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Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts

Friday, May 17, 2013

GRAND TOUR OF EUROPE: June 30-July 1 France

Wednesday June 30 
EURAIL TO PARIS
During the journey southwards, I passed the time by chatting with an American, named Bill, and a Japenese fellow with an unpronouncable name.

Bill and I discussed his girl, marriage, Astrology and Danish smorrebrod. He departed at Hamburg.

The man from Japan and I then shared a pleasant but technically difficult conversation for a few hours. Luckily, he carried a Japanese-English dictionary. Afterwards we put up the armrests and stretched horizontally across 3 seats each, in our compartment. We then enjoyed blissfully uninterrupted sleep, except when woken by 4 passport and 6 ticket checkpoints.

Donna met my train at Gare du Nord at 10am.  She complained bitterly about her solo night in Paris, having worked herself up to near hysteria, whilst awaiting my arrival.  I heard snatches of "Rip-off City" and how she had spent $27 on one meal and the 'rental' of a sub-standard bed for a single night in a shady area of town.

My overriding focus was not, however, on Donna's meltdown but on getting myself a much-needed drink of water. My overnight train had run out of drinking water long before we'd arrived in Paris. So, I was far too thirsty to do more than listen to Donna, whilst watching for fall-out.

She soon attracted uniformed attention on the platform, so I walked Donna, my thirsty self and my backpack, briskly towards the exit.  By the time Donna had run out of steam we were both standing outside Paris' Gare du Nord station.  
Gently nudging my psychically wounded companion towards a place likely to sell soft drinks, I was finally able to quench my thirst.  Only then was I able to de-fuse the situation, by talking Donna out of getting a taxi to Orly Airport in order to catch the next flight back to Vancouver.

Truth be told, I was sorely tempted to hail an airport cab for her, myself.  But, I understood that Donna was only feeling spooked by the big city and its demands.  And since I had been the one who had insisted that she try to manage alone, I now felt somewhat responsible that she'd endured such a miserable introduction to Paris. 

It was difficult for me, then a confirmed city girl, to realize just how vulnerable, and out of her depth, a practical country girl really can feel in the bigger cities.  Not everyone adjusts to city situations at lightning speed, as I had grown up doing. And Donna's Circadian rhythms were clearly better attuned to country life than to the insane hustle and bustle of a metropolis. 

It was thus up to me to calm Donna down and prevent her from making an erroneous and irrevocable decision about her once-in-a-lifetime trip. And since one has always to live with oneself, I chose to take the high road rather than risk creating regrets later on. Though I was neither fond of, nor even particularly liked, Donna, helping her regain equilibrium was just the right thing to do.   
Picture of the Luxembourg Gardens ©2002 by James Martin.
The temperature approached 100F (40C) that day, far too hot for strife and contention. So, with Donna keeping pace, and without a single clue of where we would sleep that night, I strode, confidently, southwards.  

It was good to walk on terra firma again, after spending 19 hours in a rocking train.  Donna was silent for the hour or so that we walked through Paris to find a Pension near Luxembourg Gardens.

Our room was small, dark and airless, had no air conditioning and its solitary ceiling fan offered  only the sparsest relief. We had to share a toilet with anonymous others in the pension. But that room was affordable on our $10-a-day budget - at least for a couple of days. Plus it did have its very own washbasin and bidet and it looked out over a pretty garden in the shady courtyard below.

Something about this area of Paris gave me comfort, and a sense of knowing and belonging. It was odd since I had no recollection of visiting there before.  Yet the feeling persisted.  And my feet had brought me here without hesitation.  Perhaps they knew better than I what this place meant to me?

My 'knowing' was not to be confirmed until a few days after my entire European adventure ended, while I was relating my Parisian adventures to my Mother, in her home in England.

I knew that my parents had emigrated from India to Paris when I was barely a toddler. What I had NOT known was in which area of Paris they had made a home.  So, when I described Donna's and my Pension, my Mother, at once, recognized the address. Our hotel room lay directly across the courtyard from the lodgings I had shared with my parents, 25 years earlier.

Without conscious knowledge, I had found 
- and was then gazing upon - 
the very same courtyard in 
which I'd played as a baby.

HOW COOL IS THAT?!

This black and white picture of me standing on the balcony of 
our Luxembourg Gardens lodgings was taken by 
my Father on our arrival in Paris in 1950

Silently, I smiled an ecstatic thank you to my angels for awakening a timely spacial memory in me in such an unexpected way. While I focussed on preventing Donna from panicking and getting us both away from Gare du Nord, my ego was effectively in 'neutral', and I was doing nothing, 'energetically-speaking', that interfered with the unfolding of a small miracle.

