A cement town, a wartime evacuation, and unexpected winds

“You can leave your car with a friend of mine”, says Ingemar, over a beer. “He has a big barn, so it will be under cover.”

We had met Ingemar on the Danish island of Christiansø last year, and had sailed along with him to Limhamn marina on the outskirts of Malmö, where he was also storing his boat over the winter. Limhamn was where he had been born and grown up, so despite now living in the south of France, he knew the place and its people well.

“It’s better than leaving it at the marina, where it is likely to get covered in salt spray from the wind”, he continues. “I always leave my motorhome with him.”

He has a large motorhome that he uses to travel around in when he is not sailing. We had been most impressed with it – it is fitted with state-of-the-art gear, and even has a small garage in the back of it in which he keeps his SmartCar for travelling around locally in when he reaches his destination.

A home away from home? (Similar to, but NOT Ingemar’s mobile home.)

The next day, I follow him to his friend’s place and park our car in the barn. His motorhome is already there. Several other cars are also in the barn, some classic, some covered in dustsheets. Our car will have others to talk to.

“Your car will be fine here”, says Ingemar’s friend. “I won’t move it from its place. Remember to disconnect your battery so that it doesn’t go flat.”

On the way back to the marina in his SmartCar, Ingemar talks about the local history of the area.

“Limhamn actually means Lime Harbour. There was a huge quarry, the Limhamns Kalkbrott, from which they used to extract limestone and take it by train to the harbour where it was converted into cement. I can remember as a young boy being woken every morning by the huge explosions as they blasted out the limestone. Our whole house shook. The cement was shipped all over the world – the ‘Christ the Redeemer’ statue in Rio de Janeiro was actually made using Limhamn cement.”

“Do they still make it here?”, I ask.

“Not any more”, he says. “Nowadays, most of Sweden’s cement is made on Gotland. They have turned the quarry here into a nature reserve with a lake in the middle which attracts wildfowl and other animals. Apparently the nature reserve has one of the very few populations of the European green toad left in Sweden. Look, the observation point is just off here. I’ll take you to see it.”

We stand on the edge of a giant crater and look down at the small lake and regenerating vegetation. On three of the sides of the rim are new-build housing areas, and on the fourth is the motorway to the Øresund Bridge.

Limhamns Kalkbrott.

All that material removed from the earth and used to make the cement to construct the hallmarks of modern civilisation, I think.

“Ironically, they have to keep pumping water out of it so that the whole area doesn’t become a lake”, says Ingemar. “It makes you wonder how sustainable it will be in the long run.”

—-

We set sail the next morning. We are a little nervous, not only because this is our first sail of the season, but also because it is the first proper test of everything on the boat after the winter repairs – particularly the engine which had had the heat exchanger removed. Will it all function, or did I forget to reassemble some vital bolt or screw, I wonder.

But everything works as it should, and we are soon sailing merrily northwards along the Øresund. It is just as well, as we had arranged to meet three other boats by a specific date in the small village of Smögen some 200 miles away well up the west coast of Sweden, and we already don’t have much time to get there. But at least we are finally on our way.

“Look, there’s Kronborg Castle over there”, says the First Mate, pointing to an impressive looking structure on the Danish side. “The town nearby is Helsingør, where we used to catch the ferry across to Sweden the times we drove to Stockholm.”

Kronborg Castle, Helsingør.

We cross the shipping lane at right angles to reach the Danish coast. Now the wind is on the nose, and we have to furl the sails and start the engine. Eventually we reach our destination for the night, the small town of Gilleleje on the north coast of the island of Sjælland.

“It looks like we’ll be here for a few days”, I say, perusing the weather charts and forecasts in the evening. “Strong north winds and lumpy seas are forecast for the next three days at least. We can’t sail into those.”

“Well, I am sure we can find enough things to do here for a few days”, says the First Mate. “It seems a nice little place. I read that there’s a good fish shop here with fresh fish from the fishing boats.”

Looking for fresh fish in the Gilleleje fish shop.

In the morning, I walk over to the shower block for my customary shower, taking with me the card we were given to access and pay for the toilets and showers.

“I am not sure how much money is left on the card”, the First Mate says. “I had rather a long shower last night, and I may have used quite a bit of it. But there is definitely some left.”

Outside a group of people are busy doing aerobics, led by an athletic hunk in his twenties.

“Legs up and twist”, he chants. “Arms straight in front, and bend. One, two, three four.”

Inside, I undress and wave the card in front of the reader. The shower starts. I stand underneath it and soap myself up. After one minute there is a click, and the water stops. I wave the card again in front of the reader. Nothing. There is a beep and a message appears on the reader display.

“Insufficient funds on this card to continue.”

Consternation! Dripping soapsuds and shampoo, I have no way of rinsing them off. The machine for topping up the card is at the yacht club, 100 metres away. And I can’t put my clothes on top of wet suds anyway.

The brilliant idea occurs to me that the only way is to rinse myself off at one of the basins in the common washroom. But what if someone comes in? I have to take the risk.

Starkers, I stand on my towel and slosh myself with water from the sink. The aerobics chanting outside ends, and there is the sound of the outer door opening. I just manage to wrap my towel around myself before the washroom door opens.

I avert my eyes from the curious gazes of the Athletic Hunk and several other sweating faces.

“Shower not working”, I mumble, pretending to be a foreigner not used to Danish bathroom technology. No one looks convinced.

The Athletic Hunk waves his card in front of the reader. The shower spurts out water perfectly. I pretend not to notice, dress, and beat a hasty retreat.

“I have a bone to pick with you”, I say to the First Mate when I get back to the boat.

“I told you there might not be much on it”, she says unsympathetically. “You should have topped it up before you went in.”

In the afternoon, we visit the Gilleleje museum, the central focus of which is the evacuation of Danish Jews to Sweden in October 1943. Two of the museum staff are sitting outside the café in the sunshine drinking coffee.

“The Jews in Denmark were left relatively alone for the first part of the war”, one of them tells us. “Mainly because Denmark had an official policy of cooperation with the Germans. But in October 1943, this arrangement broke down, and the Germans began arresting Danish Jews.”

“Suddenly, Jews from all over Denmark started coming to Gillerleje”, the second one tells us. “It’s the closest point to neutral Sweden, and they were trying to flee to there. Many came by train to the station here. You can find out more about it in the exhibition over there.”

“Local people hid the fleeing Jews in their lofts”, one of the panels tells us. “Then when a boat became available, they would be taken down to the harbour in the dark of night and put aboard the boat. Children were even sedated and carried down in cardboard boxes so they wouldn’t cry out and arouse the suspicions of any chance German patrols. The boat would then take them across to Sweden.”

Some of the refugees weren’t so lucky. Someone informed the Germans that there were Jews hidden in the loft of the church – a patrol was dispatched there, the Jews were arrested and taken to the nearby Horserød prison camp, and from there to Theresienstadt concentration camp in present-day Czechia, where many of them died.

The Gilleleje church where several fleeing Jews hid in October 1943.

“Look, here’s one of the boats that transported people across”, says the First Mate, pointing to a dinghy in the middle of the exhibition. “It’s so small. I wouldn’t have liked to be on the sea in one of those in the middle of the night.”

“You probably wouldn’t mind if the alternative was being taken to a concentration camp”, I say.

One of the boats used to evacuate Jews from Gilleleje to Sweden.

Later, we walk out to the outskirts of the town to see the memorial of the Jewish evacuation and of those who died.

Teka Basofar Gadol, it says in Hebrew. “Let the Great Ram’s Horn proclaim our liberation.”

The Teka Basofar Gadol memorial to Jews evacuated from Denmark to Sweden.

—-

“Well, I have to say, this is the type of sailing I like best”, says the First Mate, stretching out languidly in the warm sunlight bathing the cockpit. “A nice light breeze to keep us moving, no heeling, and no waves to make us roll from side to side. Bliss.”

We are on our way from Læsø to Marstrand in Sweden. The winds had changed, and we had been able to sail from Gilleleje to the island of Anholt and from there to the island of Læsø. We had originally planned to explore both islands in detail, but a quick scan of the weather forecast had convinced us that if we were ever to get to Smögen to meet the others, we had to press on. The next three days were to be strong winds from the north again, which would confine us to port. We weren’t too keen to do that. Today was to be light winds and smooth seas all the way to Marstand, so much so, I was expecting that we would probably have to motor some or most of the way. We promised ourselves that we would visit Anholt and Læsø on the way back and do them justice.

The First Mate is right though – it is pleasant. Except is doesn’t last long. After about half an hour, as I had expected, the wind drops to three knots and the sails flap listlessly. Shortly we are drifting along as less than two knots. At this rate, we might be lucky to get to Marstand by the morning. But at least the sun is shining.

I go downstairs to make a cup of tea. While I am down there, the boat suddenly lurches and begins to heel. Out of nowhere, the wind has picked up. I glance at the instruments – 18 knots! Where has that come from? I try to carry my cup of tea up the companion way without spilling it; by the time I get there, the wind is touching 25 knots and we are speeding along at 7½ knots.

“I thought it was supposed to be calm all the way”, shouts the First Mate. “We need to reef. We’re heeling far too much.”

We put in two reefs just to be on the safe side. The boat stabilises, but she is still hurtling along at almost undiminished speed.

A sudden wind takes us by surprise.

Driven by the wind, the waves slowly begin to grow. Unfortunately, they are an our beam, coming from the side, and Ruby Tuesday rolls as each one travels underneath us.

“I’m feeling a bit squeezy”, says the First Mate, starting to look green. “I think I’ll go below.”

“Queasy”, I say. “You mean queasy.”

“Whatever”, she says, disappearing.

Ruby Tuesday settles into an uneasy rhythm – rolling precipitously with each successive wave, but somehow managing a consistent seven knots. Clouds roll in and the sun disappears, adding to the melancholy. From time to time, the bow plunges into a wave, sending green water cascading over the foredeck and windows of the spray hood.

Crossing the Kattegat in high winds and strong seas.

A ship appears out of the haze. We are crossing a shipping lane and I have been keeping a watchful eye out for ships to avoid. The AIS tells me that our closest point of approach to this one is 75 m. That’s a bit too close. I adjust the autopilot two degrees to the south.

Ruby Tuesday, Ruby Tuesday”, suddenly crackles an Indian voice on the VHF. “Your course is very close to ours. We’re closing fast.”

“Ship calling Ruby Tuesday”, I respond. “I am aiming to go behind you.”

I adjust the autopilot a further two degrees to the south just to be on the safe side. A few minutes later we pass behind the giant cargo ship, and I am watching its stern disappear slowly into the haze again. The AIS tells me she is bound for Baltimore.

The hours pass. There is no let up in the windspeed and the waves are as high as ever. But we are making progress, uncomfortable as it is, and gradually Sweden comes into view. Eventually we reach the entrance to the fjord where Marstrand, our destination, is located. Like the flick of a switch, the wind suddenly drops and the waves calm down, and we sail sedately up the fjord with only the genoa up as we pass the imposing Carlsten Fortress on the hill guarding the entrance to the town.

Carlsten Fortress, Marstrand.

“Well, I am glad that is over”, says the First Mate. “I didn’t enjoy that at all. It was odd wasn’t it? When we set out it was calm, and here it is calm. Did we just imagine all those strong winds and waves in between?”

A good question.

Celestial mechanics, a Viking with bad teeth, and meaningful motorcycling

“Well, we have decided to head for Tunisia in the boat”, says Harry as he grinds the coffee beans with his traditional manual grinder. “We want to get there in time to see the solar eclipse in August 2027.”

We are at Harry and Beate’s place in Germany. Beate previously shared a flat with the First Mate when they were both single, and we have kept in touch with them since then. We share a mutual interest in sailing, and, indeed, had previously visited them on their boat in Makkum in Holland.

Harry & Beate with their boat in Makkum, Netherlands.

“The plan is to start off this year from Holland and enter the French canal system”, says Beate. “We’ll see how far we will get in the canals, leave her somewhere over the winter, then carry on in 2026 down to the Mediterranean.”

“Then in 2027 we’ll sail across the Mediterranean to Tunisia”, continues Harry. “I have just finished rewiring the whole boat, so she is in pretty good shape now. Everything works the way I want it to.”

Harry is used to doing such things. When we first met, he was in the process of converting a double-decker bus into a mobile home, with the kitchen and living room downstairs, and the bedroom upstairs.

“I’ve even been taking celestial navigation classes”, he continues. “Look here’s the sextant I have just bought.”

We go out on the balcony and I measure the angle between a block of flats and the power station cooling towers. It’s 87°. It could be useful.

“It all sounds very exciting”, says the First Mate. “Although don’t forget that it gets terribly hot in the Mediterranean in August. We were there a few years ago, and it was almost unbearable. I couldn’t sleep at night. But good luck anyway.”

We spend the next few days in the First Mate’s home town, visiting her family and friends. Her mother is now 91 and in a care home. The plan is that I then drive up to Ruby Tuesday in Malmö and start preparing her for the new season. The First Mate will then come up by train a week later and we will set off.

On the way up, I stop for the night with our friends Hans and Gisela in Denmark. Their son Arne and his girlfriend Evie are also there for a few days, back from Holland where they live.

“Perfect timing”, says Gisela, as I arrive. “Dinner’s almost ready. We’re having garfish that Arne caught today in the sea.”

I have never eaten garfish before, but I remember that they have a long nose.

“And the bones are green”, says Arne. “They contain some stuff related to haemoglobin called biliverdin that is bright green in colour. I hope it doesn’t put you off. Green bones look rather weird.”

Garfish (from the Daily Scandanavian)

Continuing the colour theme over dinner, the subject of Greenland comes up.

“What do the Danes think about America’s plan to annex it?”, I ask.

“Most people think that it is ludicrous”, says Hans, almost choking on a green fish bone. “America is supposed to be one of our allies, and here they are talking about taking Greenland by force just to extract minerals. The most ridiculous thing is that as an ally, they could have want they wanted through joint ventures anyway. No need to annex the place.”

“And it is also not true to say that Denmark has not done anything for Greenland”, says Gisela. “Of course, mistakes have been made in the past, but in recent years the Danes have spent a lot of money improving services in Greenland. And it is completely untrue to say that Greenland is not defended against the Russians. Greenland is part of Denmark, and Denmark is a member of NATO, so Greenland is well defended by NATO.”

“People are also trying to work out what it means for NATO”, says Hans. “Article 5 states that if one NATO country is attacked then the others would all help to defend it. The US is a member of NATO, so does that mean the US would help to defend Denmark against itself?”

Welcome to the new world order, I think.

The next morning, after breakfast, we decide to visit the Trelleborg Ring Fortress not far from Slagelse.

Trelleborg Ring Fortress (from Leibrandt via Wikimedia Commons)

“The fortress was built by Harald Bluetooth in the mid-980s”, one of the museum guides dressed as a Viking tells us. “Harald is credited with introducing Christianity to the Viking world, and with consolidating Denmark into one kingdom. For a short time he also ruled parts of Norway. He built his capital at Jelling, and constructed a series of ring fortresses to demonstrate his power to the German Emperor to the south. But he didn’t live long to enjoy it all – in 987 he was killed in a civil uprising led by his own son Svein, who was the one that invaded Britain.”

We wander out of the museum and head towards the Ring Fortress. On the way is a reconstructed longhouse.

Reconstructed Viking longhouse at Trelleborg Ring Fortress.

“Apparently there were quite a few of these inside the fortress itself”, says Hans. “Families must have been living here, but there never was a town associated with it. Presumably they were the soldiers’ families.”

Back at the small café, we sit in the sun and eat our ice creams.

“We haven’t been here for a while”, says Gisela. “It’s interesting to see the progress they are making in developing the museum.”

