UNESCO World Heritage Site

The Little Mermaid is Copenhagen's iconic site, and, to be honest, pretty small and unimpressive

The Little Mermaid is Copenhagen’s iconic site, and, to be honest, pretty small and unimpressive

Or, as it’s known to the English-speaking world, Copenhagen; I just liked the funny language and letters they use here.

Copenhagen is a city of bikers. For all our travels I've never before seen a two-level bike rack.

Copenhagen is a city of bikers. For all our travels I’ve never before seen a two-level bike rack.

Mark at Kronborg Castle, with Sweden visible across the channel

Mark at Kronborg Castle, with Sweden visible across the channel

We came to Copenhagen for the strangest reason. We had six days between our visit with Ajay and Ann in Dublin and meeting up with my brother and sister-in-law for 10 days in an apartment on Lake Como in northern Italy. What to do? Well, Mark & I both track the number of countries we’ve been to in our lives. In the 1970s I’d been to 11 countries because of my time in the Navy, so I was ahead of Mark. In 1984, though, he pulled ahead while on a college backpack trip. I’ve been trying to catch up ever since. With the stop in Ireland, though, I was just one country behind Mark, my 91 to his 92. So if we head up to Denmark for just a few days I could catch up, making it likely that some time late this year or perhaps early next year we would hit 100 together.

How’s that for a reason to go to Copenhagen? The strange thing that Mark pointed out is that every couple years now we’ve been coming to Scandinavia for a long weekend. We went to Stockholm in 2010 we spent a long weekend in Stockholm, and the next year we went to Reykjavik for a long weekend. Then in 2013, early on in this adventure, we spent four days in Helsinki. Some day we have to go to Scandinavia for more than a weekend in a capital city.

The bad news was that the weather stayed pretty much true to form. We came to Europe some six weeks ago to escape the cold, damp weather we were experiencing in Montevideo and Buenos Aires, but, wow. It’s continued to rain pretty much every day since we got here. And, as you might expect this far north, it’s pretty cold, too.

Some of the very Scandinavian architecture in Copenhagen. And note the color of the sky; it very much had a milky quality not unlike St. Petersburg during the season of the midnight sun.

Some of the very Scandinavian architecture in Copenhagen. And note the color of the sky; it very much had a milky quality not unlike St. Petersburg during the season of the midnight sun.

So there we were, up in Scandinavia as the summer solstice was approaching and yes, it stayed light really late and got light really early. We were there over the weekend and partiers were loud enough to wake me up at 3:00 AM, when it was already pretty much daylight. And all that partying noise would typically keep going until around 6:00 AM. Strange lifestyle; they would be going to bed as I was getting up for my morning run in one of the city’s several beautiful parks.

One of Copenhagen's great parks

One of Copenhagen’s great parks

We played the tourist card pretty handily in Copenhagen. On our first full day we took a boat tour of the canals and then a couple days later took a train for a day trip up to Helsingør in North Zealand, about an hour north of Copenhagen. The big deal there is Kronborg Castle, one of Denmark’s UNESCO World Heritage Sites. The castle is impressive in its own right but it’s real claim to fame is that under the town’s English name – Elsinore – it was the home of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. And believe me, they really play up the Hamlet connection in the castle even though he really was a fictional character.

The view from our boat tour of Copenhagen's canals

The view from our boat tour of Copenhagen’s canals

Hamlet's castle

Hamlet’s castle

Another big hit in Copenhagen, though with an asterisk, is the food. For several years the restaurant Noma was routinely rated the top restaurant in the world, though we didn’t go. Apparently you need reservations months in advance, which we didn’t have. Oh, and you need about $1,100; it runs well over $500 per person for dinner. The good news is that, as we saw in San Sebastian in Basque Country, the presence of a great restaurant or two can really up the game for others. The bad news is that, unlike in Basque Country, the other restaurants in Copenhagen were really expensive, too. Good food, sometimes outstanding, and not $500 apiece, but still surprisingly expensive.

And then there was the strange thing with the credit card. In the first place, restaurants add on the roughly three percent fee that Visa charges them. We see that sometimes in developing countries but almost never in wealthy countries like Denmark. VISA has a policy prohibiting vendors from passing on those costs but my guess is that Danish laws override that prohibition. If the restaurant just swallows that cost, as in the U.S., they effectively pass some of it on to those paying cash. Thus it’s a pretty smart consumer protection act to allow vendors to pass on the cost. That’s my theory, anyway.

