Post on 09-Jan-2017
By NorwegianJuly 2016Issue 43
Giving you all the inside scoop on everything USA, with a cherry on top
The American issue
‘In cod we trust.’
Was America
founded on fi sh?
Who supplies
caviar to Vegas?
Where did Frank
Zappa, Joni Mitchell
and Mama Cass all live?
What happens to
NASA’s old launch pads?
Who makes a museum
of New York garbage?!
Are Republicans
cat people?
N-001_Coverjuly.indd 1 16/06/2016 14:10
No.127843 - AIRTOX DPS.indd 2 05/02/2016 16:31
No.127843 - AIRTOX DPS.indd 3 05/02/2016 16:32
YOUR approved CABIN SIZE
* Offer valid on www.americantourister.at/.be/.ch/.de/.dk/.es/.fi/.fr/.it/.lu/.nl/.no/.pl/.se/.co.uk with a minimum spend of €69.
Get 15% off on all American To u r i s t e r cabin luggage* Go to www.americantourister.eu Enter the code: inflight16N
The featured models comply with cabin size restrictions. More cabin size models? Go to www.americantourister.eu
EXCLUSIVE OFFER
Amer
ican
Tour
ister
is a
regi
ster
ed tr
adem
ark
of S
amso
nite
IP H
oldi
ngs
S.àr
.l. ©
201
6 Sa
mso
nite
IP H
oldi
ngs
S.àr
.l.
ze models? Go to www a
light global warrantydurablefun & fashionable
No.124846 - Samsonite (NEW) 1pp.indd 1 18/05/2016 08:40
Velkommen
We Sin City!Experience the bright lights and fast
living of Las Vegas as Norwegian
expands its transatlantic routes
from London/Gatwick and Oslo this
autumn. Direct fl ights on the airline’s
brand-new Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner
aircraft start to Vegas from London
on 31 October and one day later
from Oslo. You can already fl y to Las
Vegas from Copenhagen and
Stockholm. Book now.
norwegian.com
Norwegian has been named Europe’s
best low-cost airline for three
successive years, and the world’s
best low-cost long haul airline
Norwegia n RewardJOIN OUR AWARD-WINNING LOYALTY SCHEME
The Norwegian Reward scheme now has four
million members. Members are rewarded
easily and quickly for travel with Norwegian,
even if they don’t fl y all the time. And they
can pick rewards they actually want, such
as extra CashPoints, free seat choice, free
baggage and free Fast Track. It’s so good, it
just won the Best Up-and-Coming Award at
the Freddies 2016. norwegianreward.com
Cross the Atlantic with NorwegianMAKE THE MOST OF OUR TRANSATLANTIC ROUTES AND CONNECT TO MORE DESTINATIONS
In 2013, we launched our fi rst transatlantic fl ights, heralding the end of astronomically high fares between Europe and the US. Almost three years later, 2.2 million passengers have chosen to fl y with us across the Atlantic on one of our 36 intercontinental routes. By 2015, they had voted us the world’s best low-cost long-haul airline. That Skytrax award wouldn’t have been possible without the great relationship between our passengers and Norwegian’s professional, friendly staff.
We now offer fl ights to nine destinations in the US: from New York City and Boston in the east, to Los Angeles and San Francisco in the west, and Puerto Rico in the south. Whether you are looking for shopping and sightseeing or beaches and turquoise water, we will take you there – comfortably and affordably with our new, greener Dreamliners.
Affordable transatlantic fares are good news for Europeans travelling to the US, but as half of our long-haul passengers are Americans travelling to Europe, competition is good news for them, too. There are direct fl ights from the US to London, Oslo, Bergen, Stockholm, Copenhagen and Paris, and, what’s more, our route network stretches all across Europe, so there’s always the possibility of catching a connecting fl ights to any one of our 138 destinations.
At Norwegian, our view has always been that more competition benefi ts the consumer. It creates affordable fares for everyone and a greater choice of service and destinations. With low fares and high-quality fl ights, we are looking forward to taking you on your next trip across the Atlantic.
Thank you for fl ying Norwegian! Bjørn Kjos, CEO Norwegian
y fly to Las
and
n / 0 0 5
N-005_Welcome.indd 005 15/06/2016 09:09
Made in the USA
“It’s more
Finnegans Wake than
Grand Theft Auto”
In San Francisco, we
meet Jonathan Blow,
who claims his new
video game is a piece
of high art, p29
Yellowstone
Yosemite
Grand Canyon
Zion
Canyonlands
Death Valley
Capitol
Reef
“We have
some incredible
tastings”
The Truffl e Kid, AKA
Brett Ottolenghi,
is the man bringing
luxury ingredients
to Vegas, p25
“There’s
something
magical about it”The world’s best
extreme athletes on
how the country’s
National Parks have
inspired them, p66
“It was the
centre of the
musical universe”
Take a pilgrimage to
Laurel Canyon, in
West Hollywood, once
home to the cream of
American folk-rock, p46
n
“We have
ome incredible
”
GA
LL
ER
YS
TO
CK
; G
ET
TY
0 0 6 \ n
N-006_Contribs.indd 006 15/06/2016 12:34
“It’s an opportunity
for a more
sustainable future” So say the fi shermen
of Cape Cod, who are
coping with the loss
of the fi sh that made
their name, p36
We visit the Sato Project,
a charity that rehomes
the unwanted dogs of
Puerto Rico, p80
“‘Mongo’ means
objects salvaged
from the trash”
Nelson Molina - New
York’s king of Mongo -
gives us a tour of his
incredible museum of
found objects, p58
“People are going
to look back and
say it was crazy”
Insight into the
Space Race, from a
Florida photographer
who’s spent 20 years
shooting its ruins, p18
“We want
someone who will
love them forever”
“Wynwood has
become the hip
area of Miami”
All the top tips on
eating, beaching, and
theme-parking in our
Norwegian guide to the
Sunshine State, p88
How the driverless car
revolution could affect
our streets, according to
one MIT professor, p31
“It’s not
good news for
traffi c lights”
We roamed all over to bring you our special American issue
aating, beaching, and
eme-parking in our
orwegian guide to the
unshine State, p88
h that m
me, p36
l
oing
and
zy”
ererererrerererer
s
8
n / 0 0 7
N-006_Contribs.indd 007 15/06/2016 12:34
Editorial & Art
Editor Sarah Warwick
Deputy Editor Mandi Keighran
Art Director Sarah Barnett
Associate Editor Omer Ali
Picture Editor Regina Wolek
Production Manager
Antonia Ferraro
Production Controller
Karl Martins
Editor-in-Chief
Stine Steffensen Børke
Norwegian Editors Pia Wagner
Gerhardsen, Liv Greben
Advertising
Publisher Pär Svälas
par.svalas@ink-global.com
Sales Team Theodor Dricu,
Shahzeb Gondal, Simon
Nielsen, Astrid Oie,
Patricia Vallejo
Advertising Contact
norwegian.ads@ink-global.com
+44 (0)20 7625 0853
Sales Recruitment
joinus@ink-global.com
Ink
Chief Executives
Michael Keating and
Simon Leslie
Creative Director
Toby Skinner
Editorial Director
Kerstin Zumstein
Group Design Director
Jamie Trendall
N is published on behalf of
Norwegian by Ink, Blackburn
House, Blackburn Road,
London NW6 1AW
Editorial Contact
+44 (0)20 7625 0737
info@ink-global.com
Website ink-global.com
Cover
Ice-cream sundae
created by Shotopop
©Ink. All material is strictly copyright and all rights are reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or part without the prior written permission of the copyright holder. All prices and data are correct at the time of publication. Opinions expressed in N are not necessarily those of Norwegian, and Norwegian does not accept responsibility for advertising content. Any pictures or transparencies supplied are at the owner’s risk. Any mention of Norwegian or use of the Norwegian logo by any advertiser in this publication does not imply endorsement of that company, or its products or services by Norwegian.
The world’s most instagrammable city?The Big Apple, Gotham, City of Dreams… whatever you call it, it’s a pretty special
destination. Or at least, so I’d heard. For years I was being told about it by friends who’d
bang on about walking the Highline, boating in Central Park, and partying in Brooklyn,
while my only memories of the city stemmed from a 90s TV junk food diet of Friends, Sex
and the City and Seinfeld. Last month that fi nally changed when our team uprooted the
magazine to NYC to put together this very-special American issue of n. Aside from setting
up shop in a real-life New York offi ce, and getting to meet Nelson Molina, king of ‘Mongo’
(see our feature on p58), I fi nally got to visit the Highline, Central Park and Brooklyn. I also
took more photos in a week than I normally do in a year - it’s that kind of town. You can
check out more photos of our trip on Instagram, under the hashtag #nbynorwegian. In the
meantime, I hope you enjoy our special US issue, and your fl ight with Norwegian.
Sarah Warwick, editor
What’s on our mindsnoted minds
....and Yorkshire terriers with top knots?
Where else
can you fi nd
Hillary Clinton
mannequins...
0 0 8 \ n
N-008_Noted.indd 008 16/06/2016 11:21
www.change.com
No.666768 - Change 1pp.indd 1 16/06/2016 11:14
This month’s essential info
The scene MANHATTANHENGE
Twice every summer, around the time of the solstice when the evenings are long, the streets of Manhattan fi ll with people clutching their cameras. On just these two evenings, the city grid becomes perfectly aligned with the path of the setting sun, creating a stunning phenomenon dubbed “Manhattanhenge”. The full circle of the sun is visible, sinking perfectly between the buildings of the famous New York City skyline. Named by American astrophysicist Dr Neil deGrasse Tyson (after the UK’s Neolithic Stonehenge), this urban wonder is perfect fodder for the intrepid Instagrammer. For the best view, Tyson recommends 34th and 42nd streets, where the striking east-west vista is framed by the Empire State and Chrysler buildings. The next Manhattanhenge will occur this summer at 8.20pm EDT on 11 July, with a similar, half-sunset the same time on 12 July. nychenge.com
0 1 0 \ n
Agenda
N-010-014_Agenda.indd 010 15/06/2016 09:11
Purple rain, yellow guitar
Those still mourning the loss of Prince, earlier this year, should check out his
famous Yellow Cloud guitar at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American
History in Washington DC. Custom-made by the Minneapolis fi rm Knut-Koupee
Enterprises in 1989 – during the star’s Diamonds and Pearls era – the guitar was
designed by Prince and features his distinctive personal symbol on the top and
the side of the fi ngerboard. It will be on display until 5 September in recognition
of the musician’s remarkable life. americanhistory.si.edu
nth degreeTHE SPARE CHANGE
Ever been in such a rush
through security at the airport
that you’ve left some spare
change behind? You’re not
alone. America’s Transportation
Security Administration (TSA)
has hit the jackpot after
collecting over US$760,000
(NOK6.2m) in unclaimed cash
from 114 airports in 2015. They
could have celebrated their win
with some champagne, but the
TSA will instead be using the
money on security operations.
We could think of much more
exciting things to do with it
(*googles yacht prices*).
The faceLUIS JORGE RIVERA HERRERA
Every visitor to Puerto Rico owes a debt of gratitude to environmental activist Luis Jorge Rivera Herrera, the man behind a decade-long, grass-roots campaign to protect the North-East Ecological Corridor. He and his colleagues have worked tirelessly to protect the area’s incredible beaches, one of the most important nesting areas for leatherback sea turtles in the Caribbean, and he’s just been honoured with the Goldman Environmental Prize. Good work! goldmanprize.org
US$760,000
n / 0 1 1
N-010-014_Agenda.indd 011 15/06/2016 09:11
As the parties go head to head, what do the stats say about the subjects that really matter?
Remember ‘Derelicte’, the fake fashion collection in Zoolander, based on
the style of the homeless? Well, now it’s a real thing, sort of, after one-time
Parisian designer Gigi Freyeisen joined up with artists on Skid Row, the
notoriously down-at-heel part of downtown LA, to create the ‘Swagabonds’
label. “Walking Skid Row, I was amazed by people’s outfi ts,” Freyeisen says.
“Some were interested in launching their own fashion line, they just didn’t
have the means or anyone to believe in their talent.” theswagabonds.com
The artwork SEVEN MAGIC MOUNTAINS
The landscape on Interstate 15 between LA and Las Vegas has undergone a colourful transformation, thanks to Swiss-born New York artist Ugo Rondinone. Seven Magic Mountains is a US$3m (NOK25m) piece of land art that will grace the Nevada Desert for two years, with brightly painted boulders cut from the Apex quarry stacked up to 10m high.
sevenmagicmountains.com
nth degreeDONKEY VS ELEPHANT
DE
MO
CR
AT
S
RE
PU
BL
ICA
NS
The seriesWILLIAM W FULLER
Over the past 35 years, Arizona-based photographer William W Fuller has driven across the States dozens of times, capturing the architectural landscapes of America’s major cities, including San Francisco, Washington DC, and Los Angeles, in dramatic black and white using a large-format, 4x5 camera and fi lm. Last year, he launched a successful Kickstarter campaign to bring his work together in coffee-table book The City. “The pictures are not portraits of particular cities,” says Fuller. “Rather, dynamic compositions of shape, line, form, negative space, light and shadow.”
williamwfullercity.com
Skid Row fashion
Like catsLike dogs
Like vanilla
Like Mexican beerLike American beer
Like chocolate
0 1 2 \ n
N-010-014_Agenda.indd 012 16/06/2016 09:02
EQB-500DB-2AER
PERFECTLY IN TIME. WORLDWIDE.
Daniil Kvyat | Carlos SainzScuderia Toro Rosso Drivers
Get more information about the Bluetooth® collection
No.631462 - Casio 1pp.indd 1 08/06/2016 14:21
nth degreeBETTER LIVING THROUGH... COFFEE?
Want a healthier hit of caffeine in
the morning? Try Truebroc, a new
superbrew from Baltimore Coffee &
Tea and Brassica Protection Products.
The nutritious joe boasts all the health
benefits of broccoli but tastes just like
coffee. Its secret? A naturally occurring
compound found in the seeds of the
broccoli plant, apparently.
truebroc.com
In 1976, NASA published just 40 copies of its Graphics Standards Manual, a 90-page
document that outlined how NASA should implement its iconic logo, known as “the worm”.
Since then, it’s become a cult item among graphic designers. In May this year, it became
a whole lot easier to track down a copy, as New York graphic designers Jesse Reed and
Hamish Smyth launched a Kickstarter campaign that raised US$941,966 (NOK7.7m) to
reissue the manual. The new-and-improved book is available for $79 (NOK650) and now
contains 220 pages. standardsmanual.com
The exhibition PTEROSAURS: FLIGHT IN THE AGE OF DINOSAURS
Dinosaurs are taking over LA this summer, as the Pterosaurs: Flight in the Age of Dinosaurs exhibition wings its way from its current home in New York to the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. Visitors to the museum from 3 July can expect to encounter full-size models of the pterosaur, the fi rst backboned animal to fl y, along with a collection of fossils that show these airborne reptiles could have had a wingspan of up to 10m, and an interactive pterosaur fl ying experience. nhm.org
Return to the space age
The barBEETLEHOUSE
Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice,
Beetlejuice! Tim Burton fans
rejoice – there’s a new theme
bar in New York’s East Village
where it’s Halloween all year long.
Beetlehouse is a Beetlejuice-
themed bar with gothic decor, a
bouncer dressed in stripes, and
drinks and snacks that reference
Burton’s oeuvre – think the Tall
Skeleton cocktail, Edward Burger
Hands or the Cheshire Mac. It’s
from the same team behind the
NYC Will Ferrell-themed bar Stay
Classy New York, so expect good
things. beetlehousenyc.com
Broccoli
Coffee
TruebrocTM
eee
BroB oBrro
The largest pterosaur
species had a 10m
wingspan and the
smallest was the size
of a fi nch with a 14cm
wingspan
Pterosaurs
existed 66-228
million years ago
They were the
largest animals
ever to fl y
Pterosaurs
weren’t dinosaurs
and are more
closely related
to birds than to
crocodiles or any
other living reptile
DE
NN
IS
M.
RI
VE
RA
PI
CH
AR
DO
/G
OL
DM
AN
EN
VIR
ON
ME
NT
AL
PR
IZ
E;
LA
UR
A A
US
TIN
/S
KID
RO
W F
AS
HI
ON
; U
GO
RO
ND
IN
ON
E/
SE
VE
N M
AG
IC
MO
UN
TA
IN
S,
LA
S V
EG
AS
, N
EV
AD
A,
20
16
/P
H.
GI
AN
FR
AN
CO
GO
RG
ON
I;
NA
TU
RA
L H
IS
TO
RY
MU
SE
UM
OF
LA
CO
UN
TY
/R
AU
L M
AR
TIN
; A
LA
MY
0 1 4 \ n
N-010-014_Agenda.indd 014 15/06/2016 09:12
www.dbs.noDBS PREMIUM BICYCLES PRODUCED IN SCANDINAVIA
No.767087 - DBS 1pp.indd 1 16/06/2016 12:29
Capture French or Spanish charm through Scandinavian funding
KøbenhavnUnder Krystallen 1DK-1780 Copenhagen VTel: +45 44 55 15 35international-cph@nykredit.dk
PalmaCarrer Constitució 1,07001 Palma de MallorcaTlf.: +34 966 865 690palma@nykredit.dk
Cannes13, Rue des Etats-UnisF-06400 CannesTel: +33 (0) 493 39 10 10cannes@nykredit.dk
MarbellaCentro Plaza 26E-29660 Nueva Andalucia, MarbellaTel: +34 952 905 150marbella@nykredit.dk
Learn more atnykredit.dk/udlandnykredit.dk/norgenykredit.senykredit.com/retaillending
Purchasing a property in France or Spain and moving abroad for a shorter or longer period of time is a major decision, but rest assured Nykredit will assist you all the way. As well as local representation and expertise,
we offer qualified guidance and favourable loan terms through Denmark’s largest mortgage bank. Reap the benefits of our local presence when you need advice in your new country.
No.760129 Nykredit 1pp.indd 1 02/06/2016 11:18
P.21
P.18
QnAThis month’skey questions
answered
What’s with all the abandoned
launch pads?
Why has this man predicted the end of the traffi c light?
Is Hawaiian poke the dish
of the year?
What do video games and literature have in common?
Who is the “Truffl e Kid”?
P.29
P.31
P.25
N-017_QnA_Opener.indd 021 16/06/2016 08:36
That’s what we asked the photographer who’s spent 30 years documenting mementoes of the Space RaceW o r d s ⁄ S a r a h W a r w i c k � P h o t o g r a p h y ⁄ R o l a n d M i l l e r
I
t all started with a chance
encounter. Roland Miller
was teaching photography
at a community college
near Cape Canaveral,
Florida, in 1988 when he got the call asking
him to help dismantle an old photo lab.
While there, he stumbled across Launch
Complex 19, which had been used in all of
the USA’s manned Gemini missions.
As a huge space fan, the sight was
exciting – “like science fiction come to
life” – but also concerning. Twenty years
after the pad’s last use, the degrading
impact of the harsh Florida sun and the
salty coastal air were taking their toll.
“I found it amazing that things that
had been so critical in world history
were basically now collapsing in upon
themselves,” Miller says. “I knew
immediately I wanted to photograph it.”
Thirty years on, his book Abandoned in
Place has just been published, featuring
his shots of defunct launch pads and
space centres from across the US.
Miller sees a strange beauty in all
the peeling paint and rusting metal. “It
reminds me of the temporal nature of
life and that we’re all ageing,” he says.
But while there is a certain pathos to
the pictures, as many of them are the
last ever taken of these structures – at
least half of which have now been taken
down – there’s also a sense of wonder.
His book underlines the fact that much
of the technology that was vital to the
Space Race was designed in the 1940s
and ’50s, and has a lot less computing
power than a modern smartphone.
“Not only did we go to the moon but
we went there with the technological
equivalent of stone knives and bearskins,”
he says. “I think 500 years from now
people are going to look back and say it
was crazy to do that with that technology.
And it was.” abandonedinplace.com Norwegian fl ies to Orlando from Oslo, Copenhagen and Stockholm. Book fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
What’s so good about a bunch of old launch pads?
0 1 8 \ n
QnA
N-018-019_Space age.indd 018 15/06/2016 09:13
Decaying fi ttings at Cap
Canaveral, including
Launch Complex 34 (main
picture); receivers and
recorders at Redstone
Complex 26; and an Atlas
rocket, Air Force Space
and Missile Museum, FL
N-018-019_Space age.indd 019 15/06/2016 09:13
Subject to sold out products
109NOK250 ml
Jan Thomas New!
Only
Twin pack259 NOK
No.635761 - Travel Retail 1pp.indd 1 24/05/2016 12:08
Is Hawaiian poke the dish of 2016?
Step aside sushi and ceviche – Hawaiian poke is the next big
raw-fi sh trend to sweep the world »W o r d s ⁄ T o b y S k i n n e r � P h o t o g r a p h y ⁄ R i v e r T h o m p s o n
Picked snow
crab with
Japanese kewpie
mayo and yuzu
Sprinkled with
chopped shiso leaf
Garnished with renkon
crisps - made from
dried lotus root
Topped with
ikura salmon roe
Served on a
bed of short-
grain rice
QnA
n / 0 2 1
N-021-022_Poke.indd 021 15/06/2016 11:25
“T
here was no doubt in our
mind. We just knew that
poke would be a huge
trend.” Jordan Sclare, the
executive chef of Black
Roe, is explaining the origins of his new
restaurant in Mayfair, London, which
revolves around a spectacular raw-fish
counter. On a menu inspired by Pacific
Rim cuisine, it counts poke (pronounced
poh-kay) as the star attraction
The marinated raw-fish dish, usually
tuna seasoned with soy and sesame,
served on a bed of rice, has long been
ubiquitous in Hawaii – but now it’s going
global, and fast. There are scores of poke
restaurants in Los Angeles, where it’s a
bona-fide phenomenon, and the trend has
spread across the US, from Brooklyn to
Boulder. Now it’s hit Europe, appearing in
a handful of London restaurants, and one
in Stockholm, called simply Hawaii Poke.
It should mean something that Sclare
and London restaurateur Kurt Zdesar have
backed the Hawaiian cuisine. Zdesar is the
brains behind Asian-fusion success stories
like Hakkasan, Nobu and Chotto Matte,
and Sclare was head chef at both Nobu
and Chotto Matte. Clearly, the pair are
onto something.
“We’d had the idea of a restaurant
revolving around a raw-fish counter, and
using Asian flavours, before we’d even
come across poke,” says Sclare. “It was
when we were researching that we came
across Pacific Rim cuisine and realised it
was exactly what we wanted to do.”
Black Roe’s eight poke dishes,
which took Sclare and his team weeks
of preparation, include a take on the
traditional ahi tuna with roasted sesame
soy, along with more adventurous
evolutions. There’s a sea bass poke with
wasabi salsa, a scallop poke with a sriracha
citrus salsa and a signature ahi and
yellowtail version with spicy yuzu. All are a
riot of textures and fresh flavours.
“Our dishes aren’t about being the
most authentic or about impressing
Michelin judges,” says Sclare, whose team
also cooks dishes like octopus aioli and
kalua pork belly on a grill using Hawaiian
kiawe wood. “It’s about flavour, and that
instant reaction to the food. We do a lot
of blind tastings and the rule is that the
person should say ‘yes’ within a second of
trying the mouthful. If so, it will usually be
a success.”
