Saturday, July 28, 2012
I have moved to ottorolwing.wordpress
Please go there and sign up again to follow me in the future. I will attempt to send my old blogs to this new site. Let me know of any issues.
Thanks for reading, Otto
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Bergen - Artic Circle - Mandal
Young Polish girl on the ferry |
The sleek Fjord1 ferry |
A
Me at the Arctic Circle |
The stupendous and magical waterfall at Odda |
Karina's home in Mandal |
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Fish Festival in Vevring
I met up with Karina after getting lost in Bergen. The town is similar to San Francisco, but much smaller and built on the hill sides surrounding the bay. The downtown is quite old and has several inlets coming in from the fjord. Cruise ships stop by and the cruisers do whatever cruisers do when they are not on the ship. Karina drove me around and then we went up to her home about two thirds of the way up the hill. This was her parents estate, a large home and several outbuildings, that they had purchased long ago. He was an archaeologist that refurbished and saved many of the old German homes along the waterfront. The Germans had originally come to do trading with the fishermen. Karina now rents out rooms in the main house and in one of the outbuildings that has been converted to apartments. Needless to say, it has a great view of the town, the bay, and the surrounding hills.
I left the bike there and the next day we drove four hours north to the village of Vevring, located on one of the fjords, where Wenche (pronounced Ven-ka) lives along with her brother, mother, cousins, uncles, aunts, etc. The festival was started 40 years ago as a sort of home coming, keeping the old friendships alive, and keeping the old customs and ways alive. There was only 60 or so participants, half local and half from out of town, either past residents, friends of locals, or relatives that had moved out.
The grand scheme of things was to go catch fish, get together and eat them. So I teamed up with Einar, a man about my age, and rowed the boat and he laid out the nets. We did this each evening for three days and went out each morning to see what we caught. Day one and two were disappointing, but we scored on day three with five cods, a couple of trout, and a St. Peter's fish, an oddity in this area. Fortunately, Einar and I were not the only ones fishing.
We had a fish expert on hand who would gather together the day's catch, explain to everyone what was what, open then up to see what they had for breakfast, and then pass them over to the cook. We all shared in kitchen duties with a semi formal work roster. I learned a new way to fix carrots and got pretty good at filleting fish. The cod and salmon were cooked/smoked in various ways by the men of the village and there always seemed to be a pot of coffee going and the great pancakes that they make on a large griddle. Lunch and dinner were communal affairs and we had breakfast in Wenche's home along with two other couples and whatever strays came around. Did I mention it was raining all week. I had my rain jacket from the bike, but had to borrow rain pants and the proverbial nor eastern rain hat.
Saturday they had an opening of an art show in the room behind the quick shop and Saturday night there was a one woman play (in Swedish!) put on in the room above the old milking parlor. We had dinner in the milking parlor that had been converted to a dining hall by adding picnic benches and tacking on a kitchen at one end. This village, like many in the world, has seen a conversion from farm life to working in the city and just living on the farm. But there is still home made beer and wine and smoked salmon! Some traditions just can't be stopped. Saturday, Stig took us out in his covered 35 foot boat for a three hour cruise around the fjord.
I taught the group in the house how to play 'Oh Hell' and we played til 2 am. Speaking of which, one never has to worry about getting any thing done before it gets dark - it just never does. The sun will go down around 10:30 and its back up again at 3, but it just seems like a long twilight.
Karina and I returned to Bergen on Monday afternoon, I did my laundry and repacked, ready to head further north. Karina was headed south to her other home in Mandal.
There are lots of photos at:
https://picasaweb.google.com/109078628479246209734/FishFestivalJune2012?authkey=Gv1sRgCMK6uYW0icnhaA#
Einar and me after our big day fishing |
Talking about the day's catch |
Wenche's house on the fjord |
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Jotunheimen
The sun only highlights part of this great view. |
Last night was at the Walaker Hotel in Solvorn. I balked at the price when I first came through, but then in town the Best Western had the same price and I knew that this would be my last hotel for a week, so I came back the 20 km. It has been in continuous operation by the same family since 1690 and is quite the European classic. It is the oldest hotel in Norway, quite picturesque and right on the fjord. Their offering for dinner last night was a six course extravaganza for $95 plus wine. I picked up a take away sandwich and a beer from the cafe and enjoyed it sitting on the pier. The hotel breakfasts are spectacular buffet affairs with meats, cheeses, breads, eggs, herring, salmon, yoghurt, cereals, juices, and coffee. Much of it home made or local and all very good. I think there must be some type of competition between the different hotels and it is always included with the room. Or maybe the room is included with the breakfast.
