Summer was very enjoyable but busy. I went (briefly) to spa in Pärnu (always a pleasure), to Sweden and then to the UK. I liked confident, sensible Sweden very much, not least of all because I spent my time there in the company of old pals who have a house in Lysekil, Götaland on the Kattegatt strait in the south west. The Kattegat is a continuation of the Skagerrak (meaning roughly ‘Skagen Channel’ and named after Skagen at the north tip of the Denmark) and is known either as a bay of the Baltic Sea, a bay of the North Sea or, in traditional Scandinavian usage, neither. According to The Great Danish Encyclopaedia the Kattegat derives its name from the Dutch kat (cat) and gat (hole, gate) - late medieval slang used by Hansa sailors who compared the reefs and narrow channels (at one point passable waters were a mere 3.84 km - 2.39 miles – wide) to a hole that was a bit of a squeeze even for an average puss. I am sure my Jelly would have managed when told of the fishy riches of the Baltic … she is very fond of a herring …
Lysekil is charming, especially on a bright, sunny day in the north where the light renders everything airy and translucent. Its old pastel coloured wooden town (gamlestan) is gently elegant as is the adjacent spa garden and buildings. I especially liked the whitewashed bathhouse that encloses a sea inlet, designed by Renaissance man, Carl Peter Curman (1833 - 1913), physician, gifted amateur architect, sculptor and photographer. Bird droppings always seems to come back to spa! Carl Curman’s main claim to fame was as a balneologist who initiated modern hot air baths in Sweden. He built many bathhouses, including the Sturbadel in the (now very exclusive) central Stockholm, whose façade is modelled on the Ca’ Vendramin Calergi in (appropriately watery) Venice. His own villa in Lysekil has been preserved as it was in the 19th century. See some smashing pix at http://www.flickr.com/photos/s....
Being a seaside town, a spa and Sweden’s only marine preservation area, there’s rather a good aquarium and I enjoyed strolling beneath and through big tanks full of local marine flora and fauna. But beware! Peering over the barrier of an open pool of flat fish I was attacked by a turbot that braced itself on the bottom of the tank and launched itself towards my nose. I seem to be vulnerable to turbot terror because this happened to me once before, in Hunstanton aquarium in 1969…Just to be on the safe side, I left the crabs, anemones and sea stars in open tanks unmolested. It can’t, anyway, be much of a life being prodded and poked by curious giant, warm-blooded pink things. The aquarium annual exhibition is about sea monsters, complete with a Kraken head exhaling explosive smoke and an opportunity to stand between shark jaws. The local Gullmarsfjorden legend involves a sea snake but the star of the exhibition is a real (dead) giant herring 3.65 meter (nearly 12 foot!) long. 73-year-old fisherman Kurt Ove Eriksson who found it said “I’ve been fishing around here since 1957 and I’ve never seen anything like it!” He had found the world’s largest bony fish, a Giant Oarfish (aka ‘The king of herrings’) last seen in Swedish waters in 1879. See the colossal kipper at http://www.komonews.com/news/o... and a nice video at
(to be continued)