Sunday, November 30, 2008

We have more bridges than one / Vi har mer enn en bro

I live in a municipality consisting entirely of islands of various shapes and sizes. All communications have to cross water in some way. In the old days it meant boats. Today it means bridges. I have shown you the largest one ("Sotrabroen") linking us to the city of Bergen (itself on a peninsula) a number of times. Today I'll show a small one - one of the common bridges that may represent the literally hundreds of small bridges that exist in Norway.

This one connects the island "Lille-Sotra" (on which I live) with the even smaller island "Bildøy". Across it runs the Norwegian classified road 555 which then crosses more bridges before it ends up in one of the neighbouring municipalities further out.

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Jeg bor i en kommune som består utelukkende av øyer. Alle forbindelser må på et eller annet vis kysse vann. I gamle dager betydde det båter. Idag betyr det broer. Jeg har mange ganger vist den største og viktigste (Sotrabroen) som forbinder oss med Bergenshalvøyen. Idag viser jeg en av de mange andre små broene. Den kan representere de mange hundre små broene som finnes i Norge.

Denne broen forbinder Lille Sotra (der jeg bor) med Bildøy. Over broen går riksvei 555 videre over andre broer og ender opp i nabokommunen Sund.

The bridge itself may not be of much architectural merit, but in a landscape like this even concrete may fit in shortly before sunset in November.

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Selve broen er kanskje ikke av stor arkitektonisk verdi, men i dette landskapet blir selv betong vakkert en novemberdag før solnedgang.

And boats are still being used.

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Og båtene brukes fremdeles.


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Kommentarer legges inn på denne siden.

Broer som binder - Bridges Between

The Norwegian railway system comprises 4,087 km of standard gauge (1,435 mm) track of which 2,622 km is electrified and 219 km double track. There are 696 tunnels and 2760 bridges.

The first railway in Norway was Hovedbanen between Oslo and Eidsvoll and opened in 1854. The main purpose of the railway was to freight lumber from Mjøsa to the capital, but also passenger traffic was offered. In the period between the 1860s and the 1880s Norway saw a boom of smaller railways being built, including isolated railways in Central and Western Norway. The predominant gauge at the time was narrow gauge (1067 mm), but some lines were built in standard gauge (1435 mm). The height of the era came in 1877 when Rørosbanen connected Central Norway to the capital. In 1883 the entire main railway network was taken over by NSB, though a number of industrial railways and branch lines continued to be operated by private companies.

Three urban railways, in Oslo, Bergen and Trondheim, were started as horsecar systems between 1875 and 1893. They were all electrified around the turn of the century.

The second construction boom of the main railway arose in the 1910s and included the Bergensbane across Finse to Bergen, connecting Eastern and Western Norway. Also a number of other larger projects were built through the 1920s, including a second line, Dovrebanen, to Trondheim. This period also saw the first electrified railways and a steady conversion from narrow gauge to standard gauge. Norway chose to electrify their network at 15 kV 16⅔ Hz AC.

During World War II there was a massive construction by the German Forces as part of creating Festung Norwegen, including large sections of Nordlandsbanen and the completion of Sørlandsbanen. After the war the main effort was to complete Nordlandsbanen (that reached Bodø in 1962) and completing the decision to electrify 50% of the network, a task not completed until 1970. This allowed the retirement of the steam locomotive, being replaced with electric engines like the El 11 and El 13 or the diesel powered Di 3. In 1966 Norway's only rapid transit, Oslo T-bane was opened, but in the same decade the Bergen tramway was closed. In the 1970s and 80s a lot of branch lines were also abandoned.

In 1980 the massive project of connecting the eastern and western railway networks around Oslo was completed with the opening of the Oslo Tunnel and Oslo Central Station. In 1996 NSB was split in the Norwegian Railway Inspectorate, Jernbaneverket and operating company NSB BA. Since the companies have been split into 10 separate companies and corporations. In 1998 the first new line in 36 years was opened when the high-speed railway Gardermobanen was opened to allow travel at 210 km/h between Oslo, Oslo Airport and Eidsvoll. The 1990s also saw the massive introduction of multiple units on passenger trains. In the 2000s the freight segment was deregulated and a number of freight companies have started competing with the NSB partial subsidiary CargoNet.

Source Wikipedia.





Holmestrand

Today's flower - still around

A rose bud - still to be found in November. If you look closely.