It is raining again/still as it did most of yesterday. Not a downpour, just overcast with a splash of sunshine now and then and a sprinkle every twenty minutes, just to keep me in my rain gear. I will check out after I finish my coffee and head over to Bergen, a three hour ride plus a short ferry, and meet up with Karina, a woman that I met in Greece two years ago.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
Demark and Sweden
I left Prescott on the 2:30 am shuttle to Phoenix for a 7 am June 19th flight to Copenhagen for a two month tour of Scandinavia with a side trip to Bristol, England and then up to Glasgow, Scottland. But things change, so stay tuned. | |
Here's me and 'The Little Mermaid' in Copenhagen. The city certainly lives up to its reputation as one of the most beautiful capitals of Europe. |
The downtown area has a large river running through it with many side canals such as this. Of course there are tour boats and water buses on the river and canals. |
I climbed a church tower to get this shot. It used to be the tallest building in town and the last part of the climb is on the outside of the tower, spiralling up to the very peak. |
I rode out of Stockholm on Friday, June 22, the largest holiday in Sweden, Midsummer, and found a lovely hotel on the river. This was my happy hour place with a cold beer. |
After an all night flight from New York, I arrived in Copenhagen at 7:30 in the morning and checked my large bag into storage, purchased a train ticket to Stockholm for the next day, picked up some tourists maps and headed downtown on the Metro. It was a beautiful, sunshiny day living up to all of the brochure photos. I mixed up museums, art galleries, and coffee by the river with people watching before catching the 6 pm Metro out to my Couch Surfing hosts. The Metro stations as well as all of the city is extremely automated and modern. One station even had movies projected on to the wall that appeared to be what one would see looking out the window of one of the cars as the scenery passes by. Wave at a button and the door would slide open, just like Spock would have it.
My hosts were great, giving me beer and eating with them and their teenage daughter a meal of roasted chicken, potatoes and vegies from their garden. Finn and I chatted on into the night and I crashed so hard that I didn't wake up until almost 8 am, disregarding the all night well lit sky.
Then back on the tourist route, again leaving my large bag at the train station to await my 2:30 departure to Stockholm on the high speed train to pick up the motorcycle that Noel is letting me use. I was originally picking it up in Malmo, just across the river from Copenhagen, but it was transferred to Olle in Stockholm as he had the time to do the 'get ready' work on it. I paid Olle for the work and have rationalized that I would spend that much on very limited bus and train fares and even more if I had to rent a vehicle. The train ride from Copenhagen to Stockholm was 985 SEK. An SEK is somewhere around 6.8 per USD, and Olle put me up and fed me dinner and breakfast and two beers, so that is worth at least the 800 SEK price that I am paying for food and rooms. I was warned that this would be and expensive area of the world. Good rationalizing, no?
Olle said compare Mexico to the US, then apply the same ratio to the US vs Scandinavia. The hotel I am in now is 700 SEK and includes breadfast., Dinner last night was 200.
Saturday, June 23. I am now staying at a small hotel/resort along a good sized river 10 K outside of Malung, Sweden. I rode 300 km yesterday in five hours, a good lazy beginning to the trip. The Gold Wing is old and tired, an 84 model with 98 K miles on it. The engine seems OK, but the tranny makes some interesting noises. It looks good and seems to work, so we shall see.
I think I am going to go on strike today and read and put out a blog. Maybe go into town and buy some sun screen and skin cream and replace the reading glasses that I can't find. It is another 1000 km over to Bergen, Norway where I meet up with Karina, but I don't want to be there til Tuesday afternoon. Supposedly, the roads get much more interesting in Norway as it is quite mountainous. Sweden has been fairly flat with some rolling hills, lots of water, and mainly pasture land and timbering.
