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  • To York

    Sep 20th 2015

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    Until I’d started this trip I’d forgotten the great distances to be walked in airports and some train stations.    London’s Kings Cross Station seemed to go on forever especially when transferring from another line. After obtaining my ticket to York I decided to go to the toilet.  I would not like to have had a significant disability affecting walking or else it would have been impossible due to distance.  I then discovered that to “spend a penny” now costs 30p, about 60 cents. Think I was in primary school when I last had to pay for the privilege apart from a couple of places in Vietnam.   I had booked a seat on a quiet carriage and despite heading to the platform as soon as the platform number was displayed was only just settled when the train departed as my carriage was the end of a very long line.  The previous night I’d watched a program on one of the cheap shop entrepreneurs, his foray into new markets and his fastidious attention to presentation and shop cleanliness.  While the train was just grubby and showing signs of wear, had it been one of his shops, he would not have been happy.  On a positive side there were very few passengers and the trip was smooth, uneventful and over in almost 2 and a half hours.

    One of a number of wind farms i the train corror

    One of a number of wind farms in the train corridor

    Solar Farm

    Solar Farm

    Hay stacked in field, also found as large round bales

    Hay stacked in field, also found as large round bales

    The hostel is well located in the middle of the walled city of York surrounded by numerous very old and picturesque buildings.  The lift doesn’t work so its shanks pony up 2 flights of stairs to another cubby house bunk, albeit a slightly more accessible one than that in Copenhagen. I had requested a lower bunk and staff was organized enough to select and place an A4 notice of reservation on it.  I’d got my reserved lower bunk in Copenhagen too but another old duck who had done the same and had even received confirmation missed out.  This hostel is very well presented and maintained and has won awards.  However, it is sandwiched between 2 bars and the nightlife goes on for hours.  Given it is the start of the weekend the head banging music will continue till about 2am.

    Hostel kitchen

    Hostel kitchen

    Stonegate st

    Used to train minor clergy hundreds of years ago

    Used to train minor clergy hundreds of years ago

     

    York Minster There had been a uni graduation and many young people and families were wandering the streets and having photos taken

    York Minster There had been a uni graduation and many young people and families were wandering the streets and having photos taken

    A very expensive face lift for York Minster courtesy of he Lotteries Fund

    A very expensive face lift for York Minster courtesy of he Lotteries Fund

    York

  • Outdoor Museum Copenhagen

    Sep 16th 2015

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    This is located in one of Copenhagen’s northern suburbs and accessed by train and bus/walking.  I only had time to view the southern section but it was a pleasant environment with barely any visitors, and free apart from the cost of a map.  It is about 100 years old and comprised  old buildings removed from other parts of Denmark and relocated into a rural setting.  http://www.copenhagenet.dk/cph-map/CPH-Friland.asp

    Mill built 1660

    Mill built 1660

    Entrance

    Entrance

    Smallholder's house - abt 4 acres plus pigs and labouring work

    Smallholder’s house – abt 4 acres plus pigs and labouring work

    Heater and bed

    Heater and bed

    cooking facilities

    cooking facilities

    Another small holders house another part of Denmark

    Another small holders house another part of Denmark

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    Shoemaker/small farmer's home

    Shoemaker/small farmer’s home

    Shoemaker's workshop

    Shoemaker’s workshop

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    Blacksmith's House

    Blacksmith’s House

    Ducks and pond

    Ducks and pond

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    Cart rides

    Cart rides

    Another Mill

    Another Mill

    Home of prosperous cattle farmers from Central Schleswig & built late 1700s

    Home of prosperous cattle farmers from Central Schleswig & built late 1700s

    Inside front door

    Inside front door

    Much more prosperous looking than any others I saw

    Much more prosperous looking than any others I saw

    Note date on window

    Note date on window

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    Mill house and farm buildings

    Mill house and farm buildings

    Inside courtyard

    Inside courtyard

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    Only toilet I saw

    Only toilet I saw

    One of 2 water wheels

    One of 2 water wheels

    Inside where grain is milled

    Inside where grain is milled

    China

  • Relatively Speaking 2

    Sep 15th 2015

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    Relatively Speaking 2

    I knew the Danish great grandfather’s mother and family had lived at Vallensbaek, a small community in southern Copenhagen as some births and census returns appear in early records.  It is still a rural community albeit with a substantial housing development on its coastal side.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vallensb%C3%A6k

     

    A kind staff member at the hostel checked the travel details so off I went.  When I disembarked from the train the appropriate number bus was just pulling in so hopped aboard and told the driver my destination to receive an acknowledging nod and grunt.  We hadn’t gone too far through roads of rich green trees that I had doubts about it.  When we reached the turnaround point at Ballerup I knew for certain as it was north of the station and I had intended going south.   Eventually we returned to the origin, the driver pointed out the correct start point and I started again.  However, census returns show that the great grandfather’s maternal grandmother was born at Ballerup so the trip was not entirely wasted.   No doubt it was rural in the 1700/1800s but the little I saw from the front seat of a bus was unremarkable residential.

