Lyndelse, Denmark for 3 days.

25 April, 2023

It is Anzac Day back in Australia today but here in Copenhagen it is just another chilly day. After breakfast we are heading out to Copenhagen Airport by Metro to pick up our hire car which will transport us around the Scandinavian countries for the next 84 days.

After our short time in Copenhagen we have easily mastered the Metro and the station entrance is only about 400 meters (6 minutes’ walk) from our hotel. We are lucky that it is only a chilly wind blowing and not rain as we drag our luggage to the Metro. We have only one change of trains on the way to the airport and the exit of the Metro at the Airport is right at the transfer bus station that takes us to the Car Rental Desks.

The driver-less Metro trains.

The Metro trains turn up ever 2 minutes so the trip is stress free. Let’s hope the car rental process is also stress free. We have booked an intermediate-sized car (Ford Focus or equivalent). We know that we won’t be able to fit both suitcases in the boot so one will have to ride in the back seat between accommodation. The rental car was booked through Rentalcars.com for a total cost of A$2,560.00 for 84 days including full insurance cover and unlimited kms. The normal price for this deal at the moment is between A$7,500 and A$11,000 so I am expecting all sorts of hassles at the hire desk and a roughy car with lots of kms on the clock. The actual rental company is Europcar which we have used in the past with varying degrees of customer satisfaction.

The car is booked from 12 noon so that we have plenty of time to return the car in 84 days. We arrived at the Europcar desk at 11:00 am since it was faster and easier than expected to get from the hotel to the hire car centre. The guy behind the rental desk stated that it would be an hour before the car would be ready so my first thought is that we are going to be stuffed around due to the low cost of the rental.

We waited around for the hour and the paperwork was sorted in a few minutes. We have the car key and head to the allocated parking space where the car is located in the attached garage.

We are pleasantly surprised. Our hire car for the next 84 days is a near-new Mazda CX-30 Hybrid Automatic SUV. My first concern was that at A$3.20 per litre how expensive will the fuel cost be during our rental period.

We can’t quite fit the two suitcases in the boot without laying the back seats slightly down but this car has all the gadgets including GPS, auto lights and wipers, adaptive cruise control and key-less start. This is going to be a very comfortable drive. It was definitely worth the hour wait. Far better than any Ford.

Now to master the left hand drive…. and all the gadgets.

Lynn has planned for us to do a couple of touristy things on the way to our accommodation in Lyndelse this afternoon. Our first stop was going to be the Viking Ship Museum at Roskilde on the island of Zealand (the island where Copenhagen is located) but at A$35 per entry I would prefer to spend that amount of money on a good wine. Plan B was to visit Roskilde Cathedral. The entrance fee for the Cathedral was A$15 each and since I have no interest in Churches, Lynn did the visit while I educated myself on the use of the Mazda CX-30 features.

Roskilde was the original capital of Denmark so all the Kings and Queens of Denmark are buried in its Cathedral.

Former City Hall of Roskilde on Staendertorvet.

Included in the burials is King Harald “Bluetooth” Gormsson, who was well known for uniting Denmark and Norway in 958 and for his dead tooth, which was a dark blue/grey color, and earned him the nickname Bluetooth.

Harald Blåtann, the Viking and King of Denmark, and son of Gorm the Elder, was known to be a skilled communicator. During his reign, Denmark turned its back on pagan beliefs and Norse gods and gradually converted to Christianity. The inventors of the current Bluetooth comms process used this name for the process pending a name to be determined by the marketing department. It stuck.

The corridors around the Nave of the cathedral are surrounded by 9 chapels in which various coffins are displayed including the Chancel which has Bluetooth’s grave and the Canon’s Chancel where Queen Margrete I’s sarcophagus is displayed.

Queen Margrete I’s 1423 sarcophagus.

Most of the Royal coffins are spectacular including Sophie Frederikke’s coffin in the Frederik V’s Chapel.

Coffin of Marie Sophie Frederikke .

Christian IV’s coffin in his Chapel.

Black & silver coffin of Christian IV.

The sarcophagi of King Frederik VIII and Queen Louise in The Glucksburger Chapel.

Fred and Louise.

Our next stop is Odemark, Soro, where a relative of Lynn’s, Lars Christian Larsen, the father of one of her maternal great uncles, was born in 1840 before he moved to Australia via Germany and England in 1860.

Part way down Odemarksvej the road deviates around a large, walled estate at Odemark and in the road is a flock of 6 pheasants.

The small area of Odemark, Soro.

Peeking around the open gate revealed a huge courtyard with a large house at one end and extensive outbuildings along 3 sides.

The Odemark Gods or Main Farm.

We have no information about where in Odemark he was born or what occupation his father, Issac, had. Perhaps they worked at the Main Farm. The current estate has a website – http://www.oedemark.dk – which states that the current main building was built in 1880 in 2 half-timbered buildings with a side wing.

After our visit to Odemark we headed on towards our accommodation at Sandholt Lyndelse which is on the next island of Funen, west of Zealand, which means we have to cross the 18 km-long Great Belt Bridge. By this time the wind had picked up and it was very difficult to stay in our lane. I would hate to be driving across this bridge in a high truck in a strong wind. Way too scary.

The Great Belt Bridge.

We arrived at our accommodation just after 5:30 pm which is about 2 hours later than our intended arrival time due in part to our stops along the way. The B&B is impressive for a two room B&B. Our host Fraser met us and showed us around. Fraser in an Englishman who has lived here for the past 20 years with his Danish wife, Sally.

The Baekgaarden B&B.

We quickly unpacked as we have booked in to attend an Organ Recital at the St Canute Cathedral in Odense at 7:30 pm. We had a very quick “fast food” dinner at the McDonalds just around the corner from the Cathedral and made it to the Cathedral 5 minutes before the recital began with Johann Sebastian Bach’s Toccata Og Fugi i d-mol.

The Organ in the St Canute Cathedral.

The recital ran for just over an hour then we headed back to our accommodation for an early night. I was exhausted and fell asleep very quickly.

26 April, 2023

Breakfast is planned for 9:00 am and Fraser brings in our tray right on time. We have a reasonably easy day today so we are in no hurry.

Danish breakfast.

After we finished breakfast Fraser returns to clear away and we have a long chat about what to see and do on the island of Funen.

Chatting with Fraser.

It was a sunny morning while we had breakfast but the clouds are starting to build up. We need to get moving to visit Faldsled Harbour, Faaborg and Pipstorn Forest.

Faldsled Harbour is a small, pretty harbour and marina in Helnæs Bay.

Faldsled Harbour.

9 kms away is Faaborg, an old port town located on Faaborg Fjord. Faaborg is first mentioned as Foburgh in a document located in the French National Archives, Paris, dated 25 June 1229. It is a deed of gift that gives Faaborg and the south of Funen to Eleanor of Portugal from Valdemar II to his daughter-in-law. It is mentioned as a castle (Foburgh meaning Fox Castle), so it must have existed before this date. However, this date has been used as the birth date of Faaborg and thus the town celebrated its 775th anniversary in 2004.

Our hire car for the next 84 days.

It began to prosper as an important port in the 18th century. By the 1890s, ships from Faaborg sailed as far as the Mediterranean. In the 19th century, the United Kingdom replaced Norway as the main trading partner and, in the second half of the century, trade extended to China and Australia. Today the harbour, old streets, historic mansions and town houses all make Faaborg a pleasant city for visitors.

Clouds building over Faaborg & harbour.

6 kms SE of Faaborg is Pipstorn Forest known for being one of Denmark’s largest prehistoric burial sites – a place with a 4,000-year-old history.

Edge of Pipstorn Forest at Lucienhoj viewpoint overlooking Faaborg Fjord.

Today, Pipstorn is a mixture of ancient burial sites, forestry operations (at Holstenhuus Manor, which owns the woods), a recreational area and a habitat for wild animals and several rare plants, bisected by a railway line.

Railway through the Pipstorn Forest.

We walk one of the tracks towards a tuft grave – cremation pits covered by a low mound of earth and are often associated with the large burial grounds from the pre-Roman Iron Age (approx. 500-1. BC). It was difficult to make out the mounds amongst the vegetation. We backtracked to a sign towards a series of early Bronze Age long barrows but as there was no indication of how far away the barrows were and as it had started to rain with a touch of sleet we head back to the car.

Driving back through the forest.

Back at the B&B Lynn walks up a slight hill to the local church.

Sandholts Lyndelse Kirke.

Although the doors were locked we returned the next day and the verger (or Danish equivalent) was mowing the lawns so the church was open and Lynn snuck inside to take a few photos.

