Wednesday 21 June 2017

Mid June 2017–Rodvig, Denmark to Malmo, Sweden via Copenhagen

5th June to 8th June – Rodvig

We knew the weather was changing and came to Rodvig, so that we were not in the much smaller village of  Klintholm for several days.  Rodvig did not prove to be much bigger but did offer some diversions.

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For two days the boat was pounded by wind and rain.  We were moored in the outer harbour and therefore we were got the worst of the waves and wind induced tidal surge.  ‘Bondie the Kid’ managed to lasso another rope across the boat and around the back post to keep us well away from the boat next door.  The 11th attempt was successful, a great display of perseverance and skill.  We spent most of the time aboard as you don’t want to leave your boat in those conditions and there was nowhere to go ashore for indoor amusement.

8th June – Thursday

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Someone had commented on the blog that Rodvig was a UNESCO World Heritage site due to its Geology.  So we took the coastal path to the east.  We came across a disused lime quarry with a huge pyramid structure.  An information board said that the old lime store was now used for cultural events and it looked to be open.

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Wow, the wooden structure reminded us of the Royal Dockyards in Chatham.  There was no door and the open space invited us in.  That’s me in the middle.  The echo was amazing.

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Back to the Geology, it is evident in the white cliffs, just like Lulworth Cove.  As we rounded the coast in the next few days we saw miles of this undulating rocky structure.

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Rodvig cove, looking towards the town.

Sailors Info:

Rodvig has an outer and inner harbour, the inner harbour is for larger boats and fishing vessels.  450 Krone for 3 nights (£54).  Free showers in old but acceptable facilities.  The Brugsen supermarket is located to the right of the marina, follow the road to the white flint kiln and keep going, less than 10 minutes.  There is an ATM to the left of the marina on the harbour-side.  Cafes, restaurants and small souvenir shops which were closed on quiet days.

9th June – To Dragor, base for visiting Copenhagen.

Election results day!!!

The 26 miles took just over 5 hours.  The sea was very (pots rocking in the cupboards) roly in the morning but got better in the afternoon, and there was no wind, though it was quite sunny.  The marina looked pretty full and we did not want to go too far in as there seemed to be nowhere to turn around.  In the outer part of the marina we were waved in by two British motor boats, they said we could stay by them.  At first we thought that meant rafting until we realised that they were on Lazy Lines, which we have never used before.  They are far more common in the Mediterranean.  With their help we managed to get tied up.  They handed us the ropes which are under the boat and attach to the back cleats to stop the boat from moving sideways, whilst front ropes secure the position of the boat.  Over the next few days we helped more than a dozen boats in the same situation.

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Fleur, centre.  Jupiter who helped us, on our left.  The visiting boats are good entertainment for the coach visitors.  I talked to a lovely lady from Hong Kong who was here on a cruise.

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Dragor is the place people visit for a break from Copenhagen.  It is centred around the harbour and the old town in a maze of small streets lined with painted cottages, which are either tiled or thatched. 

10th June – Saturday

It just so happened that we landed in Dragor at the same time as their annual Market and Fair.

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The lady at tourist information gave us this postcard to encourage us to go.  She said it was a half hour walk.

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It was well over an hours walk but worth it.  It was a new and used market with a fun fair and circus tent.  There were lots of food stalls and this is were we got our first hint at the prices in Denmark.  £7.20 for a burger.  £8.40 for Noodles.  £6.00 for a pint.  Needless to say we declined but then spent a fascinating two hours marvelling at what the wages must be like if these are market prices.

We found a Netto on the way back, Hoorah.  The IRMA supermarket off the town square was Waitrose plus prices.  We had bought a few things in Rodvig but had not been seriously shopping up to this point, having stocked up in Germany.

11th June – Sunday

I cut Mick’s hair using Beckie’s patent ‘hole in a bin bag and stick your head through method’ to catch the bits.  Worked a charm.  We normally wait until we have a pontoon to ourselves and cut it outside, but its not really possible when you are a tourist attraction on a harbour-side.