The bigger credit card deal, though, was with tipping. When we checked in to a cute boutique hotel the guy at the front desk told us “I see your American passport. Just so you know, unlike in the States, we don’t tip here, so no need to do that.” Great, and really appreciate the tip, so to speak. But every single time we used a credit card to pay for a meal the waiter would give us the option of adding a tip. Our guess is that Visa encourages them to do it since everyone (except us, of course) gets more money that way. Had our hotel not warned us away we would have wasted a lot of money and contributed to the spreading sense that tipping is reasonable and even expected.

That was Copenhagen, then. Good food, great parks, at least one good museum, rowdy partiers. And I’ve finally caught Mark in the great country chase.

Another great park, this one with lavender in full bloom

Another great park, this one with lavender in full bloom

A highlight was the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, a great museum with antiquities, lots of statues, French masters, and a temporary Gaugin exhibit. Here we have some 4,500 year old Egyptian mummies.

A highlight was the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, a great museum with antiquities, lots of statues, French masters, and a temporary Gaugin exhibit. Here we have some 4,500 year old Egyptian mummies.

Mark liked this bust of Victor Hugo by Rodin

Mark liked this bust of Victor Hugo by Rodin

While I was partial to this Van Gogh

While I was partial to this Van Gogh

The view from Vor Freisers Kirke, a 17th century church where the last 150 steps or so are around the outside of the steeple. Pretty great view, huh?

The view from Vor Freisers Kirke, a 17th century church where the last 150 steps or so are around the outside of the steeple. Pretty great view, huh?

Mark atop the church

Mark atop the church

Here we are at Hamle's castle. He was fake, the castle was real.

Here we are at Hamle’s castle. He was fake, the castle was real.

David, Marc, & Mark on the trail to San Candido

David, Marc, & Mark on the trail to San Candido

From Cortina d’Ampezzo we biked a little over 23 miles to San Candido, known to the Austrians as Innichen. One of the things we like about Zephyr Adventures is that each day there are options as to how hard you want to ride. There are typically short routes, medium routes, and long routes. In this case there were two options, medium and long, but the difference was primarily elevation, not distance. That is, the long route was only two miles longer than the short route. The long route, though, took you up over a mountain while the short route took you around the mountain.

David, taking a break with me, on the long steep climb on Day 2

David, taking a break with me, on the long steep climb on Day 2

And me, very happy to have reached the top of the climb

And me, very happy to have reached the top of the climb

Lake Misurina, one of the little treats to experience on Day 1's long route

Lake Misurina, one of the little treats to experience on Day 1’s long route

I chose the long route, since, well, that’s just who I am. And it was definitely challenging; the first five miles or so was just a steady climb, sometimes up a 12 percent incline. That’s intense. But it was also rewarding: there were great views of the mountains and a classic Alpine lake. And of course if you work like hell going up there’s also the thrill of the long descent. Great climb, great trails, nice lunch, then off to the hotel in San Candido.

The next day we biked into Austria. San Candido is only about five miles from the Austrian border and from there we continued another 22 to the city of Lienz before turning around and heading back. The ride there was about as perfect as any bike ride could be: mostly sunny, temperature in the low 60s, following a small river on a fantastically well-kept bike trail surrounded by Alpine mountains and brilliantly green hills. It was heaven, a biker’s fantasy. Of course, if you’re following a river, and going with the current, you’re also going downhill, which is part of what makes it so great.

We got to Lienz, rested for a bit in a cute little park, and then the four of us – me, Mark, Marc, and David – headed back. Apparently that modest slope down to Lienz had changed into a much steeper incline as we headed back. And the weather had turned so now it was overcast and occasionally raining on us. It probably took us 75 percent longer on the return than it did on the outbound and we were beat when we finished the 54-mile ride. But finish it we did and all-in-all it was a great ride. Just tiring.

Tomorrow we head southwest to Brixen, another 50-mile-plus ride if we do the long route, which we probably will. On balance, though, it’s downhill from here, so probably easier than today’s pretty challenging ride.

Mark, Marc, & David after our rewarding Day 2 ride

Mark, Marc, & David after our rewarding Day 2 ride

Tim & Pam, from Portland, along with me and Heather, from the Iron Range. We're in garden of our hotel, with those great mountains as backdrop.

Tim & Pam, from Portland, along with me and Heather, from the Iron Range. We’re in garden of our hotel, with those great mountains as backdrop.