Inside the Sandholts Lyndelse Kirke.

After the church visit she strolled around the B&B and its garden and saw the resident pair of pheasants.

The rear garden of our B&B with the Church in the background.

The afternoon is very chilly so we spend the evening updating the blog and resting up. We even have to turn up the heat as the apartment is now getting quite cold. Dinner is in tonight and consists of the remainder of this morning’s breakfast.

We will be in bed early tonight.

27 April, 2023

We are out of bed a bit earlier this morning as we have ordered breakfast for 8:30 am so that we can get on the road to see the sights that Lynn has researched.

First stop this morning is the Egeskov Slot (Castle).

Egeskov was first mentioned in 1405. The castle structure was erected by Frands Brockenhuus in 1554.

Due to the troubles caused by the civil war known as the Count’s Feud (Danish: Grevens fejde), general civil unrest, and a civil war introducing the Protestant Reformation, most Danish noblemen built their homes as fortifications. The castle is constructed on oaken piles and located in a small lake with a maximum depth of 5 metres (16 ft). Originally, the only access was by means of a drawbridge. According to legend, it took an entire forest of oak trees to build the foundation, hence the name Egeskov (oak forest).

The estate has belonged to the Bille-Brahe family since 1784, when they acquired it from descendants of the Brockenhuus family. In 1882 it was inherited by the counts Ahlefeldt-Laurvig-Bille, who still own it.

The Egeskov Slot.

We had planned to go inside and visit the Slot but the entrance fee is prohibitive and we have seen much older and bolder castles in the UK.

We are headed to the two small islands of Tasinge and Langeland which are connect by long bridges via Sio island.

Low bridge connecting Langeland Island.

After crossing Sio island (part of the low bridges connecting the islands) we stopped in at a small town called Rudkobing as we enter Langeland Island.

We parked the car on the outskirts of town and wandered through the pedestrian streets.

The shops in Rudkobing.

We found a woolen wear shop that had some woolen socks on sale. My cotton socks from Brisbane are just not cutting the cold weather so I bought a pair and Lynn bought two pair of bamboo socks since she needed thinner socks for her walking boots. My socks are traditional, Danish patterned.

Bought some warm woolen Danish socks.

Up one of the alleyways behind the main street we spied an old windmill which seems to be in working condition.

The Windmill of Rudkobing.

We continued walking through the town centre to the Town Hall. The buildings sheltered the plaza from the chilly north-eastern winds so it was very nice in the sunny pocket.

The first mention of Rudkøbing was in 1287, when it was given market town privileges by Duke Valdemar IV of Schleswig, who held the title of rigsforstander (da) under King Eric VI Menved. The original Rudkøbing Church was built most likely in the late 12th century or early 13th century. During the Count’s Feud (1534–1536) and again during the Dano-Swedish War (1658–1660), Rudkøbing was under siege by Swedish troops. Both times, the town’s fortifications prevented Rudkøbing from immediately falling, but the town eventually had to give in to the Swedes. The town was hit by the Black Plague during the 16th and 17th centuries, and experienced fires in 1590 and 1610.

The Town Hall plaza of Rudkobing.

From the town centre we continued on to the harbour. Rudkøbing got its first proper harbour in 1826 (it had previously only had a pier). In 1898, in a town of about 3,500 people, there were 152 ships based in Rudkøbing. Every year, over 2,500 ships (carrying over 18,000 metric tons of cargo) came in and over 2,800 ships (carrying over 11,500 metric tons of cargo) went out, mostly to and from elsewhere in Denmark. The town was connected by steam ferry routes to Copenhagen, Korsør, Marstal, and Svendborg.

The Rudkobing Harbour.

There are some excellent refurbished old buildings down by the harbour including the old railway station which is now the city’s historic archives building. The old 24-hour railway clock still adorns the building.

The Rudkobing station.

From 1911 to 1962, Rudkøbing was the main station of the Langeland rail network, called Langelandsbanen (da). The network was connected to Svendborg in 1926, when a railway ferry route made it possible to move train wagons between Rudkøbing and the mainland of Funen.

Before the harbour was built there were a number of small houses along the then beach front where the usual seaman, fishermen and paupers lived. The street is called Ramsherred and the word Rams-herred means “inhabited by bad-uns”. This area is now a very gentrified with very expensive harbourside renovated cottages.

Ramsherred Street.

Back to the car and we then headed to the bottom of Langeland Island through a town called Humble. We couldn’t find the Humble Pie shop, unfortunately. The farmland around this area has lots of small hills and mounds. Some of these mounds are supposedly old viking burial mounds.

Hilly farms.

We are now close to the southern coast of the island and there is evidence of significant sea winds that must drive the local farmers crazy.

Wind-swept trees.

A little further along Lynn noticed a mound in a field so I stopped and she walked across the field to the stone-covered mound. It turned out to be a passage grave and apparently some 5,000 years ago there were 7-8 large stone tombs in this area.

Myrebjerg Jaettestuen passage grave.

Our next stop is at the base of the island, a small holiday harbour village of Bagenkop. It is very quiet here at the moment as it is way too cold for the summer holiday crowds. In another 6 weeks this place will be heaving.

Holiday houses at Bagenkop Harbour.

The adjacent beach looks way too cold today but looks like it could be a very nice swimming beach in summer.

There is just one cafe/souvenir shop open at the moment so we stop in for a hot chocolate for Lynn and a hot dog for me. The locals check us out and it seems that they are thinking “why are there tourists here in this cold weather?” Still, it is not raining and the sun is shining even though it is a chilly 8 Deg C and that’s without the wind chill factor.

On our way back to Lyndelse we check out Svendborg on the main island of Funen as this was where AP Moller-Maersk was established in April 1904. We parked near the harbour and walked the old town centre.

The Svendborg Town Centre.

There are some interesting shops, churches and buildings in the town so we walked quite a few blocks to check it out.

Other end of the town square.

As we walked back to the car we noticed an interesting street decoration.

I don’t think that this will keep you dry.

It is time to head back to Lyndelse but we will have one more try to walk to the top of the Trebjerg Hill for the view over the bay, archipelago and on to Jutland. This will be our third attempt as each other attempt was washed out with rain storms.

The trail to Trebjerg Hill lookout.

It is sunny but the wind is blowing a chill through our souls but we make it to the lookout.

Lynn struggles to reach the free telescope.

The view is pretty good but it is way too cold to linger here for very long. It must be nearing wine o’clock.

Not a bad view from up here. Can we go home now?

We stop in to buy a tank of petrol on the way back to the B&B as we are nearly down to a quarter of a tank. We fill up with 36 litres of petrol for an eye-watering A$115.00. Now I know why Europe is so small. They can’t afford a larger area at these prices!

28 April, 2023

After bidding Fraser farewell we depart Lyndelse just after 10:00 am for our first stop at the Wadden Sea National Park lookout near Juvre on the island of Romo which is 182 kms west on the Jutland peninsula. It should take us about 2 hours and 15 minutes.

The E20 takes us across the Den Nye Lillebaeltsbro Bridge between Funen and Jutland then we take the 25 then the 175 which takes us over mashland and the body of water known as the Danske Vadehavsoer to Romo Island.

Den Nye Lillebaeltsbro Bridge.

To our surprise, when we get to the look out, there is no water to be seen, just grassland which is not depicted on the map. Instead there are warning signs that the area that we are overlooking is, in fact, a live firing range! We’ll have to find somewhere else to lunch.

Live firing range.

There are several solid buildings in the neighbourhood. The local museum and a farm house.

Museum on Romo Island.

As we drive through Romo Kirkeby on our way south on the island we stop at St Clemens Church which is one of Lynn’s ‘must see’ spots.

The church was dedicated to Saint Clement, the sailors’ patron saint. One of the old tombstones lining the cemetery wall was inscribed with a ship.

The oldest part of the church was built sometime after 1250 and expanded four centuries later. Possibly in the latter half of the 15th century, the church tower was built in the Gothic style. The church was expanded in the 17th and 18th centuries.

St Clemens Church.

The date on the exterior of the church says 1737 while the highly-decorative pulpit is dated 1534.

Interestingly, inside there are several votive ships hanging from the ceiling – just like in some of the corridors of the Kykkos Monastery in Cyprus.

Ships in the church.

At the southern end of the island is Havneby where the ferry to List auf Sylt on the adjacent island of Westerland, Germany, arrives and departs.

Ferry going past the concrete block houses.

We find a bench in the park to eat our rolls overlooking some funky concrete blocks that are supposed to be apartments/houses.