In the evening, I arrive at Ruby Tuesday. Spencer is there to greet me. Both he and the boat appear to have weathered the winter well. There is no mould inside and the air smells fresh. I check the data loggers that I had left running and find that the temperatures inside her had not dropped below zero over the winter. Our worries about snow and ice seem to have been unfounded.

Ruby Tuesday in her winter berth, Malmö.

I spend the next few days preparing for the voyage. I had taken the heat exchanger home to clean and service it – just as well, as I had found that nearly half of the small cooling tubes had been blocked by scale. Soaking the unit in vinegar had helped to dissolve that and left it coppery clean. The job of the heat exchanger is for saltwater from the sea to absorb the heat from the coolant running through the engine, so it is essential that it functions properly to prevent overheating.

Servicing the heat exchanger – nearly half of the small tubes have been blocked by scale.

I also decide to check the anode inside the hot-water heater. We have never done that since we had bought the boat, so it is high time. Extracting the heater from under one of the seats isn’t too difficult, but undoing the nut on top of the cylinder is. It is corroded in position, and none of the tools I have are up to the job of freeing it. In the end, I have to borrow some larger ones from the harbourmaster. With a combination of these and brute force, it slowly comes undone. There is no anode left! No wonder it has corroded. I am sure that no-one has looked inside the cylinder since it was made. I decide to replace not only the anode, but also the heating element, thermostat and pressure relief valve while I am at it.

Servicing the hot water cylinder.

The First Mate arrives in due course. I collect her from the train station.

“I hope that you have got everything clean and tidy for me?”, she says, as I load her bags into the car. “I don’t want to start cleaning as soon as I arrive.”

Luckily it is dark when we arrive back at the boat.

The next evening, we drive over for dinner to some friends, Martin and Mia, who live just north of Malmö. We had first met them on the Swedish island of Borgholm when Martin had kindly given us a hand tying up, as well as a list of must-see places on the east coast of Sweden, which we had now seen most of. He had offered to kept an eye on Ruby Tuesday over the winter, visiting her from time to time to check that everything was OK and that the batteries were kept charged.

“That’s his second wife”, says Mia with a wink as we walk past the Porsche in the garage as we arrive.

“Well, a man has to have a few pleasures in life”, says Martin, grinning.

Over dinner, the conversation turns to Swedish politics. When we were sailing near Stockholm two years previously, it had been the time of the national elections, and the far-right Sweden Democrats had won a sizeable share of the votes, giving them a strong influence in government. I am curious as to how they have performed since then.

The Sweden Democrats campaigning in 2022.

“Well they have lost some popularity since then”, Martin says, as he serves the salmon. “Last year, for example, they were found to be using social media to spread disinformation and attack political opponents online. People were put off by that. Then, this year, the government proposed stricter gun control after the country’s worst mass shooting in Örebro, but the Sweden Democrats opposed that, saying that they had concerns for hunters and farmers. That further eroded a lot of people’s confidence in them.”

“People also think they focus too much on immigration and crime”, says Mia. “Sure, it was a concern two years ago when they were elected, but overall it is less so now. But the Sweden Democrats don’t seem to be able to move on from then.”

“The next national elections are next year”, says Martin. “It will be interesting to see whether they still have the same amount of support then.”

We have booked a slot to have Ruby Tuesday lifted out of the water to have her bottom seen to.

Lifting out Ruby Tuesday for a bottom inspection.

The next few days are spent washing, scraping, sanding and painting, and replacing the anodes. I am astounded at the state of the propeller anode – I fitted a new one only a year ago, and it has almost completed eroded away.

Aluminium anode almost completely eroded after one year.

“Sometimes if you are tied up next to a steel boat, that can happen”, explains Peder, the harbourmaster. “But at least it is doing its job.”

Soon Ruby Tuesday is back in the water to complete the preparations. In the afternoon, we receive a WhatsApp message from Simon and Louise, whom we had met on the Cruising Association Rally in 2023, and with whom we had explored Gotland together in 2024.

“Are you still in Malmö?”, they ask. “We have a rip in our sail, and need to have it fixed. Is there a sailmaker there? We’ll be there in the afternoon tomorrow.”

They arrive in time for coffee and cakes.

“I am not quite sure how it happened”, explains Louise. “I was sailing, and I wanted to tack, and I think the sail must have got stuck on something sharp on the self-tacking mechanism.”

We give them a hand in taking down the sail, packing it in a bag, and putting it in our car to take it to the sailmaker in the morning. The tear is quite small, but unless repaired such rips have a habit of getting much bigger quickly. It’s always better to get them fixed as soon as you can.

In the evening, we have dinner on their boat.

“As soon as we get back from this trip in October, I’m setting off for a motorcycle trip in Nepal”, Simon tells us. “It’s a sort of spiritual motorcycle ride with a group of other like-minded bikers. I came across this chap who organises trips combining motorbiking and discussions on spirituality. It sounded interesting, so I thought I would give it a go. I even had to be interviewed by him to see if I would fit into the group.”

“It sounds like something you could write a book on”, I say. “Did you ever read Zen and the Art of Motorbike Maintenance? In it, the author, Robert Pirsig, writes about a motorcycle trip he made from Minnesota to California in the 1960s with his son. The trip is interspersed with philosophical discussions on the pursuit of truth. He developed his theory of the Metaphysics of Quality in which quality is the driving force of the universe.”

“I like these philosophical discussions”, Louise says. “I am not religious now, but I was brought up as a Quaker. Both of my parents were members. We were taught that God doesn’t exist as a supreme being, but that something of what you might call God exists in everyone and emerges when people interact. Just meeting and having an interesting conversation like we are now is being part of God. Quakers believe that you find spiritual truth through your own inner experience of every-day life and human relationships, and for that reason we don’t have any need for ritual, ceremony or even clergy. They just get in the way of the relationship between yourself and God.”

“It all sounds very logical”, I say. “But I always thought that Quakers were a sect of Christianity. This sounds more like Humanism, I think.”

“Yes, they do follow many Christian traditions”, says Louise. “But a lot of Quakers wouldn’t describe themselves as Christians, more as members of a universal religion. And they don’t believe that the Bible, or any other book for that matter, is the ‘Word of God’, although they do think that it provides inspiration along with many others. So yes, a lot of their concepts are similar to humanist ideas, and in fact, a branch of the Quakers are actually affiliated to the Humanist Association.

“Wasn’t there a lot of resistance to them at one stage?”, asks the First Mate.

“Yes”, answers Simon. “George Fox, who was one of the founders, taught that all people have equal value. This didn’t go down too well with the rich landed gentry at the time, who saw it as a challenge to the established social order, and he was brought before the magistrates several times for blasphemy. His followers were officially persecuted for a time.”

“Well, that was interesting”, says the First Mate as we walk back to Ruby Tuesday. “I didn’t know much about the Quakers. You don’t hear much about them these days.”

“That’s true”, I say. “But their ideas certainly contributed a lot to the Enlightenment and to the way we think nowadays. Their condemnation of slavery, their campaigns for social justice, and focus on individual conscience and spiritual experience all align with the Enlightenment values of human rights, social reform, and reason. Quite an impact.”

Simon & Louise and us.

A near miss, a twisted torso, and different minds

“Look!”, shouts the First Mate, pointing to a steep cliff to our port side. “You can see Hammershus castle up there. It’s hard to believe that we were up there yesterday. It looks quite impressive even from down here.”

We had left Allinge in the morning, edging our way carefully out of the small harbour with its dog-leg entrance, and are just rounding the northern point of Bornholm Island. The wind is from the north-east, giving us a comfortable beam reach as we head for Ystad, back on the Swedish mainland. Between here and there, however, we must cross a Traffic Separation Scheme (TSS) for the big ships, which the rules say that we need to do at right angles to minimise the amount of time crossing it.

“It reminds me of the time we crossed the English Channel”, I say. “It was like being in a pinball machine – no sooner had we dodged all the ships coming from one direction, we had to face a whole lot more coming from the opposite direction. Let’s see if we can get across here without altering our course.”

“Be careful”, says the First Mate. “We don’t want to have an accident at this stage.”

Running the gauntlet (we are the red one!).

We manage to make it through the north-bound lane without too much trouble. But traffic in the southbound lane is heavy, and there are five ships in a cluster that we need to avoid. The AIS tells me that we will pass behind the first three comfortably, but that we will pass in front of the fourth one with just 15 m as the Closest Point of Approach (CPA). That is a little bit too close for comfort! Hoping that the wind might strengthen and give us a bit more speed, or even drop so that we slow down, I keep an eagle eye on the AIS as we cross, but the CPA remains obstinately the same. As our paths converge closer and closer, I chicken out and decide to heave-to. As the ship passes about 100 m in front of us, we can see some of the crew leaning over the guard rails and smoking.

“Phew”, breathes the First Mate in relief. “That was pretty close.”

“Yes, I even noticed that it was Gauloises they were smoking”, I say.

Dodging the ships in the Traffic Separation Scheme.

Once clear of the TSS we alter our course to the east. As luck would have it, the wind shifts and drops, as does our speed.

“We aren’t in any hurry”, I say. “Let’s just take it easy and enjoy the sunshine.”

At a stately three knots, it takes most of the afternoon before we reach Ystad, our destination for the night.

“Better look out for that ferry over there”, calls the First Mate, pointing to something on the horizon. “It looks like it’s heading for Ystad too.”

“There’s plenty of time”, I say. “It’s miles away.”

But it’s a catamaran and travelling fast. In a few minutes it is just behind us. It blows its horn to tell us to get out of the way. We motor as fast as we can to a red buoy, and take a line just outside it so that the buoyed channel is clear. The ferry slows down and cruises past us.

Getting out of the way of the ferry coming into Ystad.

Obsession is already there. We aim for the berth just behind her. Ingemar gives us a hand tying up.

“Ystad is a pretty enough place”, he says over a cup of tea. “It’s a former Hanseatic town, and the church and some of the old half-timbered houses are worth a look. It’s just a short walk into the centre of town from here. Ystad’s other claim to fame is that it is the place where the Wallander crime series is set.”

The First Mate has watched the Wallander series, but I haven’t. I make a mental note to try and see it on iPlayer over the winter.

In the morning, we walk into the town centre. We come across the Sankta Maria Kyrka, built in the 1200s in Brick Gothic.

Inside the Sankta Maria Kyrka.

“The guidebook says that the church still has a Tower Watchman”, says the First Mate. “His job is to climb the tower every night and keep an eye on the city. He blows a horn every 15 minutes from 2100h to 0100h to signal that everything is OK. If the horn doesn’t sound, it means that there is a problem, like a fire or something. It’s an old tradition from the 1700s that has been kept alive. Apparently, it has been the same family who have been doing it all that time.”

“I wonder what they do if he is sick or on holiday?”, I say.

Next to the church is the Latinskolan, or Latin School, that was used in medieval times to teach Latin to the sons of clergymen and the local elite to prepare them to go to university.

The Latinskolan in Ystad.

A little bit further on, we come to the Klostret I Ystad, or Greyfriars Abbey, originally a Franciscan monastery. There is a small museum attached to the side, but unfortunately it is Monday and it is closed.

The Klostret I Ystad.

“The book says that the Franciscan order wore grey habits”, says the First Mate. “Hence the Greyfriars name. They emphasised the simple life and travelled around the countryside preaching, caring for the poor and sick, and living off alms given to them by those who could afford it. The friary was a place they could come back to for meditation and contemplation.”

It’s lunchtime. We join the queue at a place called ‘Maltes Mackor’ that is famous for its tailor-made sandwiches, and eventually watch in mouth-watering anticipation as each of our sandwiches is ‘constructed’ with loving care.

Spoilt for choice (from Maltes Mackor).

“Well, it took a while”, says the First Mate, “but I have to say that it was worth it. They taste marvellous.”

After lunch, we explore the narrow streets flanked with half-timbered houses. Per Helsas Gård was a farmhouse built just inside the city walls following their curvature. Nowadays, it houses a number of craftsmen, with an open air café in the old courtyard.

Per Helsas Gård.

Pilgrändshuset is a residential house joined to a warehouse dating from around 1500 AD.

The Änglahuset is another farmhouse, so called because of the decorative angel figures under the eaves.

Änglahuset.

In the evening, we ask Ingemar over for a drink.

“Did you hear that the Falsterbo Canal is closed for us?”, he asks, as he sips his Weizen beer. “They are repairing it. It’s open for south-bound traffic this week, but not northbound, then next week they are switching around. Unfortunately, we both need to go through this week.”

Falsterbo Canal was built during WW2 to allow Swedish vessels to continue sailing to and from the North Sea while avoiding the mines laid in the Öresund by the Germans. It is still maintained, but is now mainly used for recreational boats wishing to take a short cut to avoid the long way round through the Öresund.

“Yes, I read that somewhere”, I say. “We are planning to go round the outside and perhaps stop in Skanör for a night.”

Our route around Falsterbo peninsula avoiding the canal.

Obsession leaves at 0700 in the morning. We are a bit more leisurely, and don’t get going until around 1000. The wind is from the port quarter, but shifts to directly behind after a couple of hours. Sailing with the genoa only, we still make around six knots. As we reach the Öresund and turn northwards, the wind strengthens. I take out the mainsail, put in two reefs, and we still manage to make more than eight knots on a close reach. I glimpse Obsession on the AIS far ahead, already past Skanör, heading for Malmö.

Making good speed.

“8.2 knots!”, says the First Mate. “We don’t often do that speed. And with a double reef too. But it was heeling a bit too much for my liking.”

We stop for a night at Skanör, then set off in the morning for Malmö.

The beach at Skanör.

“This will probably be the last sail of the season”, I say. “I feel a bit sad that it’s all over for another season.”

“Me too”, says the First Mate. “Better make it a good one then.”

And it is. The wind is still an easterly, and blowing 24 knots, so we sail double reefed again. Before long we have passed the Lillgrund windfarm to our port, and are approaching the Öresund Bridge.

Approaching the Öresund Bridge.

“Keep an eye out for Saga Norén”, I call out to the First Mate at the bow. “They might be making another episode of The Bridge. And try to ignore the dead bodies, especially the ones sawn in half.”

With the wind blowing, she doesn’t hear me. Probably just as well.

We pass under the Bridge and arrive at the Limhamn marina in Malmö. The harbourmaster has asked us to tie up to the second pontoon. Ingemar sees us arriving and comes to catch our lines.

“I’ve just been servicing my heat exchanger this morning”, he says over lunch. “You need to do it every couple of years or so, or else the small pipes inside it will get blocked up with scale. I have rigged up a pump and some tubes that circulate phosphoric acid through the sea water side of the exchanger for an hour or so. That dissolves all the scale, leaving it nice and clean again.”

Rather than having a radiator like cars do, the heat exchanger takes in sea-water and uses it to cool the hot coolant circulating through the engine. That way sea water doesn’t come in contact with the engine to cause corrosion.

Ruby Tuesday’s heat exchanger.

“When was the last time we did that?”, asks the First Mate.

I have learnt that by ‘we’, she always means me.

“We haven’t done it since we have had the boat”, I say.

“It would probably be a good idea to do it”, says Ingemar. “Just to avoid problems.”

There is also a small leak in the cooling system that I have been meaning to do something about, and the mixing elbow that combines the warm sea-water with the exhaust gases also needs to be checked, so I decide to remove the whole assembly from the engine and take it home to do everything together. I spend the next couple of days getting it off. Like everything in boats, some nuts and bolts are almost inaccessible, and there is very little space for me to manoeuvre in the engine compartment.

“You need to lose a bit of weight”, sniffs the First Mate unsympathetically. “It’s all those peanuts you have been snacking on. I wouldn’t be surprised if you get stuck in there. Make sure you’ve got your mobile handy so you can call me.”