The days are way long and it never does get completely dark. I think I could ride all night not be too concerned about seeing things. This weekend is the midsummer festival for the Swedes, occurring on the first Friday after June 21. There doesn't seem to be much public celebrations, but I saw a lot of picnics and family gatherings going on in back yards. There is a group of 15 or so here at the hotel that had dinner last night in the restaurant and they appear to be family. I sat with Tom, an 92 year old man from Norway who is just driving around. He stayed here last year and enjoyed just walking around so much that he came back. He thinks this will be the last year as he is afraid that he is going to lose his drivers license soon. He told some interesting stories about WW II.
I did go into town and attended an outdoor annual performance of the Swedish version of 'The Taming of the Shrew', mostly local actors, but the leads were big name opera people. A different day for me. It was overcast most of the day, high of 60 or so. Tomorrow will be riding west into Norway, which promises to be more interesting riding with mountains and twisty roads.
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Dogwood & New Mexico
The dogwoods and azaleas came and went several weeks before the festival this year but the roses were in full bloom. the whole family was there and we had 26 people for Saturday dinner at daddy's home. Joe, Jerry and I stayed there. An added highlight this year was a visit to grandma peacocks old home that is being refurbished by Fred for Hannah and Jacob after their fall wedding.
Abie was the hit of the crowd, whether on someone's lap or on Ron's new riding mule. Ron and Jeane have a great family going with more on the way.
Joe on his Honda NT700V and I took off on the 23rd for parts west. It was cool and stayed cool the entire ride with morning temps in the 30's and 40's. We both had our electric jackets and had prepared for cool weather, but it would have been better with warmer temps. We spent a day and two nights with Jim and Judy and extended family in Oklahoma City and helped Jim do some maintenance work on his hot tub. Unfortunately, we didn't get it fixed in time to enjoy it. Their home is quite nice with a great backyard, indoor pool and hot tub and Judy's ever expanding garden and landscaping. Shelly's kids also contribute to the liveliness of the place.
We spent almost a week riding around northern New Mexico, Taos, Santa Fe, Los Alamos, and our favorite, the Jemez river road, where we hiked along this small creek with high trees and rock walls.
Fourteen miles in and twenty miles out of Chaco Canyon on this rough and gravelly road was a challenge for both of us. We camped there and made some interesting contacts. It always seems that the most interesting people are at the end of a long gravel road. The ruins are among the largest and best preserved in the Southwest. And the least visited due to the road maintained this way just to keep the crowds down.
I talked Joe into coming to Prescott and staying for a couple of days before he headed back. He helped me pour 45 ninety pound bags of pre-mix for a new sidewalk and rock wall foundation in front of the house. We also did some tree trimming of a large limb that had split during the 21" snowfall we had in March that was dripping pine tar on the redwood steps and handrail. And several parties and get-togethers with friends and of course a session of volleyball. We left on Sunday, May 6th and rode over the the eastern part of the state and enjoyed highway 191, 70 miles of twisties ending up at the large open pit copper mine at Morenci, where we spent the night. Monday morning after breakfast, we toured the old town of Clifton, then Joe turned left for Nashville and I to the right for Prescott.
I really enjoy these rides and the companionship with my brother. And getting a project out of the way was icing on the cake - thanks Joe.
Saturday, April 14, 2012
What a difference a day...
Returning from San Miguel, the speedometer needle went erratic, then hyper, then spun itself to death. A hundred miles later, the odometer followed suit. So I stopped in to the Scottsdale dealer and they agreed to replace it under warranty. Last Saturday, I rode down to have the new one installed, but it turned out that they had ordered the wrong speedo. They appologized and agreed to sell me a new back tire at a friendly price and install it for free in light of my long trip from Prescott - two hours.
Last night, the service writer left a message that the parts had not yet arrived. This morning, I awoke to two inches of snow and more coming down. So maybe no departure today. It continued to snow all morning and into early afternoon, but with no accumulation. Frustrated, I just stewed about all day eating breakfast and lunch out as I had already cleaned out the refrigerator.
At noon, I called the dealer and left a message to return my call and learned that they are open seven days a week, a ray of hope as most dealers are closed Sunday and Monday, which would put me two days behind. At four, the writer returned my call. The tire arrived as well as the speedo and cable and could I make it in tomorrow at noon. Then the snow stopped!
No sunshine yet, but it can't be far behind.
Keep the faith! Otto
At
Saturday, March 24, 2012
San Miguel de Allende
We couldn´t resist staying here in this downtown Matahuala hotel on the main square. The price was 270 pesos, about twenty bucks. Old, but quite clean and we enjoyed the people there. We rode our bikes through the large front door and parked them in the lobby.
