Showing posts with label Gotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gotland. Show all posts

Monday, October 18, 2010

Sweden Photo Of The Day Weekly Recap, Week 91

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #420: Struts och guanacos (Ostrich and guanacos) (cc photo courtesy of JsonLind)

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #421: Kullaberg Nature Reserve

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #422: Living in the city (on my island :))

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #423: beautiful butterfly closeup! Scarce Fritillary

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Friday, June 11, 2010

Sweden Photo Of The Day Weekly Recap, Week 75

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #360: Hot Air Balloons Over Stockholm Archipelago (cc photo courtesy of ChrisGoldNY)

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #361: Carmencita (in Kårsta/Vallentuna)

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #362: St Göran ruins

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #363: Stockholm - Midnight Sun (well, really 3am sun :))

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Friday, April 30, 2010

Sweden Photo Of The Day Weekly Recap, Week 69

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #335: Night in Visby (sweet memories of this street after a night out dancing in 2007) (cc photo courtesy of arkland_swe)

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #336: A touch of the wild

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #337: Big one

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #338: Heads up!

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #339: Sarek Stormhat

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Trevlig Valborg!
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Monday, August 3, 2009

Fire Breathing, Jousting and a Medieval Party

Fire breathing. According to Wikipedia, fire breathing "is the act of creating a large flame by spraying, with one's mouth, a flammable liquid upon an open flame. The flame is usually held an arm's length away and the spray should be both powerful and misty."

You can get your fill of fire breathing, fire dancing, jousting knights (see this link to last year’s blog post for pics), medieval parades, medieval markets, medieval costumes and lectures about the local medieval history this week in Visby, where it's Medeltidsveckan (Medieval Week). The walled city of Visby (a UNESCO World Heritage Site), on the Swedish island of Gotland, is steeped in medieval history (the medieval wall was built around 1280).

Check out this fire dancing/fire breathing show from the 2006 festivities....

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Friday, February 27, 2009

Sweden Photo Of The Day Weekly Recap, Week 8

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #38: Red house (photo courtesy of Håkan Dahlström's photostream on Flickr)

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #36: View of Södermalm (looking across Lake Mälaren)

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #37: Parque vizinho

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #39: For tomorrow's victories

Favorite Sweden photo of the day #40: Visby

Follow bloggomsverige on Twitter to view future Sweden Photos of the Day.
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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Photo Entry: Visby Memories

A view of the Baltic Sea through the medieval wall of Visby...

© 2008 Lisa Sculati



Monday, August 4, 2008

Medeltidsveckan (Medieval Week)


(Photo courtesy of Fiona Basile)

Let the games begin! Actually, they already have. Not the Olympic Games. That's this coming weekend. What I'm talking about are the Medieval Games on the Swedish island of Gotland.

Medieval knights jousting before cheering crowds dressed in medieval costume. Medieval markets inside the walled city of Visby. Medieval theatre. Medieval lectures on the culture of Gotland 600 years ago, including a rundown on how the knights battled each other....and Firebreathing. I just missed the festivities last summer. I visited Gotland the week before Medieval Week. Medeltidsveckan 2008 is now underway on the isle located in the middle of the Baltic Sea, about halfway between Sweden and Latvia. If you live in Sweden or will be traveling through Sweden this week, you'll want to check it out, through August 10th.

For more information: Medeltidsveckan 2008


(Photo courtesy of Fiona Basile)



Monday, July 28, 2008

Sweet Ride Into Paris for "Gotland"

The 2008 Tour de France is now a sweet memory for Sweden's Thomas Lövkvist. The 95th Tour wrapped up on the Champs-Élysées Sunday, with Lövkvist, nicknamed Gotland by his friends and fans, finishing in the "Top 50" in the overall standings. 180 riders began the race three weeks ago. Four riders were disqualified for failing a doping test. 32 cyclists did not finish due to a time cut and/or health issues. "Gotland" solidified his "Top 50" standing with a "Top 15" (11th place) finish at Saturday's 53 kilometer time trial from Cérilly to St. Amand-Montrond, the fastest Stage 20 cyclist in the "Young Rider" category. He ends the 2008 Tour with a 41st place finish overall and a 6th place finish among the "Young Riders." Spain's Carlos Sastre captures the Tour de France title with a 58 second victory over Australia's Cadel Evans.

Link: San Francisco to Stockholm's Tour de France archive


Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Just Call Him "Gotland"

Is anyone paying attention to the Tour de France this year? Following the doping scandals of 2006 and 2007 at the biggest pro cycling race in the world, I don't see as much enthusiasm from followers of the 2008 event. The story is buried in the U.S. sports headlines (which don't tend to devote a lot of time/space to pro cycling to begin with, but always paid close attention to The Tour prior to the most recent doping scandals). I'm following the Tour and a couple of interesting Swedish stories from the race this year.

