagen to Oslo
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Day 597 - Copenhagen to Oslo

The morning of May 16 found us rolling quickly north by train into Sweden thanks to of one of the world’s great engineering marvels: the Øresund Bridge, which, it turns out, is far more than a bridge. The train sweeps from Copenhagen beneath the Baltic Sea toward the Swedish city of Malmö. A cable-stayed bridge, nearly 8 km (5 miles) long, connects itself to an artificial island where it disappears into a tunnel that runs another 4 km (2.5 miles) before re-emerging into the light. It was a stunning ride.

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Day 594 To Copenhagen, Denmark
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Day 594 To Copenhagen, Denmark

I have little memory and fewer notes about our train to Copenhagen. I can only say it rolled Cyndy and me across roughly 225 miles of northern Europe for 7 hours. That doesn't sound fast, but it felt that way.

Once we arrived, we settled into our comfortable hotel, the Grand Joanne, only a few hundred feet from the Copenhagen train station, ate dinner at the hotel restaurant while we got our feet on the ground, and enjoyed the remainder of the evening doing absolutely nothing.

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Day 593 Garmisch-Partenkirchen to Berlin
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Day 593 Garmisch-Partenkirchen to Berlin

The Wall was a horrifying example of political suppression. I felt a sadness for Germany. Its people have been through so much. We think of Europe as stable and united; old in our North American terms. Historically this is true. But politically in many ways, the United States has been fixed longer than Europe. Germany did not exist as a nation until the 1870s. It suffered through wars and uprisings in 1871 (France), 1914 (World War I), 1939 (World War II) and was not fully reunited after World War II until 1989 when the Soviet Union collapsed and the Wall came down. It was such a powerful symbol of freedom and I remembered that Molly, my oldest daughter was in the womb at the time. "You'll be entering a finer world," I remember whispering to her. But it turns out not to be that simple.

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