Bergen

All posts tagged Bergen

The streets are not full of hunks who look like members of ’80’s pop group, a-ha.

In winter time, people walk into you all the time on the street. I have two theories for this: 1) hooded jackets impact on peripheral vision or 2) your presence is causing a ‘butterfly effect’ – as a tourist you are taking up space on the street that has been empty every other day so your presence is unexpected and people just walk into you.

Vehicles drive down pedestrian malls at any time of the day, not only before/after store closing times.

In the first half of May, students graduate from high school and wander around the streets wearing red pants. This otherwise has little impact on you as a tourist unless they choose to hold a graduation party in the nightclub behind your hotel.

Check opening and closing times and dates for attractions carefully, particularly in Bergen. Many don’t open until 15 May, just in time to close again for the public holiday on 17 May. This makes some sense for outdoor attractions like gardens and hiking trails, but is perplexing for things like museums which are not dependent on weather, and are actually good places to visit on cold and rainy days.

Otherwise, I have found May is a fantastic time to visit Norway. The weather has been mostly good – we have had days in their 20’s down to about 5 degrees Celsius. Some sunny days among the rainy (museum and shopping) days. The summer crowds have not yet descended so it is easy to move around on the streets and attractions are not crowded (also many of the staff have just started for the season and still have their training wheels on, but at least they’re still friendly).

But the best part is that the snow is just melting. Streams are part frozen, part gushing along so strongly that waves fall back upstream. Some of the waterfalls are still frozen in their upper reaches, but everywhere you look there are waterfalls cascading right from the top of a mountain / cliff to the bottom, winding their way along the rocks, and roaring with full strength at the bottom. The rivers and waterfalls are certainly at their most impressive.

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We have been in Bergen for several days now and are used to the sight and smell of dried cod.

It’s a quaint place, dominated by the rust red and ochre painted wooden buildings of the old town, the facade to a small historical precinct of narrow lanes, historical and reconstructed buildings and a large wooden sculpture of, yes, a cod! It has some apparently interesting museums, some of which may be open for four hours a day if they can be bothered to open at all. (Note for those travelling from heathen nations like Australia, Ascension Day is a public holiday in Europe. Given that it falls 40 days after Easter, the unwary traveller is likely to spend half the day wandering around and wondering why all the shops are closed on a random Thursday.) This section of the town is clearly geared up to be a ‘tourist trap” for those on the cruise liners which visit the town on around 2 of every 3 days of the year. It is designed to meet all their needs and keep them within their designated area, just as it served to self-sufficiently segregate the Hanseatic merchants from the Norwegian locals 300 years ago.

One area where locals and tourists meet, however, is the funicular, which travels to the top of Mt Floyen. On a clear day, which we were fortunate to experience given that it also apparently rains here 2 out of 3 days of the year, the views back over the town are impressive. It looks like a toy town, set around arms of a fjord, with Lego boats moored at the docks. In mid-May, the tallest of the granite mountains overlooking the town is still flecked with snow. It has the obligatory restaurant, kiosk and store selling all things moose and fair isle design. Yet, wander just a few hundred metres away along the forest paths and you feel far from civilisation, in the midst of a Norwegian wood (sorry, couldn’t help myself). We wandered the short distance to a small lake, which still had some ice cover, and found some frogs beginning to emerge from their winter hibernation.

From here, we walked back into town, at first through the pine and birch forest, then the path wound through the outskirts of the town, with white wooden houses set along narrow, cobbled lanes. We set off exploring through the lanes, houses with fairly bare yards, given that winter is just ending, but with pot plants of spring flowers, particularly jonquils, hanging by or sitting near front entrances. We enjoyed coffee and apple cake with cream at Det Lille Kaffekompaniet, one of the best cafes in Bergen, tucked away in a quiet back street.

Bergen is a great town for those who like to wander. On the opposite side of the Harbour to the touristy Bryggen, cobbled streets set out in mediaeval times yield treasures like arty shops, cafes, the theatre and lots of interesting buildings for those who like to take the time to explore a town.

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