Five stages into the 2008 Tour, a Swede contends for the lead, in the "top ten" in the overall standings. Following Stage 5, the longest stage of this year's Tour, a 232 km course from Cholet to Châteauroux, Thomas Lövkvist sits only 47 seconds off the pace, at 8th overall. Fans and friends call Lövkvist "Gotland." He hails from the city of Visby (on the Swedish island of Gotland). On the 2008 Tour, he competes for Team Columbia. Lövkvist turned pro in 2004 and won the Swedish time trial championships that year. In 2006, "Gotland" won the title at the Swedish road championships.

Another Swede to watch at the 2008 Tour: Magnus Backstedt of Team Garmin Chipotle. He's not in the top ten, 8 minutes and 53 seconds off the lead, but he did finish in 17th place in Stage 5 and offers us this video diary from the race.

Germany's Stefan Schumacher wears the yellow jersey as The Tour's overall leader through 5 stages. The Tour's title will be be decided on July 27th on the Champs-Élysées in Paris.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Cycling in Sweden

Sweden got me back on a bike. For the first time in several years. The Lonely Planet Guide to Sweden inspired me to cycle 56 or so miles (90 kilometers) on the islands of Gotland and Fårö in one day. The book reassured me that a rookie cyclist could handle such a ride. The author did not consider herself a cyclist, but she gave cycling on Gotland a shot and so did I.

It’s a good thing Gotland’s terrain is mostly flat with few hills to climb. I actually made it to my destination without getting hit by a car or falling into a ditch. No flat tires to deal with. It did not rain. Bright sunshine warmed me all day. The trip began on an early August morning in the medieval walled city of Visby and ended shortly after sunset at the ferry landing on Fårö, the island home of Sweden’s most famous film director, the late Ingmar Bergman. The movies Through a Glass Darkly, Hour of the Wolf, The Passion of Anna, Persona and Shame were all filmed on Fårö. When I envisioned cycling on Fårö ahead of the trip, I pictured spotting Bergman out and about, enjoying an isolated and unspoiled countryside (there are no banks, hospitals, police stations or McDonald's on Fårö) as I pedaled my way to the northwest corner of the island. But my visit came too late. Bergman passed away 2 days before I made it to his favorite Swedish island.

After passing 5 medieval churches (there are 94 churches on Gotland dating back to the Middle Ages), sheep, wild pigs and a field of bright red wildflowers beneath a perfect sky, I hopped onto a ferry to reach Fårö. With Bergman in my thoughts, I wound my way across his peaceful isle, with its windmills, woodlands and 17th century farms. The sun went down fast and mosquitoes smacked my face. I should have started the trip in the early, not late, morning. I could have spent less time swatting the bugs away and more time watching the sun go down over the Baltic Sea. Shortly before sunset, I reached the beach at Digerhuvud Nature Reserve, where eerie limestone sea stacks, a result of erosion during the Ice Age, meet the sea. I wanted to see the huge limestone monoliths ("raukar" in Swedish) at Langhammars at the far northwest corner of Fårö as the sun started to set, but ran out of daylight. I found myself with just enough time to enjoy the tranquility of a Digerhuvud sunset, with hues of orange reflecting off the sea.

Fairly exhausted by the time I caught the ferry back to Gotland, I was grateful to get myself and my bike on a bus, sleeping the whole ride back from Fårösund to Visby.

My next biking excursion in Sweden made me fall completely in love with Stockholm. Some people call Stockholm, built on 14 islands, the "Venice of the North." I cycled my way across the city (which has many bike paths to create a nearly car-free experience) on a rainy day and savored the Stockholm skyline, with the city's architecture (examples of Renaissance, Baroque, Classicism, Revivalism mixed with modern and postmodernism) spread out before me. I also noticed more than a dozen businessmen and women in suits cycling to or from work.

Me on a bike. Didn't think it would happen again. I can't wait to see more of Sweden on two wheels.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

My Favorite Swedish Dessert


In future entries, I look forward to talking about the difficulties of learning Swedish, about a must-do side trip from Stockholm, about famous cultural figures from Sweden. But this entry plays to the taste buds. My favorite Swedish dessert: svensk saffranspannkaka/Swedish Saffron Cake. I first tasted this amazing dessert while on the Swedish island of Gotland, located in the middle of the Baltic Sea halfway between Sweden and Latvia.

Click here for the recipe for this delicious creation.

Varsågod!