With poke, Sclare knew he was onto a
winner. “You’ve got great fresh fish and
then a whole world of Asian flavours to
play with for the sauces. It’s just a fantastic
dish.” You’ll likely be seeing a lot more of
it soon. blackroe.com
Norwegian fl ies to London from nearly 50 destinations. Book fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
From top⁄
Jordan Sclare, executive
chef at Black Roe and
Chotto Matte; lobster on
display; Black Roe poke
with yellowfin tuna
MAINLAND POKE SHOP
LOS ANGELES
You can custom-build
your own poke from
different types of fi sh,
sauce and toppings at
this Beverly Hills shop.
While that might sound
a bit like a kind of fi shy
Subway, don’t knock it
till you try it.
mainlandpoke.com
HULA GIRL
WASHINGTON
Where true Hawaiian
food is brought
to Virginia by a
true Hawaiian girl.
Chef-owner Mikala
Brennan cooked up a
distinctive take on her
native cuisine on the
Food Network before
setting up her
Arlington eaterie.
hulagirlbarand
grill.com
SONS OF THUNDER
NEW YORK
SOT serves up a classic
version of poke just
a few minutes’ walk
from Times Square.
Raw, fresh, marinated
fi sh, with either rice or
tortilla chips: simple,
but effective.
sonsofthunder.com
Eat it
stateside
AD
DIT
IO
NA
L R
ES
EA
RC
H B
Y S
HA
NI K
OT
EC
HA
. P
HO
TO
S B
AS
ILK
IM.
CO
M,
MA
RY
CO
ST
A
0 2 2 \ n
QnA
N-021-022_Poke.indd 022 15/06/2016 11:26
IN
NO
VA
TI
ON
-
D
ES
IG
N
-
QU
AL
IT
Y
-
CO
NC
IE
RG
E S
ER
VI
CE
S
ICO
NM
AR
BE
LL
A
TH
E R
ES
IDE
NC
ES
USE
TH
E W
IFI O
NBO
ARD
TO V
ISIT
OU
R W
EBSI
TE N
OW
icon
-marbe
lla.com
No.768471 - Urbania Santa Clara 1pp.indd 1 17/06/2016 14:45
Frost - white, beautiful and natural .
A collection inspired by the Nordic cold climate which gives the jeweller y a simple and clean design.
(Distributed in Scandinavia by Bjørklund)
Steel bracelets - gold, rosé and silver color
All three 498,- (NOK)
No.748987 - Bjorklund Norge 1pp.indd 1 20/06/2016 13:50
Who took a gamble on lobster?* That would be Brett Ottolenghi, the culinary upstart who brings the world’s fi nest foods to Las Vegas »W o r d s ⁄ M a n d i K e i g h r a n � P h o t o g r a p h y ⁄ J a c o b K e p l e r
(*and caviar, and saffron, and truffles and Iberico ham...)
QnA
n / 0 2 5
N-025-026_Las Vegas supplier.indd 025 16/06/2016 08:37
F
orget Joël Robuchon,
Pierre Gagnaire and Mario
Batali. It’s Brett Ottolenghi
– affectionately known as
the “Truffle Kid” – who’s
behind the best food in Las Vegas. He’s
not a chef, however. Rather, he runs
Artisanal Foods, the operation that
supplies the best ingredients in the city.
From foie gras, caviar, saffron and truffles
to exotic spices, salts and oils... You name
it, he can source it.
Ottolenghi has been in the fine-food
game for 20 years, since founding an
online truffle-importing business at
the tender age of 13. He once treated
the entire student body of his boarding
school to a meal of crocodile, and at 18,
he moved from Pennsylvania to Vegas and
started selling truffles door-to-door to
the best chefs. When he branched out
into caviar, he would wheel a live sturgeon
(above right) in a tank down the Strip to
educate his customers. “Often I’d get
kicked out the high-end restaurants,” he
says. “Other times, I’d make a friend and
ask for introductions to other chefs.”
All the hard work paid off, and today,
he supplies ingredients to many of the
fine-dining restaurants in Vegas. He
opened a retail space in 2010, and has
recently moved to larger premises near
the airport, where he stocks over 700
products – from olive oil to ice cream.
“The only unifying theme is research,”
says Ottolenghi, of his business model.
“If we want to introduce a new product
we put together a list of every celebrated
producer and then buy one of everything
they make and have incredible tastings.
We tasted over 1,200 different olive oils to
choose the eight we stock.”
Last year, he teamed up with local
chef Johnny Church, and created The
“When he branched
out into caviar, he’d
wheel a live sturgeon
around to educate
his customers ”
Café – nothing fancy, simply six plastic
chairs and three tables in Artisanal
Foods. It’s become a foodie hotspot,
where gourmands drop in to try some of
the best affordable dishes in the city. A
typical menu might cost US$12 (NOK98)
for seared foie gras, or ceviche made with
lionfish. The latter is an invasive species
that Ottolenghi is passionate about getting
on menus for sustainability reasons.
“The thing that makes us different is
that I’m not motivated by money,” he says.
“I want to educate people about food, and
the chefs recognise that.”
artisanalfoods.com
Norwegian fl ies to Las Vegas from 29 destinations. Book fl ights, a hotel and car hire online at Norwegian.com
0 2 6 \ n
QnA
N-025-026_Las Vegas supplier_NEW.indd 026 16/06/2016 11:22
EVEREST PREMIUM SPA
wellisspa.no wellisspa.dk wellisspa.se
No.134616 - Wellis Magyarorszag 1pp.indd 1 10/05/2016 10:11
N O R W E G I A N W O R D S
[ y o u n e e d t o k n o w ] :
No.616151 - Flytoget 1pp.indd 1 16/06/2016 11:13
Can video games be art?The latest by indie game-developer Jonathan Blow certainly comes close
T
o those who haven’t played The
Witness, the recent release from
San Francisco-based video-game
designer Jonathan Blow, the idea of
ranking it alongside Thomas
Pynchon’s epic, postmodern masterpiece Gravity’s
Rainbow might seem odd. While the former is a
3D-puzzle game set on an uninhabited island, the
latter is considered one of the most complex
literary works of the century.
So, was it egotistical of Blow to make the
comparison during interviews prior to the game’s
launch earlier this year? Not according to critics,
who are effusive in their praise of what might just
be the first great work of video-game culture. In
the UK, The Guardian, for example, called it “more
Finnegans Wake than Grand Theft Auto V”.
So what elevates a video game to high art?
According to Blow, the key lies in exploring themes
without worrying if the reader, or in this case
player, is following. “Gravity’s Rainbow isn’t holding
your hand the whole way through to make sure you
understood every paragraph,” he said. “If you can
keep up, great. If you can’t, come back to it in a
few years and see it from a different perspective.”
This attitude represents a departure for most
game designers, who focus on optimising user
experience. It’s typical of Blow, whose background
is in indie games, which are created by individuals or
small teams, generally without the financial support
of large publishers. However, while most of these
games have a niche following and take in less than
US$500, Blow’s 2008 hit Braid – a postmodern take
on Super Mario Bros that made his name – brought
in US$6million (NOK4.9m) by 2015.
Most of these profits were reportedly spent
developing The Witness. A team of 15 developers,
artists and even architects was hired to realise
Blow’s vision, while the soundtrack was provided
by Wabi Sabi Sound, who recorded ambient sounds
while walking around Angel Island in San Francisco
Bay. Eight years on, the game has finally been
released, selling over 100,000 copies in its first week
and grossing US$5million to date. Only time will tell if
the video-game industry has got its first real classic.
the-witness.net
Norwegian fl ies to San Francisco from Oslo, Copenhagen and London. Book fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
More art you
can play
InsideThe story of a young boy
struggling against evil
forces, Inside features
the same minimal visual
style as Playdead’s 2010
black-and-white hit
Limbo – which sold over
one million copies – and
is one of IGN’s most
anticipated games of
the year.
playdead.com/inside
MountainThis “ambient procedural
mountain game” is more
meditative artwork than
entertainment. There
are no controls, just a
mountain spinning in
space on which things
grow and die, and into
which odd objects –
from fans to baseballs –
embed. Within 24 hours
of release, it became the
number one role-playing
game in 33 countries.
mountain-game.com
Monument ValleyFrom indie studio Ustwo
this puzzle game was
inspired by Japanese
prints and MC Escher.
Each frame is designed
to be worthy of a gallery.
In 2014, it won an Apple
Design Award and was
named Apple’s best iPad
game. By May 2016, it
had been downloaded
26 million times.
monumentvalley
game.com
mountain game.c
nument Vall
W o r d s ⁄ M a n d i K e i g h r a n
QnA
n / 0 2 9
N-029_video-gamesSW.indd 029 15/06/2016 12:35
BUTIKK www.grontfokus.no
No.131015 - Gront Fokus 1pp.indd 1 14/03/2016 16:41
W o r d s ⁄ S a r a h W a r w i c k � P h o t o g r a p h y ⁄ A l e x A t a c k
Very possibly, according to this MIT professor whose revolutionary concept might replace them sooner than you’d think »
Are traffic lights becoming extinct?
QnA Big Idea
n / 0 3 1
N-31-32_BigIdea.indd 031 15/06/2016 11:27
Previous page⁄
Carlo Ratti says
traffi c lights’ days
are numbered
This page⁄
Early plans for his
DriveWAVE system
E
ver wondered what the
world would be like without
traffi c lights? Probably not,
but then that’s Carlo Ratti’s
job. As head of MIT’s
SENSEable City Lab, which aims to
anticipate how digital technologies are
changing people’s lives, the Italian design
engineer is employed to think a decade
ahead of the rest of us.
Since 2004, he’s envisaged what every
given aspect of our future lives might
look like, from waste, to architecture to
transport, and even designed products that
we might use. Last year he curated a digital
supermarket for the Future of Food pavilion
at the Milan Expo. This year he’s dreamt up
sustainable offi ce space with personalised
“thermal bubbles” for each worker; a mile-
high park in New York City; and a digital
sofa, the Lift-Bit, which wouldn’t be out of
place in the Jetsons’ living room.
Now Ratti and his team have turned
their attention to the future of traffi c,
and how the advent of driverless cars will
change our cities. Turns out, it’s not good
news for traffi c lights.
“Traffi c systems date back to over 100
years ago and they’ve not evolved that
much since,” explains Ratti. “Our thought
was that, with the advent of autonomous
cars, we could imagine new systems that
would allow us to make better use of our
roads and our time.”
After many months of number crunching
and complex equations, they’ve come up
with a new scheme, known as DriveWAVE.
Instead of indicating to drivers when to
stop at intersections to allow for fl ow from
The dawn of
“driverless”
WEPODSIf you fi nd yourself in
the Dutch city of Ede,
keep a beady eye out for
“WURby” and “WElly”,
two robot minibuses
currently being tested
there. The fi rst driverless
vehicles to be allowed
on public roads, the two
pods seat six and have a
max speed of 25kph.
wepods.com
DRIVE MENext year Volvo’s
driverless programme,
‘Drive Me’, will become
reality, as 100 of its
IntelliSafe Autopilot-
equipped XC90s are let
loose on the streets of
Gothenberg, Sweden,
and London, UK.
volvocars.com
GOOGLE SELF-DRIVE These high-profile
bubble cars have been
hooning around Mountain
View, CA, for a while
now. Apart from one
unfortunate run-in with
a bus, they’ve racked up
one million safe miles and
counting. In five years, we
could all be riding one.
google.com
other directions, as traffi c lights do, this
new scheme would work by assigning each
car a “slot”, in a similar way to air-traffi c
control. An autonomous system,
it would communicate directly with
vehicles’ navigation systems, to “make sure
the vehicles get to the intersection exactly
when they have a slot, creating a system
that is much more effi cient”.
This evolution of traffi c management
is, says Ratti, just one of the outcomes of
“the looming driverless revolution” that
few people have considered.
“It’s not just the having an autopilot.
Driverless cars will allow us to use
commuting time for other activities:
reading, sleeping, relaxing, kissing,” he
says. Pollution will also drop dramatically,
as increased carpooling reduces the
number of cars on the roads by up to
80 per cent. There could be more green
public spaces as former car parks are
reclaimed as community gardens.
While the fi rst of these vehicles are
already on the road (see right), and there
could be 10 million of them by 2020
(according to businessinsider.com), it could
take a while for DriveWAVE to be fully
implemented. “Slot-based intersections
need a certain level of intelligence in every
car,” says Ratti.
Still, there’s every chance that for our
children’s children, living in a driverless
world, traffi c lights will have the same
relevance as the dodo. senseable.mit.edu
Norwegian fl ies to Boston from fi ve destinations. Book fl ights, a hotel or a hire car from norwegian.com
0 3 2 \ n
QnA Big Idea
N-31-32_BigIdea.indd 032 15/06/2016 11:27
TimePlan is the leading tool for workforce planning, time registration and HR administration.
Five Scandinavian airports use TimePlan in order for their staff to be ready to welcome you
onboard – safely and on time. The hotel you are staying at might be using TimePlan as well,
ensuring that their staff is ready to make your stay comfortable.
Do you plan on going shopping in Scandinavia? The staff at the store might be scheduled using
TimePlan so they’re ready to help you out. Probably, the coffee or sandwich you’re going to buy
was made by people whose shifts were also planned by TimePlan.
Oh, and imagine the friendly staff at the amusement park you are going to visit with your family -
maybe their work schedules were made by TimePlan as well...
www.timeplan-software.com
TimePlan might have helped you fly today
TimePlan Denmark +45 9840 2020
info@timeplan-software.com
TimePlan Norway +47 6917 9600
firmapost@datatjenesten.no
TimePlan Sweden +46 (0) 406076235
info@timeplan-software.se
TimePlan Finland +358 (0) 9 3463199
info@timeplan-software.fi
Workforce Planning Time Registration HR Administration
No.756521 - Time Plan 1pp.indd 1 13/06/2016 12:18
It’s not too lateto show you care
Shop on arrival at the TAX FREE Store
No.749083 - Copenhagen Airport 1pp.indd 1 17/05/2016 12:08
Cape Cod’s fi shy businesses
Alligators, mastodons and wild rides in the Sunshine State
P.46
P.36
P.66
P.80
P.58
In search of the muso vibe in LA’s
Laurel Canyon
Why hard-core adventurers
love America’s National Parks
How NYC’s trash became art
LongformStories that go deeper
Saving the dogs of Puerto Rico
P.88
N-035_LF_Opener.indd 039 15/06/2016 12:36
0 3 6 \ n
A short hop from Boston on the
Massachusetts coast, Cape Cod made its
name and fortune from the huge quantities
of the white fi sh that were once found here.
As stocks dwindle, those who once relied on
the industry are fi nding new ways to survive
In cod we trust *
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 036 15/06/2016 16:14
n / 0 3 7
* But not for much longer?
W o r d s ⁄ N i o n e M e a k i n � P h o t o g r a p h y ⁄ R i v e r T h o m p s o n
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 037 15/06/2016 16:14
0 3 8 \ n
Chatham, on the tip of North America’s Cape Cod peninsular, is a classic coastal town of white clapboard houses
and neat lawns, rocking chairs on porches and tourist boutiques. A popular seaside destination, its population of just over 6,000 is set to swell in coming months as well-heeled Americans return to their New England summer homes, and holidaying families fi ll the pale, clean beaches, as they have done for generations.
Yet, away from the lobster shacks and T-shirt shops something unexpected is happening. In the boatyards and huts on the fringes of town, and along the coastline of Cape’s 100km spit, fi shermen are navigating their way through some choppy waters. Since 2012, for reasons scientists are still trying to determine and fi shermen can’t agree on, the cod stocks that gave the Cape its name and prosperity have all but disappeared, leaving the fi shing industry in the throes of a crisis.
By 2014, according to fi gures from the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries, commercial fi shermen caught some four million pounds of cod (less than two million kg). Twenty years ago, it was more than six times
that – 26,998,742lbs. Whether one blames overfi shing, environmental changes or even – as some do – the growing inland seal population that feeds off cod before they can be landed, it’s a serious and growing issue.
In an attempt to tackle overfi shing and rebuild stock, cod-fi shing quotas have dropped drastically, but it seems to be a case of too little, too late. Cape fi shermen say they are are struggling to hit even these lower quotas and many have given up trying. Any cod that can be found now are far off shore and fi shing for them often involves a three-day trip with no guarantee of success.
So, while you’ll still fi nd cod on the menu in Chatham’s many seafood
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 038 15/06/2016 16:14
n / 0 3 9
restaurants, these days it’s usually not from the nearest harbour but imported from Iceland.
On the Cape, this isn’t just about the death of an industry but of an entire way of life. As Mark Kurlansky explains in Cod: A History of the Fish that Changed the World, this humble groundfi sh was responsible for elevating New England from “a distant colony of starving settlers to an international commercial power”.
Its sheer abundance off the coast here meant it became a pillar of the economy for the early European settlers, making many colonial merchants wealthy. By the 1700s it had provided a young America with trade confi dence, and the country’s »
Opposite page⁄
Cape Cod was built on
its fi shing industry; John
Our has been fi shing these
waters for nearly 40 years
This page⁄
Rick Thompson works at
Chatham Pier, unloading
the fi shing boats; crates of
monkfi sh
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 039 15/06/2016 16:14
0 4 0 \ n
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 040 15/06/2016 16:15
n / 0 4 1
is overthrown [North American] fi sheries will continue to be fertile for centuries to come”.
Now the gift-shop T-shirts featuring the American dollar bill reworded as “In cod we trust” come across as poignant. It’s not that, as the saying goes, there aren’t plenty more fi sh in the Atlantic. “Diversifi cation” is the fi shing industry’s new buzzword, and former cod fi shermen are encouraged to branch out to the Cape’s many other species. Diff erent seasons bring striped bass, blue fi sh, tuna, haddock and halibut, while scallop and lobster fi sheries are booming (cod is one of lobster’s main predators).
Despite this, moving on isn’t as simple as it may appear. As cod has dropped off , people have started to hold on more tightly to their quotas for other species, making it tricky to switch fi sheries. In some cases, the drop in income has left cod fi shermen with outdated boats and little money to branch out in a new direction. For others, it’s a case of pride that makes them cling on to the past.
“Back in the 1970s and ’80s, the fi shermen owned this town,” says John Our, his level gaze trained on the parking lot of Shop Ahoy Liquors, on Chatham’s Main Street. “That place used to be fi lled with our pick-up trucks. Now every year there are fewer and fewer of us.”
Our, 54, has been fi shing off Chatham for 36 years, most of them for the cod that his father fi shed before him. In the early 1980s, the pair had to build a new boat because they were unable to carry the volumes they were catching. “We’d bring in 10,000lbs [4,500kg] every time we went out and we used to be fi shing most months of the year. Then we went down to eight or nine months of the year and catching 4,000-5,000lbs each trip. Then all of a sudden the bottom just fell out of cod altogether.”
He is now the oldest cod fi sherman in the Chatham fl eet and holds the »
determination for free trade in cod was a factor in its struggle for independence.
The fi sh was celebrated on offi cial crests, stamps, banknotes and in the buildings the industry funded – until it burned down in 1747, Boston Town Hall had a giant gilded cod hanging from its ceiling. The hallowed fi sh fed generations of families, provided countless jobs and appeared to be as reliable as the sunrise. Even as late as 1885 the Canadian Ministry of Agriculture confi dently stated that “unless the order of nature
Monkfi sh
Skate
Scup
Dogfi sh
Opposite page⁄
John Our’s boat
This page⁄
Since the fall in
cod stocks, Our
fi shes for monkfi sh
(pictured), dogfi sh
and other ‘trash’
species (see right)
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 041 16/06/2016 09:03
0 4 2 \ n
second-largest cod quota, which is a fraction of what it was less than a decade before. “It’s not economically viable to spend more and more time looking for something that’s not there.”
Our doubts he will see cod return to the Cape, at least in the numbers they once knew, before he retires. Personally he blames the seals, but he’s aware that others disagree and that culling the sea mammals is a solution with few supporters. Like many of his colleagues, he has now started fi shing monkfi sh – also lucrative, currently plentiful – for the three or four months it’s available each year.
To make up the rest of his pay packet, he’s reluctantly become one of those who are staking a future on less-popular but more sustainable species, including dogfi sh, skate and scup. Often referred to as “trash”, these fi sh – types of ray and shark – were, for hundreds of years, just thought of as infuriating by-products of the cod catch. They’d be picked out of nets and thrown back in the sea while attention was lavished on the prized white fi sh.
Now, however, these fi sh are a growth industry, particularly in Europe. In the UK, dogfi sh goes by
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 042 15/06/2016 16:15
n / 0 4 3
the name rock salmon or huss and, according to Richard Peirce, chairman of the Shark Trust, often masquerades as cod in fi sh ’n’ chip meals. As demand continues to grow and Asian markets have begun to develop, these fi sh may represent the best chance former cod fi shermen have of continuing to eke out a living.
For some of them, those who are happy to move with the times, this burgeoning industry even makes for quite a rosy picture. Down at the Chatham Boat Company, Doug Feeney puts the fi nishing touches on what he hopes will become his future. He’s two weeks away from launching his new boat, a revamped Stanley Greenwood Novi. The heavy-duty vessel will be used to bring in as much dogfi sh as limits allow, and is large enough to allow him to prepare the catch
onboard, bypassing the cost and control of the processors.
Instead of continuing to view it as trash, Feeney sees dogfi sh as an opportunity to carve out a more sustainable future. In partnership with Brett Tolley, community organiser for the Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance, he’s heading an ambitious crusade to build markets, increase profi ts and support the next generation of fi shermen.
“We’ve been researching ways to handle dogfi sh so I’ll brine them and I’ll fl ay them for certain markets. A lot of guys just throw them on deck then send them off for processing where you’ll be given a price you have no control over. We want to take back that control.”
Last year, Feeney travelled to China to sell it at the Qingdao Seafood Expo »
A small coastal shark that can
grow up to 1m in length, dogfi sh
was certifi ed by the Marine
Stewardship Council a few years
ago because of its expanding
population. In 2014, the Portland
Press Herald reported on an
estimated 230,000 tonnes of
spawning dogfi sh – females of
reproductive age – in the Gulf of
Maine, compared with only 10,000
tonnes of spawning cod. Chatham
catches about six million pounds
(2.7 million kg) of Massachusetts’
nine million pounds of annual
landings, and with the daily fi shing
boat limit set at 5,000lbs, it is
considered to be sustainable.
While it doesn’t command high
prices – John Our gets US$2
(NOK16) for a large dogfi sh
compared with $50 or $60 (up
to NOK490) for a large monkfi sh
– they are plentiful, and easy to
catch and prepare.
WHAT EXACTLY IS DOGFISH?
From left⁄
Mac’s is a popular Cape Cod
chain of eat shops; local
fi sherman Doug Feeney
champions dogfi sh as a
sustainable alternative to cod
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 043 16/06/2016 09:03
0 4 4 \ n
and is now getting orders as a result. There is already a market in Asia for the dogfi sh’s fi ns and skin, but he aims to start selling the whole fi sh. He’ll shortly start fi lming his fi shing trips to familiarise Chinese consumers with the species.
A tougher challenge will be overcoming consumer resistance to dogfi sh on his own shores. Americans have been slow to embrace a fi sh that used to be thrown away, but Tolley is hopeful that will change as people wake up to what’s happening.