I finally manage to get the heat exchanger and the mixing elbow off. I change the oil and replace the oil and fuel filters. We pack away the sails, and take down the spray hood, cockpit tent, and the bimini. The new dinghy is deflated, rinsed in fresh water, and stowed. Clothes and other fabrics are stored in the vacuum packs and the air sucked out with the vacuum cleaner. Everything is ready for the winter.

Ruby Tuesday ready for the winter.

“You know, we should take the opportunity to explore Malmö”, I say one evening. “Now that most of the winter preparations are done.”

“I was thinking the same”, says the First Mate.

The next morning, we cycle into town to explore. Malmö was founded some time in the 1200s when southern Sweden was actually part of Denmark. One story is that the name comes about from a young woman being ground up in a mill, but this is almost certainly untrue. In the 1600s, the city became part of Sweden under the Treaty of Roskilde. Then, in the 1800s, it was the first city in Sweden to industrialise, with the main focus on shipbuilding and textiles, but it was slow to adapt to the post-industrial period after the 1970s. However, with the opening of the Öresund Bridge, it has taken off again and is rebranding itself as a hi-tech, educational and cultural centre. In 2020, it was the fastest-growing city in Sweden, with 40% of the population coming from a non-Swedish background.

We come to a bronze statue of a number of people sitting on the back of a giant fish, by the Swedish sculptor Carl Milles. Called “Emigranterna“, it represents the large numbers of Swedish people who left their homeland to emigrate to the New World in search of a better life. Emotions of determination, hope and apprehension line their faces as they head for an unknown future.

Emigranterna.

“It’s ironic that large numbers of Swedish people left from here to go abroad to make a better life”, says the First Mate, “and now Malmö is the place that many immigrants arrive from third world countries to make a better life here.”

“Even more ironic is that there were tensions between the Swedes and the earlier settlers in America”, I say. “Especially the English-speaking ones, who saw them as culturally different in terms of language and religion. The Germans and Dutch didn’t like them much either, as they competed for jobs. But now they are well integrated into American society. What goes around, comes around.”

On the way back, we spot the ‘Turning Torso’, a 190 m high residential skyscraper built in 2005, and one of the tallest buildings in Scandinavia. It is the modern day icon of the city, replacing the shipyard crane that had previously been the Malmö icon, but since sold to South Korea.

“It’s certainly very eye-catching”, says the First Mate.

The ‘Turning Torso’.

—–

It’s the last day – the day that we are leaving to drive to Germany to see the First Mate’s family, and then back to the UK.

On the way back from the shower block, I see a quick movement of something black near the rocks of the breakwater. It’s a mink. It stops and regards me intensely. I stare back at it. For perhaps five minutes we regard each other with curiosity, neither of us moving. It doesn’t seem to be afraid, despite there being only two metres between us.

Our aquatic neighbour (from NatureScot).

What thoughts are going through its mind, I wonder? Do mink even have thoughts or a mind? Or emotions? Is it wondering what I am thinking? What would it be like to be a mink?

I think back to the essay written by Thomas Nagel “What is it like to be a bat?” that I had read during my student days. In it, he argues that consciousness has a subjective aspect that cannot be fully understood from an external, objective perspective. While we can study a bat’s brain physiology, we can’t fully grasp its subjective experience—what it is really like to perceive the world as a bat. We can imagine what it is like to be a bat, but that is still a human imagining what it might be like. Any attempt to reduce subjective experience to physical processes will always be incomplete.

And yet, there seems to be something shared in this brief encounter with the mink, even if it is just curiosity about the other. Is curiosity a shared experience? If so, there may be others. Or am I anthropomorphising?

“Come on”, calls the First Mate from the boat. “We need to pack the last things into the car and lock up. We’ve got a long journey in front of us.”

The mink scampers off to a gap in the rocks to re-join its world. I return to my world of other humans and their technology. The fleeting connection between very different minds is gone.

“See you next year”, I call after it.

A Royal Navy attack, Bob Dylan’s boat, and a detested fortress

“We’ll have to change the courtesy flag from Swedish to Danish at some point”, says the First Mate emerging from the cabin with a bowl of muesli. “Here’s your breakfast. I’ll make a cup of tea when you have finished it.”

We are on our way to Ertholmene, the ‘Pea Islands’. We had left Utklippan in the half light of dawn, even before the sun was up, carefully navigating our way out of the narrow exit to the guest harbour only a little bit wider than the width of the boat itself. All was quiet, as far as we could see we had been the first to leave. Even the intelligent rubbish bins had seemed to be asleep. A fresh wind was blowing from the south-east, so we had unfurled the sails almost straightaway. Silhouetted against the red light of dawn, the lighthouse seemed to be wishing us a safe journey, as it had no doubt done to many sailors before us.

Leaving Utklippan.

“That’s a beautiful sunrise”, says the First Mate, bringing out two mugs of tea and sitting down beside me. “You don’t see that often.”

“That’s because you are not often up at this time”, I joke. “It’s the best part of the day. Peaceful and quiet.”

She’s a night owl, I am an early riser. A perfect combination.

The sun rises over the Baltic.

We sail south-westwards on a comfortable close reach, the sea miles sliding smoothly under the keel. The hours pass.

“There’s a Swedish boat called Obsession following us”, I say, pointing to the chart-plotter. “I remember it being in Utklippan. It’s going faster than us, but I think that we have enough of a lead to get there first. We don’t want to lose our place at the ferry dock.”

We had called the harbourmaster at Christiansø earlier, to check that there would be enough space there for us. As it is only a tiny harbour, it can become very full at the height of the season.

“No problem”, he had reassured us. “The ferry goes at 1400h, so if you arrive just after then, you can tie up at the ferry dock. It’ll be free until 1000h the next morning.”

The wind strengthens, and moves round more to the east. We are now on a beam reach and doing 7½ knots. The sea also becomes choppier.

“Phew, this is a bit bouncy”, says the First Mate. “Can’t we go a bit slower? Look, there’s land ahead. It must be Christiansø.”

Christiansø is the largest of the islands of the Ertholmene archipelago, which belongs to Denmark. In fact, the whole archipelago is often referred to as Christiansø despite there being three other islands, two of which are designated as bird reserves and therefore out of bounds without a permit.

We round the south-eastern point of Christiansø, and the harbour suddenly appears, nestled in the narrow gap between two of the islands.

Approaching Christiansø harbour.

The ferry to the mainland is just leaving, and true to his word, the harbourmaster waves us to the place it has just left. About an hour later, Obsession arrives, and ties up behind us.

“I could see you on the AIS”, says the skipper. “I was trying to catch you up, but you had too much of a start on me. I’m Ingemar, by the way. I am on my way back to Malmö where I overwinter.”

I tell him that that is also where we have finally decided to keep Ruby Tuesday for the winter.

“It’s a good marina”, Ingemar says. “I grew up in Malmö. The harbourmaster is an old schoolfriend. He’ll look after your boat well.”

There doesn’t seem to be anyone else on his boat.

“I am sailing single handed”, he says, reading my thoughts. “I live in the south of France nowadays, and spend each summer sailing around the Baltic. I did the Stockholm archipelago this year.”

I am impressed. His boat is a 53-footer weighing 24 tonnes, dwarfing Ruby Tuesday. It can’t be easy to sail it by oneself.

Tied up in Christiansø harbour.

“Coffee’s ready”, calls the First Mate from the cockpit. “Drink it up quickly. I want to go and explore the place.”

Christiansø was built by the Danish as a military fortification during the Swedish-Danish wars in the late 1600s. Part of the fortifications were two towers, both of which have been renovated and now contain museums.

Store Tårn (Great Tower), Christiansø.

“The English attacked the island in 1808 in what is known as the English Wars of 1801-1814”, one of the museum displays tells us. “They destroyed several of the fortifications and captured some of the Danish ships in the harbour, but were not able to capture the whole island, so they withdrew.”

The British bombardment of Christiansø in 1808 (by Arne Skotteborg-Frederiksen)

I am somewhat surprised, as I was not aware of war between Denmark and Britain. But Google tells me later that it was all part of the Napoleonic Wars, and that France and her allies were trying to prevent British trading vessels from entering the Baltic Sea. As Denmark was an ally of France at that time, Danish forts were considered legitimate targets. The Royal Navy had bombarded the city of Copenhagen the year before in an attempt to seize the Danish fleet to stop it from being used by the French. They had then moved on to Christiansø to prevent it being used as a base for state-supported privateers to attack British merchant shipping.

“Don’t worry”, says the harbourmaster with a grin. “It’s all history. We quite like seeing British boats here nowadays. As long as they don’t try and finish the job they started in 1808. But we don’t get many coming anyway since Brexit.”

We take a quick walk around the rest of the island. A foot bridge joins Christiansø with the neighbouring island of Frederiksø.

The foot bridge joining the two islands.

On Frederiksø is the Lille Tårn, or Small Tower, now a cultural museum.

Lille Tårn, Frederiksø.

In the morning, we need to leave before 1000h to make way for the ferry’s arrival. Obsession leaves first, easing away from the quay, and we follow her out of the narrow harbour entrance. Immediately, the wind picks up from the south-west, and we zip along on a comfortable beam reach, heading for the small harbour of Allinge-Sandvig on the island of Bornholm, 13 NM away. After a couple of hours or so, however, we enter the wind shadow in the lee of Bornholm, and the wind gradually dies to nothing. We drift for a while, but with the sails flapping listlessly, we are reduced to furling them away and motoring the last few miles into the harbour.

Allinge harbour, Bornholm.

“What about coming over for a drink later on?”, says Ingemar, as he helps us to tie up in front of Obsession.

“Sounds good”, I say.

Tied up in Allinge harbour, Bornholm.

There’s just enough time before then to have a quick look around the town. Originally a small fishing settlement, Allinge prospered in the Middle Ages from the Hanseatic herring trade, with masses of Baltic herring being shipped to southern Europe for Catholics to eat on their ‘meatless’ days. In 1946, it officially joined with the neighbouring fishing village to become Allinge-Sandvig.

Nowadays, the colourful houses and streets exude charm in the typical Danish fashion that we had grown used to in southern Denmark three years ago.

The Allinge Technical School was built in 1895 with the aim of training craftsmen. Currently it is used as offices.

Former Allinge Technical School.

The Public Meeting Dome can be rented for various events.

The Allinge Public Meeting Dome.

An the way back, we pass one of the two smokeries in the town.

Allinge Smokery.

“Welcome to Obsession”, Ingemar says, as we clamber aboard. “Yes, I am retired. But I have been sailing most of my life. I started off running charters in various places, including the Caribbean. Later I started a company making desalinisation equipment for the marine industry, removing the salt from seawater to make fresh water. The company did very well, and we ended up fitting our gear on a lot of the luxury yachts. One superyacht, for example, owned by a Russian oligarch, had two swimming pools – one for the adults and one for the kids, with the water for each coming from our desalinators. Anyway, I sold the company a few years ago, invested the money, and now spend the summers sailing.”

“I bet you could tell some great stories about the rich and famous?”, prompts the First Mate.

“I could, but I am not allowed to”, answers Ingemar with a smile. “Most of the jobs we did are covered by non-disclosure agreements.”

“Getting back to the Caribbean”, I say, “I read a fascinating book recently on a sailboat that was hand-built there. On the island of Bequia. A friend of mine who lives in Australia recommended it to me.”

“I know Bequia well”, says Ingemar. “It’s my favourite Caribbean island.”

“The boat was built by a young Californian chap called Chris Bowman back in the 1970s”, I continue. “It was commissioned by Bob Dylan, but the agreement was that they would be joint owners of her. They named her Water Pearl. The book is called Me, the Boat and a Guy named Bob. It’s a good read.”

Ingemar’s brow furrows, as though he is trying to recall a memory from long ago.

“I knew Chris”, he says after a pause. “I was there on Bequia at the same time as him. I remember him building that boat. But didn’t she sink or something?”

“According to the book, she hit a reef at night at the entrance to the Panama Canal”, I say. “Despite their best efforts to rescue her, they couldn’t drag her off, and they had to leave her to break up. It was quite poignant really.”

”I wonder what Chris is doing now?”, asks Ingemar. “We didn’t keep in touch.”

“He lives in Western Australia”, I say. “My friend Tony met him at a book club meeting to which Chris was invited to come and talk about his new book. He married the girlfriend Vanessa of whom he talks about in the book, and they settled in Fremantle. She is Australian.”

“I remember her too”, says Ingemar. “It’s indeed a small world. I’ll have to buy the book.”

—-

The cold wind whips across the ramparts as the three figures furtively make their way through the dark shadows. Their years of imprisonment and the cruelty of their captor have sharpened their resolve, and now, with the fortress guard lulled by the monotonous night watch, the time for escape has come.

The woman unrolls the crude rope she had fashioned from bedsheets and drops it over the wall, trying to put the roaring of the sea below out of her mind. Weak from his illness, her husband ties it around his waist, and the woman and the servant slowly lower him over the side, the linen straining under the weight. Reaching the grassy mound at the base of the fortress wall, the man unties the rope and tugs it to signal that he is safe. The woman and servant follow, climbing down by themselves. The three pause for a minute to regain their breath, wrap themselves in the bedsheets for warmth, and with one last look at the ramparts to see if they have been discovered, disappear down the rocky path to the sea.

In his haste, the servant falls and twists his ankle, his cry echoing into the night. Lights and faces appear on the ramparts of the fortress, the alarm is raised. As the escapees pass a local inn, a dog begins to bark. The innkeeper, aroused from his sleep, is about to investigate, but, seeing the three white figures passing eerily by, believes he is seeing ghosts, and pulls the blankets tighter over his head.

The fugitives continue their escape, but they are hindered by the injured servant. Eventually, as dawn breaks, they reach the nearby harbour of Sandvig, but just as they are about to board a small boat that will take them to safety, the fortress guards appear. Their brief taste of liberty is over, and the couple are returned to the grim confines of Hammershus, their fate now darker than ever.

“It’s a good story, isn’t it?”, says the First Mate in my ear.

We are in the museum at Hammershus Fortress on the north-western tip of Bornholm, and I am reading a panel on the daring escape of one Leonara Christina Ulfeldt in 1660, a member of the Danish royalty who was imprisoned in the imposing fortress along with her husband, Corfitz, who had been accused of treason.

Hammershus Fortress ruins.

We had cycled over from Allinge harbour that morning, puffing our way to the top of the hill on which the Fortress was built in the 1200s. The largest in Scandinavia at the time, it was built when there were major struggles between the king and the church in Denmark, and served as a stronghold for the church. Over the years, various kings did manage to conquer it several times, but weren’t powerful enough to keep hold of it, and it was always surrendered back to the church. Until Frederik I, that is. In 1525, he decided that enough was enough, and chased the archbishops out of it for good.

“It’s amazing how powerful the church was at that time, isn’t it?”, says the First Mate. “They must have been terribly wealthy.”

Hammershus Fortress, Bornholm.

“Frederik I then gave it to Hanseatic merchants from Lübeck”, the next panel tells us. “However, despite their own wealth, the merchants taxed the local population heavily and coerced them to provide labour to extend the fortress. The people did rebel against them, but their uprising was brutally put down.”

Then in 1576, the King installed his own vassals there to use as an administration centre with courtroom, prison and gallows, with the proviso that they restore it, but they ended up taking the taxes from the local people to line their own pockets and letting the fortress fall even further into disrepair. It was during this time that Leonora and Corfitz Ulfeldt were imprisoned there.

The ‘Mantel’ Tower, where the Ulfeldt couple were imprisoned.

“Wow, you can sort of see why the local people on Bornholm had a deep loathing of the castle”, says the First Mate over a coffee at the end. “Everyone seemed to do all right out of it except them.”

“But I read that Bornholmians nowadays are quite proud of its dark history, and are helping to restore it again”, I say. “They think it is worth preserving.”