Note my new Danish socks?

Our accommodation is 52 minutes away so we rejoin Jutland and take the 11 which bypasses the town of Ribe. 15 minutes later we arrive at our next accommodation, Lejlighed ved Kongeaen – a two-bedroom apartment which is located – wait for it – next to a camping ground! This is the closest to ‘glamping’ that I will ever get!

The quality of the accommodation doesn’t match the high price paid!

We booked the apartment as it had a washing machine. However, it is located in another building which the campers would use, too. And, to add insult to injury, I had to make my own bloody bed when we arrived!

The pictures look better than the reality.

After we returned from a short visit to the local supermarket to buy breakfast supplies I had to do the washing since it has been nearly 2 weeks since our last washing in Cyprus. I miss Kristia!

Copenhagen, Denmark for 4 days

21 April, 2023

We have an easy day today. Just about flying from Dublin to Copenhagen. Our flight is due to take off at about 1:15 pm so we check out of the Radisson Hotel at Dublin airport at about 11:00 am and take the hotel shuttle bus to Terminal 1. The airport is significantly busier than Belfast International but checking in goes well and we just beat a large number of 20-somethings through bag drop.

Our gate is about as far away as you can get from security so we head down and find a seat before the 20-somethings crowd around and increase the noise significantly. The aircraft is 30 minutes late arriving at the gate so we know that we are going to be delayed today. Luckily it is only a 2-hour flight. We have priority boarding so we get on before the noisy mob and hope that we don’t have them sitting near us, or worse, between us.

Once everyone is loaded onto the aircraft the pilot announces that we may be delayed another hour as he has lost his slot into Copenhagen. Our 2-hour flight is quickly turning into an all-day affair.

At last we are in the air and departing a chilly Ireland. From one cold climate to the next.

Departing Dublin an hour late.

The 20-somethings are a bit rowdy but we have a vacant seat between us and they are far enough away not to be an issue to us.

Arriving in a sunny Copenhagen.

We take a taxi from the airport which is quite expensive but I just want to get checked in at the hotel before it gets late and we are not familiar with the rail transport from the airport to the city centre.

Our hotel is a bit funky but seems comfortable enough for the next 4 days. The hotel is located in the old meat packing area near central station which you would think is right in the city centre. It’s not far but a good 15-minute walk to the actual city centre. Still, it is close to a Metro station and the actual central station for medium- and long-distant trains. It will do.

It is a Friday night. The sun won’t set until about 8:30 pm and all the city workers seem to be out for dinner and drinks this evening. Why not? The sun is shining and the weather is relatively warm after a cold and wet winter in Copenhagen.

We are given directions to a number of restaurants near the hotel so we head out looking for a place to eat.

Eateries in the old Meat Packing District of Copenhagen.

There isn’t a free seat anywhere to be seen. Most people are just drinking so finding a place to eat is a bit of a challenge.

Eventually we manage to get two seats at the bar of a small, trendy restaurant/bar. It is all a bit Boho.

Bellied up to the bar for dinner.

We feel like we are the oldest people in Copenhagen. The menu is a choice of about 4 items. I have a pork dish and Lynn has arancini balls. It is expensive and takes a long time to get served. The food is OK but hopefully we can do better over the next few days.

The H15 Boho restaurant in Copenhagen.

It is rather late by the time we return to the hotel so we head straight to bed.

22 April, 2023

Lynn has booked us into a free walking tour of the city this morning so we are out of bed by 8:00 am and down to breakfast with the crowds by 9.

We don’t have time this morning to work out the Copenhagen Metro before our walking tour starts so we just walk the 15 minutes to the Town Hall where the tour commences.

Copenhagen Town Hall.

Our guide for our 2.5-hour walking tour was born in Argentina but his English is very good and he has been in Denmark for many years. He is a bit too much of a touchy-feely, political greenie for me but he seems pleasant enough.

I won’t add all the photos that we both took during the tour as they are mostly of historical buildings which get a bit boring after a while. Still, we have fantastic weather today. Not a cloud in the sky, a gentle breeze and a top of 17 Deg C. Great walking weather.

The 12th Century City marker at the Town Hall.
Radhuspladsen – the Town Hall Square.

From Radhuspladsen we walk down narrow streets like Farvergade and Radhusstraede past the Bastard Cafe.

Coffee in Copenhagen at A$10 per cup is a bit of a Bastard.

On Magstraede we are told about which houses survived numerous fires and the current price of Copenhagen real estate – 3-story townhouse, 147sqm, recently furbished, no garage – Euro1.8m.

One of the earliest city streets in Copenhagen.

We cross over the canal that surrounds Slotsholmen (Castle Island).

The City Canal.

And view a canal tour boat squeezing through one of the low arches of Stormbroen.

Wide canal boat through a narrow bridge.
It doesn’t look possible. Now a 90 Deg turn.

Before us is the Christiansborg Palace which houses the Danish Parliament. Surprisingly there are two, sand-covered enclosures which house a white horse in each.

Christiansborg Palace – aka the Parliament Building and horse stables.

To the right are the Royal Stables.

Christiansborg Palace courtyard.

We then walk to the adjacent gardens of the Royal Danish Library which feature emerging spring foliage and a beautiful, flowering magnolia tree.

The Royal Danish Library & gardens.

From there we pass by the other side of the Parliament Building and cross over the canal at Holmensbro.

Rear of the Parliament Building.

Next we stop by the Nikolaj Knusthal Church, one of the city’s oldest churches and most conspicuous landmarks. It is now a contemporary art centre.

Nikolaj Knusthal Church – now a cafe.

Nearby is Kongens Nytorv – King’s New Square.

The French Consulate building on Kongens Nytorv.

Where classical buildings such as the French Embassy and the Magasin du Nord are located.

Magasin du Nord – premier retail store.

We walk by the top end of Nyhavn – one of the most photographed canal sides in Copenhagen – then onto Amalienborg, the Royal Palace.

Queen Margrethe II’s residence in Christian IX’s Palace.

The Queen is not home today as she is now in residence at the Summer Palace in Aarhus.

But Ozzie Mary & Fred are home today in Frederik VIII’s Palace.

This is where the tour ends.

Mary & Frederick’s palace guards on duty.

In the centre of the 4 palaces is an equestrian statue of Frederick V by French sculptor Jacques Saly. It was commissioned in 1752 and completed in 1768.

Lynn is waiting for an invite to afternoon tea from Mary.

The statue faces Frederiksgade and Frederiks Kirke – the Marble Church.

The Marble Church.

Not all marble but limestone since the earlier King spent all the country’s money on lost wars.

At the end of the tour our guide mentions that this weekend is the Sakura Festival – Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival – in Langelinje Park.

The Maersk Building.

On our way there we walk past the head quarters of Maersk on the harbour where we will be lunching with Henning, a friend and colleague of Lynn’s, on Monday.

The Cherry Blossom’s are all out.

The park is next to the Kastellet, a grassy fort, and the park is heaving with people, some dressed in kimonos, all wanting to be photographed under the cherry blossom trees.

Another Blossom.

Retracing our steps we pass by the spectacular Gerfion Fountain. It features a large-scale group of oxen pulling a plow and being driven by the Norse goddess Gefjon. It is the largest monument in Copenhagen and is used as a wishing well. According to an ancient legend, Gefion was the goddess who ploughed the island of Zealand out of Sweden. The Swedish king Gylfe offered the goddess Gefion as much land as she was capable of ploughing in one day and one night. Like the Trevi Fountain in Rome, it is closed for maintenance.

The Gerfion Fountain.

Walking to the Marble Church Metro station we notice a shop across the road featuring signs such as ‘Enjoy Cocaine’ and ‘Murder King’ in the styles of their respective logos. We purchase a 1-day Metro ticket and get the subway back to Central Station then walk to the hotel.

Looking to be sued?

Lynn has been intrigued by a series of cute, playful sculptures that are in and around the building where we have breakfast.

one set of statues at our hotel.

After a couple of hours’ rest we get the Metro to Gammel Strand to catch a one-hour boat tour of Copenhagen’s numerous canals departing at 17.45.

Sightseeing cruise on the canals.
The old Naval dockyards.
The little mermaid statue from the canal side.
Residential area on the canals.
Gold and black spire of Our Saviour’s Church.
Stay seated for the many low, low bridgidas.
Round Bridge with the new library – the Black Diamond – in the background.
Marmorbroen Bridge.
More canals.

