
Thursday, May 31, 2007
Iberisk Skovsnegl

Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Roskilde Viking Museum



Tuesday, May 29, 2007
A Beautiful Idea

Monday, May 28, 2007
Lambic Beer

The Gueuze shown in this pic is a mixture of one and three year old Lambic. The combined young and old beer undergo secondary fermentation in the bottle, giving it some nice carbonation. It has a very long shelf life and is supposedly available in the US... I'll see about that soon enough...
Sunday, May 27, 2007
Tourist Food of BeNeLux




Saturday, May 26, 2007
Amsterdam Refueling Stations

No matter where you are in Amsterdam there is never a shortage of places to grab a beer. As you approach the city’s center, the concentration of bars increases until it seems that every other building facilitates the sale of frosty beverages. If DQ is the “Texas Stop Sign,” Heineken (or Amstel), is the “Dutch Stop Sign” – or at least it was for CK and me. On every street, scores of the familiar round signs beckoned us to step inside for a couple drinks. Most of the bars were smaller with a subdued, but very friendly atmosphere. Bar hopping in Amsterdam is a great way to see the city and meet some interesting people, provided that you pace yourself well enough that you can still find your way home!
Friday, May 25, 2007
Amsterdam
Known most famously among my generation for its relaxed policies on drugs and prostitution,
So, here is rundown of what
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Grafitti "Art" of Copenhagen

The first piece of graffiti I found made me feel right at home. The “Wu Tang Clan” mark is a tribute to a U.S. hip-hop group of that name consisting of 8 living members, plus the late Russell Jones (aka Ol’ Dirty Bastard, aka Big Baby Jesus, aka Dirt McGirt, aka Dirt Dog, aka Osirus). I am not a fan of most hip-hop music, but I am partial to Wu Tang Clan and was very surprised to see a reference to this relatively obscure group.




Wednesday, May 23, 2007
How to Ruin Perfectly Good Ice Cream

-CW
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
It's Burqa Time

Publicly the Danes shake their heads at all this vandalism, but I believe they also appreciate it as a form of civilized protest. She's a sort of socio-political thermostat that whistles when things get a little too close to boiling. I think it's cool--much more civilized than a French riot and probably more effective too.
I am particularly fond of this nondestructive burqa 'vandalism.' It says, "Muslims in Denmark," but what does it mean? The perpetrator was nice enough to leave it ambiguous, allowing us make up our own minds.
Monday, May 21, 2007
Contrasting Codes

In contrast, half of the American code is commentary, included solely to give the how and why. I will definitely return with a deeper appreciation for the stacks of resources that make my life much easier.
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Amager Strandpark


Saturday, May 19, 2007
Spæncom

Friday, May 18, 2007
Fredag Morgenmad
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Motorcycle Hygge