“Dogfi sh is an abundant species on the East Coast and if we want a more healthy ocean, we have to embrace what’s being caught in season and embrace family fi shermen like Doug,” he says. “There’s a big diff erence in the story of the fi sh he’s catching and the more industrial fi shing models you might see around the world. This is a step towards more transparency in our seafood chain and a more sustainable future.”
In addition to getting dogfi sh on the menu in hospitals, food banks and universities, the pair are working with Cape Cod restaurateurs, including Steve DeLeonardis, to try to boost local interest. DeLeonardis, who owns two restaurants, both called The Corner Store, in Orleans and Chatham, has been off ering his customers dogfi sh every Friday from the start of the season in June through to the end of September. Calling it by its newly rebranded title, Cape Shark, he has created the “SharkRito”, a hearty
burrito fi lled with beans, salad and pieces of dogfi sh that have fi rst been soaked in milk to add tenderness and then fried in a lemon-pepper batter.
“The goal for me is the home-grown local movement,” he explains. “It’s cleaner, fresher, has a smaller carbon footprint and if it’s opening people’s minds to something that’s here rather than increasing demand for something that isn’t, that’s good for everyone.” But what does it taste like? Well, to this inexperienced palate, it’s light, fl avoursome and juicy. Not all that dissimilar to cod, really.
Norwegian fl ies to Boston from fi ve destinations. Book fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
While you’re
in Boston
STAY
Chatham Bars Inn
For centuries society
Bostonians have fl ed
the city to summer in
Cape Cod. Channel that
spirit with a trip to this
sprawling period hotel
and sip one of Aunt
Lydia’s Margaritas on the
wrap-around veranda,
before dinner in one
of the three in-house
restaurants. lhw.com/
chathambarsinn
EAT
By Chloe
Anyone who doubts that
meat-free has gone
mainstream on the US
East Coast just needs to
look at Chloe Coscarelli.
The 28-year-old heroine
of New York’s vegan
community only opened
her fi rst meat-and-
dairy-free eaterie last
year, but now has four
in that city plus this
brand-spanking Seaport
Blvd venue.
bychefchloe.com
DO
Boston Harbour
Summer cruises are
all the rage, whether
it’s a booze-fuelled
Boathouse trip from the
seaport (every Friday),
or the high-minded
Architecture Cruise,
which highlights the
design classics of the
Beantown skyline.
spiritcruises.com,
charlesriverboat.com
AD
DIT
IO
NA
L R
ES
EA
RC
H B
Y S
HA
NI K
OT
EC
HA
N-036-044_Cape-Cod2.indd 044 16/06/2016 09:03
No.631517 - Meedoc 1pp.indd 1 16/06/2016 11:13
0 4 6 \ n
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2.indd 046 15/06/2016 16:16
n / 0 4 7
dreamin’
StillFifty years since
its California
sound took over
the airwaves,
Laurel Canyon,
LA’s mythic
rock ’n’ roll
neighbourhood,
is inspiring a
whole new
generation
of musicians.
But, asks Mike
MacEacheran, is
it still the craziest
place in America?
P h o t o g r a p h y ⁄ T i m E W h i t e
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2.indd 047 15/06/2016 16:17
When singer-songwriter Glenn Frey came to Los Angeles from Detroit in the late 1960s, the fi rst person he met was a cherub-faced man sitting on the steps of the Canyon Country Store in
Laurel Canyon. The twenty-something was none other than David Crosby, of The Byrds and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young fame, wearing the same cowboy hat and green leather bat cape as on the cover of the second Byrds album. It seemed, Frey later told Rolling Stone, like an omen. He remembers that moment, taken by the canyon’s laid-back, freewheeling vibe, as the inspiration for him to start his own band. We know them now as The Eagles.
In any other place, a chance encounter between two of the biggest names in music would seem out of the ordinary, but in the 1960s in Laurel Canyon this was an everyday occurrence. The magical hillside hang-out was home to most of LA’s new generation of rock stars. Jim Morrison, Jackson Browne, Mama Cass, Janis Joplin, Joni Mitchell, Frank Zappa, Carole King… practically every hippy to pick up a guitar could at one time be found up in the canyon, sporting bell-bottom denims and plaited headbands.
Even if you’ve never been there, Laurel Canyon has aff ected you. Magic-hour records by Canyoners, such as California Dreamin’, Mr Tambourine Man and Big Yellow Taxi, have soundtracked a million lazy summer afternoons. The fl oaty hairstyles, peek-a-boo lace dresses and printed fl oral shirts on show at Coachella or Glastonbury every summer are testament to its enduring infl uence on pop culture.
Fifty years on and the Canyon’s history has become especially relevant, thanks to a new wave of artists who have picked up its sound. Fleet Foxes, My
Clockwise from above⁄
The view over Laurel Canyon,
in LA’s Hollywood Hills region;
Lookout Mountain; Crosby, Stills
& Nash photographed for their
debut album in 1969 at Palm Ave,
West Hollywood; Joni Mitchell
poses in the window of her Laurel
Canyon home in 1970
Morning Jacket, Conor Oberst and the Avett Brothers are among those rocking the alt-country stylings of its early days, while local LA heroes Dawes, Jenny Lewis and Jonathan Wilson are now putting the city’s folk-rock scene back on the music map.
Driving into the Canyon from West Hollywood, it’s hard to imagine these windy roads and woodsy houses were the backdrop for some of the most melodic, atmospheric, and subtly political American popular music ever made. Yet Michael Walker, author of the counterculture movement’s defi nitive history, Laurel Canyon: The Inside Story of Rock-And-Roll’s Legendary Neighborhood, calls it the most energised place in American rock ’n’ roll. In the midst of one of America’s most urbanised, »
“Ask anyone in California where the craziest people live and they’ll say Los Angeles. Ask anyone in Los Angeles where the craziest people live... and they’ll tell you Laurel Canyon”- Joni Mitchell, 1968
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2.indd 048 15/06/2016 16:17
n / 0 4 9
A whole mythology exists around number 8217 Lookout Mountain, one of the steepest winding streets in the Canyon. Joni Mitchell bought the house in 1968 with royalties from her fi rst album, Song to a Seagull. Her then lover, Graham Nash, wrote Our House about their life together for the 1970 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album, Déjà Vu
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2.indd 049 15/06/2016 16:26
073_Norwegian_July_2016.indd 1 17/06/2016 10:00
n / 0 5 1
uncompromising environments, he explains, it was once an unlikely anomaly: cheap, secluded from the law, yet just off the Sunset Strip, with great places to play live and better recording studios nearby. All the elements were there for a creative revolution, and Laurel Canyon was the catalyst.
“For a little window of time – from 1966-69 – Laurel Canyon was the centre of the musical universe,” says Walker, as I join him on a tour of the area. “You had these creative, wilful people who were only 23 or 24, but they were living beyond the rules of the 1950s. It must have been incredibly liberating. San Francisco takes the credit for the Summer of Love, but it all started in Laurel Canyon.”
Today the Canyon seems like a regular LA suburb. Yucca palms with laden branches hang over the main boulevard and minor roads funnel upwards past prime real estate towards the even glitzier Mulholland Drive. On the way, there are dream-like houses on stilts overlooking the Hollywood Hills. Gardeners mow lawns in gardens buzzing with insect life, school
children race off to Wonderland Elementary and old-timers catch up on porches over coff ee.
With Walker’s help, however, its musical past comes to life once more. He takes me to the corner of Laurel Canyon Boulevard and Lookout Mountain, where Frank Zappa once partied with groupies – as well as Jimi Hendrix and Mick Jagger – at his Wizard of Oz-like wood cabin. Today it’s a forlorn wonderland of forgotten caves, dried-up waterfalls and boarded windows, yet once it was the most happening place in America. Fans travelled from Europe to be invited to parties inside.
“You’d see Stephen Stills walking down the street, or Jackson Browne playing piano in his garden,” says Walker, listing off other famous residents who hung out in the neighbourhood. “They all lived in each other’s orbits.” Farther up the Canyon, on Woodrow Wilson Drive, Walker points to where Mama Cass Elliot from The Mamas & Papas bought a ramshackle house. As photos from the late-1960s show, she created the ultimate bohemian enclave »
“Frank Zappa once partied with groupies - as well as Jimi Hendrix and Mick Jagger - at his Wizard of Oz-like wood cabin”
Right⁄
Frank Zappa lived in this Laurel
Canyon “tree house” in the late
1960s but moved out with his
family when the party lifestyle
became too much; Zappa
swinging in the yard in 1968
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2.indd 051 15/06/2016 16:18
Ice Power Cold Gel + + +
+
No.000000 Fysioline Oy (Ice Power) 1pp.indd 1 19/05/2016 11:31
n / 0 5 3
here, decorating with robed curtains and exotic cushions, and instilling an open-door vibe that drew a constant stream of fl ower-power followers and neighbours.
That group included The Monkees’ Mickey Dolenz, who lived on Lookout Mountain, and Ridpath Drive residents The Eagles and Jackson Browne. In those days, David Crosby – yes, him again – was notorious after parties for cruising the Boulevard, his cape fl ying in the wind, riding a Triumph motorcycle given to him by Peter Fonda.
Now the rock stars have gone, and the mansions and villas have been taken over by business moguls and movie producers taking advantage of the Canyon’s proximity to Hollywood and Studio City. Only a few stragglers who come to drink coff ee, hang out, and smoke are left, according to Walker. Even for diehard pop pilgrims, there are few clues as to how the Canyon created such an incredible swathe of popular culture in the 1960s.
In fact, for those with an eye on rock history, the lack of landmarks is probably just as well. Around 1969, the rose-tinted sunglasses came off in a spectacular backlash. Canyon fi xture Neil Young was the fi rst to puncture the dream in his song »
This page and overleaf⁄
Gregory Siff’s Love Street
mural on the side of the
Pace restaurant; the Canyon
Country Store (over) is still the
neighbourhood’s social hub
Few places symbolise Laurel Canyon’s hedonistic vibe better than Rothdell Trail, more commonly known as Love Street. Immortalised after Jim Morrison – who moved into a bungalow on the street with long-term girlfriend Pamela Courson – penned a song of the same name, today the lane has been given over to art mural Love Street. This gigantic psychedelic splash of rainbow wash was created by modern LA art-hipster Gregory Siff
“Fifty years on and the Canyon’s history has become relevant again, as its musical baton has been picked up by a new wave of artists”
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2.indd 053 15/06/2016 16:19
0 5 4 \ n
Revolution Blues. “I hear that Laurel Canyon is full of famous stars,” he sings, “but I hate them worse than lepers, and I’ll kill them in their cars.” Eventually a wave of eclectic misfi ts and groupies arrived, the drugs dealers moved in and the notorious Manson Family carried out a series of grisly murders, killing the hippy ideal overnight. After that, people started to lock their doors.
Nowadays, there’s just one place where the spirit of ‘66 lives on. Canyon Country Store is the neighbourhood’s makeshift cultural centre, and a store Jim Morrison once described as the place “where the creatures meet”. Today, old hippies come to fi nd the 1960s they left behind, others intrigued by a weird nostalgia for a life they never lived.
One of the latter is Angélie Buddie Guilbaud, a wistful twenty-something who’s says that, »
Take a
day trip
A couple of hours’ drive
east from the Canyon is
Joshua Tree, where it’s
said the 60s have never
really gone away...
PAPPY & HARRIET’S
A little bit country, a
whole lot hipster, this
honky-tonk saloon
and live-music venue in
the desert has hosted
the likes of Arctic
Monkeys, Spiritualized,
Vampire Weekend
and Conor Oberst.
But like any spit-and-
sawdust bar it can get
rowdy: desert native
and Queens of the Stone
Age singer Josh Homme
has been thrown out
three times.
pappyandharriets.com
JOSHUA TREE INN
Opened in 1950, this
fabled hacienda motel
on the road to Joshua
Tree National Park
is a pilgrimage site
for alt-country fans.
Donovan and Emmylou
Harris stayed here to
zone-out in the desert,
while former Byrd and
Rolling Stones’ cohort
Gram Parsons died from
an opiate and tequila
overdose in room
number eight.
joshuatreeinn.com
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2_NEW.indd 054 16/06/2016 09:04
n / 0 5 5
“Alot of people think
we carry that Neil Young,
Joni Mitchell, Warren
Zevon sound,” says
Taylor Goldsmith, frontman and
guitarist of Dawes, Los Angeles’
pre-eminent festival-friendly folk-
rock band.
Dawes have been labelled Laurel
Canyon’s second-generation torch
bearers, largely thanks to their 2009
debut album, North Hills, which was
recorded in the Canyon, produced by
Canyon native Jonathan Wilson and
is fi lled with old-fashioned acoustic
guitars and chiming melodies.
So far, so much typical Canyon
fodder, but, as Goldsmith says, they’re
reluctant to be pigeonholed into the
60s-revival box. “On our fi rst record,
the lyrics were about sunsets and
rivers, but once you’re into that real
estate it dries up fast. People don’t
write letters and ride trains anymore.”
Four albums in (soon to be fi ve,
when their as-yet-untitled record
comes out this autumn) and Dawes
have revealed a broader mix of modern
infl uences. “Our real heroes have
always been artists with extensive
catalogues like Bob Dylan, Elvis and
Stevie Wonder,” Goldsmith says.
“Every band needs certain
signposts,” adds the band’s drummer
(and Taylor’s brother) Griffi n Goldsmith.
“But even Kurt Cobain and Eddie
Taylor Goldsmith
Griffi n Goldsmith Wylie Gelber
Vedder of Pearl Jam rejected grunge.
It puts a sound in your head. We see
ourselves as a hard-working rock ’n’
roll band.”
Not sure what one of those sounds
like? Seek out last year’s best-selling
album All Your Favourite Bands, a
number one across the US that saw
them sell out auditoriums from LA to
Chicago and Nashville. Or catch them
on tour across the US this July and
August. Perhaps this is what Crosby,
Stills & Nash would sound like in 2016?
dawestheband.com
The new band
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2.indd 055 15/06/2016 16:20
0 5 6 \ n
despite growing up here and now working in the store, she’s still in awe of the 1960s’ pop ethos. “I grew up chasing fairies,” she says. “I lived up on Wonderland Avenue and all my friends’ parents were in bands.” Frank Zappa chose her middle name.
It’s said that as long as the Canyon Country Store stays open, the spirit of peace, love and understanding will survive in the Canyon, and this is the spot on our tour where it’s still possible to feel that this was once the epicentre of counterculture. We’re surrounded by girls wearing love-bead strings and Indian bracelets, while men sport fuzzy, woodsman beards, their faces framed by hairstyles that could easily have fi tted a Byrd or an Eagle 50 years ago.
This is where the old guard came to pay their respects when Glenn Frey sadly died earlier this year, bringing the good times back for many. But while the Canyon sound has been passed on to a new generation, there’s only an echo here in the Canyon of the creative powerhouse that once was.
“The new generation will never have what these young musicians had,” says Walker, looking across the misty hills. “There was once peace and liberation here – and Laurel Canyon had hope, at least for a while. It’s a place that could have lived forever.”
discoverlosangeles.com
Norwegian fl ies to Los Angeles from fi ve destinations. Book fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
While you’re
in LA
STAY
Farmer’s Daughter Hotel
The name of this
boutique hotel might
suggest a roll in the
hay, but its comfort
levels certainly don’t. A
plaid facade and denim
bedspreads play on the
country vibe, while neon
signage and poolside
chic are pure LA.
farmersdaughter
hotel.com
EAT
The Cannibal
New York’s favourite
meat-focused
restaurant now has
a West Coast home.
Opened in May, the
Culver City venue serves
up juicy steaks, chops
and sausages. There’s
an onsite butcher, too,
for quick takeaway bites
and special cuts.
thecanniballa.com
DO
StarLine Stars Homes
It’s a travel cliché but
there’s still something
oddly thrilling about
a Hollywood Homes
tour – squinting at Brad
Pitt’s security system in
the hope of a glimpse.
StarLine claims the most
celeb spots of any tour
so fi ngers crossed!
starlinetours.com
Left & below⁄
Angélie Buddie Guilbaud
works in the Canyon Country
Store and remembers her
parents hanging out with
Frank Zappa; the Store on
Laurel Canyon Blvd
GE
TT
Y;
ST
AN
LE
E,
JO
NI M
IT
CH
EL
L ©
HE
NR
Y D
ILT
Z/
MO
RR
IS
ON
HO
TE
L G
AL
LE
RY
/M
OR
RIS
ON
HO
TE
LG
AL
LE
RY
.C
OM
N-46-56_LaurelCanyon-2_NEW.indd 056 16/06/2016 09:04
Up to
25%DISCOUNTBook until 31st August and receive
WARM WINTER ESCAPADE!
SPAIN - ALL INCLUSIVE
Call Center: UK +44 20 305 138 74 / callcenter.eur@marconfort.com / Marconfort.com
JUST FEEL ITMarconfort Beach Club Hotel Torremolinos
Marconfort Griego HotelTorremolinos
FEEL THE MUSICMarconfort Benidorm SuitesBenidorm - 70’s, 80’s and 90’s music lovers
FEEL THE HARMONYMarconfort EssenceBenidorm - Adults Only 16+
Marconfort Atlantic GardensLanzarote - Adults Only 16+
No.629809 Hoteles Costamar.indd 1 02/06/2016 17:40
0 5 8 \ n
One
man’s
trash...
The NYC
Department
of Sanitation
garage in East
Harlem is home
to one of the
most intriguing
collections of
found objects in
the country. We
meet the worker
who’s made
garbage curation
his life’s work…
W o r d s ⁄ M a n d i K e i g h r a n
P h o t o g r a p h y ⁄ A x e l D u p e u x
N-058-064_trash.indd 058 15/06/2016 16:55
N-058-064_trash.indd 059 15/06/2016 16:55
Molina’s
locker room,
where the
collection
fi rst started,
is now
overwhelmed
with ‘mongo’
N-058-064_trash.indd 060 15/06/2016 16:55
It’s always Christmas at Manhattan 11, the NYC Department of Sanitation garage in East Harlem. Even in July there are Christmas carols playing, dozens of trees, wreaths, stars, candles, nativity scenes, and a life-size illuminated Santa. A mite
confusingly, however, it might also be spring, and the start of the baseball season, if one is to judge from “baseball wall”, an enormous display of autographed balls, framed mitts, and rows of fi gurines, right next to “Christmas corner”.
These carefully curated objects are just a fraction of the tens of thousands that are jammed into this enormous garage. There’s a gallery-worth of artwork, an orchestra of guitars, corners overfl owing with greenery and sparkling fountains. A whole wall of Mona Lisa reproductions, a forest of chairs and lamps, carefully ordered towers of video games, libraries of books, and tables of every kind of tchotchke, curio, trinket, toy and bauble imaginable.
This is the mind-boggling Trash to Treasure collection of 63-year-old Nelson Molina, all rescued from the garbage over his 32 years as a worker with New York’s Department of Sanitation (DSNY). In sanitation-speak, the objects are “mongo”, slang for treasure salvaged from the garbage. While it’s against department regulations, most of the 59 garages across the city have some kind of small mongo collection on display. Molina, however, is the undisputed king.
“It’s just something I have a passion for,” he says. “I have two brothers and three sisters, and we didn’t get much for Christmas. So, as a kid, I used to go out two weeks before Christmas and look in the garbage. I might fi nd a toy car missing a wheel, so I’d go into my mother’s sewing kit and fi nd a button the same size and glue it on. She never threw anything out. If she had a toaster that didn’t work, she would repair it. If she couldn’t fi x it, no one could, not even the manufacturer. That’s how I learned.”
Molina’s passion didn’t lead him directly to the DSNY, however. He began his working life as an oxygen technician with a private ambulance company. In 1981, at the age of 29, applied for various city jobs – everything from the post offi ce to the railway. By chance, the fi rst he was called in for was as a sanitation worker, and he stayed with the department until his retirement in September last year.
He doesn’t remember the fi rst piece of mongo he picked up – probably a small fi gurine or a perfume bottle, he says – but, whatever it was, it’s still in the men’s locker room. It’s here »
Madison Ave
1 0 6 t h S t
One of the dozens
of fi gurines
displayed on Molina’s
“baseball wall”
N-058-064_trash.indd 061 15/06/2016 16:56
0 6 2 \ n
Piles of action
fi gures are
testament
to changing
toy trends
over the last
30 years
N-058-064_trash.indd 062 15/06/2016 16:56
n / 0 6 3
Molina’s collection began, in a small room he built with two colleagues as a shared locker. As the collection grew, it overtook the tiny room – crowding it with everything from Star Wars fi gurines to corkscrews – and fl owed into the locker room itself, turning it into a cabinet of curiosities set to a soundtrack of birds singing (a found CD, playing on a found portable sound system) in which the sanitation workers go about their daily routine. From there, it spilled into the garage, completely taking over the second fl oor, which is no longer used for the storing of garbage trucks.
As Molina wanders through the collection, he picks up pieces, detailing exactly where he found them and how he knew to look for them – an unusually heavy bag, a telltale sound, an odd shape. It seems impossible that he would have a favourite piece among so many, but he does – a Star of David, which he found eight years ago, made of steel from the World Trade Center to commemorate 9/11.
“There’s a sad and happy story to this piece – that’s why it’s so precious to me,” he says. “9/11 happened on a Tuesday, and on Sunday, the DSNY were sending guys over there to help clean up. I was one of the guys who volunteered to go. While I was there, my wife called and told me my father had been rushed to hospital in critical condition. I went to the hospital, and he passed away two days later. I couldn’t go back to the World Trade Center. That’s the sad story. The happy story is that if I had been there eight or nine months, I probably wouldn’t be here today because of the diseases people got. Every time I pick it up, it reminds me of my father.”
However precious it is to him, the star looks set to leave the collection soon. Following a CBS interview in which Molina made sure the cameras captured the name on the plaque, its owner – who works for the sprinkler system company at the Freedom Tower – got in touch. Reportedly, the star was accidentally disposed of with the contents of a storage locker, and there are now plans to move it to the 9/11 Memorial Museum in Lower Manhattan. »
Molina with his most
treasured found
object, a plaque
made of steel from
the World Trade
Center that he
found on 98th Street
and 5th Avenue
While you’re
in New York
STAY
Roger Smith Hotel
This quirky Midtown
hotel, just fi ve blocks
from Grand Central
Station, makes an
excellent base for
exploring. It’s got
comfortable apartment-
style rooms; a 24-hour
granola and yoghurt
station, and a rooftop
bar too (above).
rogersmith.com
EAT
The Spotted Pig
Nothing says NYC grub
like a burger, and one of
the best in town is found
at Greenwich Village
gastro pub, The Spotted
Pig. The chargrilled-beef
burger is topped with
Roquefort cheese and
served on a brioche bun
with a side of rosemary
shoestring fries.
thespottedpig.com
DO
The High Line
There’s plenty to do
this month at NYC’s
park built on a disused
railway line – from
stargazing and tai chi
to the magical Up Late
experience on 21 July,
when performers in
illuminated costumes
light up the night. Find
more events online.
thehighline.org
“In sanitation-speak, the objects are ‘mongo’, slang for treasure salvaged from the trash”
ina
9 6 t h S t
N-058-064_trash.indd 063 16/06/2016 11:02
0 6 4 \ n
CBS isn’t the only one interested in Molina’s collection. Dr Robin Nagle is an anthropologist who has been working with the DSNY since 2002. She began researching waste for her 2013 book Picking Up – part of which involved time as a sanitation worker – but has since narrowed her focus to the collection. She even ran an NYU course last year on how it could be catalogued. “I’m primarily interested in Nelson’s curatorial and artistic sensibility,” says Nagle. “The beauty of it is the unexpected way in which he has shaped it.”