23 April, 2023

As predicted, the weather has gone from warm and sunny yesterday to cold and raining today. To make full use of our 24-hour Metro ticket we plan to see the views from the tower of the Parliament Building, visit the interior of the Marble Church and have a coffee by the Nyhavn canal.

Only a short wait at the head of the queue to clear the airport-standard security then take the lift to the 5th floor then a set of stairs to the 4 viewing platforms of the tower. Apparently, on a clear day, you can see Sweden.

View East from the Tower.
View North to the St Saviour’s Church spire.
View South West over the Parliament Building courtyard.
View North East towards the Marble Church dome.

We take the Metro to the Marble Church only to find that instead of it being open at noon today as advertised it won’t be open for sightseeing until 2.30 pm, so back to Nyhavn for a coffee.

Back at Nyhavn for coffee.

And a stroll along both sides of the canal.

Less crowds in the rain.

The rain has stopped but it is still overcast as we head back to the hotel before our Metro ticket expires at 2:10 pm. It is about 1:15 pm and a Ticket Inspector joins the train and inspects all the passengers’ tickets. Good thing that we are headed home early.

This evening we have been invited to dinner at the home of Henning (from Maersk) and his wife Vibeke who live in Horsholm, a town about halfway between Copenhagen and Helsingborg.

Trains run on time in Copenhagen.

We catch the 5.26 pm train to Helsingborg from Central Station in brilliant sunshine. En route we catch glimpses of Sweden across the water. We are met at the nearby Kokkedal train station platform by Henning who drives us to their delightful terraced home about 5 minutes away.

Pre-dinner drinks.

It’s been 13 years since Lynn and Henning last met and for the next 4 hours we are treated to amazing Danish hospitality and cuisine while catching up.

Vibeke being bored over entree.

Vibeke, in a previous life, spent time in Italy and was involved in Italian cuisine and turns her deft hands to producing 4 sublime and perfectly-formed courses: fish roe and chopped onions on blinis;

First Course.

cod and hollandaise sauce with asparagus spears;

Second Course.
Third Course.

pan-fried reindeer with broad beans, baked baby pesto potatoes and salad, and a home-grown rhubarb compote with cream and biscuit pieces for dessert.

Dessert.

Beverages included a cherry juice and tonic starter followed by a Californian white and a Sicilian red, reminiscent of a rioja, followed by tea and Danish chocolates.

To reciprocate their amazing hospitality, Lynn invites them to join us for dinner on 16 July when we will be staying in Snekkersten, 15 minutes’ drive north on our way back to Copenhagen at the end of our 3-month road trip.

At 10:00 pm Vibeke drive us all to the station so that we can purchase return tickets then Henning walks home with Dusty, their black Labrador who has been waiting patiently for his usual 9:00 pm walk.

Again our train tickets are inspected and we can’t believe that the Inspector, when speaking English, has a perfect Brummy (Birmingham) accent which even he doesn’t know how he acquired it!!

24 April, 2023

Today we take the Metro to Osterport and walk for 20 minutes past the Kastellet to the AP Moller Maersk building on the habour arriving at noon.

As we walk to the front door Henning emerges to take us next door to an older building which houses the Maersk Museum. Henning is the company’s Group Historian and next Monday will be celebrating 25 years working for Maersk.

The original office of the first MD of Maersk.

Unfortunately last week this building had a water pipe leak so the Museum is closed and under plastic but he is able to show us a schematic of AP Moller Holding and its numerous businesses, the 4 leaders of the family company from original owner to present-day and an office set up with AP Moller’s possessions at the time he died – a large wooden desk, chairs, a globe, photos and paintings and a large-scale model of a wooden ship.

Time for lunch so we head downstairs of the main building to the packed Bistro where the cuisine today is in celebration of the end of Ramadan. Apparently Maersk has the most diverse workforce in Denmark.

Lynn and Henning in the Company Bistro.

1.30 pm and it’s time to bid farewell and to walk to the Little Mermaid, this time to view her from the front.

Trying to ring the Maersk Bell.
The Little Mermaid and the statue.

20 minutes later we finally get to view the inside the Marble Church then take the Metro back to the hotel where we need to catch up on the blog and pack ready for our departure to the airport tomorrow to collect the hire car and to commence our Scandinavian road trip.

Inside the Marble Church.

After a big lunch today dinner will be a hot chocolate and a Snickers bar. It has been an interesting four days in Copenhagen. It has also been a busy visit but we have managed to see most of what we wanted to achieve in the four days despite the periods of rain.

Paphos, Cyprus Week 2

12 April, 2023

It is sunny and warm this morning when we went down to breakfast but the wind is picking up and the clouds are building on the horizon. After breakfast Lynn wants to complete the things to visit and see for our upcoming Scandinavian trip so she settles in at the downstairs cafe while I head down the road to see if I can organise a hire car for three days this week.

I had found a few hire cars out at the airport online but it would mean getting out there and back. The airport isn’t far away but a taxi is Eu25 each way.

Rental car companies are plentiful on the main road but so far the operators aren’t as keen to do business as you would normally expect in a tourist town. However, when I stopped at the one near the laundry the English woman attendant was very helpful and keen to do business. Within a couple of minutes I had booked a VW Up for three days for Eu100. We can pick it up after 9:00am Saturday and just leave the keys at our Hotel Reception and they will collect the car at 9:00 am on Tuesday. Too easy.

I strolled back to the hotel to let Lynn know that we had local transport over the Orthodox Easter here in Cyprus. She is still working on the places to see and things to do in the Scandies so I grab my towel and cozzie from the room and head to the beachside to soak up some sun.

I wasn’t on the sun lounge more than about half an hour when the clouds started to build up and thunder approached. I made it as far as the outside cafe awning when it started to rain and soon after started to hail. The temperature dropped very quickly to about 11 Deg C so I scampered inside to dry out and change into some warmer clothing. Sun bathing for the day is clearly done.

13 April, 2023

Lynn again wants to finish off the Scandie to do list this morning. Even though we had a night of thunder storms and strong winds last night the sun is shining this morning so I head back to the beach. The strong winds last night have created some large waves on the normally benign Mediterranean Sea and there are a couple of surfers out this morning. The water is crystal clear and sounds like a normal Ozzie beach.

Waves on the Med.

The water temperature is still too cold for a swim but the sun is more than capable of providing severe sunburn.

Before I get too burnt I head back to check on Lynn and she insists that we book seats on the Narvik, Norway Arctic Train for June as it is very popular in summer and can book out early. Done. We now have two return tickets on the Arctic Train for the middle of summer. Apparently this 2-and-a-half hour return trip offers fantastic views from the mountains above the Narvik Harbour and Norwegian fjords from the Norway/Sweden border. Hopefully we get good weather as it looks fantastic.

Internet image of the Narvik Arctic Train.

14 April, 2023

Today has to be the best weather so far in Paphos. It is a beautiful 20 Deg C out today so after yet another al fresco breakfast in the sunshine we head down to lay by the pool. Lynn even ventures in for a very short swim. The pool water is still way too cold for me.

By lunchtime Lynn heads back to the room to work out our itinerary for the next 3 days with the hire car and a couple of hours later I also head up to catch up on the blog and some emails. Any longer in the sun and we would both be lobsters.

15 April, 2023

Another sunny day here in Paphos with an expected top of 21 Deg C. First job after breakfast is to pick up the VW Up! at about 9:30 am. We did the usual video of the car condition then headed back to the hotel to set up the GPS and add the usual necessities to the car.

The plan is to head up into the Troodos Mountains and its National Forest Park today to visit the Kykkos Monastery; then a waterfall, another archaeological park and a mythical rock.

On the road into the Troodos National Forest Park.

There is very little traffic about and the roads are in great condition. Despite the VW having a miniature 1.0 litre engine it handles the hills quite well. The car is just a “shopping trolley” but it will do for a few short tours of the Cyprus countryside. I have owned and ridden bigger motorcycles than this buzz box but it will do for three days of touring around. Having said that Lynn has us doing about 650 kms over the next three days as we cross the Republic of Cyprus – the southern part of the island of Cyprus.

The toy VW Up!

It is not hot enough outside to warrant air conditioning in the car so we just drive with the windows open. Climbing up the steep hills to the pine forests is easy so far. I just wonder how the car will go if I turn on the A/C.

View of the Pentalia Valley.

The air is cool and clear as we ascend the hills and there are some great views from up here. Since there is little traffic we stop regularly to take a few photos.

All Greek to me.

Each little town that we pass through has a “Welcome” sign and a “Bon Voyage” sign to mark the start and end of each village. In the towns the speed limit is 30 kph and marked by some serious speed bumps. The poor little VW almost gets stuck on the top of each bump.

