17 May, 2018
Let a day go by and the catch-up is tough.
Yesterday we spent an easy, enjoyable day in Stavanger. Stavanger is a beautiful, small town that seems to have been the launch pad for the petroleum industry in Norway. Like every other port we’ve visited, it’s clean and in good repair. The orderly little white wooden houses give it a sense of homogeny. We walked the old town area with the cobbled streets, white wooden houses with only the splashes of blue or yellow doors and the beautiful spring flowers in pots or flower boxes attached to the outside to give it variance.
We visited the maritime museum and the petroleum museum - I know, it sounds like the last museum you would want to visit, but it ended up being very informative as well as insightful to the ethical dilemma the Norwegians seem to have as a country that sits on a huge quantity of oil reserves while struggling with the ecological impact fossil fuel creates. They are not moving forward with this industry without serious consideration of what the ultimate outcome will be economically and ecologically.
On a lighter note - today we docked in the southern Norwegian port of Kristiansand. A happy coincidence is that today is Norway’s Constitution Day. It’s a national holiday that exceeds any American holiday that I’ve ever experienced. We made our way into town on foot to find a little street side cafe in the heart of the town which afforded us great seats for the parade. This parade is all about the children of Norway and it seems that each grade in every school participates. Kristiansand is a larger city than the ones previously visited and it appears that EVERYONE is out and about dressed in traditional clothing or their “Sunday best”. People are smiling and greeting one another.
The Norwegians on a whole are a very attractive people. Beautiful olive complexion, light hair and eyes and an overall appearance of health and vitality. The children sing as they march in the parade and shout “Hurra”! Everyone is eating ice cream and carrying the flag of Norway. Rosettes are worn in the colors of the flag of Norway and the streets are packed!
After the parade we walked to the cathedral in hopes of seeing the free concert we heard was being offered there. We followed the crowds into the cathedral to discover that we were attending a Lutheran service. It was all in Norwegian, but so beautiful with lots and lots of singing, organ music and even a horn section that played exquisitely. The congregation sang along with the choir and the cathedral was filled with heavenly sound. After the service, several people asked if we were with the ship and welcomed us to Kristiansand. They said that the last song they all sang was the national anthem and how fortunate it was that we were here on the absolutely best day to be in Norway. I think they’re right.
We stayed for the organ concert and it was fabulous. Afterward we walked around town a bit. It was a beautiful sunny day and the crowds of traditionally dressed people, the spring tulips and the cherry trees in bloom made it an almost dream-like experience. It is certainly one we will never forget.