As much as the garage is a refl ection of the collector’s curatorial eye, it is also a snapshot of the ephemera of American life on Molina’s route, bordered by 96th St to 110th St and 1st Ave to 5th Ave. These objects stand testament to what people value and what they choose to throw out, the lost and forgotten, and the comings and goings of trends – from Tamagotchis, the plastic digital pets that gripped a generation in the ’90s, to Furbys, the bug-eyed robotic toys that followed. There’s a poetry in the objects that Molina chooses to pull out of the trash. Wandering the labyrinthine aisles between his carefully curated tables, it can be diffi cult to imagine just why something has been thrown out – here a collection of Native American beaded necklaces, there a book signed by former First Lady Jackie Kennedy.
As tentative plans are being made to relocate the collection to a permanent, publicly accessible space in coming years (something Nagle acknowledges would be hugely expensive), the NYC Department of Sanitation is hoping to capitalise on that sentiment to help realise its goal of zero waste to landfi lls by 2030. “This is not trash – it can all be reused,” says Nagle. “Nelson’s collection makes you think about what you throw out.”
None of this, however, is what inspired Molina. He simply collects, and doesn’t need to understand why. “I just couldn’t see this stuff going back into the garbage and being broken up. So, I just put it all together and it became this,” he says. “Robin told me I was an artist, but I didn’t see it like that. I’d been doing this for 30 years before it hit me: I’m an artist. I sit down and I don’t know how I put it together. It turned out really good.”Tours of the Trash to Treasure collection are available by appointment only by emailing tours@dsny.nyc.gov
Norwegian fl ies to New York from eight destinations. Book fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
2 n d A v
e
CA
RL
OS
DA
VID
I
N-058-064_trash.indd 064 16/06/2016 11:02
PAINTING NORWAY
NIKOLAI
15 MINUTES FROM OSLOTO HØVIKODDEN
10.06 11.09.16
BOOK & HEDÉN B.A. HUSEBY FUTUREFARMERS WITH MARTIN LUNDBERG ÅSA SONJASDOTTER
A S T R U PBUY YOUR TICKETS ONLINE: WWW.TICKETMASTER.NO
MORE INFO AT: WWW.HOK.NO
No.630580 - Henie Onstad Kunstsenter 1pp.indd 1 06/06/2016 15:16
0 6 6 \ n
“America’s
N-066-077_NationalParks.indd 066 15/06/2016 14:48
n / 0 6 7
This summer, the USA’s
National Parks Service (NPS)
will celebrate its 100th
birthday. Since the service
was founded in 1916, its
parks – 59 and counting –
have played host to hikers,
climbers, skiers and some
of the world’s most hard-
core adventurers who
train and race across their
rugged and varied terrain.
We asked some of these
extreme sportsmen and
women to talk about the
parks that inspire them...
best idea”W o r d s ⁄ G r a e m e G r e e n
Death Valley, California
N-062-075_NationalParks_NEW.indd 067 16/06/2016 09:05
0 6 8 \ n
“Death Valley is about as far away from Earth as you can get while still being tethered to it. The hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth was here: a skin-searing 56.7oC. The road gets so hot during summer it can melt the soles of your sneakers. Places have names like Dante’s View, Furnace Creek, Devil’s Hole and Stovepipe Wells. It’s not the most inviting place for a run, but a small group of runners take it on every year during the annual Badwater Ultramarathon, a 217km continuous foot race through Death Valley that pits the world’s most extreme athletes against the world’s most extreme elements. From the fi rst time I did it two decades ago, I’ve been captivated by this majestic land. There’s something magical about it, something entirely otherworldly.”
Dean Karnazes is an
American ultramarathon
runner and one of the Top
100 Most Infl uential People
in the World, according to
Time magazine. The bestselling author of
Ultramarathon Man, his feats include
running for 350 continuous miles, and 50
marathons in all 50 US states in 50
consecutive days.
ultramarathonman.com
Stovepipe Wells
Badlands
Death Valley, California
N-066-077_NationalParks.indd 068 15/06/2016 14:48
n / 0 6 9
“As an adventure swimmer, I always look for new places to explore and challenge myself. Canyonlands National Park, with both the Colorado and Green rivers, off ers an incredible landscape of canyons, mesas and buttes. Before the Colorado joins the Green river and goes into Cataract Canyon, there are some wonderful parts to swim. The water is incredibly clean and it off ers a fantastic open-water river-training venue. Quite often, I end up drinking the river as well and I’ve never had any health problems. The Colorado river has been my training venue for the last 10 years and I always fi nd it very inspirational and challenging. I hope other people get inspired by it as well.”
Martin Strel is a Slovenian long-distance swimmer and star of the fi lm Big River Man. He holds Guinness World Records for swimming the entire lengths of the Amazon, Mississippi, Yangtze and Danube rivers. In 2011, he completed his Colorado River Swim challenge for documentary series Stan Lee’s Superhumans. strel-swimming.com
Canyonlands, Utah
PARK FACT #1
Chesler Park, Needles District
The largest park is Wrangell-
St Elias National Park and
Preserve, Alaska, which
spans 5.34 million hectares –
bigger than Switzerland.
N-062-075_NationalParks_NEW.indd 069 16/06/2016 09:05
norskebunader.no • facebook.com/norskebunader • info@norskebunader.no • tlf 23 29 66 70
Contact us: 46 63 18 81 (sms only)Ad: «NBN, DITT POSTNR, BUNADSTYPE, KJØNN»Example «NBN, 1540, aust agder, dame»
DISC OVER NORWAYS CULTURAL
HERITAGE
No.626361 - Norske Bunader 1pp.indd 1 13/06/2016 15:48
n / 0 7 1
“Shenandoah National Park is for me often a space of refl ective suff ering, as I’m usually up there grinding out a massive training day, but I’m always glad I made the trip. Part of the charm of its mysterious landscape is that it’s always diff erent. Some days, I climb up through the fog to sapphire blue skies and peaks emerging like green islands in a white sea. Other days, it’s autumn’s splendour, with crimson and gold leaves fl ying. On winter days, the trees are somber and the ripples of the mountains show their true shape with a light dusting of snow. It’s no wonder singer-songwriter John Denver wrote about Shenandoah’s legendary ‘country roads’ in 1971 in his most popular song, Take Me Home, Country Roads.”
Jeremiah Bishop is a
professional bike racer in
cross-country, short-track
and marathon-distance
endurance events. A 14-time
member of the US national cycling team,
he’s represented the country at world
championships and the Pan-American
Games, where he won gold in 2003. He’s
also a member of the Topeak-Ergon
Racing Team, which takes on endurance
races around the world.
jeremiahbishop.com
Shenandoah, Virginia
National Park ranger
Roy Sullivan was hit by
lightning seven times
between 1942 and
1977, earning him the
nickname “human
lightning rod”.
PARK FACT #2
Big Run Overlook
N-062-075_NationalParks_NEW.indd 071 16/06/2016 09:06
0 7 2 \ n
“Within this park is an ultrarunner’s rite of passage. The Rim-to-Rim-to-Rim is a 77km trek that exposes runners to incredible changes in elevation (6,100m), temperature (up to 47oC) and exposure. My fi rst night inside the National Park, on the eve of my 28th birthday, I stared into the depths and realised our goal of double-crossing the canyon was an intimidating endeavour. We faced intense heat, blew out our quads on the descents, and ran a reverse mountain, climbing to the safety of
the Bright Angel Lodge as our fi nish. Marking my birthday with 28 candles and hundreds of dramatic photos remains a highlight in my career. I’ve run the R2R2R at least four times since that initial visit. I’ve set a Fastest Known Time, as well as hauled out a struggling friend. Each experience puts me in my place, shows me what I’m capable of and, most importantly, increases my respect for what great, wide open spaces off er our personal growth.”
Krissy Moehl is an Amerian
ultramarathon runner, coach, author,
public speaker and race director. In her
16-year career, she’s run more than 100
races, winning at least half, including the
165km Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc, and the 160km Ultra
Trail Mont Fuji and Hardrock 100. krissymoehl.com
Grand Canyon, Arizona
PARK FACT #3
The National Parks cover 33.4
million hectares of the USA –
3.6 per cent of its total area.
3.6%
Pima Point
N-066-077_NationalParks.indd 072 15/06/2016 14:49
Kusam
a with D
ots Obsession, 2
012. Installation V
iew: K
usama’s solo exhibition “YAYO
I KU
SA
MA
ETE
RN
ITY O
F ETE
RN
AL E
TER
NITY
” at M
atsumoto C
ity Museum
of Art, N
agano, Japan. © Yayoi K
usama, C
ourtesy of Ota Fine A
rts, Tokyo/Singapore,
Victoria M
iro Gallery, London, D
avid Zwirner, N
ew York.
11 Jun – 11 Sep 2016
WITH SUPPORT FROM: ARKDES.SE MODERNAMUSEET.SE STOCKHOLM
YAYOIKUSAMA
IN INFINITY
090_Norwegian_July_2016.indd 1 17/06/2016 10:12
0 7 4 \ n
The deepest lake in the USA
is Crater Lake, Oregon. At
589m, that’s fi ve times the
height of the Statue of Liberty.
589m
Zion,Utah
“I fi rst came across Capitol Reef National Park during my 13-year human-powered circumnavigation of the globe. My expectations weren’t high, but the further I got into this little-known 980km2 wilderness ride of twisting canyons, cathedral domes and natural bridges, the more I could feel the prehistoric landscape winding its way
Capitol Reef, Utah
into my heart. Early visitors clearly felt the same way. Fremont Indians settled along the Fremont river 700 years ago, happily planting fruit trees and leaving intricate petroglyphs on the surrounding cliff s, followed by 19th-century Mormon pioneers.”
Jason Lewis is a British explorer and the fi rst person in history to circle the Earth using only human power: kayaking, biking, pedalling a tiny boat and rollerblading. The 74,842km journey took 13 years to
complete, with a crocodile attack, pirates, two broken legs and four Guinness World Records along the way. He’s also an author and motivational speaker.
jasonexplorer.com
PARK FACT #4
Cathedral Valley
N-066-077_NationalParks.indd 074 15/06/2016 14:49
n / 0 7 5
In 1914, a millionaire
industrialist by the
name of Stephen
Mather was disturbed
by the state of
America’s few National
Parks. Despite the fact
that Yellowstone had
been designated as
the fi rst National Park
in 1872, there was no
organisation devoted
to caring for them.
Mather experienced
manic depression and
often looked for solace
in the great outdoors,
but found the ill-kempt
state of the parks
upsetting. He wrote a
letter to the Secretary
of the Interior, to
complain about their
neglect. It’s said he
received the reply,
“If you don’t like what
we’re doing, come and
do it better yourself.”
He made his way to
Washington and spent
his own money on
hiring staff and buying
new land for the parks.
In 1916, he helped to
create the bill that
mandated the National
Parks Service.
Under his stewardship,
the number of parks
grew from 14 to 20,
and when he died, the
Parks Service erected
plaques in every one of
them with the words:
“There will never come
an end to the good
that he has done.”
“Yosemite is unique in the world. From the towering sequoia trees through the tranquil backcountry to the impressive size of El Capitán in Yosemite Valley, there’s something spectacular for anyone who goes there. As a climber, the sweeping granite walls are my favourite thing here. The cracks soar to the sky,
Yosemite, California
a small weakness that allows passage. When I’m there, I discover the intricacies of the rock and, in doing so, I learn a bit more about myself. There isn’t a climber in the world that hasn’t heard about Half Dome. If gravity is your calling, then Yosemite is a ‘must do’ on the bucket list of life.”
Conrad Anker is an American rock
climber, mountaineer and author. He’s
famous for his ascents in the High
Himalayas and Antarctica, as well as climbs
across the US. He’s also team leader of the
North Face climbing team. conradanker.com
The birth of
a great idea
Half Dome Stephen Mather
N-062-075_NationalParks_NEW.indd 075 16/06/2016 09:06
076_Norwegian_July_2016.indd 1 17/06/2016 14:52
n / 0 7 7
“Yellowstone has dramatic, epic scenery and incredible numbers of animals in abundance, including wolves, bison, elk and bears. What’s more, the whole place has the fragility that comes from being placed right over the top of one of the largest volcanic zones in the world. Yellowstone represents everything about nature in the modern world: stunningly beautiful, yet teetering on the edge of existence. It always reminds me we have to make the most of the now because you never know how long everything sticks around for – before you know, it might all be too late.”
Ed Farrelly is a British mountaineer and
adventurer who has climbed some of the
biggest mountains in the world, including
Baruntse (7,129m) in Nepal, Aconcagua
(6,961m) in Argentina and Khan Tengri
(7,010m), Kyrgyzstan, as well as rafting the Grand Canyon
and completing the Mongol Rally. In 2012, Farrelly ranked
sixth in a list of the 20 most-seasoned adventurers,
explorers and expedition leaders in Men’s Fitness. edfarrelly.com
Yellowstone, Wyoming, Montana & Idaho
Death Valley is two hours’ drive from Las Vegas and the Grand Canyon one hour from Las Vegas; Shenandoah is two hours from Baltimore/ Washington; and Yosemite three hours from Oakland-San Francisco. Book Norwegian fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
PH
OT
OS
GA
LL
ER
YS
TO
CK
, G
ET
TY
, P
HO
TO
SH
OT
, T
OP
FO
TO
, S
TR
EL
SW
IMM
MIN
G,
FR
ED
RIK
MA
RM
AS
TE
R,
MA
X L
OW
E M
ED
IA
. A
DD
IT
IO
NA
L R
ES
EA
RC
H B
Y Z
AR
A W
OO
DC
OC
K
Bison
N-066-077_NationalParks.indd 077 15/06/2016 14:50
Promotion
The beating art of the bayOakland has been touted as the new creative hub of the Bay Area, but in fact there’s been an exciting art scene in the city for decades
O n the corner of Alice Street and
14th Street in downtown
Oakland, a once grey and
unassuming carpark has been
given a new lease of life. Thanks
to a two-year effort by the Community
Rejuvenation Project (CRP), vibrant murals now
cover the walls, overwhelming them with colour.
Some of the city’s most signifi cant cultural
fi gures, such as percussionist CK Ledzepko and
actor and martial artist Bruce Lee, are depicted
larger than life, with the words ‘love arts music’
emblazoned proudly above them.
These murals are a concrete example of what
has been happening to Oakland of late. The
Californian city is experiencing something of a
renaissance, while still holding on tightly to its
rich and diverse roots. After all, it has for a long
time been one of the most ethnically diverse
cities in the US, and it’s this huge mix of cultures
that gives it its edge.
It’s little wonder, then, that this waterside
metropolis has long had a thriving arts scene,
which has continued to grow and evolve. Today
Oakland is arguably the creative hub of the Bay
Area, dubbed one of America’s ‘most creative
cities’ by Forbes. And that doesn’t just mean
painters – there’s an abundance of dancers,
sculptors, glass-blowers, actors and musicians
of every kind.
Clockwise from
above⁄ Bandaloop at
the Oakland Art and Soul
Festival; Movers and
shakers of the Oakland
Ballet; Visitors enjoy an art
exhibition during the Art
Murmur; part of the Alice
Street Mural
n_july_Visit Oakland_V4.indd 069 17/06/2016 11:30
A street-
art tour of
Oakland
ps
Peace and dignity
By CRP, Vulcan, Mike 360
International & 41st
ps
We are the ones you’ve been
waiting forBy Jessica Sabogal
Telegraph and 20th
OhganeBy Dave Young Kim
3915 Broadway
UnnamedBy Brett Flanigan
Fruitvale BART parking lot
UnnamedBy Brett Flanigan
Fruitvale BART parking lot
PICTURE THIS
Oakland’s galleries span the genres from
industrial to modern art. The Oakland Art Murmur
(oaklandartmurmur.org) is an organisation that
works to connect and sustain the city’s visual-
arts culture. During its free monthly gallery walk,
member galleries and mixed-use venues are open
to the public. Many hold artists’ receptions – a great
way to get a fl avour for what each has to offer.
If looking at art isn’t your thing, you can try
your hand at making some at The Crucible
(thecrucible.org), an artist collective known for
one-of-a-kind industrial arts education and
performances. There are classes on glassblowing,
ceramics and blacksmithing, among a whole host
of other things you never thought you’d try. The
American Steel Studios, where industrial artists
can rent affordable work spaces, can be equally
bizarre. Some weird and wonderful works have
been produced here, including art cars created
for the Burning Man festival.
LET THE MUSIC PLAY
Oakland is full of top-notch music venues
too – only to be expected in the hometown of
legendary 90s hip-hop artist MC Hammer. The
Fox Theater (thefoxoakland.com) gets big-name
performers like Bob Dylan, Kendrick Lamar,
and Sam Smith, while the Paramount Theatre
(paramounttheatre.com) hosts both well-known
and up-and-coming entertainers. The beautiful
Art Deco building also plays host to the Oakland
Ballet and Symphony. Like your music a bit
rougher? Despite what its name might have
you believe, the Oakland Metro Operahouse
(oaklandmetro.org) puts on raucous hardcore,
punk and metal shows.
DANCE, DANCE
Naturally, where there’s music, people will dance,
and Oaklanders have been grooving on down for
years. Turfi ng, for example, is a style of dance that
originated in the city in the late 90s, and has made
its way from inner-city Oakland into the public eye.
Bandaloop is another popular dance company
based in Oakland. While Turfi ng mixes mime,
contortion and general popping and locking,
Bandaloop (bandaloop.org) performs an aerial
dance that explores the relationship between
movement and gravity. If you fancy giving it a try,
Bandaloop offers workshops for all levels.
New dance styles and groups continue to pop
up across Oakland, and the city’s many venues
and festivals give ample opportunity for them
to show their stuff. One such group is Mix’d
Ingrdnts, an all-female, multi-genre, multi-
ethnic dance crew, set up with an aim of female
empowerment in the dance world – yet another
sign that Oakland’s creative spirit is still alive
and well.
n_july_Visit Oakland_V4.indd 070 17/06/2016 11:30
0 8 0 \ n
HOW MUCH DOES IT COST TO SAVE A DOG’S LIFE? According to Chrissy Beckles (right), who runs Puerto Rico’s The Sato Project, the magic number is US$1,000 (NOK8,220). That’s the price of taking an animal from the island’s notorious Dead Dog Beach, getting it vetted, vaccinated, neutered, microchipped, and then transporting it to a loving family in the mainland USA. Over the last ten years, Beckles has helped to save more than 1,500 animals here. Now she’s set her sights on an even more diffi cult task: educating the next generation …W o r d s ⁄ S a r a h W a r w i c k � P h o t o g r a p h y ⁄ R a l p h Q u i n o n e z
N-080-085_Puerto-rico.indd 080 15/06/2016 14:50
n / 0 8 1
$1000
N-080-085_Puerto-rico.indd 081 15/06/2016 14:51
MARBELLA PROPERTY: AN INFORMED CHOICE
Swedish-owned firm WASA Real Estate, established in 1982, specialises in both new
and re-sale properties in the Nueva Andalucia, Puerto Banús, Marbella and San Pedro
area.The company offers a professional, personal service in numerous languages to help
clients make a well-informed choice of property. Wasa Real Estate also provides a helpful
after-sales service. The large number of client referrals the company receives, even years
down the line, is testament to its great advice and professional service. Welcome!
+34 952 818 000 | info@wasa.es | www.wasa.es
082_Norwegian_July_2016.indd 1 21/06/2016 10:47
n / 0 8 3
No one can agree on how many beaches Puerto Rico has, but some say it’s as many as 1,200. There are sunbathing
beaches, city beaches, deserted island beaches, watersport beaches…
But of all the island’s white-sanded, palm-fringed stretches, there’s one you’ll fi nd in few guidebooks. Playa Lucía, in the poor, south-eastern province of Yabucoa, is known to locals as Playa de los Perros Muerto – or Dead Dog Beach – for the hundreds of ill-treated dogs that end up here. Some are dumped; some wander in. Most will end their days here in hunger and disease.
Or at least, that was the picture 10 years ago, when Chrissy Beckles fi rst came here to visit her husband, who was a stuntman on location.
“He called me before I got there and said, ‘You’re going to freak out when you see the dogs here,’” she remembers. She was indeed shocked by the conditions of those she encountered. “They were emaciated, mangey, and just looking for the tiniest amount of love and attention.”
While it would have been easy to look away, Beckles spent the week
1500dogs saved
feeding, watering and petting these dogs, and she was determined not to forget what she’d seen. “When I got back to New York I spent three hours planning.” Over the next few years she went back and forth to the island many times, during holidays from her job as a marketing consultant.
Between trips she lobbied friends to raise funds to pay for vet servicesand adoption. As an amateur »
Previous page⁄
Scrappy, one of The
Sato Project’s dogs,
with Chrissy Beckles
This page⁄
Scrappy and Beckles;
Puerto Rico has many
beautiful beaches;
Scrappy being
checked out by local
vet, Dr Feliciano
N-080-085_Puerto-rico.indd 083 15/06/2016 14:51
0 8 4 \ n
16boxer, she even used her bouts to raise money, under posters proclaiming: “We fi ght, so dogs don’t have to.”
In 2009 she returned to the island with her husband, who was fi lming The Rum Diary starring Johnny Depp, and spent a week out on Dead Dog Beach. “When Johnny and the crew found out, they helped me raise the money to rescue 16 dogs in a week.” It was a turning point for the New Yorker. “I sat at the bar at the end of the week and said to my husband, ‘I think I want to quit my job and do this full time.’ He said, ‘OK. Just don’t mess it up.’”
Fast forward to today and her charity The Sato Project, named after the local term for street dogs, has so far rescued more than 1,500 animals, at a cost of around US$1,000 (NOK8,220) each. Each one that is taken from Dead Dog Beach is put through what Beckles describes as an “exceptional vetting programme”, including neutering, vaccination and microchipping. They are then fl own up to adoptive families in the States, who are vetted almost as thoroughly as the dogs. “We won’t give them to just anyone,” says Beckles. “We want someone who will love them forever.”
Down on Playa Lucia today, the results are impressive. While when she
fi rst came here there were 100s of strays, on most days now, “you won’t see a single dog”. She puts this down to her concerted plan to focus the charity’s eff orts entirely on this one beach.
Now, however, she’s widening its scope with new community-based projects in the Yabacoa region. Joining with a local vet who has a neuter van, and with the approval of the area’s mayor, Rafael Surillo, The Sato Project is going out into the wider community to vaccinate, spay-neuter and microchip local dogs. The charity will also issue vouchers underwriting the costs of the same services to local villagers, and fi t special collars on street
dogs a week
N-080-085_Puerto-rico.indd 084 15/06/2016 14:51
n / 0 8 5
dogs they have treated but cannot aff ord to rescue. “The mayor is very hopeful that a lot of these dogs will then be adopted by members of the community, as they will know they’re healthy,” she explains.
Although these projects should reach an additional 900 dogs a year, on an island like Puerto Rico, where there are an estimated 250,000-300,000 satos, it’s just a drop in the ocean. Beckles’ biggest priority is “changing the perception and the cultural issues”. She’s actively involved in community outreach, particularly in schools.