The Statos Valley Reservoir.

Everything is looking green in the hills after a cool and wet winter. I bet it browns off fast once the temperatures regularly hit the mid 30s in a few weeks.

We happen upon the Chrysoroyiatissa Monastery en route where we stop briefly. This Monastery also has a winery attached and some excellent views of the valley below.

The Chrysoroyiatissa Monastery.

This high-elevation monastery was built in 1770 housing religious icons, a winery and a cafe with valley views.

Our next stop is at the village of Pano Panagia which is the birth place of Archbishop Markarios III.

Main street of Pano Panagia (Panayia Village).

Makarios III – born Michael Christodoulou Mouskos (13 August 1913 – 3 August 1977 – was a Greek Cypriot politician, archbishop and primate who served as the first president of Cyprus and in which is widely regarded as the Father of the Nation or “Ethnarch”. He was also the leader of the autocephalous Church of Cyprus (1950–1977).

Archbishop Markarios III.

My reading of the history of Cyprus would indicate that a lot of the issues in the 1960s and 1970s in Cyprus were caused by this guy not willing to separate church from state and insisting Cyprus be linked to Greece after independence from the UK rather than forming an independent state. Will it ever be re united?

We continue on to the forested area where we end up driving through Cedar Valley to Kykkos.

The start of the National Forest Park.

The air is clean up here but the pine forest would be a serious bush fire risk in a dry, hot summer.

The forest back roads to Kykkos.

When we turn off the main road towards Cedar Valley the road becomes much narrower but we don’t come across any other cars. The roads are in great condition however, there is a lot of evidence that the mountains are crumbling and the roads are regularly covered in fallen rock scree so we have to drive up the middle of the road to avoid the very sharp rocks. Although we have a spare tyre I am not sure that it is adequately inflated. I don’t want to risk a flat tyre.

Dodging the rock falls on the narrow roads.

It is a very pleasant drive through the cedar trees and still we don’t see a single other car until we reach the bottom of the valley. Even then the only cars here are parked while the occupants hike along the many trails through the forest.

Cedar Valley.

Continuing on we start the steep climb through the Troodos Mountains. The trees are thinning now and the forest looks more like scrub and the soil is very dry.

Steep hills in the Troodos Mountains.

In the Troodos Mountains we arrive at Kykkos where Lynn wants to visit the Kykkos Monastery. The Monastery is a very well built and extensive stone building. There are plenty of tourists around including a tour bus.

Kykkos Monastery.

The first thing that you notice is the impressive mosaic entry. The gold mosaics shine in the afternoon sun.

Entrance to the Kykkos Monastery.

Lynn comments that she could quite easily live in a monastery to spend her days in meditation. Perhaps that is why she can turn a task into a career by contemplating her navel instead of getting the job done quickly???

Somebody is home.

Lynn takes some good photos of the monastery and spots a pair of shoes at one of the cell doors.

Mosaics on all the walls.

The workmanship in this place is extraordinary and the details of the mosaics are worth the visit.

Comes complete with a well.

Despite a large number of visitors the place is really quiet. There are no Chinese visitors here today, thank God!

Well-built & decorated Monastery.

Although it is not really all that hot here today, it is certainly dry. There is a cafe next door to the Monastery so we check it out for a possible coffee stop. The coffee is just machine coffee so we settle for an ice cream.

Ice cream with Australian macadamia nuts.

The ice cream is very nice and is coated in Australian macadamia nuts – a taste of home.

Heading to our next stop Lynn notices on the map that we are about to drive past Mount Olympus and suggests we make a quick detour. As we climb ever upwards the temperature outside drops to a cool 14.5 Deg C. Lynn reckons that she can see some patches of snow on the mountain. I scoff. How can there be snow in Cyprus? Especially at this time of year?

As we approach Mount Olympus we come across the Cyprus Ski Club hut. WTF?? Yes, apparently this area gets good snow coverage in winter and there is a ski lift. There is still significant snow in the trees and the road has large ice boulders on the roadside. There are even snow poles marking the edge of the road for the winter snow ploughs.

Snow still on Mount Olympus.

We drive to the top of Mount Olympus, something that you can’t do on mainland Greece but at the top of this Mount Olympus is a Cypric Military base so we couldn’t take any photos at the summit.

Our next stop on the way down from the mountains is at the Millomeri Waterfall. The road to the falls is a narrow, one-lane road but we manage to park quite close by and only have a short walk to the falls.

Millomeri Waterfall.

The water in the pool is cool and clear but drinking is not recommended. We had planned to take a selfie at the waterfall but again we forget to bring the selfie stick. I am starting to regret buying the thing as we always seem to forget to take it with us.

Oops, forgot the selfie stick again!

We continue on towards the narrow cobble-streets of the hill-top village of Lofou and get some great views of the valleys from the hill tops. Unfortunately we don’t get to drive through the village as a car is parked in the narrow, one-way street so we make a U-turn and continue on our way.

Back via Lofou.

We notice that most of the hills have been terraced but are no longer in use for agriculture. Perhaps they have been abandoned or perhaps are only used as grazing fields for goats. If this were Greece, Spain or Italy the terraces would be covered in olive trees. Perhaps the presence of the Old Olive Mill in the village is indicative of previous extensive olive orchards.

Terraces of Pano Kivides.

We are heading towards the coast near Limassol and the little VW has to work hard on the very good freeway as we head back towards Paphos. Our next stop is at Kourion to see the ancient amphitheater and house.

Eustolios House, Kourion Archaeological Park.

It is starting to get late and Lynn thinks that the site closes at 4:00 pm. We arrive just before 4:00 pm and are told that it closes at 5:00 pm so we have some time to check out the site. The good news is that since we are over 65 years of age that we can get in for free. Bonus!

The Ancient Amphitheater.

We probably won’t have time to cover the entire site but we head for the excellent, well-preserved amphitheater which has a magnificent view over the sea. The theater is in great shape and is still used for theater performances.

The Eustolios House.

Next we head for the covered dig site where the foundations of a very large house have been uncovered. There are some excellent mosaics and even a couple of wells.

An ancient house with a great view.

The most impressive thing about this dig is the magnificent view that the original house would have had in its day.

Back on the road we stay off the main freeway and head along the coast road. There is a view point at Petra Tou Romiou so we stop for a couple of photos. Impressive.

Petra Tou Romiou viewpoint looking west.
Petra Tou Romiou viewpoint looking east.

Our last stop for the day is at Aphrodite’s Rock. The parking area is on the land side of the main road and you walk through an underpass beneath the highway. The underpass is a narrow walkway that opens up directly at the beach.

The tunnel under the highway at Aphrodite’s Rock.

Petra tou Romiou (“Rock of the “Roman”) (that is East Roman or Byzantine as Byzantines referred to themselves as either Greeks or Romans until the 1920s), also known as Aphrodite’s Rock, is a sea stack near Paphos. It is located off the shore along the main road from Limassol to Paphos. The combination of the beauty of the area and its status in mythology as the birthplace of Aphrodite makes it a popular tourist location.

The beach at Aphrodite’s Rock.

According to one legend, this rock is the site of the birth of the goddess Aphrodite, perhaps owing to the foaming waters around the rock fragments, and for this reason it is known as Aphrodite’s Rock. Gaia (Mother Earth) asked one of her sons, Cronus, to mutilate his father, Uranus (Sky). Cronus cut off Uranus’ testicles and threw them into the sea.

Similarly, the local version indicates that Aphrodite’s Rock is a part of the lower body of Uranus. This legend says that Cronus ambushed his father and cut him below the waist with a scythe. Uranus, as he tried to escape flying, lost parts of his truncated body and testicles into the sea. A white foam appeared from which a maiden arose, the waves first taking her to Kythera and then bringing her to Cyprus. The maiden, named Aphrodite, went to the assembly of gods from Cyprus. The Romans widely referred to her as Venus. Aphrodite attracted a large cult following in Paphos, which was eventually crushed by the Romans. This is evident from the Sanctuary of Aphrodite in Old Paphos, Kouklia. A local myth is that any person who swims around the Aphrodite Rock will be blessed with eternal beauty.

Aphrodite’s Rock – the one on the right.

Another legend associates the name Achni with the nearby beach, and attributes this to it being a site where the Achaeans came ashore on their return from Troy.

The present name Petra tou Romiou associates the place with the exploits of the hero Basil as told in the Digenes Akritas. Basil was half-Byzantine (East Roman or Romios) and half-Arabic, hence the name Digenes (two-blood). Legend tells that the Christian Basil hurled a huge rock from the Troodos Mountains to keep off the invading Saracens. A nearby rock is similarly known as the Saracen Rock.

