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So yesterday featured a day trip to Roskilde. This is a beautiful city situated at the bottom of a long, narrow fjord. It was once the seat of Viking power and features an impressive cathedral in which kings like Harald Bluetooth are buried (he's actually interred vertically in a column). Jen and I visited Roskilde last time around, but we wanted to hit the Vikingeskibs Museet again, especially for the chance to sail a Viking Age boat.
We were hoping not to run into a particular British family, since last time their gross incompetence at rowing definitely tempered our experience. We lucked out in that regard, but I suppose there's really no good way to train 16 people from different lands in the fine art of hand-eye coordination in a matter of minutes. After putting the oars in the water, we pulled on the command of our captain (who spoke at least German in addition to English and Danish), and our tangle of oars somehow got our small trading vessel away from the dock. The square sail went up, the wind caught it, and we were cruising. Perfect.
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Back in Copenhagen, the sounds of the jazz festival made their way to our fifth-floor room, and so we headed out to the quay. The sun was going down (pretty amazing here in the north), the wind was blowing, the ice cream was cold, and an amazing Faroese singer by the name of Eivør Pálsdóttir had the stage.
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