The aim is to teach kids, who “grow up seeing dogs on the street and no one doing anything”, the importance
of humane animal treatment, ownership, and responsibility. Some of the high-school students she’s spoken to now even volunteer for the project, giving hope that the next generation will have a new attitude.
It is, as she says, a “huge undertaking for such a tiny organisation”, but Beckles is determined to carry on fi ghting for the dogs of Puerto Rico. “With the greatest will in the world, I’m never going to be able to rescue them all,” she says. But that’s not going to stop her trying.
thesatoproject.org
Norwegian fl ies to Puerto Rico from four destinations. Book fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
Norwegian
in the
Caribbean
St Croix
One of the US Virgin
Islands, St Croix has also
been Spanish, Dutch,
British, French, Danish
and Maltese. A melting
pot of cultures, it’s
got plenty of historical
places of interest and is
excellent for diving, too.
Martinique
As if the sun, sea, sand
and spirits (usually rum)
aren’t enough, the
island’s French heritage
has gifted a delicious
fusion cuisine, with
dishes such as fricassée
de chatrou (octopus
stew) and lambi (grilled
conch).
Guadeloupe
Known to its native
people as Karukera – the
place of beautiful waters
– this archipelago of
fi ve tropical islands is a
paradise for all kinds of
watery adventures, from
climbing inland waterfalls
to jet-skiing.
Norwegian fl ies to these destinations from New York, Boston and
Baltimore/Washington, from November to
January. Book now
AD
DIT
IO
NA
L P
HO
TO
GR
AP
HY
: C
HR
IS
TIN
A B
EC
KL
ES
, M
YR
IT
ZA
CA
ST
ILL
O
Opposite page⁄
A Puerto Rican beach; the
charity’s beach coordinator,
Ivette Fernandez on her daily
feeding route; two puppies on
their way to be adopted
This page⁄
Puppy siblings on Playa Lucia
N-080-085_Puerto-rico.indd 085 15/06/2016 14:51
Promotion
Here are some once-in-a-lifetime adventures to add to your bucket list
bucket listThe ultimate
Live like royaltyKOKKEDAL CASTLE COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
We’ve all looked at the kings and queens of the world and thought ‘I’d like to give that a go’. A stay at Kokkedal Castle Copenhagen gives you the opportunity. Housed in an 18th-century castle in Copenhagen’s countryside (30 minutes from the city), this hotel invites guests to enjoy its expansive grounds with activities such as yoga and biking. For those looking to be totally pampered, the Kokkedal Castle Spa by Sodashi is unrivalled – it was awarded Spa of the Year at the Danish Beauty Awards 2016. � +45 44 22 80 00 � kokkedalslotcopenhagen.dk
Solve the ultimate puzzleAMAZED GAMES, FINLAND
There’s a new craze taking over Finland and all you need to get involved is your imagination. At aMazed Games, which is rated number one in TripAdvisor’s Fun & Games in Helsinki list, you and your team are challenged to escape a room full of puzzles and locks in just 60 minutes. No prior experience or knowledge is required, but it helps to keep your wits about you and not lose track of time (easier said than done). Games are available in Finnish and English. � +358 44 977 41 55 � amazed.fi
Save the world ESCAPE ROOM, FINLAND
Grab three friends and put your minds to the test at Escape Room Helsinki. Seven challenges await you, each with unique stories and mysteries to solve. One to cross off your bucket list is Cosmos, the world’s fi rst virtual-reality escape room.
Strap on a pair of Oculus Rift VR glasses and dive into a deep-space adventure, where you and your team have 60 minutes to
work together and save planet Earth from destruction.Alhough you’ll be seated during the challenge, through the
Oculus technology you’ll fi nd that you can fl y through space, grasp objects with your hands, and interact with your team mates all the way. You and your team have 60 minutes – good luck!� +358 10 323 57 32 � escaperoom.fi
n_july_bucket list V2.indd 069 21/06/2016 10:51
Become a twitcher LOFOTEN RAFTING, NORWAY
The Lofoten Islands are famous for their huge eagle population, and there’s no better place to observe our feathered friends than from the sea. Lofoten Rafting is an unforgettable journey through the Islands’ nature and culture. Package and custom-made tours are available, with guides so knowledgeable they’re able to fi nd birds on almost every trip – tours will even bring along a treat to tempt any shy eagles as close to the boat as possible. The rafting trips are available all year round, so it’s never too late to go on an adventure. � +47 921 15 700 � lofoten-rafting.no
Express yourself DESIGN MUSEUM, FINLAND
The spirit of expression is alive and well at Finland’s Design Museum, where the works of design innovator Eerio Aarnio are on display. Delve into the history of Aarnio’s work, from the stylish furniture and lamps of the 1950s to his unique, modern one-off s, and explore the underlying process of the design industry.
In a Post-modern twist, the museum itself shows off an experimental streak, launching a new type of mobile architecture. Robotic stands constantly move the exhibits around the museum, creating a continuously moving exhibition space. � +358 9 6220 540 � designmuseum.fi
Spend time in a Sámi goahtiTROMSØ UNIVERSITY MUSEUM, NORWAY
Make sure to step inside a goahti turf hut at least once in your life. The traditional homesteads of the indigenous inhabitants of northern Scandinavia, these huts are full of Sámi history. That’s why Tromsø University Museum has opened a goahti to the public from 15 June to 15 August. Venture inside, where you can sit on reindeer hides and enjoy a free cup of coff ee and reindeer meat, while the museum host talks about Sámi life past and present. You’ll also get the opportunity to practice your lasso, a skill formerly used in reindeer herding. � +47 77 64 50 01 � uit.no/tmu
Visit the home of a famous painterMUNCH’S HOUSE, NORWAY
You’ve got to be pretty special for your house to be turned into a museum. It’s a select group that includes Charles Dickens, Monet and also the famous painter Edvard Munch. The latter kept this property, fi rst bought in 1898, until his death in 1944. Three years later, it was opened as a museum in honour of his life and work. The house was an inspiration to him, and its tranquil surroundings gave him peace of mind. Make sure you visit and fi nd out why. � vestfoldmuseene.no � munchshus.no
n_july_bucket list V2.indd 070 21/06/2016 10:44
Finding mastodons in sinkholes? Playing shuffleboard with grannies? Eating like a cowboy? You must be in the Sunshine State
By Norwegian
Florida
The souvenir VINTAGE POSTER
Visitors have been coming to Florida for sun, sea and sand for more than 100 years, leaving behind them a rich vein of travel adverts
and promotional posters. Choose your favourite Art Nouveau-style lithograph or 1960s airline map at one of the shops along Florida
Antique Trail for the ultimate in kitsch mementoes. Or find replicas, like this one, at WhiteOneSugar’s Etsy shop (from 100NOK).
floridaantiquetrail.com; etsy.com
0 8 8 \ n
N-088_ByNorwegian.indd 088 16/06/2016 14:07
� Florida is known as the USA’s Sunshine State
� With 20 million people, it’s the third most-populous
US state after California and Texas
� Visitors are never more than 100km from the beach
� Norwegian fl ies to Orlando from three destinations,
and to Fort Lauderdale-Florida, next to Miami, from fi ve
The basics
The postcard THE EVERGLADES
This area of wetlands, spread over a massive, swampy 6,100km2, is a unique habitat for unusual, endangered flora and fauna, as well as manatees, river otters and flamingoes. Explore its many waterways by airboat or, for total immersion, take an eight-day paddle along the 160km Wilderness Waterway. florida-everglades.com
The key areas
Florida
The Panhandle
At almost a right angle to the
rest of the state, this north-
west portion is home to the
state capital, Tallahassee, and
the so-called Emerald Coast
along the Gulf of Mexico, which
is popular with Spring Breakers
and golfers. Panama City Beach
is the biggest resort.
Central Florida
Known for “thrills ’n’ spills”,
central Florida doesn’t just
have the Disney World, Epcot
and SeaWorld theme parks, but
Legoland, Busch Gardens and
Universal Studios, too. The two
main resports, Orlando and
Kissimmee, have plenty more
to offer families too.
Gulf Coast
If one thinks of Florida’s shape
as a foot en pointe, then
the Gulf Coast – 340km of
white-sand, palm-tree fringed
beaches – stretches all the
way from the heel (Tampa) to
the pointed toe (Naples). This
area’s more relaxed, castaway
feel makes it particularly
popular for “fl op ’n’ drop”
holidays and weddings.
Miami
In a game of poker, this city
would see the rest of the
state’s beaches, food and
entertainment, and raise them
Art Deco architecture,
grade-A nightlife at club LIV
and a hip-swinging Cuban vibe.
So much fun, Will Smith
wrote a song about it.
The Keys
Down to the far south,
this string of sun-drenched
islands might well be in the
Caribbean. From Key Largo to
Key West, the archipelago is
united by the unlikely Overseas
Highway (a motorway that
seems at points to be fl oating),
Hemingway-era drinking dens
and deep-sea fi shing.
� Florida is known as
� With 20 million peo
US t
sics
n / 0 8 9
N-088_ByNorwegian.indd 089 16/06/2016 14:07
DID YOU KNOWTHAT IN ICELAND...you don t have to buy bottled water, but a bottleof wine is a lot cheaper at Duty Free Iceland
www.dutyfree.is
ALGARVE • ANDALUSIA • ARUBA • BAHAMAS • BERLIN • BULGARIA • CANARY ISLANDS • CAPE VERDE
COSTA RICA • DOMINICAN REPUBLIC • FORMENTERA • JAMAICA • MADEIRA • MAJORCA • MAURITIUS
MEXICO • MIAMI • NEW YORK • MOROCCO • PANAMA • SAINT MARTIN • SRI LANKA • TURKEY
Your next holiday is on
070_Norwegian_July_2016.indd 1 17/06/2016 09:59
Florida is the world’s number one place for sinkholes, especially around
Tampa, where one tri-county area is known as “Sinkhole Alley”. Until
recently this was seen as an entirely bad thing – particularly for the houses,
cars and occasional people who got sucked into them – but it’s also helped
clear up a prehistoric mystery. This April, an archaeologist discovered
evidence in one that man had lived here, owned dogs and hunted mastodon
up to 14,500 years ago – 1,500 years earlier than was originally thought.
Mastodons in “Sinkhole Alley”
The face THE FASHION POET
Born-and-bred Miamian Annie Vazquez is on a mission to spread positivity in her plastic-surgery loving hometown: “Miami can be a challenge for women who are insecure,” she says, explaining her motivation to set up lifestyle blog The Fashion Poet. “It’s about supporting women, embracing the body and being natural.” She took time out from the crusade to share her favourite Miami must-dos.
thefashionpoet.com
EAT“Joe’s Stone Crab is
legendary down here. The crabs are so delicious that people get them fl own to
other states, and everything else is delicious too.”
joesstonecrab.com
SHOP“Thanks to Art Basel,
Wynwood has become the really hip area, with cool bars, street art and great
boutiques.” wynwoodmiami.com
RELAX“I love the spa at the
Eden Roc Hotel. That place has the best massages – you come out a whole
new person.” edenrocmiami.com
SEE THE SUNSET“Miami’s so flat that you
can see great sunsets pretty much everywhere, but I really love the view
from Dinner Quay Marina in Coconut Grove.” coconutgrove.com
The idea EDIBLE SIX-PACK RING
Plastic rings from six-packs are said to kill more than one million ocean birds, marine mammals and sea turtles each year, as the animals accidentally swallow them or get tangled up. So it’s great news that Saltwater Brewery in Florida has produced a biodegradable, edible six-pack ring, made from the by-products of the brewing process. We’re not sure we’re up for eating one though. saltwaterbrewery.com
You can eat this
n / 0 9 1
N-088_ByNorwegian.indd 091 15/06/2016 09:14
Although the University of Bergen was only founded in 1946, the University
Museum of Bergen has been around for more than a century longer. Situated
on campus, it houses some of the largest cultural exhibitions in Norway,
including displays on Norwegian traditional costumes, the Viking Age
and religious art. Surrounding the museum are beautiful grounds, formerly
a botanical garden used for research, teaching, and the development of new species. Today it’s a great place to sit with a coffee from the museum café.
+47 555 893 60, uib.no
The University Museum of Bergen
092_Norwegian_July_2016.indd 1 21/06/2016 11:16
Celebrating its 450th birthday last September, San Augustine is the
longest continuously occupied, European-established settlement in
America. Its most famous building, Flagler College, was once the Hotel
Ponce de León, one of the earliest buildings in the US to have electricity.
Dedicated staff were hired to turn lights on for nervous guests, who
included Mark Twain, Theodore Roosevelt and Somerset Maugham. staugustinegovernment.com
The USA’s oldest city
The stayEAST MIAMI
A fi rst US opening for Hong Kong’s Swire chain, East is a new multiplatform, downtown hotel that’s clearly done its market research. Business types will love conference rooms with 270o views; foodies are guaranteed to swoon for on-trend Uruguayan restaurant, Parador La Huella; and the chain’s 24-hour gym, “Beast” (Body at East), will keep Muscle Marys happy, too. east-miami.com
2. MAKO
A 70m drop and 117kph top
speed mean this shark-
themed ride at SeaWorld
is now the fastest, longest
roller coaster in Orlando.
Just when you thought
it was safe...
seaworldparks.com
3. FROZEN EVER AFTER
Opened last month
at Epcot’s Norwegian
Pavilion, this water
ride and accompanying
Elsa-and-Anna Meet
and Greet will thrill
Frozen fans.
disneyworld.com
4. SKULL ISLAND
Everything about this King
Kong-themed adventure is
on a giant scale, from the
25m safari vehicles to its
stars - dinosaurs as well
as the famous ape. Not for
those who scare easily.
universalorlando.com
1. COBRA’S CURSE
The latest coaster from
Busch Gardens Tampa Bay
sends riders forwards,
backwards and then
spinning, all under the
watchful metre-wide eyes
of a giant serpent.
seaworldparks.com
The kids NEW THEME PARKS
This summer there’s more for little ones as four new rides open for the first time…
The nicknameSUNSHINE STATE
Despite the name, Florida isn’t actually the sunniest place in the States. That prize goes to Yuma in Arizona, followed by Redding, CA, and then Las Vegas. The top Floridan spot – Key West - comes all the way down in 12th. Given that the state does come top for beaches, perhaps a better name might be ‘Beachiest State’?
Th kid
1
2
3
4
IL
LU
ST
RA
TI
ON
BY
IA
N W
AR
D
n / 0 9 3
N-088_ByNorwegian.indd 093 15/06/2016 09:14
No.766307 - Business Meeting Park 1pp.indd 1 16/06/2016 11:32
Identified by their pastel tracksuits, neatly set hair and fanny packs, the
over-seventies are in the majority here, as Florida is the number one
retirement destination in the US. This demographic quirk has its upsides:
early-bird dinner offers; shuffleboard (practically the state sport: try it
at the well-lit courts at North Shore Park in Miami Beach); and plenty of
after-lunch naps. Oh, and pick up a copy of Early Bird, the story of one
twenty-something’s holiday in a Boca Raton retirement village.
Retirement holiday?
The cuisine AUTHENTIC CRACKER FOOD
After self-confessed “history geek” Greg Baker became fascinated with Florida’s early cattle-ranching settlers (known as “crackers” due to the sound of their whips), he wanted to set up a restaurant that faithfully recreated their cuisine. “Modern convenience foods mean people in Florida have lost touch with what they used to eat,” says the chef, who established Fodder & Shine in Tampa late last year. He now spends his days hunting out authentic heritage strains of oranges, tomatoes and beef – “there’s a large amount of fact checking” – and introducing diners to forgotten dishes such as pulu, “like a paella”, and sour orange pie, a precursor to the more familiar key lime. Not just a meal but a history lesson, too. fodderandshine.com
Florida has earned the nickname Hollywood East, thanks to the number of fi lms and TV shows that are fi lmed here, so make a pilgrimage to your favourite...
MIAMI VICE
Shot on location in Miami’s South Beach area, the show turned the lounge suit into an unlikely style icon and inspired the restoration of the area’s delapidated Art Deco buildings. Find the original cop shop on the corner of SW 7th St and SW 2nd Ave. EDWARD SCISSORHANDS
The house featured in Johnny Depp and Tim Burton’s best collaboration can still be found in Lutz, a small suburb north of Tampa. As in the movie, snow here is rare, thanks to a subtropical climate.
BLOODLINE
Those enjoying series two of the Florida Keys-set thriller on Netfl ix will no doubt be equally thrilled to visit real-life, bungalow-style Rayburn house at The Moorings Village & Spa, Islamorada.
themooringsvillage.com
CSI: MIAMI
Eager to sink a few cold ones in Horatio Caine’s favourite bar? Well you’re out of luck. Despite the crime series’ name, except for a few establishing shots, the whole production was put together in California. Booooo!
mall pa. w to a
eseys-
o
conon
ee aarerea’a’s s DeDecoco e e
pp
W
ANDNDNDNNDNDNNDNNNDNDDDDDDNNNNNNNDNNDNDDDDDDNDNDNDNNNNDDDNNNNNNDNDDDDDDDNNNNNNNDNDDDDNDNNNNNNNDDDDNDNNNDNDNNNDDDDNNNNNDDNNNDDDNNNDDDNDNNNDDNNDDDDNDNNDDDDNDNNNNDDDDNNNNDDDDDDDDDDDSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
eddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddnd
tn still
a small mall
a
a
The activitySET-JETTING
FA
SH
IO
N P
OE
T B
Y M
EL
IS
SA
DE
MA
TA
; G
RE
G B
AK
ER
BY
PE
ZZ
PH
OT
O;
AL
AM
Y;
GE
TT
Y;
RE
X F
EA
TU
RE
S;
RO
BE
RT
HA
RD
IN
G,
IA
N W
AR
D
n / 0 9 5
N-088_ByNorwegian.indd 095 16/06/2016 09:07
Secure Wi-Fi for travellersKeezel is set to become the next essential piece of travelling technology, protecting your privacy when using public Wi-Fi
These days, wherever you go you’ll
be able to access public Wi-Fi,
but while this is convenient it also
exposes you to several risks.
Public Wi-Fi is notoriously
dangerous, as even low-level hackers can use it to
access to your social-media accounts, or worse,
your bank details. It doesn’t matter if you’re at
home or travelling for work, you need to be able
to protect yourself. That’s where Keezel comes in.
It’s a portable internet-protection device,
created to put your mind as ease. Using Virtual
Private Network (VPN) technology, Keezel guards
your devices from would-be hackers and online
snoopers, using an encryption algorithm similar to
those used by large corporations and government
organisations.
Keezel works with any device capable of
connecting to Wi-Fi, from smartphones to Apple
TVs to Xbox Ones, and is able to connect to up to
six devices simultaneously. It also enables you to
unlock content wherever you are. No longer will
region locks keep you from catching up with your
favourite shows. Simply connecting your Keezel to
a server in the country of your choice will let you
surf the internet as if you were there – perfect
for viewing content posted by overseas friends.
As an added bonus, Keezel has a battery
capacity quadruple that of an iPhone 6, so you
can use it to charge your other devices too.
With Keezel, there’s no need to install any
software, just connect and you’re set. It is this
elegant simplicity that has led to the device’s
popularity, with an IndieGoGo campaign that
reached its goal in four days, and has recieved
more than $1 million in donations. Whether it’s
for home or abroad, work or play, this is an
essential piece of next-generation technology.
keezel.co/deal
Features
Prevent others from
snooping on what
you do online
Unblock Facebook
& other websites all
over the world
Secure all your devices
with just one Keezel, no
installation needed
Take advantage of more
than 1250 VPN servers in
160+ countries
Protect yourself and
your data from hacking
Exclusive deal
One Keezel device
and one lifetime
VPN for $379
(retail price $499)
keezel.co/deal
Promotion
n_july_keezel_V2.indd 069 17/06/2016 13:07
Join in now at
www.kg.land
and quote the code
‘Travel&Explore’
to get a free gift
Promotion
DNA & friendshipAre we genetically
linked to our friends?
DNA & datingAre people more likely
to choose a spouse with
similar DNA?
DNA & parentingDo genes play a key
role in parenting?
DNA & entrepreneurship
Do entrepreneurs and
employees have different
personality traits?
DNA & financeCan your genes decide
if you’re good at
saving money?
DNA & gamblingAre gambling
decisions genetic? Are
you born a gambler?
DNA & you
Get to know yourselfThe new web app KG Land, powered by Karmagenes, combines psychology and genetics to help personal development
As humans, we spend our
lives meeting and getting
to know other people, but
often we don’t really know
ourselves. The team behind
new web app KG Land, powered by
Karmagenes, is changing that, combining
genetics, psychology and technology, and
bringing them to the masses in a modern,
simple and scientifi c way.
Visitors to the website will fi nd
themselves entering ‘KG Land’, a virtual
world in which every decision a user makes
– from the avatar they choose to the way
they answer a question – reveals something
about their personality. Progressing
through the game and answering more
questions means users constantly further
their knowledge about themselves.
“The game gives players constant updates
based on their personality and their own
self-perception,” says Kyriakos Kokkoris,
co-founder and CEO of Karmagenes.
If the users want to know even more
about themselves, they can then send off
a swab of saliva to the Karmagenes HQ in
Switzerland for a DNA test. They’ll then
receive a 37-page detailed report in the
form of an e-book, explaining what their
DNA and environment say about their
personality and behavioural characteristics.
“Having a psychological test coupled
with genetic analysis through gamifi cation
makes the science more comprehensive
and user friendly. It provides meaningful
information based on both nature and
nurture,” says Kokkoris.
The team consists of fi ve scientists,
who have PhDs ranging from neuroscience
and genetics to molecular biology – plus
a psychologist. They joined forces in 2013
with the initial idea to connect people
through DNA and bring science to the
general public. They used their collective
knowledge to develop the concept.
Understanding yourself is not only
benefi cial on a personal level, but also on
a professional one. “Genetic analysis can
show us our potential and hidden talents.
You might already know you’re good at
organisation, but you never realised you
have other inherent skills such as being
decisive and confi dent,” explains Kokkoris.
“If your DNA shows you have these skills,
you’re more likely to believe in yourself and
make better professional decisions. Our goal
is to promote the positive aspects of DNA.”
The web app is still in the beta testing
stage but, according to Kokkoris, the next
step is to create a social network that is
based solely on personality. Is this the future
of friendship? Either way, Karmagenes helps
you get to know the most important person
in your life – yourself.
www.kg.land
n_july_Karmagenes V3.indd 070 20/06/2016 14:14
Education section
The call of hospitalityHeadhunters are looking out for those with interpersonal skills and a talent for business
The tourism industry is a
thriving concern around
the world – it currently
accounts for 9% of global
GDP. It’s generating more
and more job opportunities each year
around the world.
Spain has produced industry leaders
for more than 20 years, and Les Roches
Marbella University is one of the best
places you can study. Located in Marbella,
the university focuses on the human
aspect of hotel management, reminding
its students that the hospitality industry
is, at its core, all about serving people. Les
Roches Marbella is truly an international
institution, with a student body of 74
nationalities fi lling the halls – ranked
number one in Spain and the third highest
in the world for an international career.