East of Aphrodite’s Beach.

Since it is Easter Saturday here in Cyprus Lynn wants to attend the midnight Mass at a local Greek Orthodox Church. The hotel has arranged a tour bus to take participants to the church at about 11:30 pm tonight. I will be in bed by that stage.

We arrive back at the hotel after a very long day touring the hills. We managed to cover about 300 kms today so I won’t be long out of bed. The hotel has left us an Easter basket in our room. A nice touch.

Greek hotel offerings for the Orthodox Easter.

After dinner we are back in our room and we are soon in bed. Lynn is taking a nap before she ventures out for the midnight Mass. I just hope she hears her alarm. Within minutes of hitting the pillow she is snoring loudly. She manages to wake up in plenty of time to head downstairs to catch the bus but I get a call from the front desk just before 11:00 pm asking where she is. I am not happy that I have been woken up but concerned that Lynn has fallen asleep in the lobby. I tell them that she is indeed attending and that she should be somewhere in the hotel lobby. Not my problem as I just want to get back to sleep. Midnight Mass, really? What’s wrong with a civilised time of day for all this pageantry? Does the priest have a day at the beach planned for tomorrow?

Midnight Mass at a suburban Church.

Although it was Easter last week, the Greek Orthodox Church celebrates it a week later, hence midnight Mass tonight. It’s part of an ancient ritual called the Holy Fire ceremony. In the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, the priest enters the tomb of Christ and emerges with a candle that has been lit by the ‘holy fire’ which is then quickly passed to every candle in the congregation at which time, when the bells toll, it is proclaimed that “Christ is risen!” to which the congregation responds, “He is risen indeed!” The devout believe the origin of the flame is a miracle and is shrouded in mystery.

Throughout the Orthodox community this ceremony is replicated. I can only think that the ‘fire’ is an eternal flame that originated in Jerusalem and was dispersed across the globe, just like the Olympic flame. What is it about the Greeks and flames??

Today in the news it was reported that tensions were high in Jerusalem as Israel had limited the number of Christian worshippers to 1,800 to enter the church.

Apparently it even applied here in Paphos at the Agios Spyridonas Church. The church was crowded so Lynn and those from the hotel had to stand in the car park to listen to the service but it meant she was in a front row ‘seat’ when the priests came out of the church and stood at a portable lectern on the front steps for the proclamation.

16 April, 2023

Day 2 of our car hire sees us head off to Nicosia.

Church on the way to Nicosia.

Churches, ancient and modern, feature regularly in the Cyprus landscape.

Entering Nicosia.

Our route is via the A5 then the A1 to Nicosia which takes about 1:45 minutes. On approach we can see a huge Turkish flag has been painted one of the hills that backdrop the town.

The outskirts feature quite modern buildings. We park a couple of blocks west of the Ledra Street Checkpoint on a scrappy piece of dirt which costs us Euro3 for 2 hours.

After a pit stop at the local Starbucks we venture up the pedestrian mall to the Checkpoint which is a quite low-key affair but where multiple signs prohibiting taking photos are displayed. Only foot traffic is allowed through here and we can see people walking through a street market on the other side.

Looking towards the Nicosia DMV border.

In contrast to the town’s outskirts, the old town has some lovely stone buildings, reminiscent of Valletta in Malta.

Old architecture of Nicosia.

Walking east we come across the Panagia Phaneromeni Church which is located in the historical center of Nicosia and is the largest orthodox temple in the Venetian walls of the town. It dates back to 1872-73. At the site where today’s church is built, there was a monastery that was probably destroyed in 1571 when Nicosia was occupied by the Turks. it’s Easter Sunday today, so naturally the church is closed.

The Panagia Phaneromeni Church in Nicosia.

Along Dionysou Street more ‘ad hoc’ hoardings mark the border with Turkiye.

The border of North and South Cyprus.

Lynn decides that, while we’re here, we’ll walk east to visit the Old City Hall Market and the Archbishop’s Palace. Along the way we stumble across a remnant of the C16Turkish occupation – a tiny stone mosque this side of the border.

Old Mosque in Lefkonos Street, Nicosia.

Nearby, some ‘Banksy’ style graffiti.

Still some feelings about the divided country.

As we continue east in the now hot sun we realise that this section of town has become a re-construction zone – lots of abandoned buildings, construction sites and dust – so we also abandon the area and walk back to the car.

Abandoned buildings on the border in Nicosia.

Next stop, the late 9th Century Church of St Lazarus in Larnaca which is a 47 km drive SE along the A1/A2.

St Lazarus Church in Lanarca.

It’s named for the New Testament figure of Lazarus of Bethany, the subject of a miracle recounted in the Gospel of St John in which Jesus raises him from the dead. According to Eastern Orthodox tradition, sometime after the resurrection of Jesus, Lazarus was forced to flee Judea because of rumoured plots on his life and came to Cyprus. There he was appointed by Paul the Apostle and Barnabas as the first Bishop of Kition (now Larnaca). He is said to have lived for thirty more years and on his death was buried there for the second, and last, time. The Church of Agios Lazaros was built over the reputed (second) tomb of Lazarus.

The Phinikoudes Beach promenade at Larnaca.

Driving along the promenade at Larnaca we both say, “Luckily we didn’t book here in Larnaca!” To the left the beach is dirty grey sand with rows of sunbeds and umbrellas, and the water is flat. To the right is a strip of hotels and crowded restaurants and cafes. And that’s about it.

Kamares Aqueduct at Larnaca.

As we take the road out of town towards Limassol we come across an unexpected sight – the Kamares Aqueduct.

Entering Limassol on the A5 we are confronted with an ugly high-rise construction – totally out of character with the low-rise hotels opposite that line the beach.

Concrete jungle at Limassol Beach.

After inspecting the local beach and amenities again we say, “Luckily we didn’t book here in Limassol!”. There is very limited access to any of the beaches so if your hotel isn’t beach front then you need to have a pool. What’s the point of having a coastal holiday if you can’t access the beach?

Limassol Marina at Panagies Beach.

We have so much more available in Paphos in a far more picturesque setting and our hotel has direct access to a small beach and pier and the Med. We managed another 250 km driving today but a lot of it was on the freeway escaping Limassol.

17 April, 2023

For our final day of car hire we are going to investigate the western and northern coasts of the Republic of Cyprus. First stop is the Tomb of the Kings Archaeological Park. Once again we are charged the Retirees’ entrance fee – Euro0! Great value.

Tomb of the Kings Archaeological Park.

The site is a large necropolis lying about 2 kms north of Paphos Harbour. In 1980, it was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site along with Paphos and Kouklia.

Cooler underground.

Some of the tombs feature Doric columns and frescoed walls. The tombs are cut into the rock and at times imitate the houses of the living.

No bar down here.

The subterranean tombs, many of which date back to the 4th Century BC are thought to have been the burial sites of Paphitic aristocrats and high officials up to the third century AD. The name comes from the magnificence of the tombs as no kings were in fact buried here.

Yet another “tomb” – house more like it.

Part of the importance of the tombs lies in the Paphian habit of including Rhodian amphorae among the offerings in a burial. Through the manufacturing stamps placed on the handles of these amphorae, it is possible to give them a date and, through them, the other material from the same burial.

This put to rest my cynical and ongoing commentary that it was a disused quarry where the quarry workers lived underground in the cool but I don’t think so. A some time it is obvious by the stone cutting marks that large numbers of stone blocks were excavated from this site with tools and methods similar to the Egyptian processes that we saw in Egypt. At some stage or stages in this area’s history this was a quarry site.

Not a bad photo for a phone camera.

Interestingly, the Australian Archaeological mission to Paphos is assisting with a publication about the finds.

Indiana Jones he ain’t!

Driving 11 kms north we arrive at Coral Bay – with lots of British-style cafes, pubs and restaurants – and its beach, surrounded by some very nice houses and villas but for most visitors you would need to drive here to utilise the beach.

Coral Bay.

Quite a nice bay and beach today but it would be heaving and baking at the height of summer with a limited capacity car park.

East end of Coral Bay beach.

11 minutes’ drive further north we arrive at the marina and mill-pond sea at Agiou Georgiou Pegeias.

Agiou Georgiou Pegeias.

We wanted to drive further north to investigate the Avakas Gorge in the Pegia State Forest but Google Earth showed that we’d have to drive on dirt roads to get there, the avoidance of which is part of our car rental agreement.