PS The Today's flowers meme is hosted by LUIZ SANTILLI JR. . Please visit and enjoy.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Have you met Miss Bo...

A brief musical interlude with Miss Bo and I... (original music courtesy of Richard Rodgers, original lyrics, not the ones below, courtesy of Lorentz Hart). Please play the audio clip, it jollies up this post no end...

Villa Beau Bo/Palais du Bo/Casa Bo/Peep Palace
A home by any other name

Have you met Miss Bo?


Have you met Miss Bo? Someone said as we shook hands,
She was just Miss Bo to me.
And then I said, Miss Bo, I'm a girl who understands,
You're a fowl who must be free.
And all at once, she peeped, and all at once she meeped,
And all at once I felt I knew Miss Bo intimately.
And now I've met Miss Bo, and we'll keep on meeting till she flies,
Miss Bo and I.



Have you met Miss Bo? Someone said as we shared worms.
By then Miss Bo and I were family.
And then I said, Miss Bo, you're a girl without concerns,
you know one day you'll be free.
All at once Miss Bo pecked my hand, and all at once Miss Bo took the stand,
And all at once I realised Miss Bo owned me.
And now we know how things between us stand,
Miss Bo and I.


"What," asked Granny Were, nudging me with her beak in a way best described as indelicate, "are you feeding this chick? Huh?"
"Mixed grains, seed, crushed peanuts and the odd crushed and shelled snail," I replied, quivering under her beady gaze.
"What? No worms, no bugs, no beetles, no grubs?"
I shook my head and chewed my lip.
"Shame on you!" squawked Granny, clipping me roundly about the ear. "Get yourself out there and start looking for bugs and beetles this minute!"

Since that conversation, D and I have spent and inordinate amount of time grubbing in the compost heap, cultivating mealworms and darkling beetles, and hunting down slugs. And Miss Bo has proved to be a right piggy. As soon as she sees one of us appear with the jar, she's over like a shot and the poor unoffensive beetle is wolfed down before you can say mopani worm! You'll get the idea from the pictures below...

Grubbing in the compost

Ooh bugs!

Wait, Bo, I'll give them to you.

Don't worry, I'll take them right out of the jar! Darkling beetles, yum-yum!

A bird on the shoulder is worth two in the, er...

An evening cuddle, Miss Bo and I.

Drammen riverside









Friday, November 28, 2008

Vintage Friday: Typewriter Part II

following last friday's posts... here are so more typewriters found on Flickr, the more I look at all these photos the more I want one NOW! (calm calm ... but I do want one!)

I love these photo as not only are they beautiful photos featuring gorgeous decoration but they also feature a cute typewriter, proving they are great just as a display eye candy too!


Also found some great artworks featuring vintage typewriters



Isn't this vintage advert pink perfection? Sold!

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Happy Thanksgiving!

We don't really celebrate Thanksgiving here in the UK, although after seeing so many great posts, beautiful photos & delicious receipes, I wish we did!

I'd like to thank my wonderful producer ...(Oscar moment, oh no that's a different dream, wake up Tina!)


Right, as I was saying I'd like to thank all the bloggers that inspire and encourage me everyday and of course all our readers! You are all so important to me & without you this little blog would be pointless :) Have a great day everyday!


(images from Lara Ferroni )

The sun is fighting the snow in Sky Watch


The winter is approaching and with that comes the snow, but the sun doesn't give in without a fight.



PS Please visit Sky Watch Friday's own site for more.


Sky watch - Drammen


Sunrise/sunset shots captured this week.


Sunrise - Panorama


Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Summer in Prague

I was sorting out some of my photos today & came across the ones from my 21st birthday trip to Prague this summer. Everytime I look at the photo, I feel I'm under the gorgeous warm sunshine! Prague was so beautiful as well, it's full of history & I was sure you can count the number of modern buildings in centre Prague.

My photography skills are very average but hopefully you can see the beauty of the city through these photos.


One of the many spectacular churches in Prague, this one is probably my favorite, love the almost all white interiors!
I love seeing wild life in the city & couldn't resist taking this photo of swan mum with baby, just so adorable!






Traditional food

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

"Closing Doors" - a short story

You are about to read something completely different today, a short story, (an experiment in writing in the second person, present tense). It's a bit dark, so don't say you haven't been warned.



