We
had had four Danish fishermen stay with us in Alaska two years ago. We had stayed in touch with Christian Jensen,
a major in the Air Force, and he had arranged a tour of Copenhagen for us. We met Chris, his wife Nina, and Jurgen near
the train station and started our adventure.
The
first stop was the sailor’s barracks. These were originally built to house Danish Navy
sailors, but now are being renovated as apartments.
We
went to the Kastellet– a star-shaped fort that was built originally to protect
the city from the sea and the north flank.
King's Gate |
As we came into the fortress via the King’s Gate, Jurgen pulled out a
picture of when he was stationed there in the Army in 1972. Chris had arranged a guide for us. He took us places that were not usually open
to the public – like into the powder magazine, the old barracks, the church,
and a prison for political prisoners.
Chris, Nina & Jurgen wait for the guide |
down the path to the Queen's Magazine |
The
Queen’s Magazine was one of only two magazines inside the fort. (They had had an explosion, and after that
put the rest outside the fortified walls.)
The displays were of a typical black powder storage, but also of the
prison the building later became.
how the prisoners lived |
The
barracks were set up so that 36 soldiers lived in each section… the ones on the
ground and first floors had heat from the fireplaces, those on the second floor
did not.. They could even have their families in the barracks with them
the well |
Each barracks had a well. This is the only one still available.
At
the north end of the parade ground was a chapel, that is still an active
church. What was unique about this was
they built a prison along the back wall.
There were portals so the prisoners could hear the service. (It was kind of like how the prisoners at
Alcatraz could see the city so close – but it was outside their reach.)
to the left, cells -- to the right, the church |
We went up on top the walls. You can see how they reached the barracks from the walls. A while back there was a series of downpours that ended up filling the fortress with water up to the first floor.
Out
behind the chapel/prison is one of
Copenhagen’s four surviving windmills.
The have a cadre of volunteers who help maintain it and run it. There are even bakeries in town which
sell the bread from this mill.
the lagoon behind the fortress |
We
walked down the waterfront past the Maersk Line headquarters. Known for its sky blue ships, it seemed
appropriate that the building had blue windows.
Maersk’s Foundation gave the city the seed money to build an opera house
right on the waterfront… the chairman of Maersk can look across the bay at
it.
the Royal Opera House |
Marble Church (dome) and the Royal Palace |
Next
stop was the Royal Palace. We were in
the square photographing the Marble Church and other buildings when a chime
sounded. With that, the guards in all
the posts came to attention, and started a ritualistic walk-around. While these look a little like the guards at
Buckingham Palace, they don’t have the stone-faced discipline… I even saw one
of the gals give a wave to one of the children she passed.
Our
next stop was Nyshavn (New Haven) for lunch. This is an area of old warehouses that has become a hip location for restaurants, hotels, and things catering to the tourists. (Fisherman's Wharf on steroids..) We had typical smorrebord open-faced sandwiches.
We
saw the new theater. Behind this is a
large open space that can be used for events.
I particularly liked the mobile at one end.
There
was a pier area that has become a gathering place for food trucks and small business
in what used to be what the guide described as a paper building that was soon
going to be torn down. Turns out it was
a warehouse for newsprint… the city is replacing it as part of their urban
renewal program.
the paper building |
a little art work in front of the paper building |
We
went right past the Opera House. One
interesting fact is that one of the extreme games TV companies has gotten
permission to use the building for an event.
Riders jump off the roof!!
garbage power |
Right
behind there is a very large power plant that was designed to burn garbage as
its primary fuel. The city didn’t have
enough garbage, so they had to import British garbage. The guide also said that this plant uses some
of the energy to create snow. Not
exactly sure why.
The naval station would raise the flag at dawn and fire a cannon. The king liked to sleep, so he said it would be at 8 am instead of dawn.
Then
it was across the bay to see the statue of the Little Mermaid. Or, more appropriately, see all the crowds
around the statue.
As
we came along the waterfront again, we got a good look at the Royal Palace from
the sea. The royal yacht wasn’t there,
but a pretty good sized yacht was along that quay.
We
went on into a series of other canals.
Much like Amsterdam, the boats are designed to just fit under the
bridges. We saw the parliament building,
interesting church spires, and many, many boats.
you can walk up this church spire |
the pedestrian bridge "mirrors" the masts of tall ships |
across from the bridge, a sailing ship |
looking through the building behind the sailing ship |
historical ship |
rowers pass by the ship |
the Parliament Building |
We got off the tour boar and headed into the main shopping area of Copenhagen. As we were leaving, you could see this round tower. Instead of steps, this has a spiral ramp. Nina said she had climbed it in her youth!
The Round Tower |
After
all this, Chris and Nina took us home with them for a traditional dinner. They live about 45 minutes west of Copenhagen
in a little farm town called Knabstrup. We
got to meet their 3 sons and their rescued hunting dog, a pointer named Kasmir.
It was
a long day, but it was a great one!
A fun trip! The funny thing is, I found your blog while looking for mine, also named mooseadventures (mooseadventureseurope.blogspot.com) but I couldn't remember the url so I searched google and found Moose on the Loose.
ReplyDeleteI had just thought of using "Moose on the Loose" as a motto for ours ... and we had just been in Copenhagen a few weeks ago! Now I had to think hard. I looked at your blog and it isn't ours, but a lot of the pictures are similar. We stayed at Nyhaven in a hostel. We took a city bus ferry up the canal! And we are from Alaska too -- from Fairbanks! We're still in Europe and will be traveling for 8 months (through spring 2019).