We walked to the town fort and along the front where the really posh houses are.

12th June – Monday – Bus to Copenhagen

Copenhagen was our only real destination this year, anything else is a bonus, so it deserved at least one if not two Grand Days out.

We caught the 350S bus from Dragor square, at the top of the high street.  (The bus stop is across the road).  The journey only takes 35 minutes and you still get a scenic tour into town.  My highlight was passing the ‘Posh Hunde Salon’ aka dog groomers.

We have been to Copenhagen before on a Cruise stop over, so we knew the bus was dropping us off just after the main square and Parliament building.  We did not know it was so close to a beautiful park.  A lady on the bus told us to go in and see the palace.

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Rosenborg Castle.  Very impressive, the crown jewels are kept here too.  Built by King Christian IV in the early 17th century.

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On our way to the Little Mermaid (well you have to, don’t you?) we crossed another park, which housed a moated fort and garrison.

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With sentry boxes.

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The Little Mermaid.  She had recently been cleaned after being painted red by pranksters.  It is a regular occurrence as a form of protest too.

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We were however not alone.  We counted 14 coaches and there were 3 cruise ships in too.

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After a cloud burst, we walked to Nyhavn which is the most famous street, lined with brightly painted restaurants and cafes.  Beware the 10 Euro beers, we had last time.  No matter how rich you are £9 is still a lot for a beer.

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Our next stop was the Freetown Christiania.  According to the blurb.  “Established in 1971 by a group of hippies, the area has a thriving cultural life with are galleries and music venues, and is home to 1,000 people who have chosen an alternative way of life”.  The houses are mostly self builds and its fascinating to walk around.  Various herbal substances can be purchased on the main street.  The vendors all have a distinctive red brolly to protect their wares from sun and rain.

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The sign as you leave.

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The entertainment arena.

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Fab mural at the exit.

The 13th and 14th were very windy days and we stayed around Dragor.

15th June – Thursday – Grand Day Out number 2.

I specifically wanted to visit the Tivoli gardens as we missed them last time.  Founded in 1843 it is the second oldest amusement park in the world.  It costs 110DK (£13.20) to enter and then rides are extra.  The locals have yearly passes, and a ride ticket at approx £30 would be worthwhile if you are a thrill seeker. 

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The grand entrance.

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The area is packed with gardens, oases and pavilions, which usually house a restaurant, some of Denmark's best restaurants are in Tivoli.

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The Galleon is a floating themed restaurant, as is the boat house.

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There are thrills for all ages…..

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…. and thrill levels.

The aim seems to be to get your through the doors, ride the rides, and/or eat at whatever level your prefer and stay for a show and the nightly illuminations and fireworks.  Walt Disney visited here.  It would be good to return in the winter when the nights are dark, eat and take in a show.  Friday nights are extra special and have international guest stars.  Eating and shows are also extra.  Danish people like to picnic and there is plenty of room to eat outdoors too.

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The 1905 City Hall is near to Tivoli and on our route back to the bus.  It is free to enter and holds art exhibitions in the vast hall.

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Main Hall, you can explore all the floors and the staircases have beautiful frescoes.

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At the entrance is a special room which houses Jens Olsen’s world clock.  “A watchmaker’s masterpiece”. 

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The back is even more beautiful.

There are plenty of shops and many places of interest.  Most admissions are 110DK (£13.20) however a Copenhagen Ticket is available at varying rates for 24, 48 and 72 hours, which gives access to all major attractions including Tivoli and bus and rail travel.  If we had sailed into town this would have been a must.

Sailors Info:

We were glad we stayed in Dragor.  The street marinas were a tight squeeze from what we saw.  The cost was 450DK for 3 nights (£18.00) 10 DK deposit for the shower card.  Showers were free and recently updated.  Good Wi-Fi.  Irma supermarket at the end of the high street.  Netto and Fotex supermarkets 20 minutes walk across the main crossroad out of town, which are definitely worth the walk. 

