I had no idea Oslo had so many statues, but it surely does, just one park even has over 220 of them 212 all by the same sculptor, the most famous of which is this young fellow:
But more of that later, first let's get to our morning routine.
Breakfast
I woke at 5.15am local time (4.25 at home) feeling refrshed and ready to go. I spend the next 45 minutes editing photos from yesterday.
At 5.45am I made us both a cup of coffee using the nespresso machine in the room
At 6am I had my shower and did the other ablutive activities and Drew followed me and did the same.
We arrived down to breakfast two minutes after it had opened at 7am, late for us, we are normally at least two minutes early!
Breakfast was very busy, a large party of people due to catch a cruise ship in the harbour at 11am to start their costal voyage were staying at the hotel and the majority of them had been there at 7am, but we found a quiet corner and navigated the breakfast buffet, even though we didn't take the usual photos of the buffet as there were always people in the way.
I started the breakfast with natural yogurt with linseed, chia seeds, sunflower seeds and pumpkin seeds. I'm not always a fan of natural yogurt, especially when it in thin and milky, however this version was gelatinous and sour, horrible I expect for a sweet lover, but perfect for me.
I followed this up with the local delicacies; Mustard herring, tomato mackerel, pickled pumpkin, pickled fennel, pickled onions, beetroot salad and rugbrod (rye bread, Scandinavian style). I love tangy pickled food and each of these was highly tangy, different from each other in texture and flavour, but all giving a tingle to my tongue.
The healthy food over in course 1 and 2 it was time to move to the heart disease foods of sausage, bacon, egg, sauteed cherry tomatoes and sauteed potatoes, stop your nagging, I'm on holiday. I'm going to have some less than healthy food - but balance it out with the good stuff 🤣
Drew went straight for the cooked stuff and had two plates very similar to this first one with the addition of white buttered bread.
Our Route
The Storting - The Norwegian Parliament
We left the hotel at 8.55am and walked along the street called Karl Johans Gate, note Gate in Norwegian means street, I was glad to find out, as I have been puzzling where all these gates are! The street runs from our hotel all the way to the Royal Palace.
We arrive at The Storting, which, as expected is closed at this time of year, but we were able to learn about the various statues and explore the grounds around the building.
Nationaltheatret midt i Oslo - National Theatre of Norway
From the parliament we moved on to National Theatre, again I've captured some of the images in a google photos video, as they don't present well as an animation. It is year since I've last used this technology, so it is fun seeing what has changed.
The key person identified in the statutory and quotations on the pavement is Henrik Ibsen the Norwegian playwright and poet. My recollection of Ibsen is that his plays are somewhat dark and depressing, which is a very different approach to the friendly and happy people of today's Norway.
Universitetet i Oslo - University of Oslo
One of those I'd not heard of before was Peter Andreas Munch, the granduncle of the painter, who was a history lecturer, with a specialism in Norwegian history here.
Oslo Rådhus - Oslo City Hall - Day 2
It turns out that yesterday evening we had taken photos of the back and the two sides, but hadn't completed the rectangle - clearly we had missed a lot.
Det kongelige slott – The Royal Palace
The castle is set in some lovely gardens and while it is possible to visit in doors during the summer months, we preferred the garden. Around the trees, grass and flowers were statues of various royals including Queen Maud, Queen Sonja, the current queen and Crown Princess Martha, who died before her husband became king.









the google reels, are you generating them or is google/AI offering up these cycles?
ReplyDeleteHi Lloyd,
DeleteAs Robin Croft has previously mentioned on past holiday blogs I have a complex process with photos that can take some time; but, I feel, are always worth it at the end.
I upload all my photos to Google Photos, this includes those that automatically load from Drew and my phones (we both have android phones), plus the ones from the camara which I download to the PC then upload to Google - who knows in future years we may have a web-enabled camara, they are on the market, so it will do this stage itself, but not yet as Drew's camara is 10 years old.
I do this as the tools I have on Google Photos, I pay a small annual subscription for this - which I need to pay anyway because of the size of the photos I store there, are better than the windows tools on the laptop.
So, I do an edit of the photos in Google Photos, then download them all to the laptop before loading them to Flickr, as it is better for publishing, naming, linking and sharing photos.
As well as photo editing tools, Google provides two additional tools - one called Animation and one called Highlight Video - the first is the easiest - you select animation and then pick up to 50 photos that will roll in the order selected - however it has a limitation as all the photos in the animation take on the same dimensions - this means that some photos lose a part of the picture and others are stretched to fit. The photos of the Storting lost some of the image, which I thought didn't matter, but when I tried the same for the National Theatre Ibsen and the other two statues lost their heads!! Which is why I turned to the other tool - Video - this works very similarly, except that photos you choose retain their size, but you have to do more manipulation around the speed of the transtion from one to the next, and any change made takes longer for Google to achive than the simple animation, which means I had to create the video and carry on writing the blog post while I waited for Google to complete before downloading the video to my laptop and loading it up to blogger - animation, being a gif, loads into blogger as easily as a photo.
Sorry for the long reply, but I often think about the process while I am waiting for it to complete.
My Nikon allows me to download to my Android phone, Chromebook or Windows desktop. It all depends on where and when I am going to share the images.
DeleteVery impressive Robin, yours is a few years younger than Drew's I think!
DeleteGood to see the Bernadottes getting a mention on your blog again. It's weird enough having a former French general being king of Sweden. But then being crowned king of Norway as well... I guess the Scandinavian people don't bother with this annointed-by-God stuff.
ReplyDeleteYes, Robin, they seem to have a very democratic approach to monarchy - the current King had a blessing ceremony not a coronation, though it was still held in Nidros Cathedral (Trondheim) in the tradition of the earlier kings of Norway before it became and Danish then Swedish vassal state.
DeleteOf course the current Royal House of Norway - it got independence from Sweden in 1905 - is a member of the House of Glücksburg (or more formally Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg), the German family which have been the monarchs of Denmark since 1852. In the absence of any members of the former Norwegian Royal Family in Norway, they went to their closest kin and selected the second son of the then Crown Prince of Denmark, so for a while the Kings of the two nations were Father and Son and later the kings were two brothers.
Prince Carl of Denmark took the name Haakon VII when selected as King of Norway, restoring a traditional Norwegian royal name.
So, unlike Sweden, there are no Bernadottes here.