
Saturday was a beautiful, sunny and warm day in Lund, so it was a bummer to get on a train away from here, and I just hoped that Copenhagen would be the same. As it turned out, it was just as sunny there, and I got to explore the city sans rain. My friend from Santa Cruz, Michelle is studying there for the fall, and she met me at the train station and showed me around her beautiful city. It was great to see a big city, but it made me appreciate my little city of Lund, which is so manageable.


Although Denmark is a very small country, in the past the Danish kings controlled most of northern Europe, and the buildings and statues validate this in their grand and powerful presence. It truly is an incredible city filled with so many years of history.
Michelle took my friend Kyle and me on a biking tour of the city. We hit some very touristy places that she had not been to yet. I have found that it is much easier to see the tourist-filled places when you are showing someone else.
Michelle lives in an old house with a bunch of other international students. The building is beautiful from the outside, but as soon as we walked in the front door, we could smell years of tobacco smoke that has seeped into the walls, as well as some other funky smells that we couldn’t identify. The smell actually went away, though, as we walked up the flights of stairs to the top floor, where they are living. Their space is so small, with only a kitchen and bathroom as shared living space. Michelle has a nice big room, though, so it doesn’t feel too cramped. After lunch, we borrowed bikes from her housemates and set out to explore the city.

We saw beautiful parks, statues, old buildings, and tons of signs in Danish, which is an even more obscure language than Swedish. Michelle took us to Christiania, an area declared a “free city” by its inhabitants in 1971. Before declaring autonomy from Copenhagen, it was filled with many young and homeless people and was pretty much left alone by the government. It is now filled with many street vendors, crazy hippies, smoke shops, artist studios, and just about any drug you could think of. It is a very intriguing place, and surprisingly it is supported by most of the Danish population according to my guidebook. It is a very colorful and vibrant little walled-off part of town, but there is an ordinance against taking photographs while you are there, so I have no pictures to show you.

After Christiania, we went to Nyhavn, a beautiful harbor with many colorful buildings. This was definitely a highlight for me, and we had some amazing ice cream, so that really topped things off. It was phenomenal that it was so sunny and warm while we were there, because the weather changes so rapidly throughout the day in this part of the world.
It was a short but sweet trip to Copenhagen for day, but given that it takes less than an hour to get from Lund to there, it is a trip that I will definitely do a few more times.