On the way back, we cycle past Sandvig harbour where the Ufeldt couple hadn’t escaped from.

“If the servant hadn’t twisted his ankle, they might have been able to get away”, says the First Mate. “As it was, she had to spend the next 22 years in solitary confinement.”

Sandvig harbour today.

We arrive back at the boat. Someone seems to be waiting for us.

“Wow, is that your boat?”, he says. “I was just admiring it. Have you come all the way from Britain? I saw your flag. I’m Jason, by the way, and this is Harold. He has been walking a lot today and is a bit tired.”

Jason & Harold.

Harold looks a bit dejected, but on hearing his name, manages a bark.

We tell them that we have sailed from Britain, but it has taken four years to do it. Our plan is to explore as much of Europe as possible by sea, but we are in no hurry. At the moment we are doing the Baltic.

Harold pricks up his ears.

“Wow, that is so cool”, says Jason. “I am a poor student from Copenhagen, but I have decided to take a year out and hitch-hike around Denmark first of all, then we’ll see how we get on after that. But I would love to do it by boat. You have inspired me to work hard and save up, and do something similar.”

Harold wags his tail.

“I think he’s spotted a mink over there”, says Jason. “There’s a few of them around.”

Peace between neighbours, Bronze Age spirits, and a lonely outpost

“It’s only weed”, calls out a man on one of the boats tied up to the quay. “You’ll be able to push through it no problem.”

We have just arrived in the small harbour of Kristianopel, and are negotiating the entrance. The depth sounder has just told me that the depth under the keel is zero, meaning we are grounded. But it doesn’t feel like it and we are still moving slowly.

I ease the throttle forward and sure enough we keep going. No graunching sound of cast iron against rock, or even squelching against mud for that matter. On either side, we see the stringy tendrils of aquatic plants rising to the surface. Suddenly we have 0.6 m water clearance. Plenty! We tie up alongside our helpful advisor.

“We thought the same when we came in”, he says as he takes our lines. “We were almost going to anchor outside the harbour, but someone told us it was just weed. It’s only at the entrance.”

The village of Kristianopel.

We boil the kettle and take stock. Kristianopel’s claim to fame is that it once was a fortress town on the border between Denmark and Sweden in the days when Denmark was a major power and included much of southern Sweden. The Swedes weren’t particularly happy about this arrangement and mounted a series of attacks across the border. The Danish king, Christian IV, became fed up with all this aggression, and in 1606 decided to build a fortress to defend against these attacks.

“He named it after his baby son, Kristian”, says the First Mate, reading the guide book. “But added a ‘-opel’ to the end to make it sound a bit more sophisticated, like Constantinople.”

The fortress didn’t help matters for the Danes all that much, as only a few years later in 1611, the Swedish captured it and burnt it to the ground and destroyed the church. The Danish retaliated and the fortress changed hands several times over the next few years, but eventually the Danes were so exhausted that they sued for peace.

We go ashore and explore the village.

Kristianopel harbour.

“What a pretty little place”, says the First Mate. “It reminds me of the cute villages that we saw when we explored southern Denmark a few years ago.”

The fortress walls still exist in most places, and we walk along them trying to imagine life behind them in those days rather than the caravan park that it is nowadays. The occasional cannon pointing northwards towards Sweden and an ancient brazier for showing ships the way into the harbour help a little.

Walking along the Kristianopel fortress walls.
Brazier for guiding ships into Kristianopel.

“I read that the peace treaty was signed just north of here”, I say. “At a place called Brömsebro in 1645. There’s a memorial stone there. We could cycle up there tomorrow and have a look at it. There’s a smokery where we could have lunch.”

“Look, there’s a dual flag combining the Swedish and Danish flags”, exclaims the First Mate, pointing to a flagpole outside one of the houses. “I suppose you could take it to mean that Sweden and Denmark are now friends with each other.”

Dual Swedish and Danish flag.

“Or that the owners still can’t make up their mind whether they are Swedish or Danish”, I say. “So they hedge their bets!”

In the morning, we unload the bikes and cycle up to Brömsebro. It takes a bit to find the Peace Stone, but eventually we do, nestled in a small grove by a brook that used to demarcate the border between Sweden and Denmark.

The Peace Stone to celebrate peace between Sweden and Denmark.

“It’s not a very impressive border”, sniffs the First Mate. “You would have thought that they had chosen a river or something that could have been more easily defended. Look, I can jump from one side to the other.”

The words on the stone say ‘In memory of the peace in Brömsebro. De la Thuliere – Axel Oxenstierna – Corfitz Ulfeldt. The stone was raised in 1915.’

“It says in the guide book that the treaty was mediated by France”, I say. “De la Thuliere was the French ambassador, Axel Oxenstierna was the Swedish representative, and Corfitz Ulfeldt was the Danish representative. It was a big deal for Sweden, as the terms of the treaty now exempted its ships and traders from paying tolls to the Danes if they were passing through Danish territory, and they also added Gotland and the island of Øsel in modern day Estonia to Swedish territory. It marked the decline of Denmark and the start of the rise of Sweden as a Great Power in the Baltic.”

“I am always intrigued how empires come and go”, says the First Mate. “They always seem to overreach themselves and then can’t hold on to their territory.”

In the evening, we sit in the cockpit sipping our wine, and watch the swans and their young ones swimming serenely near the rocks just outside the harbour entrance.

“Something seems to be disturbing them “, says the First Mate suddenly. “Look, I think that it must be that big bird that has just landed on the rocks.”

“It looks like a golden eagle”, I say, looking through the binoculars. “No wonder the swans are upset. Golden eagles will eat the cygnets. It’s probably just waiting for its chance to grab one.”

The swans swim agitatedly towards the safety of the harbour, the little ones following their anxious parents. The golden eagle remains nonchalantly on the rock eying a cormorant, then flaps lazily off.

Golden Eagle (by Jarkko Järvinen).

Strong winds are forecast for tomorrow afternoon. We decide to try and reach the next small harbour, Sandhamn, before they start.

“Look!”, says the First Mate as we arrive. “Klaus & Claudia are here. I can see their boat Saare. And there is a space behind them where we can tie up.”

“We’ve been here a couple of days”, Claudia tells us. “After we left you in Stora Rör, we went to Kalmar, hired a car for a day, and explored Öland. After that, we sailed down here.”

“It’s quite sheltered here from the west”, says Klaus. “And we are on the right side of the pontoon. We should be blown off it with no screeching of the fenders rubbing all night long.”

—-

The shaman chants an ancient prayer to the spirit of the forest and guides the boy’s forefinger around the horse shape carved into the rock.

“The spirits are pleased with you”, whispers the shaman. ”Don’t resist them. Breathe deeply and allow their power to take over your being. You will be a great horseman and will protect your people against the enemies that will come. Just like your father before you.”

The boy feels the power of the animal surge through him, filling him with awe and connecting him to the OtherWorld, the land of his ancestors.

Bronze Age rock carving of horses.

“Now, you must make your own picture”, says the shaman, giving him the metal tool he has been carrying. “For those who follow after you to gain strength from. As those that have gone before you have done. Let the spirits guide you to release the shape that is within the rock.”

The boy hesitates only for a moment, but he knows exactly what he will draw. As the wind sighs gently through the pines, he begins to slowly and deliberately scratch at the rock with the tool until a shallow groove appears. His face furrowed in concentration, he continues his work throughout the afternoon until the light begins to fail. His back aching from the unnatural position he had taken to carve his picture on the rock, he stands up.

“I’ve finished”, he says.

Together they take in his creation.

“It’s Sol”, says the boy. “The giver and sustainer of life to us. I want her to look favourably on our people, and ensure that our crops grow, that our animals flourish, and that the forest remains our provider.”

“You have drawn wisely”, says the shaman. “Thousands of years hence, people will look at these pictures and mourn the loss of the ties to the spirit world that we have.”

Rock carving of the sun.

“Did you see the carvings of the ships?”, says a familiar voice. The mists of time dissolve in a flash.

It’s the First Mate. We are visiting the Bronze Age petroglyphs at Hällristningar på Hästhallen, just to the north of Sandhamn. We had cycled out with Klaus & Claudia after lunch, turned off the main road and walked to the rock outcrop in a small clearing. We had spent the last half-an-hour or so marvelling at the 140 carvings of ships, horses and riders, deer, sun wheels, soles of feet, and cup marks. I am imagining how they might have come to be there.

Dated to around 1000 BC, the figures portray religious rituals and aspects of daily life in Bronze Age Scandinavia. When the rock carvings were made, the area was the coastline; but it is now 25 meters above sea level.

Bronze Age rock carvings of ships.

Back at Sandhamn harbour, I see that another boat has arrived and has tied up on the other side of the pier to us. What’s more, it is flying a New Zealand flag.

“You’ve come a long way”, I say to the couple sitting in the cockpit.

“Well, we have just come from Germany where we have bought the boat”, the man says. “So not too far. But we are going to sail it back to New Zealand in a couple of years’ time after we explore Europe. My name is Ian, by the way, and this is Colleen.”

When they hear that I am also from New Zealand, they invite us aboard for a drink. It turns out that Ian is the son of a university lecturer who taught me when I was at university. It’s a small world!

The winds die down over night, and the next morning we sail for Utklippan, a remote group of three tiny islands off the south-east corner of Sweden. Stunningly beautiful, these islands are the site of a lighthouse built in the 1800s. The lighthouse was deactivated in 2008, deemed not to be useful for modern day shipping. The islands are now a Nature 2000 reserve, famed for their wildlife. The rectangular guest harbour has been cut out of the rock of the northern-most island, and is a popular stopping-off place for sailors.

Utklippan from the north.

When we arrive, Klaus and Claudia are already there. They are the only ones.

“I’ve never seen it so quiet”, says Klaus. “It’s usually much busier than this. I have seen boats rafted up three or four deep sometimes.”

In the late afternoon, a black RIB arrives and ties up just in front of us. In it are two people in uniform.

“We are the coastguard”, one tells us. “We see that your boat is from the UK. Can you show us your passports, please?”

I disappear below and manage to locate our passports and other permits. They show little interest in the First Mate’s German passport, but study my NZ passport intently. We had arrived in Sweden in April, but my Swedish Visitor’s Permit allows me to stay for six months from then, longer than the Schengen visa waiver of three months. Satisfied, they glance around cursorily, jump back in the black RIB, and are gone.

“It’s interesting that the Finns seemed to be more interested in whether the boat had had VAT paid on it, whereas here in Sweden, they are more concerned about our passports”, says the First Mate.

In the evening, we decide to have a joint dinner with Klaus & Claudia. They bring a lamb curry and rice, while we do a vegetable curry.

Pre-prandial refreshments..

Over dinner, the conversation turns to the upcoming elections in Thuringia and Saxony in Germany.

“All the indications are that the far-right Alternative for Deutschland (AfD) party will do well”, says Klaus. “There is real concern in Germany that this could lead to a return to the Nazism of the 1930s if they receive too much support.”

“We grew up having Nie weider, never again, drummed into us”, explains the First Mate. “So it is a bit of a shock when so many people support a far-right party.”

“It’s interesting that the AfD wasn’t always far-right”, says Claudia. “It was actually started in 2013 by a group of economists protesting against the bailouts to the southern Europe countries during the Eurozone crisis. They wanted these countries to leave the EU. It was only later that the party evolved towards the far-right when its various leaders jumped on the immigration bandwagon in an effort to gain votes.”

“It has its strongest support in the former Communist East Germany”, says Klaus. “But what is worrying is that a large number of young people, whom we expected to be progressive, support it too.”

After Klaus & Claudia have gone, I sit in the cockpit musing over what we had been talking about. Surely Nazism won’t reappear?

“I overheard your conversation”, says Spencer from his home in the canopy. “It’s interesting, as I was just reading the other day that the AfD won’t gain power as it is just an East German thing. You see, West and East Germans are very different people, and the differences go much further back than the Communist era. Right back to our old friends, the Teutonic Knights, in fact. It was because of them, and those that followed them, that the Baltic Germans developed a colonial mindset where they dominated the indigenous Balts and Slavs. When Hitler recalled them just before WW2, most relocated to eastern Germany, bringing their conservative right-wing worldviews with them. These views largely remain today, despite 50 years of Communist rule. So the AfD has a lot of support in the east, but it won’t gain much ground in the more liberal west.”

“Well, I hope you are right”, I say doubtfully. “But my concern is that too much immigration touches a raw nerve in both east and west Germany, which the AfD plays on. We’ll just have to see how it pans out.”

In the morning, as I drink my first tea of the day and do the crossword, there is a sound of voices outside. I poke my head out to see what is going on.

“We have come from the mainland to empty the rubbish bins”, says one of the voices. “I hope we didn’t wake you up?”

“How do you know when to come?”, I ask. “They might be empty and it would be a wasted journey.”

“Ah, but the bins are intelligent, you see”, he answers. “After someone has deposited something in there, it triggers a press and the rubbish inside is compressed. When the bin gets to around 80% full of compressed rubbish, it sends an email to our headquarters to tell us that it is nearly full. We then jump in a boat and come out to empty it. That way, the bins never overflow, and we don’t have any wasted trips. It’s all powered by this solar panel on top, see.”

Emptying the ‘intelligent’ rubbish bins on Utklippan.

After breakfast, we clamber into one of the small rowing boats provided on each island, and row over to the other island to explore the remains of the lighthouse station.

The Utklippan lighthouse.

Suddenly there is a massive series of thumps that reverberate throughout the island.

“What on earth was that?”, shouts the First Mate in alarm. “Did something fall down?”

“It sounds like heavy guns firing”, I say. “Perhaps the navy are practising.”

Sure enough, in the haze of the horizon we see a warship firing its guns, puffs of smoke being carried away by the wind.

Warships on the horizon.

“Crump … crump … crump”, go the guns. Then a few seconds later, another “Crump … crump … crump” in response, this time not quite so loud.

“There’s another ship that must be below the horizon”, I say. “We can’t see it.”

“I hope that they are only practising”, says the First Mate. “But what if the Russians have invaded Poland and this is the beginning of WW3? What would we do?”

“I suppose we could try defending the island with that cannon ever there”, I say doubtfully. “We might be able to hold them off for a minute or two, if we are lucky.”

Repelling the invaders.

A grumpy husband, a beacon of light, and a mysterious fortress

“Quick”, says the First Mate. “That German boat is leaving. Let’s see if we can get out before it.”

But we still haven’t completed everything on our departure checklist, and the German boat, Compromise, manages to slip out in front of us.

“I was talking to the wife there yesterday”, the First Mate continues. “Apparently her husband gets angry with her when there is no wind. He hates using the engine, and because she does the route planning, he thinks it is all her fault if she plans a trip with no wind.”

“Well, he must be livid now”, I say. “There’s hardly any wind at the moment.”

We are just leaving Visby to sail to Bxyelkrok on Öland. Yesterday, we had bid farewell to Simon and Louise at Fårösund, as they were sailing directly across to the Swedish mainland where they plan to spend a few days chilling out anchoring in the archipelago before sailing to Kalmar where they are going to leave their boat over the winter. We are heading more southwards as we want to overwinter in southern Sweden. We had sailed from Fårösund to Visby to spend a night there to shorten the trip across to Öland.

Arriving in Visby from Fårösund.

We motor out of Visby harbour behind Compromise. The wind is forecast to come from the southeast, but the headland to the south of Visby is making sure there is not much of it.

“I bet they are having a right old ding-dong over her taking them that way where there’s still not much wind”, says the First Mate. “If I was her, I’d tell him to do his own route planning, so he would only have himself to blame.”

But the wind picks up as we clear the headland, and before long we are unfurling the sails and are sailing along on a comfortable broad reach. We see Compromise to the south still motoring.