Mark at Lago di Landro, pretty much a perfect Alpine lake

Mark at Lago di Landro, pretty much a perfect Alpine lake

Another view of Lago di Landro

Another view of Lago di Landro

This was our view from lunch. Not bad, really.

This was our view from lunch. Not bad, really.

Day 3 was a pretty much perfect ride along this river to the town of Lienz

Day 3 was a pretty much perfect ride along this river to the town of Lienz

Could the views be more perfect?

Could the views be more perfect?

Or better than this?

Or better than this?

Sometimes the trail led us through cute little forests

Sometimes the trail led us through cute little forests

Or past classic bucolic scenes

Or past classic bucolic scenes

Kerry, our vibrant Zephyr guide - and former staffer at one of our favorite Cambridge restaurants!

Kerry, our vibrant Zephyr guide – and former staffer at one of our favorite Cambridge restaurants!

And Giacomo, now leading us on our third Zephyr bike tour. We love his cute and quirky sense of humor and, of course, his Italian accent.

And Giacomo, now leading us on our third Zephyr bike tour. We love his cute and quirky sense of humor and, of course, his Italian accent.

Mark just outside San Candido with the 1956  Olympic ski jump in the background. In case you're concerned, he was wearing a bike helmet before I took the picture.

Mark just outside San Candido with the 1956 Olympic ski jump in the background. In case you’re concerned, he was wearing a bike helmet before I took the picture.

We’re off on a seven-day bike trip in the Dolomites, the northeastern Italian Alpine region, with Zephyr Adventures a great little U.S. based tour company. This is our fourth Zephyr adventure; we hiked the Inca Trail with them in 2009, and then did bike tours in Puglia, Italy, and Provence, France. Our first stop was in Cortina d’Ampezzo, a tiny town in the summer that all but explodes with skiers in the winter. Its claim to fame was as the host of the 1956 Winter Olympics.

This area of Italy is pretty unusual. For much of its history it was part of the Austrian Empire until it was ceded to Italy after the First World War. Even today, nearly a hundred years later, it feels more Austrian than Italian. Town names are typically given in both Italian and German, which may have what appears to be no relationship at all. For instance, we’ll be heading to San Candido, the Italian name, but it’s also known as Innichen, its German name. And the cuisine seems more Germanic than Italian. Strange.

The town of San Candido, nestled into the Alps, is becoming a major ski destination for Italians with lots of money

The town of San Candido, nestled into the Alps, is becoming a major ski destination for Italians with lots of money

After shuttling up from Venice the first day was a relatively simple eight-mile ride down to the town of San Vito di Cadore and back, mostly just to test out the bikes and get a little exercise. Even with that little ride, though, I was pretty impressed with the mountains. It’s supposed to be a relatively easy bike tour, so I wasn’t sure we’d really be in the mountains. Not to worry, it turns out; we’re surrounded by gorgeous snow-capped peaks. So good they were declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2009. At the same time we’re only at about 4,000 feet altitude so thin air isn’t an issue at all.

This is the sort of scenery we passed on our little warm-up ride

This is the sort of scenery we passed on our little warm-up ride

On any trip like this meeting the other travelers is always interesting. Two of our trip mates, Marc and David, are old friends, while three of the others are people we’ve traveled with before on Zephyr tours: the bike guide Giacomo, and Ann and Pat, sisters from Liberty, Missouri. But in getting to know the rest of the crew we quickly found some crazy connections. Heather is from Minnesota, which isn’t that surprising. What’s crazy, though, is that she grew up in a tiny Iron Range town less than 20 miles from the tiny Iron Range town where I graduated from high school. Her second cousin was in the five-person German class I took in my senior year. Small world.

And then we were talking with Kerry, the other Zephyr guide. She’s originally from Minnesota too, but that’s not the freakish coincidence. Turns out she lived in Cambridge for a little while and worked at Rialto, a great Italian restaurant just a mile from our condo. On many nights when work was too intense we’d stop there and have dinner at the bar, chatting with the staff and getting to know the chef, Jody Adams, pretty well. While we didn’t remember Kerry there and she didn’t remember us, we knew lots of people in common. Crazy small world.

The next few days will be more adventurous as we head out on some longer rides. So far, though, we’re off to a good start.

We're hoping to see a lot of this kind of riding

We’re hoping to see a lot of this kind of riding