They are freaking expensive.
| Nyhavn, the popular tourist area |
So when Rasmus told me there was a beer festival in Copenhagen he was attending with some friends, it seemed like a good opportunity to dip our toes in the Scandinavian water. With a few people, we could save money by renting an apartment and having some meals there. So we bit the bullet and bought our tickets.
And after 4 days in Copenhagen I have to say, it is a really beautiful, amazing city that I'd love to spend more time in. But it really is that expensive. Especially compared to Germany, which doesn't get enough good press about what a great travel deal it is compared to the rest of Western Europe. Even grocery shopping gave us some sticker shock - a six-pack of cheap beer set us back over $10 - but everything, from admissions fees to restaurants to public transit to bars cost about double or sometimes even triple what you'd expect to pay in Germany. Get ready for $20 hamburgers.
In anticipation of these costs, I did some research and found the Copenhagen Card, which entitled us to entry at virtually every attraction and museum in Copenhagen, as well as public transit within the eastern side of the island of Zealand, including the Viking ship town of Roskilde, and "Hamlet's Castle" at Elsinore. The card costs $90 for 72 hours of validity, which was steep enough to make my heart skip a beat at first. Once we did the math, though, we realized the card saved us a ton of money.
| Something is awesome in the state of Denmark! |
cool pilot-less Metro to our apartment, and then walked to the former industrial, now yuppie neighborhood of Christianhavn. Within minutes of our arrival in town, we'd passed hipster art galleries, beautiful flower stands, dozens of bicycles, and fish markets redolent with the smell of smoked herring. Way to play into (positive) stereotypes, Danes! We spent the next several hours enjoying the sunny, if breezy weather on a self-guided walking tour of the city. At the picturesque canal known as Nyhavn, we eschewed the expensive tourist cafes and did as the locals do and bought a cheap, giant can of Viking beer and drank it sitting on the pavement in front of historic sailing vessels, and enjoyed the famous ristet hot dog for a snack. (The hot dog comes with katchup, mayo, remoulade, fried onions, and pickles - seriously tasty junk food!) By the time our friends arrived, we were all too pooped for nightlife, so we hung out in our apartment and marveled at the Nordic summer - it wasn't fully dark until 11:00 p.m. in May!
The next day we headed to Roskilde, the former capital of the Danish Kingdom and home to the Viking Ship Museum. The Cathedral in Roskilde is Denmark's Westminster Abbey - the entire royal family is interred there, from the famous Viking Harald Bluetooth to the current queen when her time comes. It's somewhat morbid, but there's even a model of her tomb on display. With amazing art and architecture spanning nearly a thousand years, it's a must-see.
| Wannabe Vikings! |
From there it was a pleasant walk through a park to the Ship Museum, which is set in a picturesque inlet, formerly the site of many raids and battles. It's theorized that five ships were scuttled there to create a blockade for would-be invaders. The ships were discovered and excavated in the 1950's and the find was instrumental in changing perceptions about what had previously been thought to be myths about the ability of the Vikings to sail to far-off places such as Greenland and Canada hundreds of years before Columbus. It's very much a living history museum, as replicas of the ships have been made using Viking shipbuilding techniques. The replicas were taking visitors for a sail out in the bay, and there were rope making classes and other interactive exhibits for young people. The museum and the original ships on display were amazing, and we got some fun photos dressing up in viking costumes as well.
| Tivoli Gardens |
Saturday was the beer festival itself. Rasmus insisted we arrive close to opening at noon, before "the good stuff sells out." And it wasn't that I disbelieved Rasmus about the variety and quality of Danish beers, but what he'd told me failed to prepare me for what I'd find. There were dozens of breweries as well as distributors, selling primarily Danish beer but also some international options. The Danish beers themselves obviously had once had a lot in common with the westcCoast beer revolution - there were many, many IPAs, double IPAs, and other hoppy wonders, many bearing the description of "American style" or "West Coast style" but there were also beers that didn't resemble anything I'd seen in the States: Black IPAs, Nordic summer sales, bitter lambics, fusions of American and Belgian styles, barleywines - you name it. And it was fantastic. At first I didn't think our 10 taste tokens of 0.1 liters each would be enough to satisfy us for several hours, but given how strong in both taste and alcohol content most of the beers were, 10 tastes ended up being quite enough for us.
| The cutest puppy ever, yes you are! Yes you are! |
Eventually we reconvened to get more hot dogs and annoy everyone on our train with our slightly inebriated antics (my husband's ability to imitate accents does not get better with akvavit, it turns out, but good on ya, Bruce!). We met up with some of Rasmus' Danish friends to go to a beer bar in one of Copenhagen's hipster neighborhoods and watch the end of the big FC Bayern vs. Dortmund football game. Inside, I spied a beer I really like, West Coast Brewing Company's Green Flash Pale Ale, and immediately requested a bottle, but Chris had already purchased two large bottles of Lagunitas Brewing Company's Hop Stoopid Ale.
Now this is a beer that's hard to find outside of specialty beer shops even in Northern California. The fact that I could buy it in Copenhagen? Amazing. Even after a day of fantastic beer, it was like home in a bottle. I may have gone off on a tipsy ramble reminiscing to a bunch of uninterested Danes about the beauty of sitting on the banks of the Russian River, looking at redwoods, watching kayakers, while drinking this beer, which is so amazingly balanced and beautiful and....whoops, I'm doing it again. Oh yeah, and each beer cost $22. Copenhagen giveth and taketh away (our money).
We didn't linger at the bar and instead took our bottles to go, enjoying the relatively warm evening, while the hipsters rode by on their bicycles and bicycle-like-contraptions rigged up to hold dogs, flats of beer, and even people. It seemed like everyone was out and about, giggly girls attempting to foist free hot dogs on passerby, football fans, hippies...a real urban slice of nightlife. In fact, back at our apartment, some neighbors were having quite the party, which apparently went on until it got light again at 4:00 a.m. When was the last time you partied from sunset to dawn? It's not hard to do during a Scandinavian summer. I kept waking up at ungodly early hours, convinced I'd overslept, only to see that it was just 5:00 a.m. It's just that bright that early.
| Me and the old stock exchange and palace |
The next day our blissful weather ended, and we woke up to rain and a bit of a hangover. I'd caught a cold the previous day as well (which I probably gave to our entire group, as they all insisted I try their beer samples and vice-versa). But it was our last day in town and we were determined to get a good value for our Copenhagen Card, so we took a boat tour of the harbor and canals, hit the National Museum which was great but disappointingly short on Viking history, and the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, an amazing and beautiful museum from the private collection of the Carlsberg brewery's founder. After a late lunch of smørrebrød (Danish open-faced sandwiches - turns out I'm not a fan of herring in any form) it was time to head back to the airport.
Overall Copenhagen struck me as both a thriving metropolis with tons for the tourist, but also a very lovable city for the resident. More beautiful than Berlin, more laid-back than Paris, more livable than London - but unfortunately, more expensive as well. Maybe someday I'll hit a windfall and be able to get those sought-after Noma reservations and I'll be able to return and experience the swanky side of Copenhagen. Here's a gallery with the rest of our pictures!