“Here’s a cup of tea”, says the First Mate. “Now, I am going downstairs to catch up on my emails.”

It is sunny and warm, and the sea is smooth. I sit back and relax, keeping a watchful eye on the instruments and the route ahead.

I think back to the newspaper article I had read this morning. Written by philosopher Mark Rowlands on his new book The Happiness of Dogs, he discusses what dogs can teach us about the meaning of life. Dogs experience unbridled joy from the simple things in life, he says, regardless of whether they are repetitive or not. They will always be ecstatic when they are about to be taken for a walk, even though it might be along a path they have been hundreds of times before. For dogs, happiness comes effortlessly.

Us humans on the other hand torture ourselves with trying to find meaning in our lives. What makes our existence worth the bother? We construct elaborate myths and narratives to convince ourselves that we are here for a purpose, that we are part of a grand plan. We must make progress – doing the same thing day after day appears to us to be meaningless, like Sisyphus’s task of pushing a rock uphill only to have it roll to the bottom again at night.

Rowlands puts all this down to our ability to reflect – we are always thinking about ourselves, scrutinising and evaluating what we do, and why we do it. Dogs, on the other hand, rather than think about the answers to the meaning of life, just live it to the full.

Not far behind us, I spot Compromise following us, her sails up now. I trim our sails and manage another half a knot. Wherever there are two boats there will be a race, whether we admit it or not.

Keeping ahead of Compromise.

Rowlands’ ideas remind me of John Gray’s book Feline Philosophy: Cats and the Meaning of Life, which I had read a couple of years ago. In it, he draws similar conclusions from cats. Cats live for the sensation of life, he says, not for something they might achieve or not achieve. Humans, however, tell themselves stories that might provide the illusion of calm in a chaotic and frightening world, that everything is under control. Even though most of the things that happen to us are pure chance, we still struggle with the idea that there is no hidden meaning to find. He advises us to leave our ideologies and religions to one side and just enjoy the sensation of life.

I notice that we are slowly pulling ahead of Compromise. She is at least half a mile behind us now. I tweak the sails a little bit more.

But would we just want to live for the moment like dogs and cats?, I wonder. Even if consciousness, self-awareness, and the ability to reflect make us anxious, troubled creatures, would we want it any other way? Would we want to give up the appreciation of the beauty of art, science, music, and all that we have achieved as a species? Isn’t it part of what being human means?

“Can you see Öland yet?”, calls the First Mate, bringing out a mug of hot tea and a digestive biscuit.

Approaching Öland.

“We’re getting close”, I say. “I can see the lighthouse at the northernmost point. By the way, I looked up what Byxelkrok means. It translates as ‘The Village Forests Bend’. Apparently the Vikings called it that as they had to turn south at the point to get to their port at Tokenäs, a few miles from Byxelkrok.”

The marker buoy showing the entrance to Byxelkrok harbour appears, so we furl the sails and motor in. Soon we are tied up safely next to a Danish family who are travelling north to Stockholm. Out of the corner of my eye, I spy Compromise following us into the harbour. Ha, we beat you, I think to myself.

The next morning dawns bright and sunny, but windy.

“Let’s get the bikes out and cycle up to the lighthouse at the top of Öland that we passed on the way here”, says the First Mate. “I’ve heard that it is a nice ride.”

We cycle along a tarmac cycle track parallel to the shore line.

Cycling to the top of Öland.

In the distance, we can see Blå Jungfrun, the fabled island in Swedish folklore where witches are supposed to meet every year on Maundy Tuesday and swap spells.

Blå Jungfrun, the island of witches.

Along the way, I feel the need for a pinkelpause. We stop at an overgrown track leading into the woods.

“Didn’t you see the sign?”, asks the First Mate. “Look there’s a house over there through the trees. You’re probably on someone’s webcam now. We might have the police knocking on the boat tonight.”

Not here please!

“I am amazed someone has gone to the trouble of putting up a sign”, I say. “They must get a lot of people with the same intention.”

We eventually reach the lighthouse.

Långe Erik lighthouse on Öland.

“Långe Erik lighthouse was built in 1845 out of local limestone”, the nearby panel tells us. “At first the lamp used mirrors and burned rapeseed oil. But this required constant attention, they were later replaced by mirrored lenses and a paraffin lamp. The lamp was changed to electricity in 1946, and in 1976 was fully automated.”

How many lives has it saved, I wonder. This is a treacherous piece of coastline.

“Come and have a look at these piles of stones on the beach”, calls the First Mate from behind the lighthouse. “They look like an army of invaders from the sea. I wonder how long they will stay up in this wind?”

Invaders from the sea?

In the morning, we leave Byzelkrok and sail down to a small harbour by the name of Stora Rör, still on Öland. The harbour is almost full, but luckily there is one berth remaining for us. We squeeze in, helped by the German couple next to us.

“I’ll go and pay the harbourmaster and bring an ice-cream back”, says the First Mate. “You finish tying the boat up.”

It’s a picturesque little place, with a bakery and a restaurant right next to the marina. And a popular weekend haunt judging from the number of people milling about, talking, eating, drinking and generally enjoying the warm sunshine. It is sometimes surprising to remember that places that we imagine to be remote when arriving from the sea are well connected by road and readily accessible to the rest of civilisation.

Stora Rör harbour.

——-

I watch as the bucket disappears into the depths of the well and splashes into the water far below. A cock crows – it is early in the morning, and the village is still asleep. I wait for a few moments for the bucket to fill, then pull as hard as I can to lift it out. Some water sloshes out and back into the well as I lift it over the stone wall, but there is enough to keep my mother happy, and I carry it back through the deserted streets to our hut near the east gate of the wall surrounding the village. She is already up and has started the fire, its smoke filling the hut and making my eyes water.

She hands me a clay bowl of oat porridge boiled in milk. As I gulp down the last drops, there is a shrill call from outside our hut.

“Erik, Erik, come and play with us!”

It’s Frida, the young girl from next door, her flaxen pigtails bobbing with excitement.

“Off you go”, says my mother. “But don’t forget that your father wants to take you up to the walls today.”

We run through the narrow passageways between the houses, sometimes playing hide-and-seek, other times playing soldiers, guarding the gates against invaders with our little wooden swords and bloodcurdling battle cries. Later I climb the walls of the fortress with my father, and look out at the fields and forests on the outside. Even though it has been peaceful for some time, I know that the wall was built to protect us from our enemies, and that our warriors need to be on the constant lookout for danger. I will be one of them one day.

As the sun sets in the evening, torches are lit around the fortress, their warm glow giving a golden hue to the stone walls. The whole village gathers in the central courtyard to share food for the evening meal. After eating, I sit by the fire feeling safe and warm, listening to the adults tell stories of the gods and heroes.

I am brought back to the present by a buzzing in my ear as a bee lands on an orchid in front of me. I am in the ruins of Ismantorp Fortress, an Iron Age fortified village near the centre of Öland, and am imagining what it might be like from the perspective of a young boy living there in the fourth century.

I had cycled up to the fortress after we had arrived at Stora Rör, and had marvelled at the massive circular stone wall, the stone foundations of 95 houses arranged inside each separated by a narrow alleyway, and the central public square with a pit.

Ismantorp Fortress, Öland.

“The Ismantorp Fortress is an enigma”, says the panel. “The walls suggest that it had a defensive function, but it is a puzzle why there are nine gates. Gates are hard to defend, so it makes more sense to have just one or two. Some experts think that it might have been a fortified religious centre similar to some Slavic castles. Other theories say that it might have been a training centre for warriors.”

The stone walls surrounding Ismantorp Fortress.

Whatever its purpose, archaeological digs so far have unearthed only an arrowhead and a belt buckle, suggesting it wasn’t lived in intensively, or was abandoned deliberately over a period of time. More digs are planned, but for the moment Ismantorp remains an enigma.

One of the gates of Ismantorp Fortress.

On the way back, I get a puncture. I must look a bit forlorn, as a couple of cyclists stop to see if I need any help. Luckily I have the puncture repair kit with me, and I assure them, not entirely convincingly, I will probably manage.

That deflated feeling.

“Well, if you do need any help, our car is just parked over there”, they say, pointing to a small car park. “We’ll be there for a while loading our bikes and having a coffee. Feel free to come over if you can’t fix it.”

It’s good of them. But I manage to get the wheel off and the tube out, find the hole by listening for the whistle of air, apply the rubber solution around it, wait for it to dry, then put on the patch. It works! Waving a cheery thank you to the other cyclists, I continue on my way.

In the evening, we have dinner at the restaurant with Klaus and Claudia, our German neighbours. They are from Mannheim, and have been cruising the Swedish archipelago in their boat, Saari.

Saari is the Finnish word for ‘island’”, says Claudia. “We’ve been exploring the islands of the Swedish archipelago in her, but we are on our way back home now. We have to be back in Greifswald by the end of the month to meet Klaus’s son.”

“I’ve been sailing most of my life”, Klaus tells me, as the beers arrive. “My father was a great sailor. I learnt to sail on Lake Constance. He taught me everything I know. I’ve passed it on to my son, who is also an excellent sailor.”

I suddenly feel very inexperienced. At least I know the pointy end is the front, and the blunt end is the back.

“They’re called the bow and the stern, aren’t they?”, says the First Mate helpfully. She’s the expert.

When we get back to the boat, I decide to have a post-prandial dram before turning in.

Spencer pontificates.

“These ring fortresses are quite interesting”, says Spencer, swinging by a thread from the canopy. “It was during what is called the Migration Period in European history, between AD 300-500. At the time the Western Roman Empire was declining, and its weakness allowed lots of different peoples to migrate across the continent. It was a chaotic time and people built fortified villages to protect themselves from marauders.”

“What sort of peoples do you mean?”, I ask.

“A lot of it was driven by the Huns”, he responds. “They invaded from the steppes of Asia, and their military prowess and brutality allowed them to sweep across Europe. Then there were the Goths who were originally from Scandinavia, but had already migrated from there to present day Poland, and were pushed by the Huns from there to the Black Sea area, from where they attacked and destroyed Rome. One branch, the Visigoths, ended up in Spain, while another, the Ostrogoths, established themselves in Italy. Other tribes were the Slavs and Avars who pushed into Europe from the east. Once all this movement had settled down, the resulting pattern of people formed the basis of the different nations that we see in Europe today. So in a sense, you are all descended from migrant stock.”

From Wikipedia (Mapmaster CC BY-SA 2.5)

“But that was all on continental Europe”, I say. “Why would they need to build fortified villages here in Öland? Weren’t they out of all this chaos?”

“Well, Öland was quite well connected during this period,”, he answers. “Not only because of its shared cultural and religious practices with the Germanic world, but also because it was part of a trading network with the rest of Europe. Goods such as amber, furs, and even slaves were traded, and Roman coins have been found on Öland. Even though it wasn’t affected by the mass migrations in other parts, it would nevertheless have been exposed to the influx of new ideas, technologies, and people, and the unrest that they bring.”

“Time to go to bed”, calls the First Mate from the cabin. “That’s enough talking to that spider. You’re stopping me from sleeping. We need to get going in the morning.”

A musical interlude, a broken spell, and a Viking hoard of silver

Ruby Tuesday, Ruby Tuesday”, crackles the VHF radio. “You are cleared to leave the harbour. Please proceed carefully. Good watch.”

It’s five o’clock in the morning, and still dark. I have just called the Ventspils Harbour Control to request permission to leave the harbour. It all sounds a bit formal, but Ventspils Harbour is a busy commercial harbour, and it wouldn’t do to get run over by a giant container ship leaving at the same time. For a start, the First Mate would never forgive me.

“Harbour Control”, I call back. “Thank you. We’re leaving now. Out.”

Navigation lights on, we edge out from the marina into the main harbour. I can hardly see the dimly-lit instruments in front of me, but I steer for the red and green blinking lights at the harbour entrance. There are a lot of different lights in a harbour, and it’s not always easy to pick out the ones that we need. But somehow we make it, and a few minutes later we are in the open sea and following the line of winking buoys marking the narrow deep-water channel out of the harbour.

“I think that our Danish neighbours are following us”, says the First Mate. “I can see their lights just coming out of the harbour. They are also heading for Fårösund.”

Ruby Tuesday, this is Agnete”, says the VHF. “We are behind you. We are going to head for the middle of Gotland, then turn north once we get there.”

“OK”, I respond. “We are heading northwards now. We will see you in Fårösund.”

The wind is from the north, but is predicted to back to the northwest, which will force us to turn in a more southerly direction, so I want to have some north up my sleeve so that we can make it into Fårösund without beating against the wind. I am puzzled as to why Agnete wants to go south and beat against the wind near Gotland. They must know something we don’t.

“I hope your readers will understand all that”, says the First Mate.

Sunrise over Ventspils.

The sun sets the clouds on fire over the receding land, and before long, it is a new day. The sea is calm, and with her sails trimmed, Ruby Tuesday settles into a comfortable close reach. We are on our way to Gotland, 90 nautical miles away. Agnete disappears over the horizon to the south.

“I was talking to one of our neighbours in the marina yesterday”, says the First Mate. “She was saying that it took her father and her 22 hours to come over in the opposite direction earlier in the week. The wind was more-or-less against them all the way, and it was very rough. Her father is getting on in years, and thinks that he is still up to it, but he isn’t really. She said never again.”

That’ll be me in a few years’ time, I think. I wonder if I will be honest enough to know when I am ‘past it’?

“Here’s your breakfast”, she continues, handing me a bowl of muesli topped with a sliced banana. “I’ll get your cup of tea in a minute.”

What would I do without her?

The miles slide under our keel effortlessly. As forecast, the wind backs to the north-west in the mid-afternoon, and we need to adjust our course southwards. But we are far enough northwards that we should be able to reach Fårösund without tacking.

On our way to Gotland.

But as we approach Gotland, the wind gradually dies. We try to keep sailing for as long as we can, but eventually the wind drops to almost nothing and the sails flap uselessly. There is no option but to motor for the last little bit into Fårösund. Miraculously, Agnete appears from over the horizon sailing at an impossible angle and beats us to the harbour.

“What was the rationale for going south?”, I ask them after we have tied up.

“Normally the wind will curve around the bottom of Gotland and blow northwards parallel to the east coast”, they say. “We were hoping to catch that to take us into Fårösund. But because of that big area of calm, it didn’t work. We just motored for the last couple of hours.”

Our friends, Simon & Louise, whom we had last seen in Kökar in the Åland Islands, arrive in the mid-morning. They have sailed through the night from Saaremaa island in Estonia.

“It was absolutely beautiful”, says Louise. “It was pitch black, and you could see the Milky Way and every star clearly. No other lights anywhere to be seen for most of the time, apart from the occasional ship in the distance. An experience I wouldn’t have missed. But the wind dropped to almost nothing at about four o’clock. We had to motor the rest of the way.”

It was the same lull that we had experienced in the afternoon, just moved north a bit.

Simon & Louise arrive.

“I read that there is a musical performance on tonight in the next village”, says Simon. “Folk music. Would you be interested in going to it?”

In the evening, we cycle up to the next village about five kilometres away. We are a little late, but it hasn’t started yet.

“We waited especially for you”, jokes the man on the door, taking our money and giving us the tickets. “But it’s pretty packed. There are only four seats left.”

We cram into the small wooden barn, and, with all eyes on us, take our places somewhat self-consciously in the front row. The musicians, a group of four girls, introduce themselves straightaway. Two of them are from Canada, the other two are from Sweden.

“We met at a festival in Glasgow”, one of the Canadian girls tells us. “We found out that our repertoires were very similar, so we decided to work together for a season and tour around Sweden first, then Canada. When we are together, we call ourselves ‘Atlantic Crossing’ to indicate that we are collaborating across both sides of the ocean.”

