Monday, July 27, 2015

Last batch of photos and end of the blog

Last Photos


A collection of pictures that did not make the cut due to crappy internet. All days. Some captions, some just pictures.


 Norway falls

 Entrance to German Bunker in Norway

 Pool on the Viking Star with retractable roof

 The restaurant
 Couches in the Spa
 Stateroom


 Shipboard Atrium 3 decks


 An indoor beach in Denmark


 Winter Palace, St. Petersburg

 Summer Palace, Peterhoff Russia

 Church doors
 Hermitage entrance


Sunset in Stockholm and going home in the morning. A fitting end.

Friday, July 24, 2015

Extra Picture Page

Some photos that either did not make the cut or there was no internet service.

Mostly in order of trip.


 Church in Bergen

Outside Bergen Shop

Flam. The Valley.

 The hairpin road down into the valley

 The streets of Allborg

 City Hall, Allborg

An Irish Pub in Allborg Norway. Who would have thought?


Alborg, Denmark-Day 5

Alborg, Denmark-Day 5

Alborg, Denmark-Day 5


We pulled into the Danish island waters at 8:30 and wound our way through the entrance channels to Alborg, the third largest city in Denmark.

A really neat city combining University, major finance and small businesses. The harbor where we berthed is brand new and right next to the city center. Our tour started just across the street from the ship.


View from the dock into the city




Unable to continue blog as internet truly sucks. Will continue from Copenhagen.




Stockholm, Sweden-Day 14-15 Last night

Day 13-Last full day and night-Stockholm

All the passengers were advised to be up at 04:30 to watch the ship sail through the archipelago into the harbor at Stockholm. While not up at 04:30, the sight of passing islands close enough to touch at 07:30 was still pretty damn wonderful. Later on, our city tour guide told us aerial photography and satellites have counted more than 30,000 islands (some pretty damn tiny) in the Swedish waters. Most of the houses/complexes were very nicely done.

 Literally 40 feet from our balcony doors as we headed toward Stockholm

Beginning the tour in Stockholm

City Hall

 Church Spire

View along the harbor front

The ship pulled directly into the narrow harbor, turned in its' own length and moored by 09:00. Our tour of the city started at 10:30 so we had time to relax and get organized. We bussed the city to see the highlights (the Palace, the Opera House, Old Town, Parliament, etc.) and returned in two hours.

As Toni is still feeling kinda punk we did not shuttle back into the city center to meander. Instead we had a leisurely lunch and sat out by the infinity pool with a glass of wine and watched the people who were watching us from the nearby rock walls.

Packing up this afternoon with packed and tagged luggage outside the door ready for pickup and removal by 10:00 tonite. We have been given detailed instructions and luggage tags for tomorrow's departure.

One more dinner. Saved out the last of the semi-fancy duds to make a final splash in the restaurant. Canceled our 8:30 dinner reservations at Manfredi's restaurant in favor of an earlier dinner and off to bed.

Anyhow, look out Virginia, we are coming back.....

Helsinki, Finland-Day 13


Helsinki, Finland-Day 13


Toni is down with a deep cough/cold. Damn.

We docked in the fog. Fog is hardly the word for it but from our cabin it was hard to even see the pier.

The fog lifted around 10:30 and Lee boarded the shuttle into town as we had both decided to scrub the tour that was part of the trip.

Not much to report other than Helsinki appears to be a very clean major city with lots of high-end shops, at least in the area Lee explored. The streetcar system is rather dated looking but seems very efficient.


 Central Square, Helsinki 

Did not notice a lot of people smiling. Must have to do with the perpetual overcast.

 An oldie but goodie.

 Wide streets, well maintained, clean, made of brick

 The store for one footed people.

Off to Stockholm tomorrow for a day of coach tour around the city, then some free walk around time.

One night tied up in Stockholm and then board the plane for home. As nice as this has been, it is time to go home and see the cat (and mow.)