Dark fingers wreath the lawn, merging as twilight descends to create a veil between day and night. In the distance you hear the screams and cries, the chanting of the advancing mob. Now and then an explosion rattles the glass and you feel the reverberations rise through your feet. As darkness hurries towards you, you see the glare of golden light and smell smoke and fire on the breeze. The acrid stench of burning flesh singes the hair of your nostrils. It won’t be long now.
You turn away and gaze at the room, once so familiar and comforting, now a prison cell. Doors that once opened to the garden are barred. Doors that led to other rooms are closed, having shut gradually over the past months as the house offered fewer options for protection.
You turn and gaze at him as he sits, head in hands, staring, without sight, at the floor.
How different it could all have been.
You told him several years previously that you had no faith in the shifting sands of government. You saw the people’s hunger and their lust for blood. You said, “See, this is how it is, this is how it will become.” But he looked at you and said, “I believe you are making more of this than is real.” You shook your head because you knew, even then. You could feel it in your bones, see it looming because this was your way, you saw things that others did not, would not. You watched the signs, reading them as they appeared in the stars, on the breath of the wind. But you knew too that fear does strange things to men, blankets their minds in shrouds of denial, rooting them to the earth in which they believe they were born. It was like this with him and you knew it, had always known it. But you believed in change, forgetting that he did not. Not realizing that he looked to you to change, to his way.
“They’re coming,” you say, your voice dry as the dust that gathers in the corners of the room. “We have one last chance before it’s too late.”
He doesn’t answer you, remains motionless, his shoulders hunched.
One door remains unlocked and you look at it, knowing it was never what you would have chosen when the choices remained wide open.
You had such big dreams, such attainable goals. You knew what you wanted and how to achieve it. You even set the plans in motion, moving step by step towards the opportunities that life was offering, knowing in your heart that you had finally found your path, but knowing too that timing was everything.
You had watched as he turned away, unwilling to follow you, deadlocked by his own fear. You had tried to reason with him, encourage him, all the while knowing that he would always choose his own way because his fears were greater than your knowing.
As the years passed you watched the advance of all your own fears - growing, bearing the fruit of terror and strife. You’d had to close up the house, locking the doors one by one as the danger increased and opportunities fled before it.
You remembered how he had first asked what you were doing. You had taken a crayon and written on the back of one door. “Too late, opportunity gone, door closed”.
He had stared at you reproachfully and you had tried not to feel guilty, because you knew you were right. Your sight gave you that.
A scream shatters the darkening air. The shrieks of the unleashed mob swim through the trees, shredding the leaves, destroying the stillness that had once been. A child wails… is silenced mid cry. A momentary stillness flits through the garden before the mob advances again.
“It’s now or never,” you say. “This time I will go alone, if I must. I will not become a martyr to your fear.”
“I don’t deserve you to rescue me,” he murmurs, his voice cracked and rasping. “Not now, not after all I’ve…”
“I am not rescuing you, I am saving myself,” you say, “and I am willing to do this one last thing, to take you with me. But it’s up to you, your choice, as it has always been – only this time I will not subject myself to the results.”
“You don’t know what’s down there,” he mutters.
“I don’t need to know. I trust, as I have always done. There is a path.”
“No,” he says, as you expected he would, “I don’t believe they will harm me. I fought on their side many years ago, they know me. They are only coming for the ones filled with greed – I’ve never been one of those. I will take my chances, rather than risk where you are going – into the unknown.”
You nod, trying not to think of all the times before when his words had contained the same hope and fear. You move towards him, go down on your knees and enfold him, one last time, in your arms.
“I love you,” you say. You kiss the top of his head, rise, and move away.
You are on your own now, as you have always been, as you have always known you would be.
You pull the heavy handle, dragging the door upwards and open. You feel his eyes on you but you do not turn around. He never believed that you would finally go; he always believed that you would stay with him, fearing that you would leave, but praying you would not.
“Wait,” he calls out.
You turn and look at him, as the gates splinter and crash open. A wreath of smoke billows past the window.
“I…” he says, but words fail him.
He stands, moves towards the window.
“Come away,” you call, “don’t stand there.”
But he ignores your words, stands in front of the glass and raises his arms.
There is a single crack. The glass shatters and tinkles to the floor. For a moment he sways, turns to you, a look of surprise in his eyes. As the baying floods through the window, his lifeblood stains the white cloth of his shirt and he starts to fall.
You turn away, step onto the stairs beneath the floor, dragging the last door closed over your head.

Austad Gård - Drammen museum # 1








Austad Manor - Buildt 1808-1813.