Norway, Sweden, Denmark

I jinxed us by posting about the great weather we had in Oslo. The next day it turned bad, heavily overcast, cold, windy with drizzle and the threat of heavier rain.

Fram in Oslo

We decided to go to the Fram ship museum. It is a pretty interesting story, and the original ship Fram is in the museum and you can board it and look around. The Norwegian explorer Fridjof Nansen commissioned it in an attempt to reach the North Pole. When some wreckage from the USS Jeanette, which was lost in the ice north of Alaska, washed up in Svalbard, the northern islands of Norway, this gave Nansen an idea. He theorized the ice flowed across the Arctic ocean, and if you got stuck in the ice in the correct spot it would carry you across the North Pole. Many people thought he was crazy, because even if the theory was true, no ship could withstand the incredible pressure of miles of ice. The Fram was designed for this journey. It was built extremely strongly, but the key design feature was its round smooth hull, which cause the ship to be squeezed up and out of the ice when the pressure increased instead of being crushed.

Nansen and 11 other crew set out on the Fram in 1893 with 5 years of supplies. They successfully got stuck in the pack ice and slowly drifted north. After 18 months Nansen felt like the path of the drift wasn't going to take them close to the pole so he and one other man took a team of sled dogs and left the ship to head for the pole. They had to turn back before reaching it, but they were to that point the closest anyone had come to the pole. In 1896, after three years bring stuck in the polar ice, the Fram came out near the Svalbard islands.

Kitchen of the Fram

After looking over this relatively small ship that they were trapped in the ice with for 3 years, Yanmei told me that she would like to do this type of adventure if she were born in that time period. This is one of the most flabbergasting things I have ever heard her say. She hates the cold, and she feels cold if the temperature is below 25C. She wore a sweater in Egypt for goodness' sake. Yet she wants to be stuck in the Arctic ice for three years!

Sweater in the Sahara

The museum had a simulation of what it was like, which I'd explored while she was using the restroom. Basically it was a meat locker that is decorated to look like the inside of a ship, with shifting groaning decks, it is a little dark and spooky, then you can exit through a small tunnel of ice. To see how serious she was about doing something like this, I sent Yanmei in and then waited by the exit. After a couple minutes she came out and she wasn't too happy with me. 🙂 I couldn't help but laugh. Later she could laugh at herself.

Yanmei as an Arctic explorer

After the museum we braved the weather to take a ferry back to the center of town.

The next day we had the train from Oslo to Copenhagen. There is no direct train, you have to switch in Gothenburg, Sweden. We had two options, take the 7am train and have 6.5 hours in Gothenburg to look around, or we could take the 1pm train and have a short 30 minute layover. Based on the weather forecast for heavy rain in Gothenburg we decided to sleep in and skip the whirlwind tour. Of course when we got up the next day it was sunny in Oslo again.

Anyway the 1pm train turned out to be overcrowded. There was no reserved seating, and there were are large number of school girls lining up to board. Several groups in different uniforms, so I guess there was some girls soccer tournament or something they were all going to. I wanted to get seats on the coastal side, but we couldn't and we were lucky to get seats at all. Some people were stuck sitting in the corridors. There were some nice views on the coastal side but we weren't able to get any pictures. Actually the landscape reminded me a lot of Northern Ontario from our train trip across Canada last summer.

When we got to Gothenburg it wasn't raining, but the weather wasn't as nice as Oslo and we could see a lot of water on the ground, so maybe we made the correct decision. We just had time to use the restroom and grab a sandwich at the Subway in the station before boarding the train for Copenhagen. The toilet cost 10 Swedish Crowns to use, and I had no Swedish currency. Luckily they accepted credit cards. The guy was very serious about it, asking to see my ID and the whole deal, for a ~1€ charge. I really don't like the pay toilets in international train stations. They are common in Europe. The one in Gothenburg is the first one I've seen that takes credit cards, so I was lucky. Normally even if you thought ahead and have some local cash, you won't have the coins needed to pay the fee. Sometimes there are change machines and sometimes there aren't. Overall it is a bad first experience for people arriving in the country.

Anyway we got on the train to Copenhagen. I thought there might be some good pictures when we crossed the bridge from Sweden to Denmark, but all I got was the wind turbine farm.

We arrived in Copenhagen on time at 8:40pm and got to our hotel shortly thereafter.

-David

 

Night train to Kraków

[Bonus post by Yanmei.]

Originally I was optimistic about our second night train. The first night train from Florence to Vienna was horrible because we had upper beds and I was anxious about falling down and I couldn't have a good sleep. So this time we booked lower beds and also I prepared a blindfold and ear plugs, so I thought I could have a good sleep. Unfortunately something unpredictable happened.