Ice cream prices highlight the cost difference in Denmark.  One scoop Ice Cream.  Germany 1 Euro, Denmark 25DK 3.30 Euros £3.00.  Basics like eggs, bread and milk can be found for maybe 10% more than Germany.  Cereal, biscuits and meat are more expensive.

16th June – Friday – To Malmo, Sweden

It is only 9.6 miles to Malmo from Dragor across the Drogden and Flintrannan Channels and under the Oresund Bridge.  Made famous by the TV series ‘The Bridge’.  (Really wish we had watched it).  It was a quick 2 hour trip, but beware, the water gets very choppy around the bridge and helming is a challenge.

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We raise the Swedish courtesy flag after we pass under the bridge.

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Picture shows the navigation signs on the bridge to show where to pass under.  A German boat decided to sail through just when it got interesting and very rocky!

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The bridge is a motorway and there is a railway track underneath.  The Danish end goes into a tunnel so that large shipping can pass over.

The marina is large and the walk to the harbourmaster and facilities is long.  A cloud burst made my shower a waste of effort, as I returned more wet than when I left the shower block.

17th June – Saturday - Malmo

We had been told that Malmo closes on Sunday so made the effort to get into town.  My app said it was a 1 hour and 48 minute walk.  It took about 1 hour 20 until we started to see interesting things.

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The Turning Torso tower, the tallest building in Scandinavia is a prominent feature on the skyline and very useful to sailors.

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Malmo is a mix of the very old and the very new.  Canals lined by modern architecture.

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Lilla Torg, billed as the prettiest square in town and rightly so.

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The apothecary shop is located at the end of a beautiful arcade which joins two of the town squares.  There is a good selection of shops and a large indoor shopping centre called Triangelen.

We walked our legs off.

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Walked back through the park and then walked an hour and a half back to the marina.  There are several parks and old palaces.  We knew we were not going to stay long so did not change any money.  With hindsight I would have used the credit card on the bus.

We left the following day. 

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Happy chappie near Oresund Bridge.

Sailors Info:

Malmo Limhamns Marina.  440Kr for 2 nights £19.80 per night.  Machine payment issues Wi-Fi password and facilities Pin Code.  Shower cubicles with communal changing.  All currently being updated to a good standard.  We landed on pontoon B, it would be worth seeking out pontoon F for visitors which on exploration is easy to access, and has turning space if necessary.  Poor Wi-Fi, but we were a long way out.  The lady in the small marina café could not have been more helpful and gave us maps and information booklets.  This is a 4 star marina.  Not sure I want to see a one star.  Chandlers on site. We did not find a supermarket nearby but there is a café and a very nice restaurant on the other side of the marina.

We decided to cross to Sweden as we were so tantalisingly close and we had a courtesy flag.  We are glad we visited and will surely return on another adventure.  We feel a long way from home right now, so are heading back to Denmark and N.E. Germany.

Tuesday 6 June 2017

Late May/Early June 2017 – Laboe, Germany to Rodvig, Denmark

21st May – Sunday

We arrived in Laboe, choosing it as the next stop, as it was just a few miles from the exit from the Kiel Canal, on the East bank of the Kieler Fjorde and we had reports that it was a good place to rest up.

The town is a short walk from the marina.

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The older fishing harbour had a grand display of larger yachts and wooden fishing vessels, which added to the charm.  The promenade had many hotels, restaurants and guest houses, and the usual seaside shops.  Ice creams are a reasonable 1 euro for one ball, but slightly more on the sea front.  Laboe is a small town, but a great place to ‘set a spell’, as the Beverley Hills Billy’s used to say.

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The first thing you see when looking up the Fjorde to Laboe is the U-Boat memorial.

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There is a U-boat and U-boat museum.

23rd May – Tuesday

News of the Manchester attack the previous night left us numb.  We have stood in the foyer of the Arena many times, as eager concert goers and anxious parents collecting Laura and her friends.

