Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Fascinating Copenhagen

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosenborg_Castle

At the end of our ten day Holland America cruise of the Baltic, Shannon and I spent another five days in June visiting the sights of Denmark's capital, København.  Not nearly enough time.

 The basics: City Hall, right across from Tivoli Gardens (second oldest amusement park in the world) and this memorial to Hans Christian Andersen.






That's the tower of City Hall sticking up back there.


Then we moved on to the museums.  What a lot of them there are.

Runic Stones

Wow.  Realism.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Little_Mermaid_(statue)

Monday, August 19, 2019

Baltic Cruise II


From St Petersburg we sailed back west, visiting Helsinki, Finland; Stockholm, Sweden; Rostock (Wismar tour) and Kiel, Germany.

Helsinki has much fancy modern architecture, contrasted by the offbeat tourist draw called the Church in the Rock.


Fascinating Ceiling


Stockholm features the Vasa Museum, containing a ship resurrected from the harbor 333 years after it foundered and sank on its maiden voyage in 1628.  Swedish engineering has vastly improved since.








Stockholm Harbor

From Rostock, Germany we took a short excursion to the medieval town of Wismar, where we learned a lot about the early history of brewing beer.  Beer was health food actually -- for all ages -- as the water was not safe to drink unless made into beer.

They love these pig sculptures
According to our guide the mayor in the olden days would issue a proclamation like, 'Dear Townspeople, on Wednesday please do not shit or piss in the canal, as we'll be brewing beer from that water on Thursday.  Thank you.'  Or some such.


So we went to a brewery, in business since 1452 and had a pint.









The tour included a walk around a church still not entirely reconstructed from WWII.



The tour guide lamented the fact that, in her opinion, Allied bombing of the church in the last days of the war was an "entirely unnecessary" act.  I did not offer my opinion that there had already been by that time six million unnecessary acts committed by Germans.

Next day we docked in Kiel, Germany.  Not much to report from there.



What?


 Then we were back to Copenhagen for more adventures.





Saturday, August 17, 2019

Baltic Cruise


Finally!  We made our way to Copenhagen by fits and starts at the end of May, delayed in Denver and unable to make an overnight connection out of Newark due to weather; arrived a day late (having paid for an expensive hotel room that we never stepped foot in) so ... at last we boarded the Holland America ship MS Zuiderdam for a tour of the Baltic Sea.



After sailing east from Copenhagen for a day and two nights we arrived in Tallin, Estonia, where, by the oddest of happy coincidences, Shannon's brother Reid and sister-in-law Tina were docked aboard a different cruise line alongside our ship; them sailing west from St Petersburg.  We had a fun visit, drank some beer in Tallin, had lunch and lots of laughs.


Some like it dark, some like it light
The fourth and fifth days we spent in Russia, touring St Petersburg's Hermitage museum, the gardens of Peterhof, and a bunch of churches, one of which was actually unusual and mildly interesting.

Our Entrance at the Hermitage













View of the Hermitage from across the Neva River






















Catherine the Great was not so much a collector of art as she was a collector of others' collections of art.

See?
Two days of viewing some of the three million pieces in the Hermitage left me mildly disappointed (and over-amazed), since the French Impressionist painters and Post-Impressionists were displayed in a different building, which we were not privileged to see.

Large Specimen


Lunch along the touristy Nevskiy Prospekt

The gardens at Peterhof

That is the Baltic Sea out there
Apparently Czar Peter The Great went to France and toured Versailles, which caused him to develop a severe case of Palace Envy.  Peterhof was the result.  Nice try, but nowhere near as impressive.

Monday, March 4, 2019

Tucson Winter Warmness




A lot different from home in Durango

Romero Canyon in The Santa Catalina Mtns
Great hiking and biking down here in Tucson, Pima County AZ.






We have seen a bit of wildlife this season, including three bobcats, a herd of bighorn sheep, a snake and this little Gila Monster, besides the usual birds and rabbits.



CLIMBING WASSON PEAK



One adventure that we always seem to fit in to a visit to Tucson is to climb Mt Wasson, the highest of the Tucson Mountains just west of the city.  This year we took the Hugh Norris Trail (I call it the Chuck Norris Trail -- it's a ass-kicker) up and back for a total of eleven miles and a gain in elevation of 2000 ft.

The poppies and all other flowers were out in force.  Crazy!


Sweaty work on a six hour walk

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

South Carolina


This past week Shannon and I traveled to Charleston, South Carolina, and to Myrtle Beach SC for a family reunion centered around a remembrance of Shannon's late sister Beth.


Before the rest of the gang arrived we explored the city of Charleston for a couple blustery cold days.  Founded in 1670 Charleston's early history is notable for the predominant slave trade.  At the south end of the peninsula there are many very old mansions crowded onto the narrow streets.

Seems like a fire hazard, so crowded together
And there were many fires that wiped out entire neighborhoods.  Nowadays there is a modern Fire Department, even though one station does have a quaint antique look:


Of course the Civil War began in Charleston harbor with the first shots fired at tiny Ft Sumter in 1861.  We visited the island.

The Stars and Stripes still flies there proudly today.

Inside the ruins.  The fort was taken by Confederate forces in three days, then later more or less destroyed as Union forces took it back, what was left of it.
Big guns
 And smaller guns.  A ten inch mortar, about the size in the front below, fired that first shot at Ft Sumter.


As to the American Civil War, on or around Thanksgiving Day, 1862, when Harriet Beecher Stowe was introduced to President Abraham Lincoln, he allegedly greeted her with these words, 'So you're the little woman who wrote the book [Uncle Tom's Cabin] that made this great war!'

So in the same vein, this above might be called the little cannon that started that great big war.
--------------------------

As more family arrived we relocated from Charleston up to Myrtle Beach SC.

Brookgreen Gardens is an interesting spot near Myrtle Beach.  Here we are with Shannon's older sister Michelle and son Gus, admiring the huge liveoak trees hung with Spanish Moss (an epiphyte plant that is neither Spanish nor moss).
Brookgreen Gardens is mostly a sculpture garden -- many, many sculptures of mythological figures, literary characters, and various constructions.

Don Quixote
Many depictions of the goddess Diana
Myrtle Beach also has a seaside boardwalk.

Shannon and Gus

On Sunday, 18th of November, the group of almost 40 of us gathered to celebrate Beth's life.  She will be missed.



Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Grand Canyon again

As summer came to an end we spent a few days camping in the Kaibab National Forest on the north rim of Grand Canyon, hiking and riding the length of Rainbow Rim Trail #10; north from Locust Point one day to the end at Parissawampitts Point, and south the following day to Timp Point and back.  36 miles or so.  And only one flat tire.  There weren't many other bike riders that we saw but the usual comment from them was "Amazing."

And how!

Sunset behind Mt Trumbull, Emma, and Dellenbaugh