Day 8: Vasa Museum, Skansen, and Jazz

Day 1 and 2: St Louis to Gothenburg

Day 3: Shrimp and Salmon Cruise in Gothenburg

Day 4 and 5: Finishing Up in Gothenburg

Day 5 and 6: Starting our time in Stockholm

Day 7: Seeing an Opera at Drottningholm

Day 8 was a busy day! Ever since we went to the Norwegian Folk Museum in Norway the other year, I’ve become obsessed with the idea of open air museums, and this was the first on our itinerary, and also the first one, as in, THE first open air museum. (It should also be noted that I loved going to Sauder Village as a kid which is in the same vein, I suppose.) While crafting our itinerary I decided we should start the day with the nearby Vasa Museum, which everybody said was amazing, but could get crowded, plus it opened earlier.

We started our day with breakfast at Skeppbro Bakeri (again!) because it was good and was also near the ferry we wanted to take to the island of Djurgarden, our destination for the day. You could get there another way, but the ferry was fastest and seemed like fun.

I got the “breakfast buffet” (but imagine that in Swedish, I think they actually just called it frukost) which included a sandwich, pastry, juice, coffee plus yogurt, oatmeal, bread and any toppings you wanted. It was a decent deal, something like 1500 kronor if I recall, while just a sandwich and coffee would set you back 900 kronor. They had a nice sandwich roll with sliced hardboiled egg, mayo type sauce, caviar, and lettuce. We enjoyed watching the sea and the birds, and then finally headed over to the ferry to ride to Djurgarden.

The ferry is part of the regular transportation system so you can use the SJ app to buy tickets.

The ferry arriving for us.

Us, on the ferry. We sat inside because we were tired and it was quite sunny.

The ferry ride was quick and uneventful and then the whole boat got off at Djurgarden, near the amusement park called Gröna Lund. We walked over to the Vasa Museum and went straight in: I had prepurchased tickets online that morning, so we skipped the ticket line, easy peasy. The museum was already pretty crowded at whatever time it was, probably 10 am ish.

The museum is all about this one ship, called the Vasa, which was really elaborate, built in 1628, and capsized pretty much right away, though sadly a lot of people died. The whole thing is tragic and really crazy. In any case though, because of the waters that the ship sank in, it stayed fairly intact for centuries until it was finally raised up in 1961, and then the museum was built in 1990. The museum houses the ship, with lots of displays about the ship, all the parts, information about the people on the ship, etc. It’s quite fascinating, and we spent about 2 hours there…probably could have spent longer, but we felt like we had gotten a fair amount of information at that point and we had made it through most of the exhibits.

In case you were wondering! And yes, you can see them, and yes, they are just boxes without bottoms. Very comforting. (Very demure).

After we had filled our brains with Vasa information, we left to walk to Skansen, nearby. It was oddly hard for us to figure out the best to get there, possibly because there were supposedly a few entrances, but actually more exits than entrances…we found our way eventually and got there around 1 pm, and immediately decided we needed to eat lunch.

We chose Restaurant Gubbhyllan, right near the entrance, and I ordered an interesting potato and herring dish. It was very Swedish and I enjoyed it. After our lunch, we started exploring.

Oh, look, we also had cinnamon rolls! Kanelbullar.

Skansen was somehow closer together than we expected: all the buildings and houses were crammed together in places. It was overwhelming and really terrific all at once. Some of the houses/buildings had people in them dressed up in period clothing who would answer questions and talk about the house and the time. We walked all over, and ended up staying just past 5 pm, when the houses started closing and the people in them leaving.

The Mechanical Engineering Shop
They were dancing a traditional dance with a live band under the shelter behind.
This was for grain storage, but it made me think of Baba Yaga’s House on Chicken Legs
There was a zoo with reindeer and other arctic animals
Nothing makes me happier than houses and buildings with grass roofs!
A busy street with all the various stores on it.
Me, riding a Dala horse
We even found a rune stone!
Those same cool stoves that they had at the palace! I imagine somehow not quite as nice (definitely more run down looking.)
You could even play this piano! It was out of tune.

We found our way out a little after 5, like I said, and we had 7:30 dinner reservations, so we decided to just keep moving.

We walked from Djurgarden to Ostermalm where we stopped in for a snack and a drink at A Bar Called Gemma. It was lovely to sit and we enjoyed our drinks.

We ended the night with dinner and live jazz at the Glenn Miller Cafe. It’s a french restaurant with live jazz, and they really cram you in there, plus it’s quite small to begin with!

We had a lovely dinner with mussels–we actually ended up sitting by a couple who were from Paris and said the food was very good/authentic in their opinion. After we finished dinner the jazz was starting: we enjoyed 3 sets of music by the Dölerud  Johannsen Quintet, with Dan Johannsen (the Swedish version of the name Don Johnson, really, which delighted Louie to no end) on trumpet. It was a thoroughly enjoyable evening, a great end to a long and full day.

Notes: you have to reserve for dinner if you want a table, and each set is charged separately: we chose to stay to the end but could have left earlier. They said you needed cash, but we were able to add the set tab to our bill–it was quite reasonable for the live music.

Afterwards, we walked back to Gamla Stan and fell asleep very easily! My feet were killing me and I was exhausted.

22, 543 steps and 9.13 miles walked, but there was a lot of museum style slow walking which can be extra tiring.