The next few days went in a blur, pottering round, trying to make sense of the senseless.

Sailors Info:

Laboe’s relatively new marina is a good, well run facility, with free showers.  22 Euros per night.  10 Euros returnable deposit for electronic swipe card to access the showers.  There is a Chandlers on site, on the water front (easy to miss).  A restaurant on site and many in the town a 10 minute walk away.  Good wifi, even though we were at the end of a pontoon.  ‘Sky’ supermarket in town, up from the main shopping square.  Continue up the hill for approx 20-25 minutes for Aldi and Edeka supermarkets.  Shops close on religious holiday.

26th May – Friday – To Heiligenhafen, Germany

A 9 to 5 day took us the 38 miles to Heiligenhafen, which had been recommended by Mike and Cate, as a preferred location, and they were spot on.  We went around the firing range indicated on the charts, so our journey was a little longer.  Radio broadcasts indicate firing days and a conscientious radio operator makes short shift of telling people if they venture into the demarcation zone.  We didn’t, but we heard others who did.  The sea was calm but wallowy and the sun was out.

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We took the sharp right turn into the channel along the sandy spit.

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With a convoy of other boats.  Another Bank holiday weekend meant everyone had the same thought, or so it felt.

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In the busy channel into town, this guy was pootling around oblivious to the oncoming traffic, and was no help when asked about the visitor moorings.  Again they were boxes with an even smaller red or green sign to signify a vacancy.  A kind German man took our ropes.

We had a short walk to pay the harbourmaster and found a modern purpose built holiday resort.

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A lovely row of modern and perfectly presented shops, lead to the beach.

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The evening was dead calm and the reflections off the water were deep and beautiful, reflecting the pink of the setting sun.

27th May – Saturday

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Walked into town to see the market and have a stock up.  There is a good choice of shops in all price brackets.

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Becky and Trevor arrive at 2:00pm.  They live on their boat ‘Dignity II of Edinburgh’ and have spent the last year in Ystad, Sweden.  We first met 3 years ago in Padstow, and again the year after in Ipswich, where we spent a great New Years eve with them on Jeremy and Patricia’s boat Tudora with Mike and Cate (mentioned earlier).  We had dinner on Fleur and they brought the most amazing cakes from the marina patisserie.  It is really great to speak English, to a New Zealander and a Scot’s man after a month or so away.  We had a few brews during the following few days recalling our adventures and cautionary tales.

28th May – Sunday

We had a walk around the beach front and along the pier.

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Pier

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Glassed in pavilion on the end of the pier with comfy seats.  How long would this last in England?

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Play area for the terminally curious.

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We walked along the seaside to the Wetland area and bird sanctuary on the sand spit.

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These delightful houses line the route.  Bet they don’t have flood insurance.

29th May – Monday

We walked around the man made lake.

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This is Njord (Norse God of Wind) made out of recycled bits and bobs, he looks very happy about it all, sat on the edge of the lake.

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These flats dominate the skyline at this end of the lake and they appear to be retirement flats, complete with Cinema, shops and restaurants.  We thought it was a hospital.

The next 2 days were very windy, up to 35 knots, so we had a stock up prior to our trip to Denmark.

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Our first Curry-worst from the old fashioned cabin on wheels near the town square.  The man prepared it with such care and we went for the Hot sauce, European Hot the man called it.  The sausages are cut up and put on a tray with the curry-sauce and the chips were a necessity. Euro 8.40 bargain for 2 inc. chips.

1st June – Thursday

We said our goodbyes to Trevor and Becky and took respective piccies with the boats, as we don’t get to do that often.

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Trevor and Becky on D2

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Us on Fleur.

We wish them safe onward passage and fair winds.  Thanks to the internet we are never too far away.

Sailors Info:

Heiligenhafen is a purpose built holiday resort with a new marina.  There is an old marina and fishing harbour in town.  The marina is only a 10 minute way from the town, although the pontoons are very long, we were on 90 of 106 on pontoon 12.  1000 boat capacity.  Market in the town on Saturday til 1300.  Sky supermarket just off the town square.  Good wifi. 16 Euros per night.