For the next two-and-a-half hours, we are treated to an exquisite performance of familiar and unfamiliar folk songs, sung and played on two fiddles, a cello and a harp. One of the Canadians also entrances us with her step-dancing skills.

“Atlantic Crossing”.

Unfortunately, it starts to rain just as we retake our seats after the interval. After the performance finishes, it is pouring down. We consider waiting for a bit to see if it eases, but, if anything, it seems to be intensifying.

“I think we will just have to brave it”, says the First Mate. “Come on. Let’s get going.”

We arrive back at the boats completely drenched.

“They were fantastic, weren’t they?”, says Simon as we lock the bikes. “Well worth getting wet for. The Canadian girl had such a beautiful smile.”

The rain stops overnight, and the next day dawns bright and sunny.

“We were thinking of getting the bikes out and doing a cycle around Fåro island”, I say. “We were going to make some sandwiches and have a picnic. Interested?”

“Definitely”, says Louise.

Fåro is the small island to the north of Gotland, separated by the Fårosund. We take the free ferry across to the small landing on the other side, and start pedalling.

On the ferry across to Fåro.

First stop is the so-called English Cemetery where English seamen who had died of cholera during the Crimean War were buried in 1854.

The Englsih Cemetery.

Further on, we pass the church in the village of Fåro in the centre of the island. Ingmar Bergman is buried in the churchyard.

Fåro church, where Ingmar Bergman is buried.

We eventually reach the spectacular sea-stacks at Langhammersgubben at the top of the island.

The rauks at Langhammersgubben.

“Gotland was the bed of a shallow tropical sea during the Silurian period, about 430 million years ago”, the guide book says. “When the creatures in the sea died, their bodies sank to the bottom and were slowly transformed into limestone. Over time, plate tectonics moved the seabed from the tropics to where it is now, and also pushed it up above sea-level, exposing it to the forces of wind and wave erosion. Limestone varies in its hardness depending on what it was formed from, and these amazing shapes, called rauks, were sculpted after the softer limestone was eroded away, leaving the more resistant standing.”

A Langhammersgubben rauk.

“Let’s have a swim and then have our picnic on the beach”, says Louise.

After lunch, we cycle back along the coastal route. On the way, we pass Helgumannens fishing camp. Apparently it is named after a monk who used to hold services there every morning and evening. Nowadays it is used as a base for sturgeon fishing.

Helgumannens fishing camp.

After a quick stop for some coffee and cakes, we are soon back to the ferry.

“Well, I enjoyed that”, says the First Mate. “I wonder how far it was?”

I work out later that it was 44 km. Not too bad for the small folding bikes.

Strong winds are forecast for the next few days, so we decide to stay put in Fårösund and use the opportunity to explore other parts of the island by car and bus. The car hire firm takes pride that all of its cars are pre-loved, and even refers to itself on the website as “Rent-a-Wreck”. But it does us proud.

The self-styled “Rent-a-Wreck”.

The sun starts to rise, casting a cold light over the forest. Through the early morning mist, I see the dim shapes of people moving amongst the trees, making their way to the clearing to attend the ceremony. Yesterday, we had prepared the old king’s body, laying it on the oaken bier, dressing it in the finest furs, and placing his sword, bronze shield, and treasured possessions that had served him well during his life alongside it.

The stone ship we had built for him stands in the centre of the clearing, its great stones forming the outline of a vessel that will carry him to the gods. They have been gathered from all over the island, with only the best stones selected as befits a beloved king.

The sun rises higher, and the chants begin, recounting the stories of Tjelvar’s deeds, how he had brought fire to our island and given it life, breaking the ancient curse that once bound Gotland to the sea. We had told and listened to these stories many times, but today there is a finality to them, as we begin to realise that it is the end of an era.

The young men lift the bier and carry it to the stone ship, laying it in the centre. The women approach, their torches lit from the sacred flame, and circle the ship, lighting the pyres as they go. The flames crackle as they take hold, their light illuminating the sombre faces with a ghostly glow. The smoke rises, carrying our prayers to the gods, the scent of burning wood and herbs filling the air. The heat of the fire reaches us, reminding us of the gift that Tjelvar had brought to our cold, dark island.

When the last of the flames has died down, we cover the ashes with stones. The people slowly leave, and the clearing is silent once more, the great stone ship standing as a monument to the man we had revered and followed. The world is different now that he has gone, the future more uncertain, but I know that his spirit will always be with us, guarding Gotland as he had in life, from now until the end of days.

Tjelvar’s Grave ship burial.

“Are you day dreaming again?”, a familiar voice says. “Hurry up. It’s time for lunch.”

I awake from my reverie. It’s the First Mate. We are at Tjelvar’s Grave, a remarkable stone ship burial in central Gotland. I am imagining what the burial might have been like. The story behind the grave is told in the Gutasaga, a saga of Gotland’s pre-Christian history. Apparently the island of Gotland was once under a powerful curse that made it rise above the water every evening and sink beneath it again every morning. This obviously was a problem for anyone who was wanting to settle on it. One day, a seafarer called Tjelvar, had the brilliant idea of landing on the island during the night and lighting a fire to break the spell so that the island wouldn’t sink back into the depths in the morning. It worked, and Tjelvar is credited not only with ensuring Gotland became permanently dry land for people to live on, but also that they would have fire to cook, keep warm, and smelt metal. He became the first king of Gotland, ruled his people wisely, and lived a long and contented life.

There are other stone ship burials on the island too. Particularly impressive is the line of three in a row all pointing to a Neolithic dolmen.

One of a line of three Viking ship burials at Gnisvärd.

The next day, we decide to take the bus down to the capital, Visby.

“Visby is another of the cities that were part of the Hanseatic League in the 1200s, and became prosperous on the back of it”, I read on the way down. “In 1361, Gotland was conquered by the Danes, but Visby was taken over not long after by pirates by the name of the Victual Brothers. They also didn’t last long as in 1398 the Teutonic Knights came and chased them off, but in the interests of peace with the Kalmar Union, the Knights sold it to Queen Margaret of Sweden, Denmark and Norway. With the breakup of the Kalmar Union in 1523, it remained in Danish hands, but was returned to Sweden in 1645 and has stayed with them since, apart from a brief three-week occupation by the Russians in 1808.”

As we arrive, we see the city walls, which have been remarkably well preserved.

Visby city wall.

As it turns out, it is Medieval Week, an annual event in which the locals all dress up in medieval clothes, speak Gutnish, and do medievally kinds of things.

Medieval Week in Visby.

We start off in the Market Square dominated by the impressive ruins of St Karins Kyrka. Concerts are held in the ruins in the summer – indeed, we even see a poster showing ‘Atlantic Crossing’ performing here last week.

The Market Square and St Karins Kyrka.
Ruins of St Karins Kyrka.

Through a narrow street off the Market Square is the Sankta Maria Kyrka, with its ornate interior and three towers capped by baroque cupolas.

Sankta Maria Kyrka.

We wander through the narrow cobbled streets lined with Hanseatic warehouses. It isn’t difficult to picture what it must have been like in medieval times with all the costumes around.

Former Hanseatic warehouse.

After lunch, we visit the Gotland Museum, itself an old Hanseatic warehouse, and spend an absorbing couple of hours learning about the history of Gotland.

First up is a particularly fine collection of picture stones depicting legends and everyday life in Viking times. Thought to be memorial stones of some kind, they differ from rune stones in that they have no text on them.

Gotland picture stone.

We learn of the Battle of Mästerby in 1361 – when the Danes under Valdemar IV invaded Gotland. The Gotland farmers got together to resist them, hoping that the swamps nearby would stop the Danish soldiers, but unfortunately it had been a dry summer and the swamps had dried out. The Gotlanders were massacred by the more professional well-armed soldiers, with 1500 farmers killed.

Casualty of the Battle of Mästerby in AD 1361.

We see the Spillings Viking silver hoard, so called because it was discovered on Spilling farm in the north of Gotland. The hoard had been buried under the floorboards of a Viking storage building on the farm sometime in the AD 800s. A lot of the hoard consists of coins from the Islamic world.

The Spillings Viking silver hoard, Gotlands Museum.

“That was all really interesting”, says the First Mate in the bus on the way home. “I never really knew much about Gotland before. It’s a fascinating island. But I guess we need to press on.”

“The weather looks good for sailing for the next few days”, I say. “I suggest we sail down from Fårösund to Visby tomorrow, stay overnight, then head across to Byxelkrok on the island of Öland.”

“Byxelkrok”, she says. “What a funny name. I wonder what it means?”

A seal-hunters island, a rough crossing, and a town of cows

The sun peeps over the horizon, silhouetting the silent dockside cranes that look like giant sleeping triffids dreaming about destroying the human race.

Leaving Riga in the early dawn.

“Aaaargh, I don’t like these early starts”, says the First Mate. “Couldn’t we have left at a more reasonable hour?”

We had cast off from the marina in Riga at 0500, and are motoring down the Daugava River to its mouth on our way to the small island of Ruhnu in the middle of the Gulf of Riga, 60 NM away. The forecast is for the wind to drop off around midday, so by leaving early, we hope to catch some breeze at least before we have to use the engine.

The chart plotter bleeps, warning that we are on a collision course with a large cargo ship coming towards us in the early morning darkness. I adjust the autopilot a couple of degrees so that we safely pass alongside it.

Avoiding a collision.

We are now back to following Racundra’s route after having deviated from it when we had left Kuivastu to sail eastwards to Kuhnu and Pärnu.

Ransome had had Racundra built on the shores of Ķīšezers Lake (called the Stint See in the book), the large body of water to the northeast of Riga, and had sailed her down the Mīlgrāvis channel (then the Mühlgraben) connecting the lake to the Daugava River.

As we pass the junction of the Mīlgrāvis and the Daugava, I look out for the small yellow wooden building that was the Customs House in those days, but of course it is long gone. In its place is a concrete building that looks like the Harbour Control. Google tells me that the Customs Office is now further up the river.

Where Ransome’s Custom House once stood (I think!).

I try to imagine Ransome rowing across to the Customs House in his small dinghy, clutching his boat’s papers to gain clearance to leave Riga. And the story told by his companion, the Ancient Mariner, about the German sailor tied up in the Mīlgrāvis being unwittingly sold his own rope by a crafty thief who had climbed on board his boat at night, stolen a newly purchased coil of rope, and had sold it back to him in the morning.

“It’s not often the Germans get taken for a ride!”, says the First Mate.

She should know.

We motor past the Winter Harbour where Ransome threw his clearance papers wrapped around a stone across to the official waiting on the wharf, and reach the lighthouse to port as we leave the river and enter the Gulf of Riga proper. Immediately the wind picks up from the west, the sails fill, and we are on our way. At least we are not becalmed at this stage as Racundra was. Gradually the lighthouse disappears from sight behind us, and we are back on the open sea.

Passing the Riga lighthouse at the mouth of the Daugava River.

My mind turns to what we had learnt of Ruhnu in the small museum in Haapsalu devoted to the Swedish settlers on the Estonian coast. They had arrived in Ruhnu to hunt seals sometime in the 1200s, had settled there, and over the generations had eked out a living by sealing, fishing and farming. They had developed a unique form of archaic Swedish based on that spoken on the mainland in the 1200s, and. a type of communal self-governent. As on the neighbouring islands, they had been granted a charter by the Swedish king which allowed them to preserve their lifestyle and customs under Swedish law. Even the German Bishop of Courland who had administered the area had written a letter in 1341 confirming that this charter would be respected under his rule.

Since then, different rulers had come and gone – the Swedes, the Russians, the Germans again – but the Ruhnu islanders had remained staunchly individualistic, “… preserving their own life and their own customs in an odd kind of private Middle Ages, centuries removed from the modern competitive struggle of the continent”, as Ransome had written.

But he couldn’t have foreseen that in a mere 22 years later, in 1944, the islanders would desert their island en masse and return to Sweden to avoid rule by the advancing Soviet Union.

“I think I can see Ruhnu in the distance!”, shouts the First Mate, waking me from my reverie.

We enter the small harbour and are motioned by the harbourmaster where to tie up. I imagine him to be the modern equivalent of the Russian ‘Keeper of the Light’ appointed by the Tsar that had come to greet Racundra. The harbour is a bit more now than the single dilapidated pier of Ransome’s day, but the sand dunes and pine forests are still there. And there are people! Lots of them.

Ruhnu harbour (Ringsu) today.

Next to us is a small boat with six youngsters on it.

“We’re from Latvia”, they tell us. “We’ve been here a week, but we have to leave at two o’clock tomorrow morning to get back to Riga before the strong winds coming tomorrow afternoon. They are continuing for two days, and we need to be back in Riga by then.”

I do a quick calculation and work out that it will be a close run thing for them. They’ll just make it before the winds are forecast to start.

We go up to the harbour office to pay.

“No, I am Estonian, not Swedish”, says the harbourmaster in answer to my question. “My parents came over here after the Swedes left. At the time of independence in 1991, the government did offer the Swedes and their descendants the opportunity to come back to their homes if they wanted, but hardly any did. A lot of the ones that had left in 1944 had died and their children weren’t interested in moving to a remote island after they had been brought up in Sweden. A few did renovate their old homes and keep them as holiday cottages. I think only a couple of people moved back to live here. So most of the island’s inhabitants are Estonian.”

I wake in the night, and hear the youngsters next door just leaving. It’s three o’clock. They are already one hour late, I think to myself. I hope they make it.

The next morning, we unload the bikes and cycle into the small village in the centre of the island, about 4 km away. On the way, we pass a motorcycle and a pair of gumboots sticking out of the sand.

Perils of speed.

“It’s supposed to warn motorcyclists not to speed”, says the First Mate. “It’s mentioned in the guide book.”

Reaching the village, we come across a stall in one of the front gardens selling home-made beverages.

Local hooch for sale.

“I think that you will like this one”, says the owner. “It’s made from the berries of sea buckthorn. 40% alcohol. I call it Ruhnu Honey so that the ladies won’t feel embarrassed buying it. I only have two bottles left.”

He won’t let us try it first, so we buy it taste unknown. As it turns out later, it has a certain je ne sais quoi.

“It’s too strong for me”, says the First Mate. “It’s like paint stripper. You’ll have to finish it.”

Further on is the road to the lighthouse, described in Racundra as “an ugly structure of red iron tubes“.

“I wouldn’t call it ugly”, says the First Mate. “It isn’t perhaps the traditional lighthouse made of stone, but it has a certain character of its own.”

Ruhnu lighthouse.

We take the track leading out to the beach. It’s superb. Apparently the sand is supposed to ‘sing’ when you walk along it and make the sand-grains rub against each other. But try as we might, we can’t get them to sing. Just a dull crunching sound.

Limo beach, Ruhnu.

We reach the church, not far from the centre of the village. In fact there are two churches, one wooden, built in 1644, and one of stone, built in 1912. The stone church is having its roof and steeple repaired, and is covered in scaffolding.

“I know it is good that they are repairing it, but it isn’t very photogenic”, complains the First Mate.

Ruhnu churches.
Inside the wooden church.

We come to Liile’s Farm, where coffee and cake is being served. As we sit on the rustic wooden benches and tables outside enjoying the warm sunshine, the dark rainclouds gather from the west. Before long, the first drops are falling.

“Quickly”, I say. “We need to get going. We have quite a long cycle ride back to the boat. We’ll get soaked.”

Halfway back, the heavens open and the rain pours down. We arrive back at the boat drenched.

“Did you see the sign in the toilets?”, I ask the First Mate, after my shower to warm up. “It seems that some of the sailors they get here aren’t toilet-trained. I hope that that doesn’t apply to us?”

“Speak for yourself”, she retorts.

Making sure it’s done properly!.

