Free, delicious food from the forests - Chanterelles ... :-)
Catastrophes, wars, terrorism, ecological disasters, deadly diseases, poverty .... The list of tragedies - both personal and public - is endless. Every day and hour media, politicians, experts - and charlatans - bring us a never ending barrage of bad things. No wonder that many people feel depressed and weary. This blog tries - in a modest and personal way - to contribute to a more balanced view. After all, there is so much to appreciate and enjoy in life ...
Friday, 7 September 2018
Monday, 3 September 2018
French president Macron in Helsinki
Last week, while in Helsinki, I managed to get this shot of another visitor´s car:
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French president E. Macron in Helsinki |
Sunday, 2 September 2018
Urban architecture in Helsinki
Saturday, 1 September 2018
Costa Favolosa in Öresund
Thursday, 23 August 2018
Sunsets in Öresund
We have been blessed with three consecutive sunsets here in Hittarp. Here is photographic
proof of the sunsets, beginning with the one this evening:
Tuesday, 21 August 2018
German topsail schooner Thor Heyerdahl in Öresund
The sight of a sailing tall ship - in this case the German sail training
schooner Thor Heyerdahl - is always something special ... :-)
The schooner has an interesting history:
Thor Heyerdahl (named after Thor Heyerdahl), originally named Tinka, later Marga Henning, Silke, and Minnow, was built as a freight carrying motor ship with auxiliary sails at the shipyard Smit & Zoon in Westerbroek, Netherlands, in 1930. Her original homeport being Hamburg, Germany, she was used for the next 50 years as a freighter. Eventually sailing unter the flag of Panama as Minnow and then awaiting further use in Germany, she was bought in 1979 by two sailing enthusiasts, who turned the now run-down ship into a topsail schooner to use it for sail training, especially for teenagers and young adults. One of the two original owners was Detlef Soitzek, who had sailed with the Norwegian anthropologist, zoologist, ethnologist and adventurer Thor Heyerdahl on his Tigris expedition in 1977/1978, and suggested to name the ship after the famous researcher and adventurer. The ownership of the ship was subsequently turned over to an association. (Wiki)
Sunday, 19 August 2018
Two German Unimogs in Höganäs
These two German owned Unimogs were parked in Höganäs the other day:
"Unimog is a range of multi-purpose all-wheel drive medium trucks produced by Daimler (formerly Daimler-Benz) and sold under the brand name Mercedes-Benz. In the United States and Canada, the Unimog was sold as the Freightliner Unimog. The name Unimog is pronounced [ˈuːnɪmɔk] in German and is an acronym for the German "UNIversal-MOtor-Gerät", Gerätbeing the German word for device (also in the sense of machine, instrument, gear, apparatus). Daimler-Benz took over manufacture of the Unimog in 1951 and they are currently built in the Mercedes truck plant in Wörth am Rhein in Germany
Due to their off-road capabilities, Unimogs can be found in jungles, mountains and deserts as military vehicles, fire fighters, expedition campers, and even in competitions like truck trials and Dakar Rally rally raids. In Western Europe, they are commonly used as snowploughs, municipal equipment carriers, agricultural implements, forest ranger vehicles, construction equipment or road-rail vehicles and as army personnel or equipment carriers (in its armoured military version)
(Wiki).
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