An average of 1,000 students attend Les
Roches Marbella each year. They have
the option to study for Bachelor’s
degrees with four specialisations to
choose from: entrepreneurship, human
resources, events and resorts, or to take
postgraduate courses in international
hotel management or marketing
management for luxury tourism. Aside
from classrooms that are equipped with
the latest technology, the campus has lush
gardens, several restaurants and sports
facilities. Les Roches Marbella prides itself
on having a unique focus on practical
learning; thanks to the reputation it
has built in its 65-year history within
the industry, undergraduates receive
on-the-job training as well as academic
lessons. Students may fi nd themselves
on internships at some of the most
recognised hotels worldwide, including
the Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons Hotel,
Sheraton, Hilton and many more.
Le Roches Marbella’s reputation also
means it has become a major site for
headhunters. On average, each Les
Roches Marbella graduate receives 4.7 job
offers to join the world’s best hotel chains.
It could be the perfect starting point to
kickstart your career in one of the world’s
biggest industries.
lesroches.es
n_july_Escuela V3.indd 069 20/06/2016 11:41
Discover a new way to holiday with languages.
Travel-specific content − learn
the basics and useful phrases
for your holiday.
City-specific sightseeing vocab
for your trip to Paris or Lyon.
Experience the local cuisine,
and enjoy your food with our
food-specific courses.
Learn pronunciation, vocabulary,
grammar, lifestyle, romance and more...
traveLling made easy with babbel.
Focus on words and phrases that you know you will need. Memorise some basics like, ‘Where is…?’, ‘I would like…’, and, of course, ‘please’, ‘thank you’, ‘hello’ and ‘goodbye’. Even if you know literally nothing else in the language, these phrases will allow you to start talking right after you step off the plane.
Keep it relevant2
You don’t need years of study under your belt before you start using a language. Learning a bit every day helps to integrate the language into your everyday life and also to retain it. Little but often is the best approach. Set one small, achievable goal every day: ‘I want to order a coffee in Spanish.’ - ‘I will ask for directions in French.’ Keep it simple, it will stick.
1
There’s always the chance to learn some of the local language for your holiday, even if you’re already en route! Here are our tips for picking up a language when you have no time to spare.
learn as you go
Last minute hacks for travellers
QUICKLANGUAGETRAVEL TIPS5
Go to Babbel.com/coupon and enter EASY after you register to claim your 3-month free offer.
Sign up for our 3-month subscription and get 3 EXTRA months for free!
TAKE ME WITH YOU
3 MONTHS
OFFERFREE
Discover a new language experience.
CODE: EASY*
3 MONTHS
OFFERFREE
Discover a new language experience.
CODE: EASY*
3 MONTHS
OFFERFREE
Discover a new language experience.
CODE: EASY*
3 MONTHS
OFFERFREE
Discover a new language experience.
CODE: EASY*
3 MONTHS
OFFERFREE
*
No.764086 Lesson Nine insert.indd 1 13/06/2016 14:13
Dedicate some of your downtime to practicing your new language. Bored on your flight or have a long layover? Do some language lessons on your smartphone. Stopping by your hotel for an afternoon power nap? Learn some phrases that you can try out in the evening. Lounging at a sunny café? Eavesdrop on the next table to see if you can pick out words you’ve learned.
Your smartphone gives you access to a wealth of resources: podcasts in your target language, dictionaries, even language courses like Babbel! The next time you whip out your smartphone to check Facebook or to play a game resist the temptation and spend five minutes learning something new.
use those spare minutes
trust your devices
3
5
To make the most of your handful of useful words and phrases, you have to try them out. The more you speak, the better your new language will stick, so put it into practice constantly. Speaking someone else’s language will always make a better impression than expecting them to speak yours — even when you make mistakes!
Don’t be shy
Your voyage of discovery doesn’t have to end when you fly home. The progress you will make while on holiday is a first step towards language mastery. Keep up these five learning habits and keep learning. You’ll be glad you did the next time you travel!
4
LanguagE Hacks for Travellers5 last-minute tips
TAKE ME WITH YOU
Go to babbel.com/coupon
Click on Register Now
Select your learning language and register
Then enter the code EASY (in capitals)
sign up for 3 months, get 3 extra months free
1
2
3
4
Go to babbel.com/coupon
Click on Register Now
Select your learning language and register
Then enter the code EASY (in capitals)
sign up for 3 months, get 3 extra months free
1
2
3
4
Go to babbel.com/coupon
Click on Register Now
Select your learning language and register
Then enter the code EASY (in capitals)
sign up for 3 months, get 3 extra months free
1
2
3
4
Go to babbel.com/coupon
Click on Register Now
Select your learning language and register
Then enter the code EASY (in capitals)
sign up for 3 months, get 3 extra months free
1
2
3
4
Babbel makes learning a language fun and
simple. With just a few minutes a day, you
can improve your travel experience.
Travel-specific content − learn the basics
and useful phrases for your holiday.
14 languages to choose from, including
Spanish, French, Italian and German.
Over 8500 hours of content available.
Available on desktop, mobile & tablet.
language learning made fun with babbel.
3 MONTHS
OFFERFREE
* 1. Voucher is for an additional 3 month subscription plan to learn one of 14 languages available when a 3 month subscription is purchased at the price of £17.95/€19.95 (3+3) 2. After the initial 6 months (3+3), the
subscription will automatically renew for a further 3 month periods for the above mentioned amount, unless you cancel any time up until one day before the next renewal. 3. Offer available until the 30 September 2016
4. Information on the Right of Withdrawal for consumers and the Terms & Conditions can be found at http://about.babbel.com/en/terms/ 5. Offer only available to new Babbel customers Lesson Nine GmbH, Bergmannstr. 5,
10961 Berlin. Managing Directors: Markus Witte, Thomas Holl, Lorenz Heine. Amtsgericht Berlin-Charlottenburg: Company Registration Number HRB 110215. Got a question? Need some help? Email info@babbel.com
*
No.764086 Lesson Nine insert.indd 2 13/06/2016 14:13
The American dream Studying in the US is a dream for many, but getting there can seem out of reach. ACN gives a helping hand
Promotion
“Ask yourself how many glasses your child can handle you drinking before their holiday is affected, rather than how many you want”
The number of fi lms and TV shows
set at American universities
suggests they’re pretty fun places
to be. Whether it’s Rory’s life at
Yale on Gilmour Girls or the
Barden Bellas’ antics in Pitch Perfect, campus life
never looked so good. But what the cameras
don’t catch is the long application process it
takes to get there – made all the more confusing
when you live halfway across the world.
Enter the American College of Norway (ACN).
Based in the coastal town of Moss, it’s a private
university that offers one year of an American
college education before its students complete
their degree at a US institution. Its dedicated team
helps students choose, apply and prepare for
university in the US over the course of this year.
“We try to go through every detail with them so
when they go over to the US, they’ll be excited,
not nervous,” says ACN adminstrative director
Krista Lauritzen. “We like to tell people that
studying in the US is a way of life. Your whole
world will revolve around the university – your
sporting events, clubs, friendship groups. So it’s
important to know what’s available to you and
what you can expect from a university, but also
what it expects from you.”
Students can choose to go to any university,
anywhere in the US. The College is highly successful
at placing students, thanks to the knowledge of
its staff, as well as its four partner universities.
These will accept any ACN student upon successful
completion of the one-year programme.
ACN takes just 100 students each year. “Our goal
is not to be a big school,” says Lauritzen. “It means
we can give each student the help they need.”
americancollege.no
Campus life
ACN students organise
events to celebrate
typical American holidays
Super Bowl party
Thanksgiving
Prom
Halloween
Homecoming
n_july_american_college_of_Norway_FP V3.indd 070 17/06/2016 15:47
n ⁄ DIRECTORY
WATCH OUT FOR TRIWA
TRIWA was founded in 2007 by four friends who wanted to change the perception of watches from status symbols to style symbols. All of TRIWA’s products are designed at the brand’s creative studio in Stockholm. Blue is one of the themes for its AW16 collection, used to provide stand-out details, like this bold sub dial on the Blue Eye Falken. Its organic brown leather strap from Tärnsjö serves to enhance the Klein blue colour. Buy online at triwa.com or at the fl agship store in Stockholm (Grev Turegatan 13).
triwa.com
STYLE AND SUBSTANCE
Oppermann London creates luxury leather goods, inspired by Swedish minimalism with a twist of London style.
Each product is built to last, handmade in Italy using Swedish and Italian natural leathers. The company is infl uenced by architecture, utilising clean lines and geometric shapes to make items with a focus on function, simplicity and style. Selling exclusively through its own webshop, Oppermann London’s products are also surprisingly aff ordable.
oppermann-london.com
FIND YOUR FEMININITY WITH EMMY
High-waisted trousers, full skirts, quirky knits – Swedish fashion brand Emmy is all about femininity and retro-style clothing, inspired by past eras from the 1930s to the 1960s. Despite the vintage feel of her collections, owner and designer Emmy Nilsson strives to ensure garments can be combined with more modern pieces too. “My designs are for everyone. You don’t need to have victory rolls and red lipstick, although this works well too,” she says.
The feminine silhouettes and a focus on making well-fi tting garments means the clothes fl atter any shape and are extremely comfortable too. Emmy even makes its clothes in 10 diff erent
sizes, ensuring a great fi t for all. What’s the point of looking good if you don’t feel it?
Emmy has designed a stunning new collection for the summer season. This time it’s 40s inspired and based on themes such as tennis and travel. The lighter fabrics are ideal for the warmer months.
Online, you can fi nd a list of Emmy stockists, as well as peruse and purchase current and previous collections.
+46 70 286 95 37, emmydesign.se
n_july_directory V2.indd 002 20/06/2016 17:36
SCAN SAT
Scan Sat is a network for phone, TV and internet, with coverage from Benidorm to La Manga del Mar Menor, including Torrevieja. It off ers packages that cater to personal needs. Popular possibilities are mobile plans with national and international calls; Total Package British TV, which includes a 5Mb Internet connection, a phone with international calls and 21 HD British TV channels; and Total Package Scandinavian + British TV, comprising the same as the latter but with 58 HD Scandinavian and British TV channels.
+34 865 66 18 18, scansat-network.net, info@scansat-network.net
DEN NORSKE SKOLE GRAN CANARIA The approved Norwegian private school in Gran Canaria prides itself on a healthy environment, safe learning facilities and educational excellence. Its students range across school years 1-13, incorporating primary and secondary learning in one place. The glowing student recommendations are testament to the school’s welcoming nature. Staff even help arrange contact with host families for foreign students. As a dyslexia-friendly school, classes are small, with highly qualifi ed teachers, and it provides a great opportunity to learn Spanish.
colegio.no
KEMPINSKI HOTEL BAHÍA
If you’re looking to escape the crowds and fi nd a little piece of paradise, the Kempinski Hotel Bahía has everything you need. Located close to Estepona and just a 15-minute drive from Marbella and Puerto Banus, this is pure relaxation at its best. Sub-tropical gardens, a superb choice of dining venues, three swimming pools and a luxury treatment spa will leave you feeling refreshed, with the state-of-the-art-gym and a dedicated golf concierge completing the package for any fi tness fanatics in the family.
Carretera de Cádiz, 29680 Estepona, kempinski.com/estepona
LES CUBES
This chic restaurant is situated on the Milla de Oro stretch of Marbella. It’s renowned for its spectacular sea views and consists of three rooms, one cocktail bar and a cellar stocked with more than 275 types of wine. The restaurant off ers high quality local and international cuisine. Parking is free, and you can show your boarding card to receive a 10% discount. Make sure you don’t miss out on Les Cubes’ live jazz experience, every Friday night.
Urb.Oasis Club CN340, KM183, Marbella, +34 952 868 396
lescubesmarbella.com
n_july_directory V2.indd 003 20/06/2016 17:36
n ⁄ DIRECTORY
FROM STEREOSCOPES TO SELFIES Preus Museum, Norway’s national museum of photography, is the place for fascinating exhibitions and events. This summer, ‘The Edvard Munch/Experiments’ joins the line up, showcasing Munch’s creative way of working and how he formed his ideas for both painting and photography.
You can also check out ‘A History Of Photography’, an exhibition detailing how developments in the photographic process have shaped how we take pictures and what we take pictures of.
+47 33 03 16 30, preusmuseum.no
NOW THAT’S ART
The Nordenfj eldske Kunstindustrimuseum’s extensive collection of works features Baroque silverworks, two custom-designed offi ce interiors by Henry van de Velde and Finn Juhl, and Norwegian contemporary craft. This summer you can see the tapestries of Hannah Ryggen, returned to the museum’s permanent collection after a year on loan to large retrospective exhibitions, as well as True Blue, an exhibition that celebrates the visual language of blue and white (pictured).
+47 738 089 50, nkim.no
MUSICAL HISTORY TOUR Formally the home of composer Edvard Grieg, Troldhaugen in Bergen is now a living museum, comprised of an exhibition centre and concert hall. Music-history fans will want to check out Grieg’s villa, which dates back to 1885, where Grieg composed many of his best-known works. Every day at 1pm the museum hosts a concert, with Norway’s best pianists playing a number of his most famous compositions, a unique experience which combines the beauty of Grieg’s music and the environment outside.
troldhaugen.com
UNDER THE NORTHERN LIGHTS While most modern conference centres are stylish, this one really stands out. Located above the Arctic Circle, under the aurora borealis, the Sámi Cultural Centre is a testament to the creativity of the Sámi, and is the largest events venue in northern Lapland. The facility is equipped with state-of-the-art tech, features activities such as husky safaris, and you can visit the Sámi Parliament hall too. It can be found in the heart of Sápmi, surrounded by a beautiful natural landscape, ideal for enjoying some peace and quiet.
sajos.fi
n_july_directory V2.indd 004 21/06/2016 11:27
SCANDINAVIAN BUTIK
No need to fi ll the suitcase with all your favourite food, candy and design after a trip to Norway, Sweden or Denmark – US-based food service, scandinavian butik, is here to lighten the load. It’s the most convenient way to stock up on a huge range of cheeses, meats, breads and condiments, as well as local favourites such as Anthon Berg chocolate and Haribo, both in-store and online. It also carries gifts from some of Scandinavia’s best design brands, including Stelton, Normann Copenhagen, Ekelund and more.
349 Main Ave, Norwalk, CT 06851, scandinavianbutik.com
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Everybody wants to get fi t and healthy, but lets face it – cutting out our favourite foods is absolutely rubbish. So thank goodness for Meal My Day, a new way of dieting brought to you by Sini and Tuukka Linjala, who have realised the key to successful weight loss is to continue to eat the food that you like.
Meal My Day isn’t about starving yourself, it’s about adding some vegetables and a bit of open-mindedness to your plate. The Linjalas’ aim is to show that it’s possible to eat healthily and still love every bite. Meal My Day shows how easy that is. Its 30 ready-made diet plans, all created by personal trainers, are available to subscribers.
More than 800 healthy homemade recipes are featured on the website, along with a shopping list for every week, so the whole family can enjoy healthy (and, more importantly, delicious) meals.
Getting to grips with Meal My Day is easy. Step one, create your profi le. Step two, plan your perfect diet and see the nutritional value of your food. Step three, tuck in and enjoy your meal.
It’s the perfect recipe for feeling good – eat your favourite meals and feel no regrets afterwards.
+358 40 645 4033, mealmyday.com
FLORIDA MAGIC When it comes to holiday homes, Orlando reigns supreme, as thousands of people from Norway and wider Europe hunt for places in the Sunshine State. The Jerry Barker Group has an excellent reputation, helping hundreds of clients purchase a new or resale vacation home in the area. Holiday homes are supposed to help you unwind, so Jerry Barker takes care of all the stressful work, helping you to fi nd the best locations, negotiate the best price and sort all aspects of buying and ownership.
+1 407 286 8170, jerrybarker.com
n_july_directory V2.indd 005 20/06/2016 17:36
n ⁄ DIRECTORY
GET READY FOR YOUR HOLIDAY
For many of us, holiday preparation means choosing which museums to visit and deciding whether we need to pack that tenth pair of shoes. According to the Ministry for Foreign Aff airs in Sweden, however, it ought to involve a lot more than that.Patric Nilsson at the Ministry explains why it’s important to organise insurance, buy return tickets and fi nd out what’s happening in your destination before getting on the plane.
“People have to be aware that everything that happens at home can happen when you travel, but the circumstances can be very diff erent when you’re on a trip,” says Nilsson. “When
Swedish citizens are at home in Sweden, for example, they’re entitled to medical care, but abroad it can be very expensive.”
In an eff ort to reach young travellers, the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Aff airs released UD Resklar in 2011, an app that provides easily accessible travel information (in Swedish) for Swedish citizens going abroad. Users can input their passport, visa and insurance details for safekeeping, as well as those of their emergency contact.
ud.se/resklar
CURE YOUR SHYNESS Anxiety can often result in the avoidance of social situations, aff ecting your ability to develop relationships and progress at work. Though it can seem like a problem for life, social phobia can be treated with Sympatix’s endoscopic sympathetic block – a drug-free day surgical procedure. Academic studies have demonstrated the procedure’s eff ectiveness in combating the psychological feeling of anxiety. The block can also help address stuttering, trembling and blushing.
+358 50 67222, con sympatix.fi , telaranta@gmail.com
BECOME YOUR OWN DERMATOLOGIST
Do you have a rash, bumps or a strange spot but never really have the time to get it checked out by a dermatologist? With the First Derm app, you can get advice remotely. Just take two pictures and describe your problem, and within hours you’ll receive advice from a board-certifi ed dermatologist. If needed, First Derm can get you a quick face-to-face appointment, but in 70% of cases all that’s needed is prescription-free medication from a pharmacy. The service is available in six languages and is compatible with iOS and Android. fi rstderm.com
n_july_directory V2.indd 006 20/06/2016 17:36
Promotion
TvåSmåSvin (Two Small Pigs)
STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN
This tavern, in the Årsta district,
specialises in open sandwiches, Czech beer and the Scandinavian
spirit, Aquavit. Its interior is heavily infl uenced by Danish and
Czech design – think patterned tiles, leather sofas and high stools,
all accompanied by marble and glass lamps, as well as a well-
stocked bar. The tavern was opened in 2014 by Jimmy Nygren
and Kalle Olofsson, who both found inspiration in the traditional
Danish open sandwich, smørrebrød. On these you’ll fi nd everything
from pickled herring to pork; from raw beef to fresh beets.
� Årstavägen 49, 12054 Årsta � +46 08 722 75 20
� tvasmasvin.se � info@tvasmasvin.se
PaleetOSLO, NORWAY
The only bad thing
about eating at Paleet,
Oslo’s newest destination
for fashion, food and lifestyle
is that there’s too much choice.
Visit Sabaki if you fancy sushi,
sashimi and maki – or if you
feel like trying Robbatayaki or
Teppanyaki. There’s also Public
Matpub, a gastropub offering
a selection of micro-brewed
beer, while Pizza Crudo offers
authentic Neapolitan pizza
cooked from a wood-fi red
oven. Continental café The
Room serves a range of hand-
brewed coffee, and spice fans
can visit Taqueria, home of
delicious Mexican cuisine.
� +47 238 986 86
� restaurantpaleet.no
Restaurant Zaff eranoPLATANIAS, GREECE
Located on the beautiful island of
Crete, Restaurant Zafferano offers
creative cuisine that captures
the fl avour of the Mediterranean.
On the menu are succulent fi llet
steaks, fresh Italian pasta, Cretan
seafood, sushi and to-die-for
desserts. A selection of fi ne wines
and champagnes are also available.
Zafferano places an emphasis
on elegance, a philosophy
it shares with its sister
restaurant, Kariatis,
found in the Venetian
harbour of Chania.
� +30 28210 38180
� zafferano.gr
� +30 28210 55600
� kariatis-restaurant.gr
Hungry?You’re on holiday. It’s time to treat yourself. We’ve picked out some of our favourite restaurants from around the network
OsushiREYKJAVÍK, ICELAND
Osushi is a unique dining experience. Instead of traditional
serving methods, you snatch your sushi off of plates brought
to you via conveyor belt. But don’t worry about accidently
ordering the most expensive thing on the menu – prices are
distinguished by the colour and pattern of the plate, with
most meals ranging between 230-440 ISK.
If you’re not in the mood for sushi, there are plenty of
other meals also available, including teriyaki chicken, noodle
salad, tempura and desserts.