It starts to blow in the early evening. We have put double lines on each mooring point just to be sure. And snubbers on the windward lines to minimise the snatch. Hopefully we should be OK.

The winds continue for the next two days. Eventually they die down. But the forecast is showing that more are on their way.

“I think that we should try and make it to Ventspils on the Latvian coast”, I say. “We have a three day window to do it in. We can overnight in Möntu, and ride out the winds once we get to Ventspils. It’s not ideal, but the alternative is to stay here in Ruhnu for another week.”

Möntu is a small harbour near the bottom of Saaremaa island, and most used as a stepping-off point to cross the Baltic to Gotland. There’s not much there apart from the harbour.

The crossing to Möntu is rough, as the last three days of strong westerly winds have generated a significant swell. The wind also changes to more head on during the day, making it difficult to calculate the best tacking strategy.

“Phew, I don’t really want to do a passage like that again”, says the First Mate, as we tie up in in the sheltered waters of Möntu harbour. “We were heeling far too much for my liking.”

Tied up in Möntu harbour.

The wind dies down during the night. In the morning, the sea is like a millpond. We continue in much calmer conditions, and reach Ventspils in the mid-afternoon. We tie up in the old Fishing Harbour.

“It’s quite sheltered in here”, the harbourmaster says. “You shouldn’t have any problems with the winds.”

As with many other cities along the coasts of the Baltic States, Ventspils was founded in the 1200s when the German Livonian Order built a castle on the banks of the Venta River during their crusades to convert the local population to Christianity.

Ventspils Castle.

In the 1300s, it became part of the Hanseatic League, and prospered as a shipbuilding city. It was destroyed during the Polish-Swedish War and the Great Northern War in the 1600s and 1700s, with the plague finishing off any remaining inhabitants in 1711. In 1795, it became part of the Russian Empire under which it built up its shipbuilding capacity again. In the 20th century, it flipped between German and Russian rule a couple of times, but after WW2, fell under Soviet rule for 50 years.

We meet Nigel, the Cruising Association’s Honorary Local Representative for Latvia, who keeps his own boat at Ventspils. Seeing our flag, he leaves a note on our boat when we are out to come and have a chat to him if we like. He’s English, but lives in Ventspils and has a Russian wife.

“Ventspils became very prosperous on the back of oil”, he tells us. “During the Soviet era, they built a pipeline from Russia to carry crude oil to here for export. After Latvian independence, it continued to be a major exporting terminal of Russian crude. That’s why I came here in the first place – as a consultant advising on safety aspects. Now with the sanctions from the Ukraine War, all that has gone. Not a drop passes through here now. The only thing keeping the city going is EU money.”

Ventspils oil terminal.

“It’s partly true”, when we talk to the harbourmaster later. “A lot of businesses have found it difficult with the sanctions. That fish factory over there, for example, has had to work hard to find new markets now that they can’t sell to Russia. They have been quite successful in Germany. But having said that, there is still a lot of trade with Russia. Someone estimated that 27% of stuff passing though the port here is coming from or going there.”

“He didn’t say whether it was legal or not”, says the First Mate later. “And I didn’t like to ask him.”

As it turns out, we have arrived when the annual city festival is in full swing. We walk into the city centre, about a kilometre from the harbour, to see what is happening.

On the way, we pass a sculpture of a cow. It is the first of many.

Cow City.

“In 2002, they had a CowParade here”, a chatty Latvian explains. ”They made these fibreglass sculptures of cows and had local artists paint various themes on them. The idea caught on, and nowadays cows are sort of the city’s symbol. You’ll see them everywhere.”

“It’s a bit like the elephant in my hometown of Hamm in Germany”, the First Mate says. “An architect designed a huge elephant around one of the old mine-head cranes, and now the elephant has become the city symbol. Companies will quite often have a model of an elephant outside their offices. It’s not like elephants had much to do with the city before then.”

Stalls of all shapes and sizes are arranged along the water front. Street performers keep the kids entertained. On the wharves on other side of the river, even the brightly painted derricks join in the festivities.

Browsing the stalls.
Keeping the children entertained.
Dance of the Derricks?

We reach the Market Square.

“Look here’s the International Writers and Translators’ House”, says the First Mate. “I met a woman in the shop last night who is there. She is half German and half Latvian, and won a summer scholarship from it to write a book on how war and occupation affects individual families. Her father, who was the Latvian, was a KGB informant. When her mother found out, she divorced him and went back to Germany to live. Now she, the daughter, has come back to research her book.”

It’s a theme common to many families in the Baltic States, we are starting to realise.

The International Writers and Translators’ House.

The First Mate spies some local honey and decides to buy some while I admire the ancient clock in the middle of the square.

Market Square clock.

“Phew, it’s hot”, says the First Mate. “Look, there’s some kvass. I’d like to try that.”

Kvass is a kind of low-alcohol beer brewed from various cereals, especially rye, originating from the Slav areas of north-eastern Europe and Russia.

“It goes back at least to 988 AD”, says the man behind the counter. “At the time when Vladimir the Great was baptised. It was probably even drunk before then. Here, try it. You won’t get drunk. It’s only 1% alcohol. More of a soft-drink, really.”

He hands us a couple of bottles. It is thirst-quenching and tastes a bit like root beer.

Trying the kvass.

In the evening, we sit in the cockpit sipping our wine and watching the fireworks marking the end of the city festival for another year.

Watching the fireworks over Ventspils.

“I am kind of dreading the crossing from here to Gotland”, says the First Mate. “It’s nearly 90 miles in the open sea. I hope it isn’t going to be as rough as the one we had the other day. I hated that.”

“We’ll be fine”, I say, not altogether convincingly. “The winds are favourable, and the sea shouldn’t be too rough.”

AirBnB woes, a republic within a republic, and Soviet prudes

“You’d better get your passport out”, says the First Mate. “The Border Control officer is getting on the bus.”

We are on a bus to Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. We had decided to leave Ruby Tuesday tied up in Riga, and spend a few days seeing what Vilnius was like. We had booked an AirBnB, cycled down to the Riga bus station, loaded the bikes in the luggage compartment in the bus, and found our seats. Next to the coffee dispenser, as it turned out. Now we are at the border between Latvia and Lithuania.

Loading the bikes onto the bus.

“I still don’t know why they need to have a border post here”, says the First Mate. “I thought all that was unnecessary now that both countries are in the EU.”

“Perhaps they are looking for Russians trying to get into Lithuania illegally”, I joke.

Border Control checking passports.

The Border Control official makes his way along the bus aisle looking at passports. We hand him ours, he has a perfunctory scan, and gives them back again. No issues, it seems. We breathe sighs of relief. The bus restarts and continues on its way to Vilnius.

I take the opportunity to read our trusty guide book about Lithuania.

“Humans have lived in the area since at least 9000 BC”, it tells me, “The Balts, whose ancestors had migrated from the region between the Black and Caspian Seas before 2000 BC, became relatively prosperous by trading amber. There were lots of different tribes, but in the 1200s, a local leader called Mindaugas unified them into one and created the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. One of his successors, Gediminas, then extended the borders down to present day Belarus and Ukraine. He also founded Vilnius in the 1320s, supposedly because he heard ‘an iron wolf howling with the voice of a thousand wolves’ which he took as a sign to found a city.”

“As you do”, I think to myself.

“Then in the late 1300s, one of the grandsons of Gediminas, Jogaila, decided to marry a Polish princess called Jadwega as a way of unifying the two countries against the Teutonic Knights”, it continues. “This eventually became known as the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and was one of the largest countries in Europe at the time. By the 1500s, Vilnius was one of Eastern Europe’s most sophisticated and grandest cities.”

Outside, we are leaving the forest behind and enter extensive cropland with hectares of grain crops stretching into the distance.

Fields of grain waiting to be harvested.

“In the 1600s, Russia and its allies defeated the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and broke it up. Russia ended up with most of Lithuania, and clamped down hard on the rebellious Lithuanians. However, they weren’t able to quell the tide of national feeling, and in 1918, Lithuania declared independence. To complicate matters, Poland wanted to restore the commonwealth, and annexed Vilnius in 1920. The Lithuanian government fled to Kaunus, another city, where it stayed until WW2. Its history subsequently has been similar to that of Estonia and Latvia, with Russia invading in 1939, followed by the Nazis in 1941, and by the Russians again in 1944. Finally in 1991, it became independent from the USSR.”

“We’re nearly there”, says the First Mate, tapping me on the knee. “You’d better get ready.”

We arrive in Vilnius, unpack the bikes, and cycle to the AirBnB that we have booked.

Arriving in Vilnius.

“Here we are”, says the First Mate. “Number 11. Apartment 42 will be somewhere inside. Let me just open the gate to the courtyard with the code that the owner gave me.”

It had taken a little bit to find the street address, but we had managed in the end. Just as the First Mate is searching on her phone, a car appears on the other side of the gate. The gate opens noiselessly.

“Come on”, I say. “Quickly. No need for the code. We can go through the gate before it closes again.”

We push the bikes and ourselves through. The gate glides noiselessly shut again.

We climb the stairs in the stairwell to the fourth floor. There is no number 42.

“Perhaps it’s on the next floor?”, says the First Mate, climbing the stairs again.

Suddenly there is a piercing shriek. It’s the First Mate.

“There was a strange looking man behind the door to the landing”, she says, shaking. “I think he was deaf. He didn’t respond when I asked him if he knew where 42 was. He just kept staring into space like a zombie.”

“Perhaps we could ring one of the doors and ask if they know where number 42 is.”, I say.

We ring one of the doorbells. A woman in bra and panties opens the door.

“Sorry, no English”, she says, shutting the door again.

“Are you sure we are in the right block?”, I ask. “Something weird is going on.”

We go downstairs again and try to open the gate with the code. Nothing happens. We try several more times, but still nothing happens. After some time a young girl arriving home opens the gate from the outside.

“We are looking for apartment 42 in Block 11”, we tell her. “Do you know where it is?”

“This is Block 13”, she says. “Block 11 is the one over there.”

I try to give her the impression that I am a fire safety officer and that we are checking all the blocks in the street, but it fails miserably.

“Don’t worry”, says the young girl. “Lots of people make that mistake. Especially the older ones.”

We eventually find apartment 42 in Block 11. The code to the key box doesn’t work. We try several times but it refuses to open.

“I have just remembered that the owner sent another email to say that he just changed the code this morning”, says the First Mate after the seventh attempt. “Let me see if I can find it. Oh no, my phone is almost flat.”

She finds the email just before her phone batteries give one last gasp and give up completely.

The code works.

We finally manage to open it.

The next morning, we cycle into the city centre. On the way, we pass the derelict Soviet Palace for Culture and Sport. It’s hideous, so much so it has a strange kind of attraction about it.

The derelict Palace for Culture and Sport.

We reach the Tourist Information.

“We don’t have free walking tours as such”, says the girl. “But we can give you a guidebook with a suggested route and lots of details of things on the way. That way you can see all the sights of the city.”

We start at the vast Cathedral Square and the Cathedral itself. Ironically (or perhaps not), it is built on an old pagan site that was used for worshipping Perkūnas, the Lithuanian God of Thunder, riding across the sky in his fiery chariot.

Vilnius Cathedral. (And no, the tower wasn’t imported from Pisa.)

Perhaps alluding to Perkūnas is the imposing statue of Gediminas, the founder of Vilnius, and his horse.

Gediminas (AD 1316-1341), the founder of Vilnius.

In front of Gediminas’s statue a group of people are standing and waving the blue and yellow flags of Ukraine.

“We are Ukrainian refugees here in Lithuania”, explains one woman to us. “We come here once a week to give speeches and protest against the illegal Russian war against our country. Lithuanian people are very supportive of us as they remember what it was like for themselves to be occupied by the Russians. No one wants to go back to that.”

Ukrainians protest to Gediminas.

To one side of the Cathedral is the 17th century baroque Palace of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania.

Palace of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania.

Exploring some of the narrow winding back streets, we come across Literatu Street with its plaques and writings of various famous writers with connections to Vilnius hanging on its walls.

Gunter Grass’s plaque in Literatu Street.

The street gets its name because the Romantic writer and poet Adam Mickiewicz once lived there.

“The book says that he was the national poet of Poland because he wrote in Polish, but is also claimed by Lithuania because he lived here, and Belarus, where he was born”, says the First Mate.

“A bit inconsiderate of him not to think of the confusion he caused”, I say.

Vilnius is supposed to have more churches per hectare than any other city in Europe, and we can well believe it.

“You can’t show them all”, says the First Mate. “Just show one or two on the blog to give people an idea. Otherwise they will get bored.”

Church of St Casimir.
Church of the Holy Spirit and the Dominican Monastery.

Further on are the University and Presidential Palace. The University was founded by the Jesuits in 1579.

The University of Vilnius.
The Presidential Palace.

We end up climbing to the castle on the hill dominating the city. The view from the ramparts is superb.

Vilnius Castle.
View of Vilnius from the castle.

“Phew, all this sightseeing has made me hungry”, says the First Mate. “Let’s see if we can get a bite to eat. I want to try that cold beetroot soup that is so popular here.”

We find an open-air restaurant in the park near the Cathedral Square, and order Šaltibarščiai, the cold beetroot soup she is referring to. It is made from beetroot, gherkins, kefir, spring onions, and hardboiled eggs, all garnished with fresh dill and served with a side plate of warm boiled potatoes, and a slice of dark rye bread.

Šaltibarščiai, a Latvian favourite.

“Wow, that is so tasty”, I say, scaping the last vestiges of pink from my bowl. “Perfect for a light summer lunch. We must find the recipe and make it when we get home.”

“You’ve got a rye bread crumb on your beard”, says the First Mate. “Here, let me get it off.”

After lunch, we cycle over to Užupis on the other side of the Vilna River. Užupis was declared a separate republic from Lithuania in 1997.

Entering the Republic of Užupis.

“It all started as a bit of an April Fool’s joke”, explains the long-haired girl in the small boutique and coffee-shop. “Užupis had become somewhere that artists, poets and musicians liked to live, and one day some of them got together and came up with the idea of ceding from Lithuania and becoming an independent republic. So they elected one of them as president, others as the government, and wrote a constitution. Since then, it has captured the imaginations of people throughout the world who like the concept of escaping from the rat-race, and so it has become quite a tourist attraction. Now it is a source of pride to Vilnius city.”

The Constitution of Užupis.

We order two coffees and cinnamon rolls.

“We only have oat milk”, the Long Haired Girl says. ”Is that alright?”

Of course they do. But we are fine with that.

Drinking coffee at the Art Incubator.

“The river is the border with the rest of Lithuania”, the Long Haired Girl continues, bringing the coffees to where we are sitting outside. “On Užupis Day, our national day on April 1, you can get your passports stamped, and use our national currency. We even have our own flag, the Holy Hand, which has an open hand on it to denote that corruption is not practised in Užupis. We did have an army of ten men, but we retired them a few years ago in the interests of peace. Besides, we have our own guardian angel. She protects us.”

The Užupis flag.
The Guardian Angel of Užupis.

We read that Užupis used to be the Jewish quarter of Vilnius, but the Holocaust obviously brought an end to that. During Soviet times, it became derelict, and only drunks, prostitutes and squatters lived there. But after Lithuania’s independence in 1991, artists and other creative people began moving in. The rest, as they say, is history.

The artists taking time out from the Art Incubator.

“Did you see Tibet Square?”, the Long Haired Girl asks, as she collects the cups and plates. “The Dalai Lama came here and planted a tree there. The Chinese government weren’t too happy as they saw it as a political statement rather than a cultural one.”

Tibet Square.

There is a seat fixed in the middle of the river. We take turns sitting on it and taking photos of each other.

“Why are we doing this?”, I ask.