Wednesday, May 16, 2007
Liquor in the front, Poker in the rear...........It's a party!
We started the day by foraging for food. Although not many restaurants in the area, we walked on down by the canal till we reached the old city and went in to have some of the best pastries I've had on my trip so far. I recommend the Rhubarb thingy. I developed a thing for Rhubarb in england, not neccesarily the texture...like snot...but the tangy taste. I do like tangy. Once we got past wondering if this attractive young lady standing by the side of the street with a questioning look on her face was in distress....I really wanted to help.....we went and bought way too much sugar. We sat on the walls of the canal and ate our spoils, preparing ourselves for the trek into Christiana. I think that's how it is spellt.
Chris did not have a very high opinon of this place due to his last visit here, but after finding beer for the price of what would be a lonestar or PB in a little convenience store, his heart softened. Christriana is a "self governing" part of Kopenhagen. I think the history goes back to squatters setting up in an old army barracks area in the 50s and 60s and making a go of it. You might recall the recent police and protester clashes as reported on the news throughout Europe when the community was up in arms over the demolition of one of these buildings within the little Sovereign nation. Like most things outside the norm of mainstream society, it is both the best and worst of worlds. It attracts your punkers, hippies, tourists or locals who want to go and smoke pot and have fun and other people who are making an honest go of living outside the norm of mass consumerism and impersonal politics. Not that punkers and hippies suck. Well hippies do....but I'm not much for hypocrits. The problem seems that in any place where you are the bastion of your own idea surrounded by people that at best ridicule you, and at worst try to wipe you off the face of the map, be that new developments or active government suppresion, is that you end up spending all your energy in an Us against Them dogfight. And that's what half of Christiana seems. Selling t-shirst and pot-brownies, making money off of tourists while you fight the good fight against consumerism. The other half if quite cool. Buildings and homes that have been adapted by their owners or dwellers to suit their needs without as much adherance to accepted and legal building codes, making for an interesting variety of pads. There's a bunch of families living there in great houses, what looks to be like a townhall for meetings and a school house for the locals and some other public amenity buildings. This is the working part of Christiana. I wonder how you end up becoming a part of it?
After this we worked our way around to downtown. The old part, through the office sections and financial districts till we got through the bustle of shopping time and to a plaza where we sat down and had some beer. An interesting thing about Kopenhagen is that either by design or culture, their zoning is very strict. For a city as old as this, and certainly one as untouched by WWII as this, (ask Chris or any Dane to tell you about the "phone call from Germany"--as an aside, one of the coolest things about DK history is the fact that the night before the Gestapo was meant to round up all the Danish Jews, they were secreted out of the country by a vertible armada of small boats and fishing vessels.) there is very little mixed use. Usually, taking Paris or Berlin again as an example, there is ground floor retail, shops or markets and upper offices and maybe still higher, living quarters. This seems not to be the case here. When its an office building....it's office...when it's government....it's government....(you can tell by the anti G8 graffiti on them). So the feeling is a kind of segmented, divisive downtown. Pretty, but it doesn't feel that lively. But this also might be due to the fact that the infrastruce of DK is massive. They've built their nation and city for an expected population 20 years in the future..and they have the cash to do it, which is totally different than the states where we are crammed into an apocalyptic infrastructure that reached its capacity and stopped working 20 years ago. So at times, it feels a bit empty.
I could talk about the little mermaid, but to compete with CK's comments would be a travesty, as mine could hardle compare. Let's move on to when John and Chris get schooled by 2 Danish shysters.
For dinner and entertainment that night, we walk to the new BoBo neighborhood of Chris's friends. I am a bad person so I don't remember their names, but I do remember loosing money, eating good pizza, having a great non-alcoholic beer, and generally having one of the best nights of my 10 week trip in Europe. We each odered a pizza from the local dudes down the street, stopped at the paki for brews, picked up the pies and sat down for dinner. Chris' friends, a couple, had just bought their pad and were renovating it. They had the largest bathroom I have yet to see in Europe, about the size of one in an American efficiency..(due mostly to the fact that these buildings are all so old that they originally had shared bathrooms on each floor)...and they accomplished this by knocking out a wall and doing a fine job of the finish... nice tile work guys. They both work in the archi-world...the lady friend as an architect....and the boy friend as a drafter / surveyor / project manager. They have a degree in Denmark which is much like an architectural degree, but is not as involved and focuses on the practical side of developement, drafting and project management. Chris Kahanek is very impressed.
After dinner, we sat down to a friendly game of poker. I was unaware that this is one of CK's least enjoyable activites. Mostly he says cause he has resigned himself to always loosing. I dig it cause I'm an excitement junkie. But I suck too. And it wasn't but half an hour till I was out and that I realized that my friends and hosts...1) spoke better english than I did, 2) must watch ESPN poker tournaments every moment they are on, 3) quoted more 80's and 90's pop culture references than you would run across at an over the hill Silverlake hipster party on Saturday night. I advocated a 2nd round, (shouldn't have) and for double the stakes this time. Cause what fun is playing if you are just gonna break even. Better to go out in a blaze of glory yo! I tried not to bluff so much this time, cause I suck and I'm bluffing hands that I couldn't possibly have with the cards that are face up, and I managed to hang in for a while longer, even beating Chris and watching it come down to the two friends duking it out(the boyfriend and another male friend--lady friend is asleep on the couch while we blast Faith no More), on their 11th beer each, the one repeating to the other , "you're such a bad poker player man....you know that....I mean...you suck....how do you live with yourself.....you're a fuckin' liar..." Now they are speaking english mind you...because we are playing poker or for the benefit of their guests I don't know. I suspect that speaking english while playing poker is de-riggeur, all the slang is english anyway. Imagine them having these conversations with Danish accents and the night is complete.
I got home, busted out some more renderings, packed my stuff the next day, cooked CK a breakfast that might make him rethink this marital ( or martial?) plans and then took the train, massive as always, to the airport where they charged me more for my over the weight limit luggage than my flight. When I saw the tiny little turbo-prop non-stop flight to Stuttgart that they were going to cram my shit into, I didn't feel so bad, except that I was worried that it would still fly.
Much thanks to all in DK who showed me a good time. Especially my Louisianna museum tour-guide who met us for dinner and drove us an hour to the DK countryside to look at modern art. I owe you a beer girl.
Toodles
John Zapf
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Koooopehae - or that's how they say it....
It's been awhile since my trip to Kopenhagen, so I'll have to split it up into the 2 formative experiences....arrival (general appreciation of the city and of CK's appartment)....and when I got my clock cleaned by Americanophiles weilding poker decks.
I came to Kopenhagen via Hamburg, so I took the train, a scant 5 hours from door to door. The train is amazingly pleasant. It's Danish, which means the vast quantities of luxury tax, ie 180% of any vehicle purchase (luxury is defined differently in Europe....probably for the better of the world) go into producing and mainting a public asset. The train is high speed, quiet and comfortable, there were no angry german youths sitting next to me on this trip, brooding about the downfall of their grandfather's dreams that pretended not to speak english when I asked if he "was gonna be an asshole for the whole trip". Only polite passangers of varying nationalities which gives me a change to show off how I know about 1/50th of 3 different languages. I sound like I'm speaking Bladerunner street lingo. The really cool part is when the train boards the ferry and you get to go out on deck and check things out. They've turned the boat into a kind of mall with a bunch of restaurants and duty free stores, so don't bother buying water and a candy bar. You're gonna be stuck behind a 73 year old truck driver buying his monthly stipend of hard liquor.
Once off the boat, you are in Kopenhagen quick enough, and if you are lucky like me, you have what most would assume is a Russian bodyguard or a US Marine waiting for you at the train. Chris is neither of these, although his very open world view, tempered with libertarian American patriotism makes it seem like he has conducted Black Ops in various locales for either of these vocations. We hoofed it to the bus, me lugging all my stuff for the past couple of months, including the 40 pounds of computer gear that I packed into my bag. Chris lives in a residential development. Very nice, very new, lots of families, nothin else goin on. It's almost like Danish master planners looked at Houston and said.....yeah.....that's what we want. There is not much else going on in the hood and it's a bit of a walk to the nearest train. This is kind of interesting as Europe generally gets a good rap about their housing. But what might be a good thing, maybe is just old. When a neighborhood is 50 to 100 years old, buildings change, stores move in, different amenties open to support the local market. With these brand spankin new developements, you get none of that. And in the day and age of building out and low is cheapter, you wonder if these developments will ever engender the kind of density that will turn these projects into Berlin or Paris neighborhoods that people rave about.
After this first introduction, I sit down at Chris's desk and setup my laptop and drives, connect to the internet, not wireless mind you as the IT folks at Thornton Thomasetti have their spies everywhere. I mean....everywhere, and get to work, not to raise my head till my last day in DK.
Monday, May 14, 2007
Pirate Design

