This blue marble

– and yet it spins


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New skin on old bones

Oldhouse-1The long, wooden house stood by itself in an overgrown meadow of high grass and flowers, shyly exhibiting brand new walls painted red, sparkling white corner posts, and a sturdy, new roof. Why shyly? Because its exterior was nearly 300 years younger than its timber construction. It is not with complete comfort that one bears new clothes after loving one’s only outfit for centuries. Oldhouse-3My great-grandfather and great-grand uncle were born in this house. They were not born in this meadow though. Before the house was dressed in new clothes, it was dismantled, every log and plank numbered, carried a few dozen kilometers further, and built up again from scratch. Why? Because someone thought it was a valuable piece of history and should be kept under a watchful eye.

Other generations could be born in this house. The timber walls are dry and healthy. The moss and flax fiber insulation between the logs is only a few decades old. The windows are new. All that is needed is lots of love and care – and a little imagination.
Oldhouse-2(Pernaja, Finland; June 2018)


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Gamle Stavanger

Stavanger-2Stavanger is surprisingly quaint, and somehow a little whimsical, too. I never thought this town would consist of white, impeccably restored cottages. Pink roses seem to be a popular gardener choice.

As I walked along the narrow cobblestone streets I thought I was in a story book by Swedish Astrid Lindgren, not in an actual fishing town in Southern Norway. Stavanger-3(Stavanger, Norway; June 2018)