I write to you while we are in route to California. We spent two full days in Oslo before departing for home. First, an observation: The Norwegians are excellent English speakers. In my opinion, the Norwegians were far superior to the Scots we encountered previously on this trip. The Scots say things like, "Yer a wee scunner!" which apparently means, "You're a nuisance." English is a mandatory part of the curriculum in Norwegian schools and we didn't encounter anyone who couldn't speak it reasonably well, if not completely fluently. At no point did we have to explain, "Jeg snakker ikke norsk" (I don't speak Norwegian), and at some point we stopped asking altogether whether someone spoke English, as we realized English speaking was basic and worried this question might almost seem rude. We visited a lot of stuff while we were here, including the Rådhus (city hall), the opera house (for a tour,...
We stayed one night in Ålesund and for a few days in Øye. These cities are fun for me at least partly because they use letters unique to the Danish-Norwegian alphabet, the 'a' with the circle on top and 'o' with the line through it (official letter names pending further review). Ålesund is a port town of about 70,000 on the western side of Norway on the Atlantic coast. We landed there around 1100PM, but it looked more like 700 or 800pm, owing to the latitude (about 62 degrees north). Throughout our stay here, I've been very excited about the (nearly) never-ending daylight. The sun sets at about 1130PM rises about four hours later, but the hours between are marked more by a duskiness rather than a true darkness. We only stayed in Ålesund overnight (if you want to call it "night") before departing the next morning for Øye, which lies at the tip of a remote Fjord, the Norangsfjorden. Some locals told us that another nearby town, Urke, had less than...