Our walk this Sunday, from home to
Frognerkilen, along Oslo Quayside to the
Operahouse and returning up
Karl Johan´s Street (including Coffee Americano and a Croissant at
United Bakeries) to the
Royal Castle and beyond, has resulted in some nice photos, a water blister under my right foot and this blogpost.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ-sXBfOPrQam5OsiqXiDWQbwePFye70EXs5SuOM1Aw_lUivawtKyTesXyBoQ8ZUptBY9GmrZgDa6axUSr3m8pQ9o-ziZMy50PdfWYUmseMs0SIZrPx35Hbw4nqurgXSbev4v3n-EIFJk/s400/IMG_3535.jpg)
A lot of ships (including the
Color Magic bound for Kiel) can be found at the quayside.
My first ship is
Christian Radich. The
full rigged ship, named after a Norwegian shipowner, is anchored under the
Akershus Fortress, and is Oslo´s pride.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjMtRucshw9cNldPy4prE3W-_HbbApOkAoHSmOr_WpDHlFpN3lPTCQ16_Hdp5CIdL4xq8oMgThvhF9RIzc9K5bQ6QXbV8tZEeMhtufiSZjuNxTM9vpzBdOwydyzHEIEZAGrhvPSq8udW3Y/s400/IMG_3550.jpg)
At
Vippetangen we can see
Danskebåten, while a Russian school ship can be visited at
Revierkaia.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj-3LcJWH8gjsWJ6fKaW9sORFyv6d6iE08gKBwUhF7Kb9mNDeld_db2AAVynQOv9YAWJ3rieXeH4Cyau46-NUR9_9S02gsOI0kj2c1bwzNTw13lcGmA6qmiNSV61K4lzjeB-YZiocVo4Kk/s400/IMG_3541.jpg)
The white marble at the Operahouse looks good in the nice weather.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjsLOLGULjr3F347iOkR2fCEzfOAYReAW7LqZjYQ8gBEGHsM-8-MtKu12KCQYcQsp8cMy74HO35eLhksjuI0jM7z0qw5C7UrZesd7ZTGflI9-V90wl74fvIH8SWIZYnDkypow_-hHphVWo/s400/IMG_3553.jpg)
While resting at the beautiful white marble, the spectacular sculpture
in
Bjørvika needs more description.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrSAZ6bhdBZ_zoQ2NnY3F5XuFBrgTf-EFeKNrTcJzzunp0eeyimUgHM8llryBfPEIsuh6TxCw-MX_q2EWjDKfLN9ThT3loJWU_lG34wTAouJ1m1z6duVJv6YqBPKW_HLupa27T1jG9Z3M/s400/IMG_3545.jpg)
The Water sculpture (335 tons heavy and 12 meter high) by Italian
Monica Bonvicini (45), resident in Berlin, is a three-dimensional version of Caspar David Friedrich's painting "Arctic Ocean". He is considered among the foremost artists of European romanticism, studied in Copenhagen, lived from 1798 in Dresden and was friends with Norwegian JC Dahl.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWMzj0J3dCFZOby-tA71DV0iP1Yrky-SPGxtU52IPL3fZgp1Dz51qCNHqtwbTnhQy8Uh7PzGuM7hHer_gruAb-z7owxH9QnlpxrrLzZJkaBVnykVdNda8-nJdnQU-jzTP951B0WAOZr-U/s400/IMG_3554.jpg)
Click on the photos to see them larger / better.
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