My cabin in Geilo included breakfast in the morning. There was only one other couple in the breakfast room. I got talking to them, he was half English and half Dutch. His wife was German. They had been visiting a Norwegian friend he had served in Israel with in the UN many years ago. His view was that Israel was not a country but an asylum. He said the Holocaust had traumatised the Jews to the extent the were all mad. Add the hatred of the neirbouring countries and he concluded the place was a hopelessly lost cause.
I left Geilo at 9.30 and made Kristansand at 6pm for the ferry. It poured all the way except the last hour and the ride was miserable and the roads were awful.
Norway is great. Downsides: beer is about £6 a pint (and is usually horrible)

I love a drink and found the best thing is to buy a bottle of wine (a red from Chile for £6 or so) from the booze stores only found in bigger towns.
Food in Norway is awful. Probably the worst in the world and very expensive: £10 for a burger that might as well be cardboard stuffed with grass cuttings and horrible chips. Most older Norwegians stuck me as slim and fit but some youngsters seem to have an appetite for the congealed gloop that passes as fast food: it can only be a matter of time until one of these youngsters is out swimming and gets harpooned by a passing Norwegian Whaler.
The speed limits are tedious: but then there are very few places on the roads I would want to have an off: choose between rockface, barrier posts or a tree
The people are great, a little reserved; shy even. Of course there are exceptions, Hi Liv.
I got the ferry to Denmark that departed at 7pm and arrived at midnight before another 3 1/2 hours to my friends in Lemvig. They had stayed up until 3.30am waiting for my arrival: Ova passed the time drinking (not that he needs an excuse to stay up half the night drinking) and we stayed up until 6.30am getting drunk and catching up on things.
Saturday I caught up with Danish Hans who I met 20 years ago in Portugal when we were all on m/cs and have stayed great friends ever since. In the evening we had a midsummer party with loads of good food, beer and great company
Danish Hans has just got back on 2 wheels after a few years: £16,000 for a seven year old 1100RT ( thats after paying 60% income tax

)
I rode home in the rain via Germany, Holland, France, then the Cherbourg to poole ferry to avoid the biggest carpark in Europe (the M25). 12 days and 4060 miles: R1200GS