My angels had used my meagre compassion plus my 'take charge' attitude, regarding Donna and her needs, to lead me back - in time as well as space - to where I might re-visit my younger, more vulnerable and tender self.  Why?  To re-ignite and expand my capacity for compassion.

I knew all this to be true, in all its complex simplicity, in less than an instant.  Since being struck by lighting as a small child I had had many such 'revelations' - or upgrades, as I like to think of them.

I would dearly treasure this new "upgrade" in days to come, when the rigours of continuous travelling exacted a punishing physical toll from Donna - and, in a different way, also from me.

In our Parisian Pension, Donna and I freshened up and changed, quickly, into shorts, sandals and tank tops. Then we exchanged our 'steam-bath' of a room for the Rue de Rivoli and the relative coolness of a 3-hour city air-conditioned city bus tour.

The trouble with 70's air conditioning is that it could only lower the temperature inside the bus by about 10 degrees Celsius, compared with the outside temperature. And on that day, the outside temperature was already well beyond 40C!  
photo by kind courtesy of www.bigbustours.com
I had taken a similar ride 4 years before en route back to UK from Morocco. We had been short of time then, and the weather was a good deal cooler, so we'd not left the bus at all.

This time, I was determined to leave the bus, along the way, and spend some time visiting a few of the sights. It was the best way I knew to soak in the atmosphere of a place.

After a wonderfully long and explorative bus ride, we both sauntered back towards Gare du Nord, to collect Donna's pack.

In my haste to steer her away from the station, that morning, I hadn't realized she'd stowed her backpack in a locker, prior to meeting me on the platform.  She insisted that she had, but that I hadn't seemed to hear her.

Ooops...perhaps I should have listened more closely to Donna's litany of complaints?! So, now I would pay for my decision to ignore them, and dutifully accompany her to reclaim it.  Fair's fair and one lives and learns, but did this latter lesson have to take place on what was surely the hottest day on record in this Parisian summer?


Ah but when you're crazy, what's another trek 
through the sauna that was Paris that day?

Back at the hotel, Donna and I both drank gallons of bottled water, in lieu of food, since it was way too hot to imbibe anything solid. After a few hours' nap, we changed into dresses and heels for a sedate evening cruise  up the Seine on the "Bateau Mouche". 
It was a perfect evening, warm and sultry. And Donna seemed, finally, to be enjoying herself in Paris. How could one resist being seduced by all the attractions along the Seine, bathed in glittering lights? What a romantic ride that cruise would have been in the company of "Mr Right". 

It was almost 11pm by the end of our Bateau Mouche tour. Mercifully, the heat had abated sufficiently for us to walk UP the Champs Elysees towards the Arc de Triomphe.  
by kind courtesy of 
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Avenue_des_Champs-%C3%89lys%C3%A9es_July_24,_2009_N2.jpg
Slightly ahead of us strode two lone males, who turned around, and waited for us to catch up with them, when they heard the clicking of our heels on the pavement. I was surprised by how very quiet the streets of Paris were, an hour before midnight.
photo by kind courtesy of http://www.inspiredinfrance.com
Walking a few blocks together, we discovered that our companions were both from the USA. They claimed to be chefs who owned their own restaurants in Indiana. Yet, on the road - or rail - one can claim to be anything one wants. It isn't necessarily true. And I had already learned to be polite, but accept nothing as reality unless it bears scrutiny.

To prove their culinary prowess to Donna and me, the two men invited us to dine with them in the shadow of the Arc de Triomphe. Our budget did not extend to such luxuries, so we were hesitant about accepting. But the delicious aromas wafting from the restaurant plus our hosts's insistence on footing the entire bill, sealed the deal for both of us. The magic of Paris made us throw caution to the wind as we smiled and said: "Mais oui, merci"


Thursday  July 1  
Out on the town in PARIS 
Supper was superb, and our hosts were courteous, cheerful and flirtatious as well as very knowledgeable in a culinary sense.  We enjoyed the luxury of speaking English to others who understood the same idioms.  It was close to 1am when the pair took us dancing in a club off the Champs Elysee. There, when asked, I requested champagne.  And we all toasted to Paris! 
by kind courtesy of
Everyone was having a great time, dancing and chatting, till the bill arrived. Tom was charged a whopping $75 for a single bottle of Champagne - and we'd all eventually consumed two magnums!  Tom  proceeded to get seething mad with me for having had the temerity to request Champagne in Paris! 