“I don’t know either”, says the First Mate. “But everyone else was doing it, so I thought that we had better too.”

“Well, others are all doing it!”

It is our last day in Vilnius. The First Mate and I decide to split up and meet again for lunch. I set off for the National Museum of Latvia, while she heads for the MO Museum of Modern Art.

I spend a fascinating couple of hours learning about how people migrated from the Black Sea-Pontic steppe region at the end of the Neolithic period, bringing with them new languages, culture, farming methods, and tools. They decorated their pottery with cord impressions, used boat-shaped battle-axes, and domesticated livestock. The fusion of their culture with that of the existing inhabitants resulted in the Proto-Indo-Europeans and the emergence of the Balts.

Corded-ware pottery.

Over time, these Balts evolved into different tribes with the exotically-sounding names of the Aukštaičiai, Selonians, Semigallians, Samogitians, Curonians, Sudovians, Skalvians and several others, each with different customs and rituals. It was only in the 1200s that they were reunified by Mindaugas.

An Aukštaičiai (Upland Lithuanian) family in the 5-6th centuries.

“How was the MO Museum?”, I ask the First Mate over lunch.

“There was an interesting exhibition there called ‘We Don’t do This’”, she tells me. “It was all about how sex and nudity in art was suppressed during the Soviet Union era, and the changes that have happened since independence. Sex was never mentioned in the public sphere under the Soviets, and there were severe penalties for doing so. For example, the artist of a painting of young people on a beach was jailed for six months. Can you imagine? Things are much more relaxed now. Art is more explicit and artists are much readier to explore love and intimacy than before. I found it quite fascinating.”

Prison sentence.

“We had better make our way to the bus station now”, I say. “It’s not long before the bus goes.”

We pay and jump on our bikes. Mine doesn’t feel quite right. The tyre is flat.

“It was fine when I arrived for lunch”, I say tetchily. “I wonder what caused that?”

“You’ll just have to push it to the bus station”, says the First Mate unsympathetically. “I’ll meet you there. I just have a bit more browsing to do. You can fix the bike when we get back to Riga.”

Fun-loving Blackheads, rude cats, and Holocaust reminders

“Russia is on the up”, says Mike. “Its GDP is growing, it has new markets for its oil and gas in China and India. It will win the war in Ukraine. No doubt. Time is on its side. The West doesn’t have the stamina.”

We have arrived in Riga, the capital of Latvia, and are talking to Mike, an ethnic Russian living here. His parents were sent to Russia during the Soviet period as a part of Stalin’s Russification policy to increase the proportion of ethnic Russians in the Baltic States and the other Soviet republics compared to their indigenous populations. He is an IT teacher at a local school.

“But the only reason the GDP is growing is because the economy is moving towards a war footing”, I say. “Export revenues have decreased by 30%, so most of that growth is due to vast sums of public money being used to fund growth in armaments factories. And much of that money is coming from Russia’s strategic reserve fund. Already half of that has been used. Benefits to ordinary Russians are being sacrificed to support an illegal war. It’s not sustainable.”

I had read all this in the newspaper the day before.

“Latvia made a big mistake when it chose to be independent and turned its back on Russia”, he continues. “It’s only a small country and it would do much better if it was part of a larger country like Russia. There’s a lot of corruption in government here now, and inflation is very high.”

“But it chose to join the EU and NATO”, I say. “In that sense it is both independent and part of a larger grouping. The best of both worlds. It’s interesting that almost all of the former Soviet Socialist Republics opted for independence when the USSR fell apart. That must say something about Russia. People want to make their own decision and determine their own futures. They just didn’t want to be ruled and occupied by Russia.”

I had had similar discussions at the time that various African countries were becoming independent.

“Well, yes”, says Mike. “But what’s the point in being independent if your country is going down the tubes?”

In the morning, we unload the bikes and cycle into town over the Vanšu Bridge that crosses the Daugava River.

The Vanšu Bridge over the Daugava River, Riga.

On the way, we pass Riga Castle, now the official residence of the President of Latvia.

Riga Castle.

We decide to take one of the free city walking tours coordinated by the Tourist Information Centre. Our guide is Liga.

“You can remember it by thinking of Riga, the city we are in”, she says by way of introduction. “Then just replace the ‘R’ with an ‘L’.”

Liga tells us how to remember her name.

We start in front of the House of the Blackheads. Just as in Tallinn, the Blackheads was the name given to unmarried merchants and various other professional men.

House of the Blackheads, Riga.

“They weren’t allowed to join the Great Guild until they were married”, Liga tells us. “So they had their own Brotherhood. Originally they were a military organisation protecting Christianity, but evolved into a more social organisation doing good works in the city. They were called the Blackheads because their Patron Saint was St Maurice, an Egyptian Christian, and not because they were spotty adolescents.”

There are gentle titters from the group.

St Maurice, Patron Saint of the Blackheads.

“They are credited with starting the custom of decorated trees at Christmas time”, she continues. “The story goes that during one of their drunken parties they decided that it would be a good idea to go to the forest and cut a tree down and stand it up in front of their clubhouse. They then decorated it with all sorts of things. After Xmas, they set fire to it. The custom of decorating trees has continued at Xmas time, but for some reason setting fire to it afterwards hasn’t.”

“I thought decorating Christmas trees was first done in Germany”, whispers the First Mate to me.

Memorial to the first Christmas tree.

We arrive at the Riga Cathedral.

“The Cathedral was built in the 1200s by one of the Bishops of Livonia, which the country was called in those days”, Liga tells us. “It is supposed to be the largest cathedral in the Baltic States. When it was built, it was Catholic, but became a Lutheran cathedral during the Reformation. During the Soviet era, it was prohibited to hold services there, and it was used as a concert hall. However, since independence in 1991, it has been re-consecrated.”

Riga Cathedral.

As we walk to the next stop, I ask Liga about current beliefs in Latvia.

“A lot of people are turning back to the old ways”, she says. “A lot of my friends have houses in the countryside, and are more into revering nature rather than going to a church. Many see Christianity as an imposition by foreigners on the native Latvians. In many ways, revering nature makes a lot of sense, as we depend so much on it for our own well-being. And you can see it all around you, rather than imagining some invisible being somewhere up in the sky. Something like 20% of the population identify with their pagan past.”

We arrive at the Three Brothers. The story here is that, not to be outdone by the Three Sisters in Tallinn, Riga decided to have the Three Brothers, a group of residential buildings built next to each other in different centuries, starting in 15th century. They currently house the Museum of Architecture.

The ‘Three Brothers’, Riga.

“And here we have the Latvian Parliament Building”, says Liga at the next stop. “We pride ourselves on being the only parliament in Europe without armed guards outside. You can see a couple of policemen in that car over there, that’s all.”

Latvia Parliament Buildings, Riga.

“What about corruption in government?”, someone asks. “Is that a problem in Latvia?”

“Unfortunately, there is a lot of corruption in Latvian politics”, she responds. “We are not the worst in Europe, but we are definitely not the best. The main problem is the relationship between the government and business – many people think that it is too close, and that business people are being offered lucrative government contracts if they have good friends in government.”

Sounds a bit like in Britain during Covid, I think.

A little bit further on, we stop in front of an eerie looking sculpture.

THe ‘Ghost of Riga’.

“This the ‘Ghost of Riga’”, says Liga. “It’s a modern sculpture, but it is based on an old story about a young girl who fell in love with a young Swedish soldier. Although such a relationship was forbidden by the authorities, they would meet each other at night near the Swedish Gate back there. Unfortunately, one night they were discovered, and the girl was brought before the town’s leaders. They decided that her punishment was to be bricked up in the city wall. Ever since, her ghost has roamed the streets looking for her lost lover.”

“Another tale of someone being bricked up in a wall”, I say to the First Mate. “It definitely seems to have been a custom in this part of the world.”

“And all because of sex again”, says the First Mate. “LIke you said in the last post.”

Round the corner we come to the Great Guild building and sit on the steps looking at the house on the other side of the street.

“That is the Cat House”, Liga tells us. “Apparently a rich merchant was refused entry to the Grand Guild, so he took his revenge by building a house on the other side of the street of the Guild building. Because he liked cats, he had statues of two cats made and mounted them on top of his house with their bums facing towards the Guild. The members considered this a great insult, so after a great deal of wrangling, they agreed to give him membership if he turned them around. So he got what he wanted in the end.”

The ‘Cat House’, Riga.

We end up at a sculpture of a rooster standing on a cat standing on a dog standing on a donkey.

Town musicians.

“It’s the Bremer Musikanten, the Town Musicians of Bremen”, says the First Mate to me.

“Yes, that’s right”, says Liga, overhearing her. “It was a gift from the city of Bremen, which Riga is paired with. The story is that as in the Grimm fairy tale of them looking into the robbers’ house that they are planning to frighten away so they can eat their feast, in the sculpture they are looking through the Iron Curtain at all the wealth of the West that they would like to share.”

It’s the end of the tour. We thank Liga and decide to cycle to the City Market for lunch.

Spoilt for choice.

We watch fascinated as a group of Orthodox Jews taste the samples and buy their weekly supply of fish.

Fish for supper tonight.

On the way back, we swing past the Freedom Monument. This was built in 1935 to celebrate those who died in the battles to gain Latvia’s independence in 1918, and became a focus for the country’s struggle for freedom and national unity. During the Soviet era, there was talk of removing it, but it never happened for fear of provoking too much civic unrest.

Freedom Munument, Riga.

Nearby is the Latvian National Opera.

Latvian National Opera House.

Not far away is the Russian Embassy. As in Tallinn, there are posters condemning the war in Ukraine.

No to War.

A little bit further on is Alberta Street and its Art Nouveau houses.

Art Nouveau building, Alberta Street, Riga.

“It was interesting what the walking tour guide was saying about the resurgence in the old religious beliefs in Latvia”, says Spencer that evening. “I was reading on the web that there is even a Latvian religion based on the old ways. It’s called Dievturiba.”

“Yes, I have heard of it”, I say. “Tell me more about it.”

“Well, it was founded in the 1920s at the time of the first Independence. It makes no pretence of being the same as the ancient religion, but is a synthesis of Latvian legends, folklore and folk songs, and so provided a focus for Latvian nationalism. It was suppressed during the Soviet era, but there has been a revival since the second independence in 1991.”

“Interesting”, I say. “What do they believe?”

“Well, it depends who you talk to”, he answers. “Some believe there is only one god, Dievs, but he has two aspects, Mara, representing the maternal aspect, and Laima, representing fate and fortune. Others believe that the latter two are separate gods in their own right, and there are also a number of lesser gods. Humans have a physical body, an astral body, and an eternal soul. The purpose of life is to find an individual ‘Path to God’. If you are successful, the eternal soul reunifies with Dievs when you die. The physical body decays, of course, and the astral body also eventually fades away.”

“Not a lot different from many religions”, I say. “But the astral body bit sounds a bit unnecessary. What’s its purpose? Why don’t they just keep it simple?”

“Well, that’s the thing”, he says.” A lot of people don’t really buy all the theology stuff but quite like the idea of reconnecting to the old ways and revering nature. Personally, I quite like the revering nature bit, as us spiders would get a bit more recognition for all the good that we do!”

In the morning, we cycle over to the Riga Ghetto and Latvian Holocaust museum located in an old warehouse building not far from the market.

Riga Ghetto and Latvian Holocaust museum.

“You can have one of these museum guides in English and German”, the young man at the desk says. “And since you live in Scotland, we even have one in Gaelic. One of my colleagues is a linguist, and he translated it.”

I had to admit that I don’t speak or read Gaelic apart from a few place names on Ordnance Survey maps.

We spend the next couple of hours learning of the history of Jews in Riga, the creation of the ghetto, and the mass murder of Jews. The ghetto was created within a Riga suburb fenced off by barbed wire by the Nazis when they occupied Latvia in 1941. Initially it was for the Latvian Jews, but after more than 25,000 of these were killed in the nearby Rumbula forest within three days, Jews from other parts of Nazi-occupied Europe were also sent there. Many of these were also killed by shooting in Rumbula forest.

The Riga ghetto.
Reconstruction of a ghetto room.

We learn of the ‘Butcher of Latvia’, a Latvian by the name of Herberts Cukurs, who was the deputy commander of the Arajs Kommando, a Nazi collaboration unit that was responsible for the largest number of murders of Latvian Jews. Despite supposedly being an ‘all round good chap’ before the war and a noted aviator who flew solo to Gambia and Japan, Cukurs turned out to be particularly brutal, shooting Jewish children and babies in captivity, burning Jews alive, and sexually assaulting Jewish women. After the war, he fled to Brazil, but was tracked down by Israeli agents and assassinated. Amazingly, there have since been efforts in Latvia to rehabilitate his memory.

Herbert Cukars, the ‘Butcher of Latvia’ (from the Times of Israel)

We enter a railway wagon similar to those used to transport Jewish people to the Riga ghetto. Inside, mirrors line the walls to give infinite reflections of a few tree saplings in the centre, giving an impression of a large forest. Perhaps it was memories of the lands they were leaving knowing that they were heading for certain death, or perhaps it represented the last view they had before they were shot in Rumbula forest. Everyone can interpret it how they want.

Wagon used to transport people to Riga ghetto.
Leaving for Riga and almost certain death.

On the wall outside is a list of the names of Jewish people killed in Latvia, indicating where they originated from.

List of names of Jews killed in Latvia.

Particularly poignant is a room with suspended cubes lit from within with the names and details of many of those killed written on the cubes’ faces. All ordinary people whose only crime was to be born Jewish.

Life stories of some of the ghetto inmates killed by the Nazis.

The actual ghetto itself is a few streets away from the museum.

The location of the Riga ghetto nowadays.

“It’s amazing that the street names are still the same”, says the First Mate. “I would have thought they might have renamed them, to try and forget the terrible things that happened here. Imagine buying a house in Ludzas Street nowadays knowing what happened there.”

“That may be just why they kept them”, I say. “To stop people forgetting what happened.”

Nearby is the Russian Orthodox church. We have a quick look.

St John the Forerunner Orthodox Church.

On the way back, we pass the remains of the Great Choral Synagogue that was one of the first synagogues to be burnt down by the Nazis and the Arajs Kommando in 1941, reportedly with Jewish people locked in its basement.

Remains of the Great Choral Synagogue burnt down in 1941.

Back in the city centre, we peek into the modern-day Jewish synagogue.

“I have never seen inside a synagogue before”, says the First Mate. “It’s certainly a lot more minimalist than the Orthodox church.”

Inside the Jewish synagogue, Riga.

On the way back to the boat, we decide to visit the intriguing-looking National Library of Latvia on the left bank of the Daugava River.

 “You can become temporary members of the library if you want to look around”, says the woman at the front desk. “I’ll give you a card each, which will give you access to most, but not all, of the rooms. I suggest you take the lift to the top, have a look at the view, then make your way down each level by the stairs. Here’s a brochure of what is on each level.”

The view out over the river to the Old City is stunning.

View from the top floor of the National Library.

We make our way down each level. It’s quite a different concept to the Oodi library we had seen in Helsinki. Rather than a community library, this one is more of a traditional repository of Latvian art, music, folklore, literature, and history. Earnest scholars pore over old tomes, librarians reverently return books to the shelves, visitors speak to each other in hushed tones.

A repository of national knowledge.

“I bought some of this Riga Black liqueur today”, says the First Mate that evening, as we unwind in the cockpit. “It’s pretty popular here. We can try some.”

“You know, I can’t quite reconcile in my mind what Mike was saying yesterday”, she continues, taking a sip. “On one hand, he is intelligent, helpful, and thoughtful, but I was quite disturbed by his views on Russia and Latvia. How can a nice person like that hold such views?”

“When you have been brought up with a particular mindset, it’s difficult to see the world in any other way”, I say.