St. Petersburg Russia Day 11-12 (Part 2)

St. Petersburg Part 2

More Museums

We were still 25 folks on the same bus, same driver, same guide. All good. The 'gang' does a good job staying together and only two are a tad late returning after 'free time'.

The main thrust for today was a visit to Peterhoff, a palace in the countryside away from the hustle and bustle of the downtown palace or the summer palace or one of the mansions. Life must have been tough.
 Water comes from canal dug to Bay. Fountain jets up 21 meters.

View of the Peterhoff Palace. Spectacular.

 Toni got dressed up for lunch

Hydrofoil back to the ship.

We are about museum'd and palace'd out. 

Off to Helsinki! Or as Toni calls it, "Hellinski".

Thursday, July 23, 2015

St. Petersburg Russia-Days 11-12 (Part 1)

Saint Petersburg, Russia-Days 11-12

Wow!

It is very tough trying to describe this second largest city in Russia. We were here for two full days and spent a good deal of time driving thru the city going to different venues.

The city was originally named Petrograd (Peter's City), Leningrad later (after the revolution) and eventually St. Petersburg.

It is said to be the cultural capital of Russia with 65 theaters for all the non-video arts, museums everywhere (an intense native nostalgia for the past?), thousands of buildings done in solid concrete. Green and white for the royal palaces (mostly of Catherine the Great's time), lots of yellow for the rest. Dull brown is also a favorite. Apartment buildings everywhere and almost no evidence of single family residences anywhere in the city proper.

Our guide, Maria, did a great job for the two days of our tour "Ultimate St. Petersburg". She has a teaching degree in Chemistry but has been accepted to start medical school in September. Her English was very good and she was not reluctant to answer pointed questions about life in Russia as she knows it for the last 30 years. She was well versed in Gorbachav, Kruschev, Putin and more. She was also able to provide real life information on employment, daily life, and more. Quite a pleasant change from previous tour guides.




Maria our intrepid guide

Bazillions of concrete block apartments for miles

The port is very security aware. Each time we left or returned to the ship, we had to pass through passport control. As Russia requires a visa for anyone not always with the tour guide, no one was allowed to wander anywhere. Also, do not ever try to enter or leave the country without a passport.

 How to describe the tour? Big buses, small(ish) groups on each, lots of discussion about the history of Russia, unbelievable images of super-opulent lifestyles. It truly boggles the mind to think that the original gold statuary and filigree everywhere was actually solid gold leaf. When the Nazis were overrunning Russia and during the siege of Leningrad, most of the palaces were looted and destroyed. Palaces for summer, palaces for winter and the occasional small mansion in between.

Our first tour was of the Summer Palace, built for Catherine the Great and only used by her for 2 years before she died. Mind blowing.

 Summer Palace. At least a city block long, four sides of a square

 We had priority access, head of the line stuff.

 One of the rooms. Gold everywhere

After the first tour (the Summer Palace) we were driven to an enormous restaurant building that is used only for tour lunches I suspect. Peasant Fare was what we were promised and Peasant Fare is what we got. Borscht, meats, vegetables and (naturally) Vodka served well chilled. Quite a building to see, touristy as hell but neat.

Shades of backwoods Russia!

After lunch, a trip to the "Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood".  Has to be seen to be believed.

The Hermitage has to be seen to be believed. Spread across 5 buildings, the museum boasts a collection of more than 3,000,000 pieces covering just about every topic of the past. No more than 7% of the entire collection is ever on display at any one time and the contents are frequently changed out.

Only one building was built specifically for the Hermitage Museum, the other 4 were appropriated by Empress Catherine the Great to house her growing collection. Photography is allowed inside but without flash. We took @ 3,000 pictures, only a few shown here. For presentation times for the Lee and Toni-Russia Hermitage show check your local listings!

 Gold, Plaster, sculpture...everywhere

Room after room after room


Even got the Egyptians involved.

And that was day one.