Noel and Fedencio, one of the best waiters I have ever experienced. He even gave me the recipe for frijoes chollas and I promised to send him this picture. The ride through this part of Mexico from Saltillo down is a very dry and flat desert akin to west Texas. We also had a cross wind to add to this unpleasant part of the ride.
But worth the trip!! This is the first view of San Miguel coming in on a high hill overlooking the city. The main cathedral is on the town square and our hotel is about on the left side of the photo, half way up, and is a fifteen minute walk to the cathedral. Temeratures are 60 to afternoon highs of 85. Quite perfect. The other riders are somewhat clickish and wear their club jackets and shirts. One on one they are very friendly and open, but when it comes time for a social function, they gather with their clan. Mostly our age with too much stuff hanging off of thier mostly BMW GS bikes and wearing mostly BMW logo clothes. Maybe 20 percent brought their wives along.
This is the view from the area where I worked when I took my sculpture class here in 2004 at the Instituto de Allende. In 2004 there were eight of us but now the studio is closed and I didn´t even see any students studying spanish, the main portion of thir curriculum. The town is packed though as in addition to our group, there are five major weddings and the pope and Mexico´s President Calderon are in the neighborhood. Police are on every downtown corner.
Parque Juarez in midtown is host to a group of students waiting for their turn to perform at the anniversary of Juarez´s birthday or death. A very patriotic event in a very beautiful and large park.
Harry´s Bar, now owned by Bob, is the hot spot for meeting locals and other visitors. It is just off of the square and it quickly became somewhat of a habitual happy hour for Noel and me. Twofers margarita´s and popcorn for 70 pesos, five bucks!
Thursday night, we paraded from the hotel to the cathedral led by two donkeys all decorated and a 12 piece mariachi band with a very entertaining conductor. The city has a sound and light show that projects onto the face of the building and lofty music floats down. It was extremely enjoyable and normally only shows on the weekends, but bikers are special. And the band played on... Afterwards, Noel and I went to a hotel that had a live band and salsa dancing. A small dance floor, but great dancers. Noel and I did our best.
Friday we had a tour for one hundred miles, some of it quite lovely with hills and windy roads between picturesque pueblos. But half of it was on flat roads with too many cars, trucks, and topes. We stopped for ice cream in Delores Hildago, thats my bike about half way down. We all posed for a group photo on the steps of their cathedral and then returned the 30 miles to San Miguel, detouring through what they call the Santuaria on the old road between Delores and SMA. All cobblestone and a ton of churches and chapels. This is also where the hot springs are located and was a very rich part of the area.
This large scultpture is on the outskirts of Delores Hildago on the way to SMA. The cleanliness and greenery is typical for larger Mexican cities, but lacking in the poorer smaller towns. We have had a great time here so far and will take a different and hopefully more enjoyable route home going northwest to Zacatecas and staying to the left of Chihuahua, crossing into New Mexico at Columbus. We will leave early Sunday moring and take five days or so to get home. I saw a bumper sticker in New Mexico on the way down which said ¨Welcome to New Mexico, actually it is not new. Actually, it is not Mexico.¨
Friday, February 17, 2012
La Ventana activities
This is my living room for my trailer. I spend a lot of quality time here reading or playing anagrams with friends. The tree is full of woodpeckers, doves, finches, humming birds and LGBs. Local food includes homemade tamales for $1 and dried bouganvilla leaves which are used to make the jamaica drink.
We took a day trip to Sol del Mayo, a government sponsored Eco spot run by locals. The pond was 25 feet deep and the jump for Travis was 40 feet. Another woman dove off! I took the photo. The interior of Travis's school bus. He had previously changed out all of the side windows, installed the stove and the floor. I helped him with the side paneling and varnishing. We picked up some used car seats from the junk yard and had new mounts made for them and bolted them in. The old driver's seat was very uncomfortable.