� +354 561 0562 � osushi.is
n_july_restaurant guide V2.indd 070 20/06/2016 17:17
Route network Europe
Norwegian fl ies to almost 140 destinations around the world. There are nearly 450 direct routes, but you can book more combinations at norwegian.com
Here are fi ve route highlights this month – turn the page for our full list of destinations from every hub, and more »
5
3
12
Fly to Mallorca/Palma
from 11 destinations
Fly to Copenhagen from
nearly 70 destinations
Fly to London
from nearly 50
destinations
Pisa/
Tusc
any
Dubai
4Fly to Oslo from more
than 100 destinations
Fly to Rome from
Oslo, Bergen,
Copenhagen,
Stockholm, Helsinki
and London
Malta
Ibiza
Mallorca/Palm
a
Copenhagen
Rome/Fium
icino
Sardinia/
Olbia
AlicanteM
urcia
Málaga
Marrakech
Reykjavík
Agadir
Lanza
rote
Fuerteventura
Gran C
anaria
Crete/C
hania
Crete/H
eraklion
Rhodes
Tel Aviv
Cyprus/Larnaca
Antalya
Dal
aman
Santo
rini
Varna
Prist
ina
Belgr
ade
Sara
jevo
Split
Pula
Szcz
ecin
Budapest
Krako
w
War
saw
Pragu
e
Vilniu
sPal
anga
/Kla
ipeda
Riga
TallinnH
elsinki
Stock
holm
Visby
Mal
mö
Goth
enburg
Aalborg
Karlsta
d
Hau
gesu
nd
Gdan
sk
Oulu
Rovanie
mi
Kiruna
Bodø
Ival
o
Har
stad
/Nar
vik
AndenesM
oldeÅlesund
Stavanger
Bardufoss
Tromsø
Laks
elv
Alta
Kirken
es
Venic
e
Mila
n/Mal
pensa
Kefalo
niaLe
fkad
a
Burgas
Athen
s
Sici
ly/C
atan
ia
Sici
ly/P
aler
mo
Cors
ica/
Ajacc
io
Cors
ica/
Bastia
Algar
ve/F
aro
Munic
hBer
lin/S
chönefe
ld
Billund
Krist
iansa
nd
Um
eå
Lule
å
Kittil
ä
Ham
burg
Barce
lona
Nic
e
Bilbao
Lisb
on
Dubro
vnik
Rijeka
Tener
ife
Madeira
Bordeaux
Edinburgh
Dublin
Manchester
Amsterdam
Cologne/Bonn
Geneva
Salzburg
Corfu
Longyear
byen
Grenoble
Birmin
gham
Paris/CDG
Mad
rid
Trondheim
Marseille
Montpellier
Zagre
b
Tiva
t
Kos
Men
orca
Bergen
London/G
atwic
k
Vero
na
Sandefjo
rd/To
rp
Oslo
Oslo/R
ygge
Vienna
Paris/Orly
1 0 6 \ n
N-106-112_MapsNew.indd 106 15/06/2016 09:18
The USA & the Caribbean Asia
1O’Keeffe blooms
Known for her
“expressive” fl owers
and landscapes, US
artist Georgia O’Keeffe
is the subject of a
major exhibition at
London’s Tate Modern
from 6 July. tate.org.uk
2Great Danes in sand
Copenhagen’s Sand
Sculpture Festival
(to 18 September)
features massive works
by global artists at
Hundested Harbour,
plus a children’s play
area. sandfestival.dk
3Roman holiday
Until 15 August,
musicians from around
the world play evening
gigs at the lakeside
stage at Rome’s Villa
Ada, alongside bars
and stalls selling food
and more. villaada.org
4Cruise Oslo’s fjords
Take to the water this
summer in Oslo for
musical, theatrical and
even pirate cruises
with Norway Yacht
Charter, who also
provide bus tours.
nyc.no
5Summer in Mallorca
As well as increasing
capacity to Palma
from Scandinavia,
Norwegian has added
domestic routes from
Barcelona and Madrid
to its services. Book
now. norwegian.com
Los Ange
lesO
akla
nd-San
Fra
ncisc
o
Ft Lau
derdal
e-
Florida
San J
uan –
Puer
to R
ico
St C
roix –
US
Virgin
Isla
nds
New
York
/JFK
Orlan
do
Bangk
okBoston
Las Ve
gas
Guad
eloupe
Mar
tiniq
ue
Baltim
ore/
Was
hingto
n
n / 1 0 7
N-106-112_MapsNew.indd 107 15/06/2016 09:18
From Norway
From Alta
� Oslo, Tromsø
From Bergen
� Alicante, Antalya,
Barcelona, Berlin/
Schönefeld,
Crete/Chania,
Copenhagen, Corfu,
Dubrovnik, Gran
Canaria, Harstad/
Narvik (Evenes),
Kraków, London/
Gatwick, Málaga,
Mallorca/Palma,
Murcia, New
York/JFK, Nice,
Oslo, Paris/Orly,
Prague, Reykjavík,
Riga, Rome/
Fiumicino, Salzburg,
Split, Stavanger,
Stockholm,
Trondheim
From Bodø
� Gran Canaria, Oslo
From Harstad/Narvik
� Alicante, Bergen,
Gran Canaria, Oslo,
Trondheim
From Kirkenes
� Oslo, Tromsø
From Molde
� Alicante, Oslo
From Oslo
� Agadir, Algarve/
Faro, Alicante, Alta,
Amsterdam,
Andenes, Antalya,
Athens, Bangkok,
Barcelona,
Bardufoss, Belgrade,
Bergen, Berlin/
Schönefeld, Bilbao,
Billund, Bodø,
Bordeaux, NEW Boston,
Budapest, Burgas,
Corfu, Corsica/
Ajaccio,
Copenhagen, Crete/
Chania, Crete/
Heraklion, Cyprus/
Larnaca, Dalaman,
Dublin, Dubrovnik,
Edinburgh, Ft
Lauderdale-
Florida,
Fuerteventura,
Gdańsk, Geneva,
Gran Canaria,
Hamburg, Harstad/
Narvik (Evenes),
Haugesund, Helsinki,
Kefalonia, Kirkenes,
Kos, Krakòw,
Kristiansand,
Lakselv, Lanzarote, NEW Las Vegas,
Lefkada, Lisbon,
London/Gatwick,
Longyearbyen, Los
Angeles, Madeira,
Madrid, Málaga,
Mallorca/Palma,
Malta, Manchester,
Marrakech,
Menorca, Milan/
Malpensa, Molde,
Munich, Murcia, New
York/JFK, Nice,
Oakland-San
Francisco, Orlando,
Palanga/Klaipeda,
Paris/Orly, Pisa/
Tuscany, Prague,
Pristina, Pula,
Reykjavík, Rhodes,
Riga, Rijeka, Rome/
Fiumicino, Salzburg,
San Juan – Puerto
Rico, Santorini,
Sarajevo, Sardinia/
Olbia, Sicily/Catania,
Split, Stavanger,
Stockholm, Szczecin,
Tallinn, Tenerife,
Tivat, Tromsø,
Trondheim, Varna,
Venice, NEW Verona,
Vienna, Vilnius,
Visby, Warsaw,
Ålesund
From Oslo/Rygge
� Alicante, Gran
Canaria, Málaga
From Sandefjord/
Torp
� Alicante, Gran
Canaria, Málaga
From Stavanger
� Alicante,
Barcelona, Bergen,
Berlin/Schönefeld,
Copenhagen,
Dubrovnik, Gran
Canaria, Kraków,
London/Gatwick,
Málaga, Mallorca/
Palma, Manchester,
Murcia, Nice, Oslo,
Prague, Salzburg,
Split, Warsaw
From Tromsø
� Alicante, Alta,
Gran Canaria,
Kirkenes, London/
Gatwick, Oslo,
Trondheim
From Trondheim
� Alicante, Antalya,
Barcelona, Bergen,
Berlin/Schönefeld,
Copenhagen, Corfu,
Dubrovnik, Gran
Canaria, Harstad/
Narvik (Evenes),
Kraków, London/
Gatwick, Málaga,
Murcia, Nice, Oslo,
Riga, Split, Tromsø
From Ålesund
� Alicante, London/
Gatwick, Oslo
Turn the page for all
routes from the rest
of Scandinavia >>
What to do around the networkthis monthScandinavia
Where to go from…
Wine-tasting in CreteThe Minoans were making wine
on Crete 4,000 years ago but it’s
taken some time for wine buffs
to take notice. Most of the wine
comes from lush, sunny valleys
in the Heraklion region, south of
Knossos or west of Dafnes – the
local winemakers’ association
produces a good map of the
vineyards. winesofcrete.gr
Berlin sound & visionBerlin’s Renaissance Spandau
Citadel, to the city’s west, is the
setting for a series of outdoor
summer concerts, including this
month Massive Attack (4 July),
Beirut (9 July) and The Pixies (18
July). The 9th Berlin Biennale for
Contemporary Art is also in town
until 18 September, including art
on a sightseeing boat. citadel-
music-festival.de, bb9.berlinbiennale.de
1 0 8 \ n
N-106-112_MapsNew.indd 108 15/06/2016 09:18
H-8380 Hévíz , R ákóczi st . 2 . | Tel. : +36 83 540 070 | Fax: +36 83 540 071E-mail : of f ice@hevizmarket ing.hu | w w w.hevizlake.com
Lotus ThermeHotel & Spa�����
7=6 special off er incl. halfboard andunlimited complimentary use of spa.From EUR 612 per person/ 7 nights in double room standard
www.lotustherme.net
Danubius Health SpaResort Hévíz���� superior
Summerhit off er incl. halfboardand unlimited use of spa&wellnessFrom EUR 499 per person/ 7 nights in double room standard
www.danubiushotels.com/heviz
Hotel SpaHévíz����/���
Recreation in the Hotelof the Lake HévízFrom EUR 365 per person/ 7 nights in double room
www.hotelspaheviz.hu
Have you ever swum in the world’s largest thermal lake carpeted with water lily? Not yet?
Visit Hévíz, the Hungarian town, which is located only 2 hours away from Budapest and Vienna, and recharge your batteries with the power of nature!
Unique experiences are waiting for you:• Thermal mud massage in the swimming massage pavilion at the lake• Luscious Hungarian wines and traditional gastronomy• Hot air ballooning over protected areas• Professional golf courts• Varied cycling or Segway tours• Modern wellness treatments (beauty, anti-aging, relaxing)• Monuments from the Roman era• 10 000 beds, a wide range of accommodation facilitiesú
Don’t miss the outdoor festivals in the summer!
TOP 3 OFFERS
H é v í z , t h e f o u n t a i n o f l i f e !
. . . l i v e t s k i l d e ! . . . l i v e t s k ä l l a ! ������������ �����
���������������
INNOVATION�����WINNER2016
No.628477 - Hevizi Turisztikai 1pp.indd 1 16/06/2016 14:26
From Denmark
From Aalborg
� Alicante,
Copenhagen,
London/Gatwick,
Málaga, Mallorca/
Palma
From Billund
� Alicante,
Barcelona, Oslo
From Copenhagen
� Aalborg, Agadir,
Algarve/Faro,
Alicante,
Amsterdam, Athens,
Bangkok, Barcelona,
Bergen, Berlin/
Schönefeld, NEW Boston,
Budapest, Burgas,
Corfu, Crete/
Chania, Crete/
Heraklion, Cyprus/
Larnaca, Dubai,
Dublin, Dubrovnik,
Edinburgh, Ft
Lauderdale-Florida,
Geneva, Gran
Canaria, Helsinki,
Ibiza, Kos, Kraków,
Las Vegas, Lisbon,
London/Gatwick,
Los Angeles,
Madeira, Madrid,
Málaga, Mallorca/
Palma, Malta,
Marrakech,
Marseille,
Montpellier, New
York/JFK, Nice,
Orlando, Oslo, Paris/
Orly, Pisa/Tuscany,
Prague, Rhodes,
Riga, Rome/
Fiumicino, St Croix
– US Virgin Islands,
Salzburg, San Juan
– Puerto Rico,
Santorini, Sarajevo,
Sardinia/Olbia,
Sicily/Catania, Split, NEW Stavanger,
Stockholm, Tel Aviv,
Tenerife, Trondheim, NEW Varna, Venice,
Zagreb
From Finland
From Helsinki
� Alicante, Athens,
Barcelona,
Budapest, Burgas,
Copenhagen,
Corfu, Crete/
Chania, Cyprus/
Larnaca, Dubai,
Dublin, Dubrovnik,
Gran Canaria, Ivalo,
Kittilä, London/
Gatwick, Madrid,
Málaga, Mallorca/
Palma, Nice,
Oslo, Oulu, Paris/
Orly, Prague,
Pula, Rhodes,
Rome/Fiumicino,
Rovaniemi, Salzburg,
Split, Stockholm,
Tenerife, Venice
From Oulu
� Gran Canaria,
Helsinki, Tenerife
From Sweden
From Gothenburg
� Alicante,
Barcelona, Crete/
Chania, Gran
Canaria, London/
Gatwick, NEW Madrid,
Málaga, Mallorca/
Palma, Nice,
Pristina, Rome/
Fiumicino, Salzburg,
Stockholm, Tenerife
From Karlstad
� Alicante, Gran
Canaria
From Stockholm
� Agadir, Algarve/
Faro, Alicante,
Amsterdam, Athens,
Bangkok, Barcelona,
Belgrade, Bergen,
Berlin/Schönefeld,
Bordeaux,
Budapest, Burgas,
Copenhagen, Corfu,
Corsica/Bastia,
Crete/Chania,
Crete/Heraklion,
Cyprus/Larnaca,
Dubai, Dubrovnik,
Edinburgh, Ft
Lauderdale-Florida,
Geneva, Gran
Canaria, Grenoble,
Gothenburg,
Helsinki, Kiruna, Kos,
Kraków, Las Vegas,
London/Gatwick,
Los Angeles, Luleå,
Madrid, Málaga,
Mallorca/Palma,
Malmö, Manchester,
Marrakech, Munich,
New York/JFK,
Nice, Oakland-San
Francisco, Oslo,
Paris/Orly, Pisa/
Tuscany, Prague,
Pula, Rhodes, Riga,
Rome/Fiumicino,
Salzburg, San Juan
– Puerto Rico,
Santorini, Sarajevo,
Sardinia/Olbia,
Sicily/Catania,
Sicily/Palermo, Split,
Tel Aviv, Tenerife,
Umeå, Venice,
Vilnius, Visby
From Umeå
� Gran Canaria,
Stockholm
From Visby
� Oslo, Stockholm
Turn the page for
routes from all
other countries >>
ScandinaviaWhere to go from…
Art in BergenFans of Edvard Munch should
head for Bergen this month. The
KODE Art Museums are home
to the largest collection of the
Norwegian artist’s works outside
Oslo, including a version of The
Scream. A new exhibition focuses
on Nikolai Astrup’s early work,
while KODE Contemporary has a
fantastic collection of modern art.
kodebergen.no
Tour StockholmSee different sides of Sweden’s
capital on a variety of city
tours. The brave will love the
popular Ghost Walk; fans of
Stieg Larsson’s books can take
a Millennium Tour. There’s even
the Run with Me running tour, for
fi tness fanatics. Don’t forget
your trainers!
visitstockholm.com
What to do around the network this month
1 1 0 \ n
N-106-112_MapsNew.indd 110 15/06/2016 09:19
Promotion
From someone who knows“Throughout the
training, I learned
to change the way I
look at things, and
then things started to
change. Now, I dare
to dream about the
future and plan for it”
Kim-Erik Pedersen,
former participant
The impact of trustSocial enterprise company lyk-z & døtre supports youth at risk, creating remarkable results through emotional innovation
M ore and more children and young
people are being put in psychiatric
care and given medication. Normal
human emotions like sadness and
loneliness are being diagnosed as
anxiety and serious psychological disorders.
Ingeborg Lykseth, founder of the company
lyk-z & døtre, believes that their problems should
be dealt with in a completely different way. She
thinks that everyone has what it takes to make the
changes they need for a happier future. It’s this
belief that inspired her to develop an innovative
leadership programme for youth at risk, called
FROG Online Identity.
“It’s based on neurophysiology and cognitive
training,” she says. “It’s a powerful methodology
that causes a positive emotional and mental
change in each participant.”
While the aim for some participants is to get back
into school or work, for others, the goal is simply
to feel happy again. In most cases, the programme
has a proven and lasting impact. They gain self-
confi dence and trust in who they are, and become
able to take charge of their own future.
Once the programme ends, Lykseth and her
team can keep track of participants through an
online platform. This ensures the positive effects
of the programme continue long after the actual
course is over.
Lykseth’s passion and dedication has
been rewarded with several awards. She was
named Social Entrepreneur of the Year by
FERD Social Entrepreneurs in 2012, and
awarded the 2015 National Award for Social
Entrepreneurship in Education and Technology
by Fundación Ship2B. However, this wasn’t
always the case.
“It took eight years to get my programme
approved. There was a lot of failure, a lot of
mistakes, and a lot of money lost,” she says.
But, thanks to the same skills and trust she
teaches her students, Lykseth never gave up.
If you want to participate in FROG Online
Identity, or support youths at risk, contact lyk-z &
døtre – you can make a difference.
+47 915 94 080, +47 906 59 990
lyk-z.no, ingeborg@lyk-z.noIM
AG
ES
: W
ER
NE
R J
UV
IK
, L
YK
-Z
& D
ØT
RE
AN
D M
ED
IA
TE
AM
.N
O
n_july_lyk-z V3.indd 070 20/06/2016 14:16
Rest of the world
From the Caribbean
From Guadeloupe
� Baltimore/
Washington, Boston,
New York/JFK
From Martinique
� Baltimore/
Washington, Boston,
New York/JFK
From San Juan -
Puerto Rico
� Copenhagen,
London/Gatwick,
Oslo, Stockholm
From St Croix -
US Virgin Islands
� Copenhagen
From France
From Paris/Charles
de Gaulle
� NEW Ft Lauderdale-
Florida, NEW New
York/JFK, NEW Los
Angeles
From Paris/Orly
� Bergen,
Copenhagen, Oslo,
Helsinki, Stockholm
From Nice
� Bergen,
Copenhagen,
Helsinki, Oslo,
Stavanger,
Stockholm,
Trondheim
Other French airports
� Bordeaux,
Corsica/Ajaccio,
Corsica/Bastia,
Grenoble,
Guadeloupe,
Marseille,
Martinique,
Montpellier
From Germany
From Berlin/
Schönefeld
� Barcelona, Bergen,
Copenhagen,
Gran Canaria,
London/Gatwick,
Oslo, Stavanger,
Stockholm, Tenerife,
Trondheim
From Cologne/Bonn
� Alicante, Gran
Canaria, Málaga,
Tenerife
From Hamburg
� Alicante,
Barcelona, Gran
Canaria, Madrid,
Málaga, Oslo,
Tenerife
From Munich
� Alicante, Gran
Canaria, Málaga,
Oslo, Stockholm,
Tenerife
From Spain
From Alicante
� Aalborg, Bergen,
Billund, Cologne/
Bonn, Copenhagen,
Gothenburg,
Hamburg,
Harstad/Narvik,
Helsinki, Karlstad,
London/Gatwick,
Manchester, Molde,
Munich, Oslo, Oslo/
Rygge, Sandefjord/
Torp, Stavanger,
Stockholm, Tromsø,
Trondheim, Ålesund
From Barcelona
� Bergen, Berlin,
Bilbao, Billund,
Birmingham,
Copenhagen,
Dubrovnik,NEW Edinburgh,
Gothenburg, Gran
Canaria, Hamburg,
Helsinki, London/
Gatwick, NEW Mallorca/Palma, NEW Manchester,
Oslo, Stavanger,
Stockholm, Tenerife,
Trondheim, Warsaw
From Bilbao
� NEW Barcelona,
Oslo
From Fuerteventura
� London/Gatwick,
Oslo
From Gran Canaria
� Barcelona, Bergen,
Berlin, Birmingham,
Bodø, Cologne/
Bonn, Copenhagen,
Evenes, Gothenburg,
Hamburg, Helsinki,
Karlstad, London/
Gatwick, Madrid,
Málaga, Munich,
Oslo, Oslo/Rygge,
Oulu, Sandefjord/
Torp, Stavanger,
Stockholm, Tromsø,
Trondheim, Warsaw
From Ibiza
� Copenhagen,
London/Gatwick
From Lanzarote
� London/Gatwick,
Oslo, Stockholm
From Madrid
� Birmingham,
Sicily/Catania,
Copenhagen,
Dubrovnik, NEW Gothenburg,
Gran Canaria,
Hamburg, Helsinki,
London/Gatwick, NEW Mallorca/Palma, NEW Malta, Oslo,
Stockholm, Tenerife,
Warsaw
From Málaga
� Aalborg, Bergen,
Birmingham,
Cologne/Bonn,
Copenhagen,
Edinburgh,
Gothenburg, Gran
Canaria, Hamburg,
Helsinki, London/
Gatwick, NEW Manchester,
Munich, Oslo, Oslo/
Rygge, Sandefjord/
Torp, Stavanger,
Stockholm, Tenerife,
Trondheim, Warsaw
From Mallorca/Palma
� Aalborg, NEW Barcelona,
Bergen, Copenhagen,
Gothenburg,
Helsinki, London/
Gatwick, NEW Madrid,
Oslo, Stavanger,
Stockholm
From Murcia
� Bergen, Oslo,
Stavanger,
Trondheim
From Tenerife
� Barcelona,
Berlin, Birmingham,
Cologne/Bonn,
Copenhagen,
Edinburgh,
Gothenburg,
Hamburg, Helsinki,
London/Gatwick,
Madrid, Málaga,
Munich, Oslo, Oulu,
Stockholm, Warsaw
From Thailand
From Bangkok
� Copenhagen, Oslo,
Stockholm
From the UK
From Birmingham
� Barcelona, Gran
Canaria, Madrid,
Málaga, Tenerife
From Edinburgh
� NEW Barcelona,
Copenhagen,
Málaga, Oslo,
Stockholm, Tenerife
From London/Gatwick
� Aalborg, Algarve/
Faro, Alicante,
Barcelona,
Bergen, Berlin,
Boston, Budapest,
Copenhagen, Corfu,
Crete/Chania,
Cyprus/Larnaca,
Dubrovnik, Ft
Lauderdale-Florida,
Fuerteventura,
Gothenburg,
Gran Canaria,
Grenoble, Helsinki,
Ibiza, Kefalonia,
Lanzarote, Las
Vegas, Los Angeles,
Madeira, Madrid,
Málaga, Mallorca/
Palma, New York/
JFK, Oakland-San
Francisco, Orlando,
Oslo, Pula, Rome/
Fiumicino, Salzburg,
San Juan – Puerto
Rico, Santorini,
Sicily/Catania,
Split, Stavanger,
Stockholm, Tenerife,
Tromsø, Trondheim,
Warsaw, Ålesund
From Manchester
� NEW Alicante,NEW Barcelona,NEW Málaga, Oslo,
Stavanger,
Stockholm
From the USA
From Baltimore/
Washington
� Guadeloupe,
Martinique
From Boston
� NEW Copenhagen,
Guadeloupe,
London/Gatwick,
Martinique, NEW Oslo
From Ft Lauderdale-
Florida
� Copenhagen,
London/Gatwick,
Oslo, NEW Paris/CDG,
Stockholm
From Las Vegas
� Copenhagen, NEW London/Gatwick,NEW Oslo,NEW Stockholm
From Los Angeles
� Copenhagen,
London/Gatwick,
Oslo, NEW Paris/CDG,
Stockholm
From New York/JFK
� Bergen,
Copenhagen,
Guadeloupe,
London/Gatwick,
Martinique, Oslo, NEW Paris/CDG,
Stockholm
From Oakland-
San Francisco
� NEW London/
Gatwick, Oslo,
Stockholm
From Orlando
� Copenhagen,
London/Gatwick,
Oslo
Where to go from…
GE
OR
GI
A O
’K
EE
FF
E –
JIM
SO
N W
EE
D/
WH
IT
E F
LO
WE
R N
O.
1,
19
32
/P
H E
C R
OB
IS
ON
III
/G
EO
RG
IA
O’K
EE
FF
E M
US
EU
M/
DA
CS
LO
ND
ON
; C
IT
AD
EL
BE
RL
IN
/P
ET
ER
EN
GE
LK
E;
MU
NC
H M
EL
AN
CH
OL
Y/
DA
G F
OS
SE
/K
OD
E B
ER
GE
N;
AL
AM
Y;
PH
OT
OS
HO
T;
PL
AIN
PI
CT
UR
ES
; S
UP
ER
ST
OC
K
1 1 2 \ n
N-106-112_MapsNew.indd 112 15/06/2016 09:19
Everyone wants to return home from
holiday with an attractive tan, but
getting sunburned is not a healthy sign.
Even though sunburn’s reddening effect
disappears from the skin after a short
while, in the long term it can cause permanent damage
to skin cells’ genetic material, which may even lead to
skin cancer.
Using suncream incorrectly is one of the most
common mistakes people make on holiday. It doesn’t
matter if you apply a high factor of sunscreen if
you apply too little of it. The recommendation of
Kreftforeningen/the Norwegian Cancer Society is
that your body needs a big handful of sunscreen to
effectively protect itself against the sun’s rays.
It’s also important to remember that although
sunscreen is helpful in the battle against sunburn, it’s
not an invincible shield. Remember to take regular
breaks away from the sun, and avoid it around midday.
Most people from Nordic countries have light skin and
will easily get sunburned. Take a lesson from the locals
– many people in hot climates take a siesta about
midday. Chilling out in the shade around this time feels
pleasant, and is good for you too.
Another mistake people make is to forget about the
sun. It’s quite common to get sunburned when you’re
doing something other than sunbathing: doing sports,
sitting in a cafe or walking around on excursions.
Be aware that the sun is most intense between the
hours of 11am and 3pm, and its rays can be twice as
strong in countries close to the equator as they are in
Nordic countries. Shade can reduce UV radiation by
more than 50% – and you can still get a tan when
sitting away from the sun too.
It’s important to remember sunscreen
and protective clothes, even if we’re
not lounging on the beach. Even
on a cloudy day, 10 to 90% of UV
radiation can still break through.
Keeping these protective measures
in mind will let you enjoy your
holidays and stay safe.
+47 815 70477, kreftforeningen.no/solvett
Avoid costly errors in the sun
There are far too many people making the same mistakes when outside on holiday
Promotion
Enjoy the sun, but avoid getting sunburned
Take breaks from the midday sun. Why not
enjoy a nice lunch in the shade?