My view was if he hadn't wanted to pay for it, he shouldn't have ordered it. But I could see Tom was way too angry for a logical argument.  So I suggested dancing might help him find his balance again - literally and otherwise.

We danced for an hour or so, but the atmosphere was far from joyful. Tom's mood remained dour till he took my hand, and, without explanation, pulled me off the dance floor. Then casually announcing that we were going for a walk, he practically dragged me around the block and into a nearby hotel.

My turn to seethe! 

Who the *&^% did he think he was??

While I certainly felt bad about the awkward situation that had shaken Tom to his core, I was not about to single-handedly make him 'feel better'. On the other hand, I did feel badly for my part in creating Tom's obvious stress.

He and his friend had given Donna and me a wonderful memory of a summer's night in Paris. We had feasted and enjoyed a good few laughs at the restaurant and club last night.

So, I put my own anger on hold to help my new friend. Ordering him to sit astride a chair, leaning forward against the seat-back, I quietened him down by giving him a back, neck and head massage.  It worked like a charm because Tom's rage had exhausted him and he had quickly fallen fast asleep.  So I covered him with a blanket and let him sleep.
by kind courtesy of  www.getfitwithmelody.org
Twice in 24 hours I'd had to de-fuse a 
situation I'd unintentionally 
helped to create.

Obviously, something was trying to get me to pay closer attention to conversations, but I would need to do so later.

At that moment, I needed only to find Donna and make sure she was safe. Quietly evacuating the hotel, I retraced my steps to the dance club. But the club had closed and Donna was nowhere to be found. I sincerely hoped she had made it back to the Pension.

It was dawn and I needed to return to Luxembourg Gardens. So I walked DOWN the Champs Elysees on the shady side of the street, avoiding the sun, even at that hour. My clicking heels created a staccato beat that accompanied the early morning birdsong.

The sun was already warm, promising yet another sultry hot day. Blousy Parisian women "d'un certain âge", who might have stepped out of a movie set,  were already on their knees, vigorously scrubbing their red door stoops. They grinned up at me 'knowingly' and bid me "bonjour" as I passed.  I smiled back,  and bid them a cheerful "bonjour" back again, allowing them their amorous fantasy of my 'nuit d'amour' in Paris!
by kind courtesy of 
Eventually the beautiful old horse chestnut trees that shaded the dusty, walking path across the road beckoned, so I crossed the street.

That morning I was accompanied by cheery birdsong, sunshine and the whisper of a breeze through those wonderful old trees.  At the end of the Champs Elysees, I caught the early morning metro towards Luxembourg Gardens and our hotel. 

Donna was, thankfully, at the Pension when I got there, having been escorted 'home' by her dinner date. She looked both relieved and irritated to see me. And I surmised from her expression that she hadn't been impressed when I'd left the nightclub without her.

Since I was far too tired to coherently explain myself, I didn't even try.  Instead, I used the bidet creatively to give myself a reverse shower. I then opted to air-dry my body on top of a towel on the bed, beneath the laziest ceiling fan ever made.

At dinner, the previous evening, Donna and I had loosely agreed to spend Canada Day (July 1) with Tom and his friend. We were to meet them in the queue outside the Louvre Museum.  We did go there, after I'd reluctantly dressed. But the crowds and soaring temperatures convinced us that it was just too hot to stand in any line up - even one that led to the Mona Lisa. Besides, I was reasonably sure I never wanted to see Tom again.
by kind courtesy of
The heat was merciless and, although it was only lunchtime had exhausted us both. So we chose to return to the Pension, where we slept during the heat of the day.  Our plan made perfect sense!

In the cool of our CANADA DAY evening, Donna and I 'celebrated' by washing our clothes in our tiny sink. Incredibly, they took less than half an hour to to dry on a make-shift clothes line strung across the room.
by kind courtesy of
http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lxutz5rQ0E1r3c79uo1_500.jpg

It was while writing postcards that I discovered my address book was missing.  My camera was safe, but two rolls of used film were also missing. Those pictures documented my amazing week of activities in Scandinavia, along with my new friends, the sights I'd seen, and even photos of an elderly relative I'd probably never see again. I was beyond heartbroken!  How could this have happened?
Mon Dieu! 
Who would take such specific items?  
NEXT WEEK!

