Sunday, June 15, 2003

Bergen, Norway

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In June of 2003 Kate met with some colleagues in Bergen, Norway. We had been in Krakow Poland for the annual KBS meeting and on our way home we visited Oslo and Bergen.

Bergen is a major port city on the west coast of Norway sort of due west of Oslo the capital city. Oslo is the largest city, Bergen the next in size. We stayed in the old city near the harbor and didn't get a sense of this being a big city -- in fact it has a very small town feel. Both cities are quite far north -- about the same latitude as the Shetland Islands which are well off the north coast of Scotland. This makes for long summer days. Albeit cool summer days. I hate to imagine what the winters are like.

Bergen is sheltered by mountains in an archipelago of islands and is a jumping off point for some steep scenic fjords. We were only there for a few days, Kate was busy with meetings, but I got to tramp around the old city a bit. We did get to do some things together -- like riding the Fløibanen funicular to a hilltop view of the city. We booked a cruise of the nearby fjords on the last morning but it was raining and cloudy -- we didn't get to see much of them.

We flew in from Oslo crossing over snow covered mountains in between. It's not terribly far as the crow flies (about an hour by air) but an awful long distance were you to drive over the mountains. It's about 8 hours by auto and you'd be driving over mountains and through some snowy stretches. Probably an interesting drive ... if you had the time.

We almost missed our return by air to Oslo after the morning of the disappointing fjord tour. We hadn't counted on the time it would take to get back to our hotel, pack our gear and take a bus out to the airport. The airport is about a half hour out of the city. We end up running through the airport at the last minute to catch our flight. This was in the days before 9/11 when airport security wasn't as anal. I suppose it wouldn't have been the end of the world had we missed the flight as there are lots of regular flights between these two cities.

Bergen is most famous for the pretty wooden warehouses that line the harbor. The "Hanseatic Wharf" (see the photo above) dates back to the middle ages when Bergen was the major trading port for Norway and a northern partner in the Hanseatic League. These days these old wooden structures house gift shops and the like. It's an interesting area to explore with lots of back lanes. There's also pretty lanes to explore up the hill sides into residential areas. 

Further down the wharf towards the sea is an area of historic castles and forts. Rosenkrantztårnet (a 13th century tower) and the Bergenhus Fortress are worth exploring. At the town end of the harbor there's a market, cafes, open pedestrian square and sturdy buildings of stone and brick. We had dinner one night in a restaurant overlooking the harbor. Seafood, as you would expect, is a specialty. Wine and alcohol are prohibitively expensive.

Bergen is an interesting city to explore.


Ps. These notes and recollections were prepared in January of 2021 during the COVID-19 lockdown. Photos are macro photography copies of slides taken at the time.

Oslo, Norway

 

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This is only a place holder. Work on this blog and photo album will follow.

Ps. Photos were scanned during January 2021 of the COVID-19 lockdown from Fujichrome 35mm slides taken at the time. These are quick scans using a "Kodak SLIDE N SCAN Digital Scanner".

Saturday, June 7, 2003

Krakow, Poland

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This note is a place holder. The album and note require a lot more work.

Kate's annual KBS conference was held in Krakow Poland this year.

Friday, June 6, 2003

Auschwitz

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Kate's annual KBS conference was in Krakow, Poland in June of 2003. I had a lot of time to explore the city but I also took the time one sunny day, with some friends, to go out of the city by train to visit the Auschwitz Concentration Camp at nearby Oświęcim. That's about 50km to the southwest from Krakow so it's only a short train ride.

This is the main camp of several (Birkenau is another famous nearby camp that's part of it) and this is a huge place — an industrialized "final solution".

There's the famous entrance gate with the sadly ironic motto "Arbeit macht frei sign" (translated as "work sets you free"). Inside the buildings there's exhibits to display photos of the victims and their modest belongings. What brought me to tears was the piles of luggage where each had a return address painted on by the poor soul who thought they might return.

You will have heard of at least one of the 6,000,000 who perished in the Holocaust. Anne Frank and the other seven were transported here from the secret annex in Amsterdam on 3 September 1944. All perished except for her father Otto who lived to publish her famous diary. See more at the Anne Frank House Museum.

From Wikipedia:

"The International Holocaust Remembrance Day, or the International Day in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust, is an international memorial day on 27 January that commemorates the victims of the Holocaust, which resulted in the murder of one third of the Jewish people, along with countless members of other minorities between 1933 and 1945 by Nazi Germany, an attempt to implement their "final solution" to the Jewish question. 27 January was chosen to commemorate the date that Auschwitz concentration camp was liberated by the Red Army in 1945."  

The photo album, not for the faint of heart, has pictures of the gas chamber and the ovens used to burn the bodies of those who were killed there. For those who would deny the Holocaust I invite you take a trip to Auschwitz near Oświęcim.

These notes and photos were composed and scanned during the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020/21 from slides taken in June of 2003.