The weather for
both of our days in Stockholm has been warm and sunny; highs in the mid 70’s.
Everyone says this is not typical, and it’s not what we expected. But we’ll
take it.
We split up
this morning after breakfast and planned to meet at noon at the parade ground
at the Royal Palace in Old Town. That was a serendipitous plan, since right
after we met, the elaborate changing of the guard began. This involved more
than a new set of guards at the guard shacks. What we watched was a 45 minute ceremony that
included a platoon of soldiers marching in, followed by the Royal Swedish Navy
band. The band played an entire concert of mostly marching tunes, but also
threw in a couple of Abba favorites. Bet you won’t hear Abba played by the US
Marine Band.
We split up
again for the afternoon, but met for dinner at The Pelikan, and old restaurant
in an even older building in Sodermalm, the southern part of the city. The
Pelikan specializes in Swedish “home
style” cooking, and I was finally able to go get meatballs. And they came with
whipped potatoes an, d Lingonberry jam. Classic. And these were not your Ikea
meatballs. Big, meaty, round, substantial orbs of Swedish fare.
All of our crew
had the meatballs, except John. John chose the reindeer (I’m opting out of the
Rudolph jokes here). John’s reindeer was medium rare, came with a potato soufflé
and a shiny nose (sorry). He said it was great and tasted like beef.
The Pelikan is
also known for its selection of Aquavit (over a dozen), and since it’s part of
the experience, we engaged in this tradition as well.
Since this is
our last evening in Stockholm, a couple of observations…
Stockholm is
close to being a cashless city. Oddly enough, cards are preferred almost
everywhere. Our hotel, the Hobo, accepts cards only for payment throughout it’s
restaurants, bars and shops. We expect that to change when we get outside of
Stockholm, but I have to wonder if what isn’t driving the move to get rid of
cash isn’t a desire to curb cash transactions that can avoid the high taxes Swedes
pay.
I read a little
about Swedish and Nordic culture before the trip, and one of the characteristics
of the culture is a belief in equality of individuals that is pretty rigid. , A notion that no individual is better than another, and shouldn't expect to be. I’ll
write more about this later, but there’s a belief that this goes back to the
Vikings, the fierce warriors who took pride in having no leader.
I'm looking for
evidence of this cultural trait, and in Stockholm I think I found one:
Senior discounts!
I guess if you
really think about it, why should seniors get discounts? In fact, in writing
this paragraph, I just asked the seniors in our travel group the same question:
Why should seniors get discounts? And no one had an answer. Interesting.
Tomorrow, we’re
heading north, to Osterlund and
Vemdalen, in search of Nelson family roots.
What kind of meat is in a Swedish meatball?
ReplyDeleteTrick question. Swedish.
ReplyDelete