PARIS - GERMANY
via LUXEMBOURG
Paris: 
The Difficult Decision
The Eiffel Tower 

Luxembourg:
The Great Un-Welcome
The Not-So-Great Train Robbery

Germany:   
Mosel Wine Valley
Ancient Roman Ruins in Trier
Explosion in Trier 
Trial and Tribulation in Koblenz

GRAND TOUR OF EUROPE 

July 2-3 PARIS, FRANCE 

Friday, April 5, 2013

GRAND TOUR OF EUROPE: June 18-20 England to Sweden (1303 miles)



Friday June 18 6.30AM: 
Amersham to Paris (260 miles)


Amersham Station
photo by kind courtesy of 
http://www.inconvenientmule.co.uk/commuter/wp-content/uploads/2010/1/140920083131.j0g

Donna and I awoke excitedly at 6.30am!  After we had showered and eaten breakfast, John drove us both to Amersham to catch the train to London.
photo by kind courtesy of:
http://arailwayrunsthroughit.files.wordpress.com/2011/07/sandwiches.jpg?w=497
At Marylebone, we joined the rush-hour throng, arriving at Victoria Station by 8.30am.  There, we shopped for lunch-time sandwiches to eat en route to our connection in Folkestone.  Our train arrived there by 12.30pm, and we were efficiently shunted onto the cross Channel ferry by 1pm.

All went smoothly till our ferry arrived in France at 2.30pm [1.30pm British time] local time. Industrial strikes had closed those docks preventing us from disembarking at Calais. Instead, our vessel was re-routed to Boulogne, where, after much ado, we caught a train back to Calais, so as to make other connections within France.

We used our 2-month Eurail passes for the very 
first time on this short trip between French ports.
We now had 8 weeks in which to travel the length 
and breadth of Europe before our time ran out.

After much ado, we finally arrived at Calais at 6pm [5pm British time].  Having finished our British Rail rations before reaching Dover, we were now both very hungry.  But we had not one French franc between us.
photo by kind courtesy of 
We desperately needed to exchange some traveller's cheques so that we could eat.  But, because of the strike, the exchange at Calais had remained closed that day.

With stomachs growling and patience dwindling, we then wandered into the nearest 'bar', intending to plead for some help.  Despite months of copious and detailed planning, we could not have imagined that political unrest in France would so complicate the very beginning of our trip.
photo by kind courtesy of 
Seeing our predicamment, a kind and very observent gentleman simply gave us 2 francs, with which we bought one glass of red wine each.  We immediately made a toast to our benefactor's health and saw this event as a good omen for the beginning of our Grand Tour of Europe!

We had, however, yet to learn just how very long this 'beginning' would take.

At 7.30pm, we considered our options and decided to catch the train to Paris, because connections through France into Scandinavia were more plentiful from the capital.

Once underway, we had plenty of time to eat, but found the rate of exchange on French trains to be as exorbitant as their food prices.  So Donna bought us each a drink, paid for with her remaining English notes. And happily, that second glass of wine  temporarily eliminated most of our stress.
Our lack of skill in conversational French was no obstacle when we eventually arrived at La Gare du Paris Nord at 10.30pm.

By now quite dizzy with hunger, we were relieved and grateful to be aided by another gallant Frenchman. This amazing gentleman first interceded with station booking clerks on our behalf.  He then ensured that our continuing journey to Stockholm remained worry-free.  We were both extremely grateful that this kind soul was there to rescue two damsels in distress that evening.

Our angels were 
already working overtime!
While our angel of mercy arranged our travel schedule, Donna and I stowed our backpacks in the station lockers. After what seemed like forever, our kind interpreter informed us of our travel times and connection points, wished us a happy trip and then disappeared into the night.

Donna read her book, till I suggested that we jay-walk through the Parisian traffic to the open sidewalk cafe I had spotted across the street from Paris Nord.  If nothing else, the adrenaline rush would keep us awake!

Once there, we discovered that the cafe served only demi-tasses of thick, bitter Turkish coffee. But I knew from my experience with Turkish coffee in Spain, that it would keep us awake long enough to board the 11.37pm overnight train to Koln.(Cologne)


Friday June 18  11.37PM:
Paris to Cologne 

(266 miles)
photo by kind courtesy of 
Our French 'protector' had booked us each a couchette for our overnight comfort.  We were both quite surprised that anyone could have designed, much less fitted, 6 sleeping berths into that one small 7 x 8 foot compartment.

But, despite a long day of travel, I was able to sleep only intermittently; partly because of the train made many lurching stops along the way, but also because the other four berths were occupied by males whose snores drowned out all other sounds.


