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Rollag and Geilo – Heritage Day

Today was heritage day for the Skogen family. The first stop was the stave church in Rollag where my Dad’s Father’s Father, Helleck, was baptized. We couldn’t go inside the church, but we wandered around outside looking at all the graves. There were about 4-5 Skogen graves there…my favorite name was Ninni Skogen.

Next, we stopped at the house where Helleck lived as a young child before moving to America. The family there was very friendly and let us walk around their land. They have remolded and are currently adding on, but the same structure was still there with the huge rock in the back. This is the house that is in the painting above the piano in our house in Madison that some of you may know about.

The pig in image below was an extra stop up we made at a Christmas shop just up the hill from Helleck’s home. The little boy wearing the Simpson’s shirt couldn’t get the pig back in the pen alone, so my Dad and brother, Nathan, tried rounding him up. They had their knees bent with their arms out while making some strange noises…I was recording the whole thing with my Dad’s video camera (You’ll see footage later). They still couldn’t get him back in the pen.

We drove for over an hour to the house where Helleck’s wife lived before moving to America. In the Oslo, Norway post, Roar is holding a photo album with a picture of my Dad’s Father, Orin, sitting on his mother’s porch. We stopped at this same place for my Dad to visit, sit and have his picture taken at the same place his Father sat.

*Helleck and his wife lived about an hour apart in Norway, but didn’t meet each other until both of them moved to Wisconsin. They married and had 10 children, my Grandpa (Orin) was one of the children.

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Oslo to Rjukan, Norway

We left Oslo early this morning and started making our way West. The first stop was in Kongsberg at the Silver Mines. I should have been a little apprehensive or had some kind of ill feeling about going over mile into a mountain, but all of us just quickly ducked into the tiny cars ready to be pulled into the mines.

It was a bumpy, 12-minute ride in.

The second stop was in Notodden to visit Norway’s biggest stave church, which was built in the 13th century.

The last stop on the itinerary was the Vemork Heavy Water Museum in Rjukan, which was overthrown by the German’s during WWII to produce the atomic bomb. The story is fascinating and definitely worth reading about! I wouldn’t be able to do it justice. : )

After visiting the museum, we gradually followed a very curvy road to the top of a mountain. The hotel was at the top, basically in the middle of nowhere. There is a little community up here at the base of ski hills, but the hotel feels more like a retirement cabin. I was hoping there would be dancing at night with a live band… there was music, a woman singing American music with a Norwegian accent, but I was a little disappointed there was no dancing.

Also, last note, it flurried today.

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Oslo, Norway

Since the hotel serves breakfast from 6-11am, we had plenty of time to sleep, which I took full advantage of. It’s traditional in Norway to serve cold cuts, cheese and really good bread in the morning. They had this for an option in one room and then all the usual breakfast food in the other.

The only touristy thing we all did was go to the Akershus Fortress and the Resistance Museum.

In the afternoon, we took a bus to Roar and Tove’s house about 45 minutes outside Oslo. In a few days, we will be traveling across southern Norway and stopping at various towns. But, most importantly, we’ll be visiting both homes that my great-grandparents lived in before moving to the United States. Tonight, Roar showed us a photo album of when my grandparents visited both houses about 30 years ago.

Check back soon for more photos in the next few days!

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Traveling to Norway

Being together as a whole family is a rare thing for the Skogen family. But, our dad has been generous enough to take us all to Norway…a total of 13. I’m the youngest of 7, 4 are married, plus mom and dad. (the grand kids were left at home) We all flew into Detroit from various cities. We traveled from Detroit to Amsterdam, then from Amsterdam to Oslo. I was able to watch three movies!

The Oslo airport is the nicest and cleanest airport I’ve ever been to. The architecture was gorgeous, there was tons of glass, and had nice wood flooring! I was impressed. Immediately after getting off the plane, we hopped on our private short coach bus and started touring Oslo.

We stopped at The Opera, Bygdøy, The Viking Ship Museum, Kon-Tiki Museum, and the Vigeland Sculpture Park. I’d say the sculpture park was my favorite, not only because all the sculptures were naked people, but the artist’s work revolved around the circle of life, from birth to death. I haven’t photographed death, but the first part I’m really interested in documenting! : )

Finally hoping to relax after flying to Norway then sightseeing for 4 hours, we went to the Grand Hotel to get ready for dinner…we only had 45 minutes. We walked a few blocks away to this cute and modern little restaurant to meet family friends that we haven’t seen in about 10 years!! Now up to 20 people, we sat at a huge long table in a private room, ate a 4 course meal, and drank a different wine with each dish. Have you ever had gold pop rocks on a piece of fudge?? It kind of freaked me out. The dinner lasted more than 3 hours. By this time, for those of us who couldn’t sleep on the flight, had been up for about 36 hours.

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