Retracing part of our route so far we drive east, then north, to the Baths of Aphrodite situated on the NE coast of the Akamas Peninsula.

Traffic jam for goats crossing on the E709.

Just as we summit the hills and get a view of the sea and the town of Prodromi in the distance we hit a traffic jam. Seriously??!! It’s only when we inch around the bend that we see the cause of the jam – a seemingly never-ending herd of goats crossing the road.

Never-ending herd of goats.

50 minutes after we left our last stop we arrive at the crowded car park for the Baths. Luckily we get the last car parking spot and follow the path through a small botanical garden, complete with a stand of gum trees, to the Baths which is packed with the public holiday crowd of tourists.

Baths of Aphrodite.

Underneath an old fig tree, shaded from the warm Cyprus sun, is a small natural grotto. Water flows down a wall of rock and forms a pool amongst the moss. It is here that legend says Aphrodite would come to bathe. According to Greek mythology, she met her lover Adonis at the pool when he stopped for a drink while hunting.

Island Bar at Latchi Beach.

Time for a pit stop so we drive back and park near a beach bar at Latchi. We were quite taken by the small village of Latchi with its beach, marina, bars and restaurants and quality-looking houses and villas as we drove through on our way to the Baths.

Latchi Beach.

We arrive and order just in time as a crowd of people arrive just after us. A pint of Heineken and a chocolate milkshake later we’re ready for the hour drive to our penultimate stop – the monastery of Agios Neophytos on a wooded hill area above the village of Tala and 15 kms west of Paphos.

The original monastery cells cut into the rock face.

It was founded by the monk and recluse Neophytos in 1159. The property is currently a museum consisting of the Engleistra (Place of Seclusion, built in a natural cave, with a small chapel) and the Monastery.

The majority of the wall paintings completed in the original Engleistra portion of the monastery during Neophytos’ life were done by Theodore Apsuedes in 1183, decorated in the traditional Byzantine style.

The original cave-like cells overlooking the ‘modern’ Monastery..

Outside of the Engleistra sits the main church of the monastery, the katholikon. It is a large Venetian-inspired basilica probably built during the early 16th century. It is very atmospheric with lots of pictures of saints covering the walls and the domed ceiling supports three large chandeliers. Unfortunately, no photos are allowed.

Agios Neophytos Monastery Chapel.

The Monastery has always had a small community. The monks today promote the publication of historical manuscripts written within their walls in order to preserve their history.

Tonight the hire car company will collect the car from our hotel so we don’t have to do anything but leave the car keys with reception. We have managed to drive over 680 km in the past 3 days. A least we have seen a lot of the Republic of Cyprus.

18 April, 2023

Today has to be the warmest day so far in Cyprus so the plan is to relax by the pool all day but first we have to take this week’s washing back to Kristia at the laundry. Our next available laundry is over a week away in Copenhagen.

At least we will have some form of sun tan from our two weeks in Cyprus. In hindsight we probably needed to come here a week later in the year and stay for three weeks instead of two. Our first week was a little spoiled due to our colds and the chilly, cloudy weather. Our second week was much nicer and we are now very relaxed before we have three months of full-on travel.

19 April, 2023

We don’t have to check out until midday today and our transport to the airport doesn’t collect us until about 3:00 pm so I plan to do some blog catch up since I have been a bit slack and haven’t done a bloody thing since we collected the hire car last Saturday.

Lynn is still up early (therefore she makes sure that I am also awake). She plans to do a last-minute trip to the pharmacy to get a few more packets of blood pressure meds.

After a leisurely breakfast we pack our suitcases and I get stuck into doing the blog. After we check out at midday we find a nice place on the ground-floor lobby with a power point and a desk away from the other checked-out guests.

By 3:15 pm we are on the transfer bus and headed to the airport. 5 hours on a very basic plane with rock hard seats and without an entertainment system seems an eternity.

Departing Cyprus and looking back at our resort hotel.

Since we won’t be getting in to Belfast until 11:00 pm Cyprus time we ordered a meal on the plane. We won’t do that again. It was the epitome of very bad airplane food.

Crossing the French Alps on the way to Belfast.

After a long day it is nice to just be able to walk 50 meters to the hotel after we collected our luggage at Belfast International Airport.

20 April, 2023

We wake up later than we planned this morning thanks to a failure of Lynn’s phone alarm failure. However it worked out for the best as we were told that the breakfast room would be very busy this morning so we had planned to eat by 7:00 am. We rolled up for breakfast at 8:00 am and the place was almost empty.

After a reasonable breakfast we took our time to repack and checked out at 10:30 am and headed across the road to the bus terminal where we boarded the 705X Aircoach to Dublin airport.

At least the bus has WiFi.

We are staying at the Radisson Blu Hotel at Dublin airport tonight in preparation for our 1:15 pm flight tomorrow to Copenhagen.

We checked in to the Radisson at about 2:00 pm and were given an upgraded room on the top level. The hotel is being repainted so there is a strong paint smell but the room is very nice and we will have dinner at their very nice restaurant this evening.

Lynn is fascinated by the hotel’s wall clock in the lobby. This should keep her entertained for a while.

The lobby clock at the Radisson Hotel Dublin Airport.

Lynn has some ironing to do tonight then it will be an early night and hopefully her alarm will go off in the morning.

I will start a new blog page tomorrow to mark the first leg of our three month Scandinavian road trip.

Royal Beach, Paphos, Cyprus Week 1

6 April, 2023

We wake up early at around 7:30 am local time and it is a beautiful sunny day. The maximum temperature forecast for today is a very mild 19 Deg C with a low of 12 Deg C. It already feels much warmer than that.

View from our room at Royal Beach.

True to her word, Lynn heads down to the gym at 8:00 am while I take a shower and catch up on some emails. I also checked out the blog and found that when Lynn edited the blog in the Belfast airport hotel she didn’t save it correctly so I had to rewrite 3 days of the blog. NOT HAPPY!

We chose to have breakfast al fresco this morning to take advantage of the beautiful weather.

Breakfast in the sunshine.

Lynn wants to walk to the harbour via the coastal walking path after breakfast then back along the streets to look for a suitable laundromat for later in the week and again for just before we leave Cyprus.

We walk past a number of beach resorts on the way but ours seems to be better than most. The pathway is quite busy but we can’t imagine how busy it could be at the height of tourist season. It is about 3 km to the harbour but with a cool sea breeze it is very pleasant.

The harbour at the end of the point.

At the harbour there is an archeological park which is more a tourist attraction than a serious dig site. At the harbour is an old fortress called Paphos Castle on the original harbour sea wall.

Paphos Castle.

The castle was originally a Byzantine fort, the castle was rebuilt throughout the years and used as a prison and warehouse. Now it is a tourist attraction. Not quite in the same league as the Alexandria Fort in Egypt.

All along the harbourside are bars and restaurants all touting for business. We will probably come down here for dinner a couple of times this week just to say we ate here.

The restaurant strip from the other side of Paphos Harbour.

There are also lots of tourist boat tours, hire cars, etc operators along the harbour foreshore but Lynn is on a mission to find a laundromat in town, which frankly is a doomed mission as there is no way that I am lugging two bags of laundry 3 km from the hotel when there is one close to the hotel.

Tourist strip at Paphos Harbour.

After faffing about for half an hour walking the back streets of Paphos Harbour looking for an illusive laundromat I have had enough and head back to the hotel via the main road where I know that there will be a number of laundromats. Chances are that there will be one near the University which is only about 300 meters from our hotel.

The main boulevard behind the beach resorts.

I was correct. Although I found two laundromats within 1 km of our hotel I found one at the University just around the corner. I was back and cooling off in our room for about half an hour before Lynn returned.

Our local laundry.

I have proven again that there is no need to turn a task in to a career. That is a couple of hours of my life that is wasted. I could have been having a cold, cheap beer down by the harbour.

When Lynn finally returns we head to the pool with the intention to cool off and lay in the sunshine to try and get some colour in our very pale English skins.

Looking cooler.

I crept up to my waist in the pool but it was way too cold for me. Lynn managed a full lap before returning to the sunny spot on the sunbeds to warm up. I think the only swimming while we are here will be in the indoor heated pool.

While we were wondering about the harbour this afternoon I noticed a steak restaurant that was reasonably priced. It has been a long time since I have had a good thick steak as the prices for wafer thin steaks in the UK are almost three times what we would pay in Oz.

Bloody and bloody big T bone steak.

