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We didn't know about
NORWAY

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What are some of the “things” or activities that people in Norway do for fun?

ANSWER: Friluftsliv, directly translated as “open air living”, is the Norwegian way of outdoor recreation and an important part of the Norwegian cultural legacy.

outdoor recreation in Norway: hiking, skiing and kayaking
Photo courtesy: Visit Norway

What's one thing the public probably does NOT know about Norway?

ANSWER: Norway has evolved from the poorest nation in Western Europe to the wealthiest - yet we don't boast or show-off and still live a frugal lifestyle. Of course, we're the only nation in the world who goes shopping in Sweden for bargains.

a fishing village in the Lofoten Islands
Photo courtesy: Hurtigruten

Share some aspect of Norway as regards to what it has contributed to the world.

ANSWER: I think the Trampe (Norwegian: Sykkelheisen Trampe) is the first and only bicycle lift and is absolutely more fun than anything else. The prototype was built in 1993 in Trondheim, and still in service today. Trampe is a Norwegian verb meaning "to stomp". We also invented the Cheese slicer.

illustration of a trampe or bicycle lift
a trampe on a street in  Norway

For further information about Norway, click on: www.visitnorway.us.

Send your feedback to editor@Travelingboy.com.

Archives

THREE Things We didn't know about the Netherlands
THREE Things We didn't know about Warsaw, Poland
THREE Things We didn't know about Krakow, Poland
THREE Things We didn't know about Wroclaw, Poland
THREE Things We didn't know about Hamburg
THREE Things We didn't know about Monaco
THREE Things We didn't know about Adventures by Disney
THREE Things We didn't know about Oahu
THREE Things We didn't know about Cancun
THREE Things We didn't know about Kaua'i
THREE Things We didn't know about Bern, Switzerland
THREE Things We didn't know about Switzerland
THREE Things We didn't know about Wales
THREE Things We didn't know about Pismo Beach, California
THREE Things We didn't know about Pullman, Washington State
THREE Things We didn't know about New Mexico
THREE Things We didn't know about Lake Geneva
THREE Things We didn't know about La Paz
THREE Things We didn't know about Juneau
THREE Things We didn't know about St. Louis
THREE Things We didn't know about Eurail
THREE Things We didn't know about Air Berlin
THREE Things We didn't know about Nova Scotia
THREE Things We didn't know about Norway
THREE Things We didn't know about Ottawa
THREE Things We didn't know about Berlin
THREE Things We didn't know about Austria
THREE Things We didn't know about France
THREE Things We didn't know about Portugal

Ed Boitano's travel blog/review
Three Musical Pilgrimages: Mozart, Grieg and Hendrix

Troldhaugen Villa in Bergen, Norway
Johann Chrysostom Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791) could read and compose music, plus play the violin and piano, when he was five years old. Born into a musical family in Salzburg, Austria (then the Holy Roman Empire), he had a unique ability for imitating music, which first became evident when he recited a musical piece by simply observing his father conducting a lesson to his older sister. This led to a childhood on the road, where the young prodigy performed before many of the royal courts of Europe.

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Tom Weber's travel blog/review
Treasures of Ireland: The Irish Goodbye (Dispatch #20)

Irish sunset

The Palladian Traveler brings to a close his 20-part series on the Emerald Isle from an upscale restaurant in downtown Dublin where he files his final dispatch and then quietly slips away.

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John Clayton's travel blog/review
Two "MUST SEE" Truly Spectacular Places in Europe. Here's Why.

Culzean Castle, Scotland
The Han Grotto and Culzean Castle. As the name of my Traveling Boy feature is "Travel With a Difference," it's important to me to always bring you offbeat and unusual tourist places around the world you may not know about. These two fit that category to a T, and they're absolutely worth a visit. One's in Scotland and one's in Belgium. Culzean (pronounced CULLANE) Castle is located near Maybole, Carrick, on the Ayrshire coast of Scotland.

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Ringo Boitano's travel blog/review
Highway 49 Revisited: Exploring California's Gold Country

aurora borealis lights up the night sky near Fairbanks
In the 1840s, the population of California was only 14,000, but by 1850 more than 100,000 settlers and adventurers had arrived from all over the world – and they came for one reason: gold. James Marshall had discovered the first gold nugget at Sutter’s Mill in El Dorado County, creating the largest gold rush in history.

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Eric Anderson's travel blog/review
Lake Charles’ Family-Size Low-Key Mardi Gras

dressed-up for the Mardi Gras
The Southwest Louisiana Mardi Gras in Lake Charles, the second largest in Louisiana, does not need parents there to avert their children’s eyes. This is family entertainment and children are very much part of it. The main office of the Lake Charles CVB has costumes from last year’s Mardi Gras but it also has figures to fascinate little ones from country boys fishing for their dinner to alligators who have already fed and are rubbing their stomachs.

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Fyllis Hockman's travel blog/review
Puerto Vallarta: Magic and Mayhem on the Malecon

Cedar Hill, Washington DC
So I heard that you could spend from dawn to dusk on the Malecon in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico and never get bored and I thought, "Okay, I'm up for that challenge." Well, maybe not the dawn part – I'm not a morning person – so I had no problem leaving those early hours to the joggers and those seeking an early start to catch their red snapper for dinner.

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