Minutes ago I was standing in a square in Copenhagen enjoying the feeling of the sun on my face. It was my first experience with the sun in the Danish capital. We have not had warm weather here which is fine but the showers yesterday and rain on Monday were most unwelcome. When it hasn’t rained it has been mostly to partly cloudy. As frequently noted on this blog, I’m not a huge fan of the sun. It’s nice now and again but it was certainly appreciated this morning. It promises to be a very nice day which doesn’t do us much good as we’re flying to London in the afternoon. (Early tomorrow we fly back to the U.S.).
We haven’t encountered anyone in Finland or Denmark who didn’t speak English and indeed almost everyone save foreign born cab drivers speak it fluently. Talk about convenient. I’ve not once asked a native: do you speak English? Because it’s like asking: do you use food as sustenance? (Okay, that was a weird analogy.)
We’ve ridden the metro a lot the last few days and as I noted in my last post it is amazingly efficient and clean. Although yesterday we had a torturously long three minute wait for a train.
No one litters in this country (or in Finland) yet it’s a chore to find a waste basket in public areas. So what do Danes do with their rubbish?
Complaint department: the showers in Europe suck big time. Virtually no water pressure and you need an advanced degree in mechanical engineering to figure them out.
Yesterday we saw what looked like more royal palaces and more ornate four-hundred-year-old government buildings. Also more large public plazas and immaculate parks and spires reaching to the sky. Copenhagen is a feast for the eyes.
I went to the War Museum. It wasn’t bad featuring as it did artifacts from very skirmish the Danes have ever been involved in. I appreciated the fact that it didn’t romanticize war instead making a point to show the brutality of it. For some reason they had a surprisingly large amount of samurai paraphernalia.
The missus and I made a pilgrimage to Juno the Bakery which she has followed for years on Instagram. It has a reputation for excellence that we discovered is justified.
I had a simple bread, butter and cheese sandwich which was one of the best eating experiences I’ve ever had. The bread was sublime. I topped it off with a pastry (honestly can’t remember what was in it) that was like an orgasm for my tummy. We bought cookies and such to take away. It was well worth the visit plus it afforded us an opportunity to see yet another part of this city.
Danes are in a hurry. We’ve noted that they walk fast and bicycle fast. Our meandering requires constantly stepping aside for a native rushing here or there. Even parents pushing strollers go at full speed. But they do like to lounge during breaks and after work for a coffee or a drink. Amazingly they’ll sit outside for the beverage, chilly weather be damned. I admire their fortitude. Supposedly Denmark has one of the lowest rates of cigarette smokers in the world but we encountered far too many, a lot of whom were enjoying their smoke along with drinks at outdoor cafes. Maybe it seemed like a lot to us because we come from Berkeley where virtually no one lights up anymore.
So this is it. The trip is — for all intents and purposes — at an end. It’s been grand. I do believe I’ll sum it up in a post a few days from now when we’re back home enjoying our creature comforts. I love travel but am the first to admit that there are many inconveniences associated with being on the road effecting sleep, bowels, stomach and sense of direction to name but a few. Oh yes, and those damn showers.