Determined to overcome this annoyance, I made a mental note to buy earplugs before booking my next overnight train journey.


Saturday June 19 6.30AM: 

photo by kind courtesy of: 
We were duly deposited at the station near the entrance of Cologne's great Gothic Cathedral at 6.30am German time.

Sadly the great doors to the Cathedral were closed, so we had to content ourselves with its external architecture of soaring stone spires and Gothic arches.

To learn more about Cologne Cathedral press here

Thankfully the money-exchange was open, so we each cashed about $10 (one single day's allowance) then parked our backpacks in a locker at the station and went sight-seeing around the Cathedral. The morning was warm and sunny, which considerably brightened my spirits.  And the first order fo the day was to find something to eat.

For breakfast, we simply ate whatever was available!

Strudel was available!! 
photo by kind courtesy of: 

YUM!!
I took many pictures of the Cathedral and the picturesque roadways and shops around it. Then we both stocked up on soft drinks and snacks for our continuing journey to Denmark and Sweden.

Saturday June 19 9.00AM

Cologne to Copenhagen
(434 miles)
The train that took us to Copenhagen was first-class all the way!  It had fully reclining seats that turned the normally 6-person compartment into one enormous 7 x 8 ft bed!   Donna and I wasted no time in storing our back-packs overhead so that we could get horizontal and catch up on our missed night of sleep.

Happily we were to enjoy a glorious 9 hours of uninterrupted snoozing, before our train boarded the train-ferry that links Germany to Denmark.  Then the usual call of "Passports" told us it was time to check out the buffet in the Puttgarden Ferry.

Danish Smørrebrød 

6.00PM

photo by kind courtesy of www.biteandbooze.com 
This  ferry had an international reputation for giving travellers who had the good fortune to arrive on the 6pm T.E.E. train, a delicious banquet called Smorrebrod.

After 34 hours of non-stop travel, Donna and I each happily paid the reasonable price of six Danish krone to gorge ourselves on everything in sight. Only when we were sated, did we notice that other, more savvy, travellers brazenly spooned second and third helpings of this delicious fare into personal sized tupperware containers - no doubt for midnight feasts!

Aboard the Ferry, we exchanged traveller's cheques for Danish and Swedish krone. And then, as the ferry was docking, we re-boarded our TEE for the short trip to Copenhagen.  We were steadily heading north, so our daylight hours were slowly increasing.

The sun had not yet set when we arrived  in Copenhagen at 8.10pm.  I had time to purchase a cup of tea for the inflated price of 6.60 Danish krone. *gulp!*  That was more than our Smorrebrod had cost us.

We had to remain close to the station in order to catch our connecting night-train through Southern Sweden.  As before, Donna chose to read while I preferred to walked up and down, stretching my legs while window-shopping and people-watching.

Saturday June 19 9.00 PM:
Copenhagen to Stockholm 
(343 miles)
For our second overnight train journey, this time from Copenhagen to Stockholm we purchased almost-comfortable couchettes, which, with the addition of newly purchased wax ear-plugs, resulted in my first full night's sleep since leaving England. I was so exhausted, I could have slept standing upright!

Sunday June 20 7.20 AM
Stockholm  
photo by kind courtesy of  nidalsouvenirs.ecrater.co.uk 
Our train pulled into a Stockholm's deserted Centrallen station the next morning at 7.20am.  Donna and I immediately rented a station locker for our back-packs then treated ourselves to a cup of tea each before heading outside to discover Stockholm.

Even for a Sunday morning, the streets of Stockholm sported very little vehicular traffic. Except for Donna and myself, they seemed to be entirely devoid of life.

photo by kind courtesy of 

Where were all the people?

We had heard that Swedes were clinically clean, and most particular about keeping their streets clean. So, why were there papers and streamers strewn about everywhere?

Two enormous full-colour photos that adorned the walls of the building across from Centrallen provided a clue.  They depicted a happy couple who radiated importance - since their faces alone stood 10-feet tall!  But, apart from their names, we could not translate what was written about them.

Stockholm was eerily quiet that morning, feeling more like a scene from "Outer Limits" than a summer Sunday in a thriving 20th-century European metropolis!

Still perplexed, Donna and I walked the several blocks to the Information Center, where two cheerful, English-speaking ladies explained why the city had been so deserted that day.