    Streets in Ballerup

    Streets in Ballerup

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    The village of Vallensbaek was reached through more rich greenery and countryside.  It’s a very pretty village with swathes of green grass, a village pond with resident ducks, neat tidy houses some of which were thatched and an ancient church and churchyard now with a modern round glass church alongside it.

    Vallensbaek Pond

    Vallensbaek Pond

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    The church was closed and has been for some time due to fire but it was possible to see through some of the windows to just make out some of the wall paintings and the carved wooden baptismal font.  The churchyard was neat, tidy and peaceful.  With few exceptions I saw no tombstones post late 1980s. I had not expected to see family tombstones as census returns reveal that our ancestors were very poor.   The tombstones were an eclectic mix of sizes and styles and many had nick knacks around them.

    Vallensbaek Church

    Vallensbaek Church

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    Through window of old church

    Through window of old church

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    The new church was a complete contrast from the original one built in the 12th century.  It too was closed but I was able to see a little through the glass walls.  Trees have been planted around it and time will soften the difference.

    New and Old

    New and Old

    IMG_5479

    Copenhagen, Family History

  • Relatively Speaking 1

    Sep 15th 2015

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    The Danish great grandfather was born in Copenhagen in a building in the Amalienborg Palace area, 25 Amaliengade.  The building originally belonged to the famous architect, Lauritz de Thurah https://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurids_de_Thurah  but in the late 1780s took over the function of the Queens Foundling Hospital where unwed women could give birth in safety and anonymity.  https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Den_kongelige_F%C3%B8dselsstiftelse

    Amaliegade 25, the Royal Foundling Hospital

    Amaliengade 25, the Royal Foundling Hospital

    Copenhagen, Family History

  • Copenhagen

    Sep 15th 2015

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    Copenhagen is flat and perfect for walking and cycling.  Bikes and dogs can be carried on trains. I saw a couple of dogs in the station but none on trains.  Bikes were everywhere with dedicated cycle lanes some of which were separated from the road.   No sign of lycra but people wearing suits and high heels rode on bikes along with many kid seats and larger box like arrangements at the front of bikes.

    Carriage for bikes Similar signs for prams and wheelchairs

    Carriage for bikes Similar signs for prams and wheelchairs

    Double decker bike rack at the main station

    Double decker bike rack at the main station

    Public transport consists of trains, metro and buses.  Buses were clean and fast but didn’t wait for the unprepared.

    There were many prams around, especially the large high riding ones Australians consider English.  An unusual number of men were pushing prams often without an accompanying woman.

    Walking tours are a popular way to introduce newcomers to the city.  I went on one on my morning of arrival.  The tour guide was enthusiastic and knowledgeable with stories of the  history and people of Copenhagen while taking us from Town Hall Square through the old streets of the city to the Nyhaven waterfront area and around to the Amalienborg Palace precinct.

    Town Hall Square

    Town Hall Square

    Old streets

    Old streets

    Odd Old Cafe

    Odd Old Cafe

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    I bought some delicious  apples   from the seller included in this series of photos from the Nyhaven waterfront. They came from one of Denmark’s other islands. His sailing boat was moored below with additional boxes of fruit and a also couple of kids playing quietly together.

    The Amalienborg Palace precinct was a short walk away.  Originally it was designed as housing for some of the upper crust but following another of Copenhagen’s fires royalty needed a home and moved into a couple of the vacant properties and have used them ever since.

    ONE OF THE BUILDINGS IN THE PALACE PRECINCT

    ONE OF THE BUILDINGS IN THE PALACE PRECINCT

    CHANGING OF THE GUARD

    CHANGING OF THE GUARD

    LOOKING TOWARDS AMALIENGADE

    LOOKING TOWARDS AMALIENGADE

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    In the same area is the Marble Church. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederik%27s_Church

    Inside Marble Church

    Inside Marble Church

     

    Marble Church

    Marble Church

     

    Copenhagen

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