Uppsala is a university town and while visiting it during the school year is probably a much different experience, visiting it in the summer felt like a lovely Sunday morning. The city is quite small and was really very empty but still impeccably dressed.
Every Swede I had talked to on my journey told me to only spend a day in Uppsala (or skip it altogether) and to spend the majority of my time in Stockholm. While Uppsala is not the most exciting place in the world, it was one of the more relaxing places I've visited. In all probability this was a "moment in time" kind of experience for me. There was a hole in my soul and Uppsala was exactly what I needed to fill it. Chances are if I went back it wouldn't be nearly the same- but for one glorious day I was moronically happy-go-lucky as I heel-clicked and tune-whistled my way through the streets of this lovely place. I wanted more than anything to spend more time here but unfortunately, I had already reserved a hostel in Stockholm and the inner accountant in me couldn't bear to throw away the $4USD deposit I had already put down (that's like 4 beers in Prague!!... or about a third of a beer in Sweden..)
Swedes are the weirdest...
I just realized that in my 10 or so blog posts about Europe I've yet to include a photo of the inside of a cathedral. Here you go!
The outside of the cathedral which is, incidentally, the tallest church in Scandinavia. I would make a great tour guide.
Easy like Sunday morning'....
Uppsala Castle. They can't all be winners.
No matter where you go in Uppsala you are never more than 100 meters from fresh fruit.
This train station bike lot is roughly 4 times the size of the car lot. This is the least American thing I've ever seen.
And last but not least: Stockholm. Though I've lived in major cities for the past 9 years now (yikes!) I realized that, while I enjoy the experience of doing so, I'm not really a city guy at heart. If I had to live in a major city though, Stockholm might be the place.
The city is build on a series of islands on the coast of the Baltic Sea. I've always felt rejuvenated next to water. Something about the smell of salt in the air and that particular type of breeze only ever felt near the ocean do wonders for me. Because of the island system, a face full of ocean is never more than a few blocks away. I looked up the quickest way to get to the Vasa museum from my hostel and the route included using the public ferry system!
The downside, and it is a major one, is that Stockholm is the most expensive city I've ever visited. This meal at Pelikan, while delicious, cost almost $50 for everything you see on the table. This is a pub mind you.
Another downside is the method in which booze is distributed throughout Sweden. Besides the exorbitant cost (1 beer in a pub costs ~$15USD), the only place to buy anything over 3,5% ABV is in state-run liquor stores called Systembolaget or "System" for short (which I find hilarious).
Now I've been exposed to some goofy liquor laws living in the U.S., but a state-run alcohol distribution scheme? Come on.
In Åre I had the good fortune to talk to an aquavit distiller about the hoops he's had to jump through. I was able to taste his aquavit which was very, very good. Unfortunately, though he could allow me to taste the spirit at the source, he could not legally sell me a bottle. His only choice is to sell directly to these "Systems" at an extortionate price. Of the 45 Euro it would cost me to buy a bottle at the System, he gets only 6. How on earth can you afford to profitably produce alcohol in this way? Short answer: you can't. He loses money every year- he simply does it as a labor of love. The major liquor companies are able to succeed (barely) but only on volume. There simply is no room for craft producers in the Swedish market.
But getting drunk on ocean breezes is free so...
However, this heavy intrusion of the state into the lives of the Swedes is normal here. There is an enormous sense of social equality which is nicely summed up in the Swedish word "lagom" which essentially means "not too little, not too much." This word, this idea and this country are simply the opposite of everything my American upbringing has taught me to believe. I could easily live in Stockholm, but could I live in lagom? I doubt it. At the end of the day my 20-year video is so ground in the virtues of capitalism that I don't think I could really live this way. But it's amazing to see the Swedes pulling it off and it's really eye opening to put yourself in a culture so incredibly different than your own. Mark Twain wrote that travel is fatal to ignorance, bigotry and narrow-mindedness. Sweden taught me that there are virtues in other ideas, even if I don't particularly agree with them. We can learn a thing or two from the Swedes: Ideas aren't black and white. It doesn't have to be one or the other. We can coexist with people of different viewpoints and if someone else is doing something different somewhere else, it's really none of our business. Instead of trying so hard to change the way others live their lives maybe we should concentrate on living our own. After all, it's the differences that make the world such an interesting place to live in and explore.
'Till next time, Sweden!