On Saturday June 19, 1976, Sweden's King Gustaf XVI had married his Silvia.  We had only just missed being uninvited guests at a city- and country-wide celebration of their Royal Nuptials

Twenty-four hours earlier, these same streets had been filled with merry-makers, celebrating their King's marriage. We had planned our trip, blissfully unaware that our arrival in Stockholm was to have coincided with this joyous occasion.

We had tried so hard to arrive in Stockholm on 19th. Thankfully labour strikes and ill-perceived train schedules had detained us just long enough for the revelry to end and accommodation to, once again, become available.

After a sleep-deprived weekend, beset with challenges, I doubt if Donna or I would have felt much like negotiating a street-party upon our arrival in Stockholm. So we were both incredibly grateful to have arrived the day AFTER the Royal Wedding. With overnight revellers vacating their rooms, we had no trouble booking a pension for that night.

Those irritating travel delays now seemed to me to be ordained by angels. 

An hour later, we had reclaimed our luggage and pre-paid 2 nights at the rear of an establishment that looked rather dubious from the outside.  But in Europe, one cannot judge a hotel by its facade.  Though our room had only a partial view of the courtyard, it was deliciously quiet, our beds were comfortable, and there was plenty of hot water for showers.

Duly refreshed, I gave my jeans and sneakers a rest, dressing instead in a skirt and sling-backs. Then, armed with information pamphlets from the Visitor's Centre, I negotiated the bus to Skansen. 2kr bought a ticket that lasted me an hour on Stockholm's bus system - regardless of direction travelled.

Skansen
Skansen is the world's first outdoor museum, displaying a variety of Stockholm's heritage buildings, as well as the old-time skills that once provided inhabitants with clothing, food and entertainment. Being surrounded by ancient houses, with men, woman and children dressed in traditional costume was fascinating. And, after so much time in a train, I enjoyed spending the cool, windy afternoon, soaking in the living history.

Walking across the hilly coastal terrain upon which Skansen was created was quite a work-out. No wonder Swedes have such marvellous legs.  They have a passion for walking and for stone steps!

by kind courtesy of 
The open air museum, known as Skansen, features original houses and features village life from Lapp and Swedish culture.

I saw reindeer in their zoo, and was amused to discover that are the same animal as Canada's caribou!  But somehow the thought of Santa's sleigh being pulled by a team of caribou just doesn't have the same ring of romance, does it?!  Rudolph the red-nosed caribou......um, perhaps not!

At scheduled times, young folk-dances in national costume entertained visitors, their firey red and blond heads glinting in the slanted northern sunlight.  On looking around myself, I was surprised to notice that there were as many red-headed people in the crowd as there were blonds.


After several hours of walking and taking happy photos at Skansen, I stopped to rest my complaining knees and ate a shrimp salad at Cafeteria Solliden.  Duly restored, I was ready to return to the pension.  I had a yen to go dancing.  But the dance-hall at Skansen was closed. And facing the crowds at Grona Lund, Stockholm's Amusement Park, did not appeal that night.

I felt quite proud of myself for creating an educational open-air day, after such a long rail journey from England. But I had been having so much fun in Skansen that I completely lost track of time.

Stockholm lies 59 degrees north of the equator, and experiences its longest day each year on June 21.  Without realizing it, I had stayed out for many hours longer than intended. So it was almost suppertime before I returned to the Pension and a somewhat worried travel companion.

In record time, I changed into my dancing clothes, then Donna and I caught buses to Stockholm's Mocambo Club to listen to some good blues music. There we met Anildo from Cape Verde Islands who helped us to pronounce some of the more impossible Swedish phrases.  Later, he escorted us through tunnelbana (underground) and showed us the massive information board at Centrallen.

Centrallen Stockholm's underground was a surreal experience, especially for a girl who had grown up with London's dull and dirty tube system.
photo by kind courtesy of enviromeant.com
Here the platforms were wide and clean, featuring artistically painted natural rock walls. There was a hop-scotch area for children, a safe distance from the rails, automatic escalators and a lift for disabled people or those with heavy loads. And, best of all, the trains were bright, clean and on time.

Donna and I returned to the pension, and were in our beds within an hour of midnight. And we sorely needed to sleep because early the next morning, we would fly into the Arctic Circle to celebrate the Summer Solstice in Sweden's Lappland city of Kiruna.
NEXT WEEK!
June 21 
Sweden
Midsummer Dinner and Dancing

Midnight Sun Adventure 

The World's Largest Iron Mine

The Arctic Circle


GRAND TOUR OF EUROPE 
June 21 SWEDEN's ARCTIC and Journey South