Lynn had a steak salad which she advised was very good. Mine was an aged T Bone and very thick. I asked for it to be cooked rare but it was more like blue than rare. Still it was very tender and very big. That should last me for steak until after we return from the Scandinavian trip where I suspect that the only red meat there will be reindeer.

The sun is just setting as we hike back to the resort and twilight seems to hang around for quite a while. It is getting chilly in the evening air.

Back at the resort before dark.

Back at our room Lynn notices that she has walked 21,493 steps or the equivalent of 13.97 km. I am tired just thinking about it.

7 April, 2023

It is going to be 21 Deg C today and Lynn is up at 7:00 am this morning for her gym and early morning walk. I am lucky to be up by 8:00 am. Lynn took a walk to the left side (as you face the sea) of the resort this morning and ended up at a tiny Greek Chapel.

St Nicolos Church.

As she does, she goes inside to check it out. It is Easter Good Friday today but the Greek Orthodox Easter is not until next Friday so the church is empty this morning.

Inside St Nicolas Church.

Another beautiful day out so again we ate breakfast al fresco in the warm sunshine. So nice not to be hunkered down due to cold driving rain and wind.

After breakfast we headed down across the walkway to the far edge of the resort to find a couple of sun beds right by the sea. The plan is to make sure that we don’t get our now non-Ozzie skin sunburnt. I checked out the sea water but it still too cold for a swim plus there are way too many rocks amongst the coarse sand. Still, the water is crystal clear but free of any sea life. The Med is quickly becoming the Dead Sea.

Paragliding on the Med.

I think that we managed to get slightly burnt today but Lynn has a thick coverage of factor 50 sunscreen on. Not sure that it will help her very pale complexion.

It is still a warm evening when we walked less than 100 m to the ‘Tea for Two’ Restaurant down the main road behind the resort. Neither of us was very hungry so Lynn had a tuna mayo baked spud and I have a moussaka and salad. They were excellent but still way too big. The restaurant has some amazing ice cream desserts but by the time I downed a fabulous chocolate thick shake we had yet again over done it. At least we by passed the beer and wine tonight.

8 April, 2023

Lynn developed a head cold over the past few days. She blames it on a passenger behind her that sneezed a few times during the flight to Paphos. I think that she caught it before we left. Anyway, she managed to keep me awake most of the night last night so I am exhausted by the time we head to breakfast at 9:30 am.

It is cold and cloudy this morning so we can’t lay by the pool to rest up so I head back to bed while Lynn goes to the pharmacy for some cold meds. We still need to book some activities for while we are here in Cyprus so it may be a job for later this afternoon while this last blast of winter curtails our activities at the resort.

We are now both feeling like crap and I really can’t be bothered eating so Lynn heads out for a toastie and brings me back a milkshake. I hate wasting a day in a new country but luckily the weather is also crap so it is off to bed early tonight.

9 April, 2023

Another dull day here in Paphos and although we are both feeling unwell we manage a light breakfast and we turn up for the Cyprus wine tasting at the downstairs bar at 11:00 am.

The wine tastes quite bad but maybe it’s the medication (although we are not the only dissenters).

Paint stripper, right?

Despite the wine being less than ordinary the local port is very drinkable. Not that we drink port these days. We need a coffee after the wine tasting to ease the pain to our palates.

After a quiet couple of days we need to take a walk so we head off along the beach front to the Greek Chapel. It is not far away but there is a threat of rain so we are back inside a half hour.

Cyprus flag.

One of the hotel activities this afternoon at 2:00 pm is lawn bowls. Since it is starting to rain the game has been moved indoors. Unlike my parents I am not a big fan of bowls. Possibly because I have a bad twitch in my right hand that causes me to turn my wrist over when bowling underarm. Lynn however, like her father, is very good at bowls so we sign up for an afternoon of “ends”.

The Coach advised me to take up surfing.

I put more bowls in the gutter than on the green stuff but Lynn was the best of our group. It was a bit of fun but not something that I plan to take up when we stop traveling.

10 April, 2023

We are both feeling a little better this morning, or it might be the drugs that Lynn bought at the pharmacy. Still, we have washing to do today so we head down town after breakfast to the laundry. Kristia, the laundry owner will do our two large bags of laundry by 3:00 pm this afternoon so we will use the two trips as our exercise for the day.

On the way back to the hotel after dropping off the laundry we notice that there is a medical centre across the road from our hotel so Lynn considers making an appointment to try and get more blood pressure medication. While standing outside the practice somebody from the practice asks if we need to see the doctor. ‘Are they touting for business in Cyprus?’ I think to myself. We tell him that we are considering get a prescription for meds and he advises that Cyprus, like Spain, doesn’t require a prescription for ongoing pharmaceuticals. Since there is a pharmacy almost next door to the laundry we will stop in this afternoon before we collect the laundry.

Back at the resort we manage a couple of hours on the sunbeds before it starts to rain again. By then it is time to head to the laundry via the pharmacy. How bad are things getting that going to the pharmacy and the laundry is noteworthy? Still we manage to stock up on pharmacy items so that we have sufficient stock to last until we are due back in Brisbane in the third quarter of next year. Also Kristia has done a great job on the laundry and only charges us Eu20.00 in total.

This evening we are invited to a cocktail party as new guests of the hotel. The only cocktail offered is a Brandy Sour which is very strong and almost drinkable. The other option is a sort of sparkling local wine which probably doesn’t rate as the latter. Some finger food is offered and we chat to a couple from Leeds in the UK who are regulars to Cyprus. They have made the trek on at least 8 occasions.

11 April, 2023

The wind has whipped up from the west this morning and although it is sunny the wind is very cold. We are well enough today to start to do a few more activities. First up is a Cyprus version of French Boules. This Cyprus version is held on artificial turf on a concrete base. Lynn and I are teamed up as Team Australia and we easily take our heats to be in the finals with an Englishman and his daughter. The Ashes of Cypritic Boules…

As usual Lynn has a brilliant round and we defeat the Poms 2 nil.

Lynn already has us won.

Next we line up again for a Cyrpus version of shuttle board. Again the Aussies win the heats and are in the finals. We find out that the same Poms are our opponents. Lynn again smashes it and we are assured of a win but it all seems a bit unfair so I drive my chuck hard and give the game to a very happy father and his 9-year-old daughter.

Can we beat the 9-year-old and her father?

With all this sunshine and cool wind we decide to walk the 3 km to the Kato Paphos Archaeological Park. Lynn wants to check out the ruins. Since we are seniors we get in for free. The site is not particularly well signposted and really nowhere in the same league as other sites in Greece but the mosaics are very fine and in good condition.

Kato Paphos Archaeological Park.

Some of the mosaics were on the paths underfoot of the tourists, some just outside in the sun but a few were well protected inside a modern structure.

Very detailed mosaics.

The mosaics were so detailed it was hard to imagine that they weren’t artworks.

Amazing details and vibrant colours.

Many of the excavations have been covered with sand again as this site is very exposed to the sea and shifting sands from the nearby beach.

At least some are protected from the elements.

After checking out the main dig site and the mosaics we headed to the headland about 500 meters further on. From here you can see Kefalos Beach and downtown Paphos. It reminds us of Athens. A harsh, densely- populated concrete city. If we manage to get a hire car next week we may drive through downtown Paphos but it is not worth walking to from here.

The Paphos Lighthouse on the headland.

We reached the lighthouse on the headland then Lynn tried to find the ancient amphitheater but she took us the wrong way but eventually we doubled back to find it just under the lighthouse.

Not quite the acoustics of the theatre in Alexandria.

It is time to walk the 3 km back to the resort. I am in desperate need of ice cream. Although it is not that hot, the wind has dried us out so we stopped in at our favourite cafe near the hotel. I have be wanting to try out their banana split since our first dinner here but have never been able to fit it in. Today is the day.

A banana split to share.

When the “to be shared” banana split arrives Lynn informs me that she hates banana ice cream. A bit late now so she only eats the vanilla ice cream and I get the lion’s share of banana ice cream. We walked over 9.2 km today so we can indulge in a fat attack. Yummy!

We have already been in Cyprus for a week and it feels like we have done very little. Still, most people who come to Cyprus come for the weather and to relax by the seaside. We have certainly done that so the plan for the second week is to go and see a bit more of the country.

On the way out to dinner tonight we stop on the way to the restaurant at a tour and hire car agent and ask about renting a car. The agent is not very helpful and just tells us that they have no stock. I have also made an online inquiry but also had no response. Maybe this island lifestyle has the locals in a “can’t be bothered” mode.

Tomorrow I will stop in at the Car Rental shop that is near the laundry.

Advertising but lack of delivery.