When we arrived to our cabin we found it was six beds instead of four beds, so the space between the beds was very small. It was impossible to sit on the lower bed. I also worried about hitting my head if I sat up in the middle of the night. However this was not the worst thing. I thought David and I would have the cabin to ourselves. Suddenly two other guys came into the cabin to sleep above us. I started to despair. The first guy was very tall and strong, at least 300 lbs. The second guy after him looked like a Sumo wrestler, he looked double David's size. He had the bed above me! OMG! When he climbed into bed I saw his leg, it looked as big as an elephant's. I asked David if he could switch with the guy, but David said it was too late and not polite.

After he lied down I felt like the bed would crash down any minute, even though he was nice and didn't twist his body. I started to imagine the injuries I would suffer if the bed fell on me. I probably wouldn't die, and we had insurance to pay for injuries. But I would still have to suffer the pain. Maybe my face could get twisted and I could get disabled then David would leave me. It made me anxious and I felt helpless so I prayed to God that the bed was very strong and could support 500lbs and that nothing bad would happen.

After turning off the light and closing the cabin door, I started to smell some stinky feet. I moved my blindfold from my eyes to my nose and mouth. Also the bed was super hard. I had to turn every few minutes or it would start to hurt. I also worried about how David would sleep. After the last night train he told me the beds remind him of the ones in jail, very hard and only 1 blanket. Actually this time we had no blankets. I guess he will suffer all night, however after a few minutes I heard him start to snore.

In the morning I woke up and nothing bad had happened. I had a pretty good sleep. David told me the guy above me nearly didn't sleep and didn't stay in the bed above me much. I felt very lucky. They were nice guys. But I guess this is that last time we will take a night train.

-Yanmei

[David: also these night trains have no showers. This particular one had no dining car either so there was no water or breakfast. Luckily we brought bottles of water with us. I agree no more night trains.]

 

 

Last day in Prague

For the next leg we had booked a night train from Prague to Kraków, Poland. After the previous bad experience on the night train I wanted to abandon this plan. At least we reserved bottom bunks, but it was still couchettes not real sleeping berths.

A little while ago my brother Chris suggested we take a ferry from Swinoujscie, Poland to Ystad, Sweden. Ystad is only about 90 minutes train from Copenhagen. We need to end up in Copenhagen because that is where our flight out of Europe leaves from. I also thought taking a ferry would be fun, so I tried to arrange this plan. Swinoujscie is on the north coast and Kraków is in the south of Poland so it is a long journey. There is a night train that connects the two, but it turned out to be sold out on the date we need. So I looked into a day train. There is nothing direct so you have to make connections, and one of the connections was sold out, meaning we'd have to stay over night in another town then catch an early train the rest of the way. I even contacted a Polish travel agency to help. Eventually we felt like it was just too much trouble and stress, which is not what we wanted so we gave up that plan. I wanted to give up Poland entirely and just go through Germany to get to Copenhagen. Yanmei didn't want to skip Poland so she devised a new plan that we could live with. I won't spoil that yet though.

Anyway we checked out of our hotel at noon and had 10 hours to kill until the 10pm train. Unfortunately it was cold, rainy and windy, and also most museums were closed because it was Monday. I suggested we do an escape room. I've been wanting to try one for a while, but we always have higher priorities. There was one close to the hotel called MindMaze so I reserved a time for us and we braved the rain to go there.

An escape room is a live puzzle game. Basically you get a team and are locked in a room and you have to figure out how to escape within a time limit. The one we booked was for 2-5 people so we could do it as a couple. The theme was an alchemist's laboratory and we had 60 minutes to escape.

In the room there was a locked chest a locked desk a locked wardrobe a locked dresser and various other stylistic things such as jars with chemicals, old books etc. It was very fun. We had to work as a team and we did. Yanmei would notice things that I didn't and vice versa. For example I figured out how to open the first lock, and Yanmei found an important clue hidden behind a painting.

In the Alchemist's Lab

We ended up escaping in 58 minutes although we needed two hints to do so. The time seemed to fly by. I think we could do better next time now that we understand better how clues link together. Apparently many people don't escape even with the hints. Anyway we want to try more of these, and they have them in most cities now. It would also be fun to do it with a group of friends. I know there are more difficult ones designed for larger groups with longer time limits.

We still had some more time to kill and considered going to see a movie such as Jurassic World, but ended up just doing a bit of shopping instead since the rain stopped.

Finally we headed to the train station to catch the night train to Poland.

-David