A walking tour of Ålesund’s window eyebrows for you, my fellow off-season tourists

Norway’s tourist season is mid-June through mid-August, meaning that’s when most attractions outside of Oslo (besides ski hills) are open.  Traveling here in April has been a relief after over-touristed Portugal, but you should know about the challenges too, particularly in Ålesund.

alesund

Our main reason for visiting Ålesund, a windy town in the western fjords, is to see the famous Art Nouveau architecture, which was built in hurry after a fire in 1904.  (Let’s just say that, as Chicago residents, we have a soft spot for windy places by the water whose architectural origin story involves a catastrophic fire).  We were planning on picking up a special guide to the architecture from the tourist information center or the Art Nouveau museum but the TI is closed and the museum doesn’t have the book in stock.   The contemporary art museum is also closed and so is the museum of oldest house in town, though their posted hours say they should be open.

Oh well, I’ve invented my own walking tour of Ålesund’s architecture, called Steet Signs and Window Eyebrows, and Wait for It, a Fart.

Here are the street signs:

 

And the window eyebrows:

 

 

And wait for it, a fart:

fart

(You probably thought I got the juvenile fart jokes out of my system in my last post: ha!)

window

Anyway, with a view like this from our apartment, who needs a tourist office anyway?

 

How we got to Ålesund: bus from Trondheim.
Where we slept: City View Studio Apartment. Price: €92 for a double. Recommended: yes.

17 comments

  1. Reblogged this on U S A.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks for sharing!

      Like

  2. Looks like a very quaint place 🤩

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The location on the fjord is quite stunning.

      Like

  3. If a Chicago resident has the hood pulled up against a fart, then the place is too windy for me!

    Are the museums closed outside of tourist months?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The secret to windy weather is hood over hat, plus layers underneath.

      Well, some museums are closed outside of summer but others are meant to be open but weren’t. The Art Nouveau museum was open (with shortened hours) but most annoyingly out of stock of the guide to the architecture.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. “Hood over Hat” sounds like a nice title for a book.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. awtytravels · · Reply

    Thinking of Norway has given me a craving for IFA Saltpastiller… Keep the, erm, farts coming!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I saw some IFA Saltpastiller in the grocery—I should have bought them for a souvenir. Glad to find someone who appreciates the fart humor.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. awtytravels · ·

        They are an acquired taste but… I love them!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. Nemorino · · Reply

    According to Google Translator, “sakte fart” is Norwegian for “slow speed”.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. No fast farts in front of my lighthouse!

      Like

  6. There’s always a trade-off between being swamped with tourists or a town being closed.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. So true, though I think we landed on the right side of the trade-off this time.

      Like

  7. I think i would have been just a bit grumpy to trek to museums in the cold only to find them closed….My response would have been my father’s version of ‘Gone with the Wind’ – depart with a fart.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Can neither confirm nor deny we responded as your father would have…

      Liked by 1 person

  8. You’re tough…just to fly to Norway on a discounted whim. 🙂

    Like

Leave a reply to The Wife of Bath Cancel reply