Sunday, May 13, 2007
The Seine
Saturday, May 12, 2007
Pâtisseries

Oh, and for something like this you definitely want to be at least a few blocks away from the nearest tourist trap--the difference in quality, service and price can be startling.
Friday, May 11, 2007
Musée du Louvre


Thursday, May 10, 2007
Got Gas?

Wednesday, May 9, 2007
Champs-Élysées


Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Escargot
Monday, May 7, 2007
Racaille
Earlier in the evening the French government officially announced that Nicolas Sarkozy had won the Presidential election. He is the leader of the UMP, France's largest center/right political party, and he defeated Socialist Ségolène Royal.
Socialists absolutely despise Sarkozy. They call him a Bush clone, and around here that's a truly hateful insult. After the announcement Royal's supporters started to gather in Place de la Bastille to protest. By pure coincidence our target 'cheaper' pubs were in the area...



Like everyone else, we ran. Unfortunately we picked the wrong road because the wind carried the gas right along behind us. I caught a good whiff of the gas, but the guys who were up front were choking nonstop. Eventually we reached a point where we could breathe normally and we turned down a side street toward a large boulevard. This is when things got interesting...

The protesters were not ready to call it a night. Slowly their chants grew louder and more forceful. They started tipping over trash and recycle bins. Then, at the front of the crowd, I heard a popping sound. I'd call it similar to the sound made when you uncork a quality French wine. The sound of breaking windows. The police immediately started advancing and the crowd started retreating.
I have to say the next hour and a half was nothing less than a carefully choreographed performance. Once the window breaking started the protesters would work their way down the boulevard, methodically breaking almost every window. At some point they would stop with the windows and re-form a front line. The police would also stop a stone's throw away (literally). The chants and yells would commence and gradually build up. Sometimes they would light trash on fire. Then, once again, the Pop Pop Pop of windows.
We watched the riot work its way down the boulevard from the doorway of a pub that unbelievably stayed open during the entire riot. When the protesters got too close we left, but the bartender stayed with a handful of patrons to weather the storm. As a side note, we were happy to see that the prices were much more reasonable, just as we had been told.

The protesters were infiltrated by countless undercover cops. This was common knowledge and it was the reason why the protesters behaved in such a controlled manner. They knew exactly what they could get away with: breaking windows and starting trash fires. Looting, torching cars and buildings, attacking bystanders--these actions would have resulted in arrest and jail time.
The protesters thought we were cops (and told us so) because we were watching and not chanting. Once they found out we were American they were very intrigued by our presence. They seemed pleased to have outsiders--particularly Americans--watching them struggle against their own goverment. They must have felt that their effort to attract attention was actually working.
No one was at all hostile towards us Americans. In fact, they were quite friendly, and this shouldn't surprise anyone. Minorities here in Europe dream of a place where they can live the way they want and not have to conform to a foreign society. They believe that in America they can climb as high as they dare and no one will push them down. The American Dream is alive and well. Their words, not mine.
Now I know that riots are a terrible way to promote a cause, but it was still easy to sympathize with their plight. Ancestry means everything here. If your father wasn't a natural born citizen then you are an outsider and in many small ways you will suffer as a result. No one even bothers to deny this and some actually believe that's the way it should be. These racaille protesters were already on edge and now Sarkozy, a politician with a 'tough' attitude toward immigration, is their newly elected President.
Sunday, May 6, 2007
The Eiffel Tower
Saturday, May 5, 2007
Arc de Triomphe


Friday, May 4, 2007
Versailles


I felt like a flea on the back of a Chia pet. Just add water and voilà!