Last year
we had a barbeque at our house with friends for Christmas. The kids played in a
small pool and some of the bigger kids followed this up by a swim in the ocean.
You could call it a typical Kiwi Christmas. This year we were looking forward
to something very different. If you can believe what Tina says – ‘A Real
Christmas’. Would we get a white Christmas? Our chances were definitely
magnitudes of order higher compared to the last few years.
The lead up
to Christmas started in earnest at the start of December. This also coincided
with plummeting temperatures, very little light and the profusion of outdoor Christmas
Markets popping up through out Stockholm .
We spent a
day at the popular open air museum – Skansen, which is purported to have the
most traditional and authentic Swedish Christmas market of the lot. It was a
bitterly cold day, however this didn’t dampen our enthusiasm and we took in the
stalls, ate and drank our weight in pepparkakar (gingerbread) and Glögg (mulled
wine), danced to the nifty Christmassy music being played by the onsite live
band, and saw fleeting glimpses of Jultomte, in effect Sweden’s Father
Christmas, but in reality a short scruffy dwarf from Nordic mythology that
bears only a vague resemblance to the Father Christmas I grew up with. He seems
a lot more sensible when compared to Father Christmas, he knocks on the door
and asks if there are any nice children instead of trying to squeeze his
voluminous weight down a narrow chimney, and he isn’t that fat. He gets
porridge for his efforts, which makes sense considered the plummeting
temperatures, and he doesn’t hang out malls for the weeks and months leading up
to Christmas waiting for thousands of scared children to sit on his lap and
have their photo taken. By the looks of him, he is more likely to be hiding out
in the forest eating magic mushrooms and drowning himself in glögg, which seems
a much better way to spend his time.
Get your Julklappar (Christmas presents) here. |
Dancing at Skansen |
Finally - some snow to clean up! |
Studded tyres. The most exciting thing to happen in my cycling life for a few months. |
Fire breather at work Christmas do. |
Julmust - a hideous fizzy Christmas drink. Together with a hot dog, the cheap and nasty Julbord of the takeaway lovers. |
The one
positive part of the near perpetual darkness – there is a positive in everything,
was that Christmas lights could actually be seen. In New Zealand , people can decorate
their houses to kingdom come with all sorts of gaudy light shows, but unless
you are a night owl, they are kind of lost to the world and in reality just a
waste of electricity. But not in Sweden . They added light to the
long nights, and in some cases the streets. I would have expected the street
lights to be powerful illuminating flood lights in a country with such a long
winter. But no, they are reasonably pathetic, which is surprising. But the
array of Christmas lights on display definitely help to mark the boundary
between road and house in more than one part of my daily commute. Office
windows (ours included) and apartment windows nearly all had the ubiquitous
pyramid of fake candles lit by the marvel of electricity. Many colourful paper
lamps were also on display and the colours and lights definitely helped to
brighten the spirits in the darkness of the long nights. Even though I’m from
the Southern Hemisphere and am used to long hot days, barbeques and beach life
around Christmas time, the cold and dark and pretty illuminations just kind of
felt right. But still, the short gey days were killing me.
We were
both looking forward to the break over Christmas in Germany . Although not exactly
renowned for their hot Christmases, we were mainly looking forward to some
daylight, and of course staying at the fine Hotel Bayer. We also booked a week
in Mallorca in February, a place I thought I would never go, but with the
approaching bathroom and pipework replacement in our apartment complex set for
the start of the January, we were looking at two months of no running water or
sewage and no bathroom in the midst of the darkness with temperatures that are
set to dip down to minus twenty. We were dreading it and a week escape in the
middle of it to get some vitamin D from the elusive sun was too tempting.
Then we had
a stroke of good luck. Friends of ours were leaving. Not that that was good
luck, the opposite in fact as it takes a while to make friends in a new city , the last thing
you want is for them to leave. However, considering the housing situation in Stockholm , someone
leaving also opens up opportunities and the natural question soon followed “Can
we have your landlords number?” A house with a small garden with a 1st
hand lease just down the road (ie. Not renting off someone who rents off
someone else for a maximum of 12 months), available just when we were to be
without water and a bathroom for two months. It sounded too good to be true. It
wasn’t, we move in at the start of January. A nice Christmas gift for us just
days before we jetted off to Germany
for Christmas.
With Ana’s
imminent second birthday, the flight to Germany and back was to be the last
time she was to sit on our laps for its duration. Tina and I counted up the
number of planes she had been on to date. Fourteen including the one we were
on. Not bad for a less than a two year old. I’m not too sure if I am proud or
horrified at that statistic. Ana was now old enough to know she was off to see
Grandparents. And boy was she excited. She sprinted around the airports at
Stockholm and Frankfurt in such a state of excitement she didn’t have time to
look where she was going, the wave of bag towing fellow passengers simply
parting in two so as not to inhibit her progress, while Tina and I sprinted to
keep up with her.
Well, we
failed miserably in the white Christmas department, maybe next year. More
importantly, we are hoping for the winter to begin in earnest on our return to Sweden
and hope the greyness becomes more of a white paradise.
Merry
Christmas to all, wherever in the world you happen to be.
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