While traveling through so many different homes, I’ve been trying to notice what I like most about each and translate these into ideas to incorporate into wherever we might settle in the future.
Spring in Stockholm (but not in Reykjavik)
So, it seems like spring has arrived in Stockholm: the tree leaves are budding and the flowers are out in full bloom!
Continue reading “Spring in Stockholm (but not in Reykjavik)”
Reykjavik Street Art
Beer in Iceland
From 1915 to 1989, beer was banned in Iceland. However, since then country has made up for lost time and now has many excellent, locally brewed beers, including a great selection of my favorites, porters and stouts.
(For more information on why beer was banned for so long in Iceland – while wine and hard liquor were prohibited for only six years and twenty years, respectively – check out this article.)
Restaurant and Cafe Play Areas
We’ve only been to a couple of Reykjavik restaurants and cafes thus far, but many of them have had some sort of kids’ area, ranging from just a table with a few toys to a full-on playroom, like the lower floor of The Laundromat in the image below.
Optimism
More Reykjavik Street Art
Not Quite Lost in a Forest
When the Vikings arrived in Iceland, the country is reputed to have been fairly green, with around 60% of the land covered in grass, trees, and bushes. In the centuries that followed, most of the trees disappeared due to deforestation and nibbling sheep, resulting in the country’s well-known moon-like landscape. There have been efforts at reforestation, but because of the poor soil quality, the trees are still pretty tiny.
Stockholm: What We Recommend Most
I generally spend the first week in a place feeling vaguely disoriented before beginning to find the places and rhythms that make up our daily life. Stockholm, on the other hand, felt immediately and almost completely like home.
Harpa Music Hall
Reykjavik’s Harpa music hall and conference center is right on the water and stunning, inside and out. According to the guide of this walking tour of Reykjavik, there was some controversy about whether to finish the partially-constructed hall after the banking collapse in 2008. However, now that the building is finished and acknowledged as lovely, she says that pretty much everyone claims to have been in support of it.