This will be a mosaic on the wall just outside the kitchen door in Prescott. Brightly colored tile is hard to come by in the states, so I bought a bunch of it here. It will be 7' x 10' and has a pond in the lower right fed by the waterfall. The browns are mountains and desert, blue and white sky, yellow sun, a beige road zig zagging into the distance with the front wheel of a motorcycle entering from the lower left. This was a layout just to make sure that I had enough tiles, the rest will stay here in my trailer til next year.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Tony & Sandy
Tony of Tony & Sandy died last week of as quick heart attack while walking from his wind surfer up to his trailer on the beach. Go to La Ventana
for photos of Tony, his friends and life here in La Baja. He is missed by all.
Everything is still going well here. We had the competition for windsurfing, kiting and paddle boarding last weekend and I had volunteered to help with the beer booth but wound up walking around with another guy with two galvanized pails full of canned beer and selling it to the crowd. It was fun being the shill and trying to spot a likely customer. On Saturday, they had the Luche Libre style of Mexican wrestling. Sort of an overacted WWF with costumes and egging the crowd on. At the end, they had a greased pig competition with one kiter, one windsurfer and a local Mexican trying to catch the pig, and return to an old couch that had been set up. The Mexi didn't quite get the rules and after catching the pig, he flung it over the heads of some bystanders in the direction of the couch, but he missed and the pig bounced off of the hard packed dirt. I big Ooohhh from the crowd and Suzy, the MC quickly announced that no animals were injured during the making of this event. It reminded several of us old timers of the WKRP turkey drop.
Then we had the volleyball three person competition on Monday and Tuesday mornings. We start at 8 am and go till the wind comes up around 10 or 11. One guy on my team had pulled a muscle windsurfing on Monday afternoon, so we didn't do to well on Tuesday. I think we came in 4th or fifth out of ten teams. The two person competition starts in the morning and I am playing with the guy that I first camped next to 13 years ago.
Noel, the buddy from Prescott that is loaning me the bike in Sweden should get back from the main land this week after picking up another of his bikes in Guadalajara and taking the ferry back to here. So I have sort of been looking after his girlfriend who stayed here. Fun stuff like emptying their black water and changing over the propane tank. He and I are also planning on riding down to San Miguel de Allende in March for a BMW bike rally.
Joe,I think we had planned on doing Texas early because I wanted to go to Sweden in May, but that got pushed off to June 19th. So I have from Dogwood til its time to pack up in mid June. I want to take the Vixen down to Cave Creek sometime in May and see if that may be where my next wintering place is. It is getting crowded and noisy down here with a lot of development going on.
Monday, January 9, 2012
Down to Baja
I enjoyed a wonderful Christmas with Oakley & Liseanne and Rebecca and Dan in Phoenix. Isabella had graciously loaned me her home in Scottsdale while she was visiting her family in St. Louis. We all went down to Tucson and had lunch with Chris and Steve Beck - they are doing great!
I closed up the house on New Year's Day and went over to Jerry's in Borrego Springs. We played a round of golf and then Jerry made a great dinner for us and his friends Mike and Teri. Monday morning I headed south in the SUV. I was going to take the Vixen, but I don't think that it is ready for Baja yet with no solar electric or propane appliances. Plus it will be better to have the SUV for picking up Oakley, Rebecca etc when they come down in February.
I crossed over easily at Tecate and glad that I didn't get the red light at customs as I was carrying a full load of wine. The road to Ensenada was in good shape and there must have been at least 8 new wineries and I also saw a new Museum of Wine being constructed. The mountains were very green and the weather was perfect for an afternoon's drive.
The remainder of the trip was uneventful and relaxed. I really poked around this time, taking excursions, starting late and stopping early. I stayed at the Mission Inn in Catavina the first night, the Frances Hotel in Santa Rosalia the second, and the Perla Hotel in La Paz the last night. I stayed in La Paz as I wanted to make a dental appointment and do some shopping before going out to La Ventana.
The trailer was in great shape, all four tires still holding air and not too much dust on the inside, so I was pretty well set up before dark. Six utilities are required. Water from trenching over to the nearest spigot, batteries connected to the solar, propane tank filled and connected, the refrigerator and hot water heater lit, and a septic tank dug. The weather is still a bit on the cool side, 60 at night and 70 in the day. But it makes for great vollyball.
It seems less crowded in the camp this year, but the usual gang is here. I think that as more people buy or build a house and more resorts are popping up, the campground gets fewer customers. Jack & Nancy from Hawaii showed up in their Vixen. I had met them in Napa when I picked up my Vixen in August.
So life is good. Otto