However, 1 euro for a shower, with communal changing room!!  Buy a token in the foyer of the facilities.  Get changed and stash your stuff (leave valuables on the boat), dash to put the token in the machine, press the button to activate your selected cubicle, dash back to cubicle and press the red button.  Hope the water is warm, waste time altering the temperature, then luxuriate in the 3 to 4 minutes you have left under the skin piercing water jets.  Repeat red button until water stops.  Should be an Olympic sport.

2nd June – Friday – To Gedser, Denmark

38 miles today from 0800 to 1600, sunny and calm with no wind.

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We passed under the Fehmarnsund Bridge which links the mainland to the island of Fehmarn.

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Holiday home delivery, with work still in progress, see man on roof.

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Hoist our Danish courtesy flag.

We moored and bought diesel by credit card (no person) and then moored on the long jetty.

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The harbourmaster office was a typical Danish structure and also housed the facilities.

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Many of the harbours use card machines for payment.  They are pretty straightforward and issue pass cards for the facilities.  There is an English option so no worries so far.

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We walked towards the town centre, which is marked by this church.  Gedser is the Danish version of Lands End and has a ferry port and a supermarket, but no cash machine.

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The swan family came to visit, mum, dad and 6 signets.  They all went for a swim later too, with dad on guard.

Our German neighbour’s wife helped us with ropes the previous night, as there is a wooden plank running along the top of the jetty that you have to thread your rope through.  Our German neighbour introduced Michael to naturism on the pontoon the following morning as he aired himself and his dog.

Sailors Info:

Gedser is really a passing port, ourselves and a dozen or so German and Dutch boats spent the night.  180Kr per night (approx £21.60 at 0.12 pence per Krone).  The facilities are passable, and paid for on the pass card.  We didn’t.  There is a small well stocked supermarket in town 20 minutes walk away.  No wifi.

3rd June – Satruday – To Klintholm, Denmark

An early-ish start at 0750 for the 35 miles to Klintholm, arriving at 1500.  The day was very overcast, we had patches of heavy rain and the wind was bitterly cold, but we had the best sail yet as the wind direction was perfect with a constant 15 knots.  At least 7 hours of pure sailing.

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Klintholm marina with holiday homes.

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Gallery

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Beautiful gallery interior.

Sailors Info:

Klintholm marina looks quite new and is being developed from a much older and long standing harbour.  Again a good passing place.  There is a small shop, cafe and a couple of restaurants.  No ATM. Poor wifi.  Once we had followed many pink arrowed signs to the harbourmaster office the machine was out of order.  The sign said come back at 8:00 to 9:00 the following day.  Kr 180 was paid at the machine the following morning with the harbourmaster present.  So we had no access to the facilities but the toilets were free access and were of a very high standard.  The boxes were easy to access and again the fleet of boats at Gedser arrived here too including our German friend. 

4th June – Sunday – To Rodvig, Denmark

Not again, news from London, we know Borough Market well as it was Laura’s base for a few years while studying.  So many good memories of nights out in this popular area slammed and shredded by mindless violence.


The forecast was for the winds to increase so we chose to move while we could.  More to see, good wifi and supermarket access also influenced the decision.

We left with heavy hearts at 09:15 for the 25 miles to Rodvig arriving at 14:00.  It was a very cold day with very heavy rain, which was forecast but we were willing to bear this in order to have a few days rest in a slightly larger town. 

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We pass these white cliffs en route.

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Rodvig harbour-side

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The flint kiln.  The fishermen apparently realised there was more money to be made extracting flint from the local stone.

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Rodvig fishing harbour

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The houses are either old like this or red brick with tiled roofs or contemporary Scandinavian design.

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Danish Water Taxi, looks like a bath time toy.

Staying here a few days for more forecasted winds to pass.  More from Rodvig if we find anything.