Protect yourself with clothing and wear
a head covering. Shade can reduce UV
radiation by more than 50%
Use a high SPF and apply plenty of sunscreen
Staying safe in the sun
n_june_kreftforeningen v3.indd 070 18/05/2016 15:04
The airline Norwegian’s green fl eet
Boeing 787-8 DreamlinerServes Norwegian long-haul network
Number of aircraft: 8 ⁄ Seats: 291 ⁄ Crew:
Two pilots and eight cabin crew ⁄ Engines:
Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 ⁄ Max start weight:
227,930kg ⁄ Length: 57m ⁄ Height: 17m ⁄
Wingspan: 60.17m ⁄ Engine thrust: 67,000lbs
per engine ⁄ Cruise speed: 913kph
Boeing 737-800Serves most routes in Norwegian’s network
Number of aircraft: 99 ⁄ Seats: 186/189
⁄ Crew: Two pilots and four cabin crew ⁄
Engines: CFM 56-7B26 ⁄ Max start weight:
78,999kg ⁄ Length: 39.5m ⁄ Height: 12.5m ⁄
Wingspan: 35.8m ⁄ Engine thrust: 26,400lbs
per engine ⁄ Cruise speed: 858kph
Norwegian’s long-haul fl eet is signifi cantly more fuel-effi cient than any of the top 20 transatlantic airlines, a report revealed late last year. The International Council on Clean Transportation reported that Norwegian’s Boeing 787-8 fl eet burned 14 per cent less fuel per passenger kilometre than its closest rival on the list, and around 50 per cent less than the three lowest-placed, big-name airlines. And Norwegian has one of the newest and greenest fl eets in Europe: in addition to the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, which is one of the greenest planes in the world, our 737-800s are the most environmentally friendly mid-sized planes, reducing per-seat CO2 emissions by 23 per cent compared to the 737-300 and by as much as 33 per cent compared to the MD80. Extra fuel effi ciency and reliability is also good news for your wallet and your time. norwegian.com
Our new
Dreamliner
787-9 joins
Norwegian’s
green fleet
Boeing 787-9 DreamlinerAlso serves Norwegian’s long-haul fl ights
Number of aircraft: 1 ⁄ Seats: 344 ⁄ Crew:
Two pilots and eight cabin crew ⁄ Engines:
Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 ⁄ Max start weight:
252,650kg ⁄ Length: 63m ⁄ Height: 17m ⁄
Wingspan: 60.17m ⁄ Engine thrust: 74,000lbs
per engine ⁄ Cruise speed: 913kph
Norwegian has some of
the greenest aircraft
in the world
The world’s greenest transatlantic fl ights
1 1 4 \ n
N-114-115_Airline_July.indd 114 15/06/2016 09:19
TM
Our story�1993-2002 Norwegian established on
the west coast of Norway
fl ying Fokker F-50s with
Braathens SAFE.
�2002 Domestic routes
launched in Norway with
Boeing 737-300 aircraft.
�2003 Norwegian listed
on the Oslo Stock
Exchange.
�2005 First year in profi t.
�2007 Stockholm
becomes Norwegian’s
Swedish base.
� Bank Norwegian
and frequent fl yer
programme Norwegian
Reward launched.
�2008 Delivery of fi rst
Boeing 737-800 Next-
Generation aircraft.
� Norwegian enters the
Danish market and opens
Copenhagen base.
�2009 Norwegian
receives the Market
Leadership Award from
Air Transport World
magazine – seen as the
Oscars of the industry.
�2011 Becomes the
fi rst airline to offer free
infl ight WiFi on
European routes.
� Opens new base at
Helsinki airport, Finland.
�2012 Norwegian
signs the largest-ever
European agreement
for 122 Boeing and 100
Airbus aircraft.
�2013 Norwegian is the
fi rst airline in Europe to
offer infl ight movie and
TV rental on all our WiFi-
enabled aircraft.
� Launches long-haul
routes to Bangkok, New
York, Ft Lauderdale-
Florida, Los Angeles,
Oakland-San Francisco
and Orlando from
Scandinavia and the UK.
� Named Best European
Low-Cost Airline by
AirlineRatings.com and
Best European Low-Cost
Carrier by Skytrax World
Airline Awards.
� Opens new base at
London Gatwick plus
new bases in Spain, and
expands in Germany.
�2014 Voted Best Low-
Cost Airline in the World
by the 2014 Air Transport
News Awards.
� Norwegian is again
voted Best European
Low-Cost Airline by
AirlineRatings.com and
Best European Low-Cost
Carrier by Skytrax World
Airline Awards.
� At the Apex Passenger
Choice Awards we win
Best in Europe, Best
Single Achievement for
our moving map on
the 787 Dreamliners,
and Best Infl ight
Connectivity and
Communications.
�2015 Starts fl ights
to Las Vegas and the
Caribbean.
� Voted Best European
Low-Cost Airline for the
third time running, and
the World’s Best
Low-Cost Long-
Haul Carrier
at the Skytrax
awards.
� We win
Airlinerating.com’s
Best Low-Cost Airline
– Europe award for the
third year in a row.
� Wins Best in Region –
Europe and Best Infl ight
Publication at the Apex
Passenger Choice Awards.
�2016 Starts fl ights to
Boston from London,
Oslo and Copenhagen.
� At the Grand Travel
Awards, Norwegian is
named Best European
Airline and Best Domestic
Airline, and CEO Bjørn
Kjos (pictured below)
the year’s top executive.
� Launches new routes
from Paris to New York,
Los Angeles and Fort
Lauderdale-Florida.
st
d
N d B t E
Long-haul captain Claes Söderberg from Sweden and American cabin chief Trista Helene Pettersen fi rst met at work two years ago on a fl ight between Stockholm and Los Angeles. “He stood out from everyone and I remember feeling I wanted to get to know him better,” Trista says. They spent their time off together in LA and this year the couple were married in New York’s Swedish Church. Claes is now based in London, while Trista is in Fort Lauderdale, so they continue to have to travel to see each other, though they manage to work together at least once a month, as our picture shows. norwegian.com
16Get nlineFIVE YEARS OF NORWEGIAN’S ONBOARD WIFI
Since we became the fi rst airline to offer free
WiFi on European routes in 2011, more than
19 million passengers have logged on. One
third of our passengers log into a social media
site within fi ve minutes – and Germans are the
most keen to get online. To join them, select
the wireless network “Norwegian Internet
Access”, open your browser and connect via
the homepage. Happy browsing!
Meet the crew
n / 1 1 5
N-114-115_Airline_July.indd 115 15/06/2016 09:19
Living the dreamBoeing’s 787 Dreamliner has been hailed as a revolution in passenger fl ight. But just what is it that elevates these aircraft?
SENSITIVE LIGHTINGThe hue of the cabin changes up to six times during the flight, to provide an ambient background. Dimmed lights simulate changing time zones, while relaxing lavender or warm orange lights signal sleep or meal times
BIGGER VIEWSAt 48cm by 28cm, the windows are the largest of any passenger airplane, meaning more natural light and better views. The colour and tint of the glass changes during the flight, and the plastic shade has been eschewed in favour of a button that allows a complete fade
LOWEST EMISSIONSOver their longest journeys, 787 Dreamliners consume 14 per cent less fuel than comparable aircraft, and emit 20 per cent fewer emissions. This translates into faster journeys and cheaper travel
LONGER DISTANCES 787 Dreamliners fly further, with a range of 15,200km, making them the only mid-size planes that can fly long-range routes
MORE ENTERTAINMENTThe all-singing, all-dancing onboard entertainment system includes movies and games; USB charging, snackbar; and our award-winning moving maps. For even more comfort, Premium has extra legroom and reclining seats too
I l l u s t r a t i o n ⁄ N u r i a M a d r i d
1 1 6 \ n
N-102-108_dreamliner.indd 116 15/06/2016 09:15
GREENER MATERIAL...The 787 Dreamliner is the first airplane to be made with 50 per cent composite material: its fuselage and wings are made from carbon-fibre-reinforced polymer. This gives it a higher strength-to-weight ratio than other comparable aircraft, making it lighter, and therefore more eco-friendly
... MEANING LESS JET LAGThis polymer material is stronger than metal, meaning the cabin can be more highly pressurised. The pressure is set to 1,800m rather than the conventional 2,400m, which enables passengers’ bodies to absorb more oxygen, so passengers are more refreshed when arriving at their destination
HEALTHIER AIRThe planes’ “fresh-air system” uses high-efficiency particulate air filters, which treat the air onboard to make it cleaner and healthier, while gas filters reduce strong odours – even perfume particles – to make air more palatable for noses
QUIETER CABINSThanks to two Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engines in noise-reducing nacelles (casings), the 787 Dreamliner is 60 per cent quieter for take-off and landing than other comparable models. A quieter air-conditioning system, vibration isolation in sidewalls and elimination of squeaky interior materials add to a more ear-friendly experience
MORE ROOM FOR BAGS…No more battling to fit your bag. The overhead bins are designed to be 30 per cent larger than other comparable aircraft, so each passenger can easily fit their bag right above their head, rather than five rows behind
…AND FOR YOUR HEADEven better: the bins’ shape and the way they fold into the ceiling, means more headroom for everyone – even at its lowest point, the cabin is more than 1.8m high
LESS TURBULENCEAs they are made from polymer rather than metal, 787 Dreamliner wings adjust on take-off and during turbulence. This flexibility, combined with a system that detects turbulence and balances for it, makes journeys less bumpy
n / 1 1 7
N-102-108_dreamliner.indd 117 15/06/2016 09:16
IN THE US AT AFFORDABLE FARES
FLY THE 787 DREAMLINER
8 DESTINATIONS
No.000000 HOUSE AD USA_DPS.indd 2 09/06/2016 10:22
No.000000 HOUSE AD USA_DPS.indd 3 09/06/2016 10:22
Promotion
“Although it’s known that hair loss is largely determined by genetic factors, the mere presence of balding genes or hormones is not enough to cause hair loss”
Dr Thomas Whitfi eld, DPhil (Biochemistry),
Oxford scientist and founder of Oxford Biolabs
Tired of thinning hair?Oxford-rooted hair regimen can boost your hair and self-confi dence
Scientists from Oxford, UK, have
developed a product that can
help keep your hair thick and
healthy. Their product TRX2 is
currently one of Europe’s
best-selling hair supplements and is now sold in
more than 100 countries. TRX2 is a food
supplement based on organic compounds that
has no side effects, compared to medicinal
products. Also it does what it says.
“Our customers have noticed that they’re
getting compliments, surprising their
hairdressers and seeing clear advancements,”
says Dr Thomas Whitfi eld, DPhil (Biochemistry),
Oxford scientist and founder of Oxford Biolabs.
Hair treatments often promise a lot without
delivering, but TRX2 is backed by cutting-edge
science and has been thoroughly tested. Three
of the key ingredients in TRX2* are offi cially
recognised by the European Commission as
contributing to the maintenance of normal
healthy hair. The effects can be impressive. Start
taking TRX2 as early as possible to see results
before the problem takes over.
TRX2 is suitable for men and women of all
ages. The crystalline white capsules come in a
brown glass bottle, which is suffi cient for one
month’s supply and can be purchased from
around €49 (NOK 467).
Since 2016 Oxford Biolabs have introduced an
advanced TRX2 topical range to complement
TRX2 capsules.
The manufacturer ships worldwide and
there’s a special offer for our magazine readers
when ordering via the TRX2 website: trx2.com
Oxford Biolabs Ltd, The Oxford
Science Park, Oxford, UK,
+44 800 808 5251
contact@trx2.com, trx2.com
Reader offer
Order via trx2.com
and use the coupon code
OBL5 to receive an
exclusive 5% discount.
*Zinc, selenium, and biotin. Visit trx2.com to check the 18-month study results
e
d an
nt
ders
m
n_july_Oxford Biolabs.indd 069 16/06/2016 16:44
I
n their green school
uniforms, Bokoï and
Babouï look so alike that
people often believe the
two boys are twins. The
brothers, who are also best friends,
used to live with their father in Boularagi
village, near Lake Chad in Central Africa,
where they spent their days farming and
chasing animals to prevent them from
destroying the family’s crop.
“We chased all kind of birds, goats,
cows, even monkeys. Once, we were
sleeping at night, and I heard a hippo
outside,” says Bokoï, aged eight. “I woke
up my brother, but he didn’t believe me.”
The next morning they saw the huge
footprints of the hippo right outside
the house. For the brothers, the hippo
was a sign of upcoming danger. Two
months later their lives were turned
upside down.
“We were sleeping in the house when
three men came knocking at our door,
asking where our father was,” 10-year-
old Babouï says. “They wore pants with
many pockets and black turbans. I told
them he was not there, but they forced
the door open, grabbed him and killed
him. We tried to run, but they caught us.”
In the hands of Boko Haram, the boys
suffered many hardships, but in the
end they managed to escape. When
none of the soldiers was watching, the
boys crawled away through the grass.
Because it was harvest season, it was
high enough to hide them. It probably
saved the boys’ lives.
A new UNICEF report shows that
more than 1.3 million children have
been uprooted by the increased Boko
Haram violence in Nigeria, Niger,
Unicef Breaking free from confl ict
Norwegian and UNICEF have been working together for children since 2007. As a
Signature Partner to UNICEF, Norwegian supports the organisation’s work, giving
children the best possible start in life, and a safe and happy childhood.WO
RD
S:
GR
O R
OG
NM
O,
PH
OT
O:
BA
DR
E B
AH
AJ
I
The plight of two brothers highlights the dangers posed by Boko Haram
Brothers Bokoï and
Babouï managed to
escape Boko Haram after
their father was killed by
the armed group
Cameroon and Chad – the countries
around Lake Chad. Thousands of
children have been separated from
their families and subjected to
exploitation, abuse and recruitment by
armed groups. Not everyone survives.
There has been a tenfold increase in
the number of children used in suicide
attacks in the region.
If they hadn’t been found and
rescued, Bokoï and Babouï would most
likely have faced a future as soldiers.
“They told us that we will fi ght with
them. I was sure they were going to kill
us if we tried to escape,” Babouï says.
After their escape, the brothers spent
days walking through the bush, hungry,
thirsty and exhausted, before a man
on a motorbike found them. He took
them to a camp for internally displaced
people. Their mother is now in Nigeria,
and they haven’t heard from her for a
long time, but after a few days in the
camp, thanks to the work of UNICEF and
a social-welfare regional delegation,
they were reunited with their uncle.
They now live with him, and go to
school every day. The brothers have fun
practising their French, and the younger
one is happy to show off his counting,
although he mixes up the numbers.
His brother laughs. Finally, the smile
is back on the two small faces. There’s
an old saying in their regional language,
Kanembu: “Gomay waya dounadoum
do wadji.” This means: “The struggle
you are in today will be your strength
tomorrow.” Let’s hope so.
Please help UNICEF’s work in Central
Africa unicef.no, unicef.org
n / 1 2 1
N-121_Unicef.indd 121 15/06/2016 09:20
Promotion
Naturally giftedYou can’t beat a bit of nature, and Iceland shows that when it comes to your holiday you don’t need anything artifi cial
“Skagafjörður is one of the best regions in Iceland to experience the world famous phenomenon, the Northern Lights”
Relaxing in a hotel hot tub is
always nice, but you know
what’s even better? Soaking
in a real natural hot spring.
The waters that fl ow
through the Icelandic fjord of Skagafjörður
are naturally warm, and bathing can be
enjoyed in a large number of hot springs.
Hofsós, Sauðarkrókur and Varmahlíð
are open all year round, so you’ll always
have somewhere to relax. After a hard
day enjoying the dramatic scenery of the
fjord, you can wallow in one of the natural
coastal pools that have built up along the
shoreline. Grettislaug is a popular favourite
for visitors.
Iceland has plenty to offer nature
tourists all year round. Skagafjörður is
one of the best regions in the country
to experience the Northern Lights, for
example. If you’re looking for something
a little more action packed, the ski area
on Tindastóll mountain is suitable for the
whole family, with slopes for beginners as
well as the more experienced. There’s also
cross-country skiing, snowmobiling and -
for those who want to take it to the
next level - helicopter skiing at the
Trollaskaga mountain range.
Explorers may also be interested in
checking out one of Skagafjörður’s most
popular tourist destinations: the historic
Glaumbær’s Farm and Áshús. Featuring
timber buildings that date back to the
18th century, you can learn all about how
Iceland’s coffee production has changed
over the last 300 years.
To top off your visit, you can stop by the
café and enjoy some traditional Icelandic
pancakes, ponnukokur, along with some
rhubarb jam.
Animal lovers will also want to check
out the famous Icelandic horses, known
for their small stature and unique
features that have earned them admirers
from all around the world. Skagafjörður
offers various horse-riding tours for all
levels of expertise. While Iceland may
be something of a dark horse in terms
of holiday destinations, entertainment
and excitement come naturally to
Skagafjörður.
visitskagafjordur.is
Clockwise from main⁄
The Northern Lights; perfect
skiing conditions; the waters
of the fjord; the historic
Glaumbær’s Farm
n_july_skagafjordur V2.indd 069 17/06/2016 15:00
Get close to natureFrom traditional cottages to modern pavilions, Rindalshytter’s
rustic cabins are the perfect getaway
Promotion
“Rindalshytter’s cabins provide a warm environment that brings families together”
It’s nice to be able get away
from the stress of the city,
and when the summer
season rolls around, you
want to be in the right
place to appreciate it.
For many of us, however, it’s not
practical to leave our urban lives behind
completely. For those who want to
escape, but don’t want to change their
whole lives, Rindalshytter’s cabins offer
the ideal solution. They’re a place for
people who want a different life alongside
their civilian one, in a warm environment
that brings family and friends closer
together. Rindalshytter’s designs really
catch the eye, with massive windows
fi lling the communal rooms with natural
light, making it seem as if nature itself is
bursting into the cabin.
The company’s mission statement isn’t
to build vacation homes, but to build
dream houses around the world, with
cabin projects being launched not just in
Norway, but in Scandinavia and Europe as
well. Their cabins aren’t just the best-
quality cabins on the market, they provide
value for money too.
If you can’t fi nd your cottage among
the company’s standard models, they’ll
custom make it for you. You maintain
a close relationship with the project
manager, so keeping track of development
is clear, quick and simple.
Rindalshytter uses a mixture of
traditional Norwegian architecture with
modern solutions. The company builds all
homes using maintenance-free materials,
so your home-away-from-home can
remain the ultimate stress-free zone.
+ 47 71 66 41 40, rindalshytter.no
IMA
GE
S ©
MIR
: D
ES
IG
N B
Y O
LE
PE
TT
ER
WU
LL
UM
, A
NN
IKA
N Z
AH
L F
UR
UN
ES
, P
HO
TO
IN
GE
R M
AR
IE G
RIN
I
n_july_rindalshytter V2.indd 070 17/06/2016 14:00
Contains high amount of
natural lutein, which is also
found in the Macula of your
eye - the part of the retina
responsible for central vision.
With eye-vitamins A and
zinc for maintenance of
normal vision
Only blueberry tablet in the
world with natural eye-
bright extract
Manufactured in Sweden
Advantages of
Blue Berry™ tablets:
NEW NORDICOnline Store
ges of
No.129598 - New Nordic 1pp.indd 1 06/04/2016 15:02
EntertainmentNorwegian is the fi rst airline in the world with infl ight entertainment for you to enjoy on your tablet, laptop and smartphone. All you need are your device and headset – then hundreds of hours of entertainment and our free, onboard WiFi are at your fi ngertips
Live TV
Norwegian is the
fi rst airline to offer
live TV on European
fl ights: watch
Bloomberg TV and
Norway’s TV 2 News
live on the airline’s
fl eet of WiFi-
equipped aircraft.
Infl ight WiFi
Norwegian’s high-
speed broadband
on fl ights within
Europe has been
recognised by the
Passenger Choice
Awards. TV on
Demand is free,
and there’s a small
charge for VOD.
Great movies
Tom Hardy (The
Revenant) is a
lone driver facing
the past in Locke
while Benedict
Cumberbatch stars
in topical drama The
Fifth Estate in our
Video on Demand
(VOD) line-up.
Kids’ stuff
There’s a host of
fi lms for children
to choose from,
including an
animated, updated
Tarzan and
director Martin
Scorsese’s award-
winning Hugo.
TV shows
Alongside wildlife,
science, cookery
and lifestyle shows,
enjoy Norwegian
dramas Kampen
For Tilværelsen
and Frikjent, plus
a profi le of pop
group The Cure’s
video output.
Choose from hundreds of hours of free entertainment on the
world’s fi rst Android Infl ight Entertainment System. You can enjoy
the best new albums, games and movies – including Brooklyn
(pictured), starring Saoirse Ronan – plus use the digital snack bar
to order snacks. On the Dreamliner, the seatback monitor is also
used to call the fl ight attendant or turn on your reading light.
Boeing 787-8 DreamlinerAndroid Infl ight Entertainment System
Flight tracker
Norwegian’s hugely
popular fl ight
tracker allows
you to follow
the progress of
your fl ight, time
to arrival, the
weather forecast
at your destination
and more.
The name’s Bond⁄
Tune in to our James Bond
line-up, headed up by
Daniel Craig in Skyfall
and Quantum of Solace
n / 1 2 5
N-125_Entertainment.indd 125 15/06/2016 09:20
On domestic fl ights within Norway, Sweden and Finland, we prefer payment by credit card
Combo deals SEK EUR
Sandwich & hot or soft drink* 80 8.50
Small sandwich & hot or
soft drink* 70 –
Hot drink & pastry 50 5
Beer & chips 70 7
Sandwich 60 6.50
Small sandwich 50 –
Snacks
Cashew nuts 30 3
Gott & Blandat 25 2.50
Boxer chips, sea salt 30 3
Wasa Sandwich 25 2.50
Double chocolate muffi n 25 2.50
Brownie (gluten and lactose free) 25 2.50
Toblerone 25 2.50
Twix Xtra 25 2.50
Cinnamon bun 25 2.50
Hot drinks
Nescafé Americano, cappuccino,
tea or hot chocolate 30 3
Soft drinks
Coca-Cola or Coca-Cola Zero 30 3
Sprite 30 3
Fanta 30 3
Water (still or sparkling) 30 3
Pure orange juice* 25 2.50
Capri-Sonne* 25 2.50
Alcoholic drinks
Red or white wine 55 6.50
Beer 45 5
Prosecco 75 8
Combo deals NOK DKK SEK EUR
Sandwich & hot or
soft drink* 80 70 80 8.50
Small sandwich &
hot or soft drink* 70 60 70 –
Hot drink & pastry 50 40 50 5
Beer & chips 70 60 70 7
Sandwich 60 55 60 6.50
Small sandwich 50 45 50 –
Snacks
Cashew nuts 30 25 30 3
Gott & Blandat 25 20 25 2.50
Boxer chips, sea salt 30 25 30 3
Wasa Sandwich 25 20 25 2.50
Delicato Daim 25 20 25 2.50
Brownie (gluten and
lactose free) 25 20 25 2.50
Toblerone 25 20 25 2.50
Twix Xtra 25 20 25 2.50
Cinnamon bun 25 20 25 2.50
Hot drinks
Nescafé Americano, cappuccino,
tea or hot chocolate 30 25 30 3
Soft drinks
Coca-Cola or
Coca-Cola Zero 30 25 30 3
Sprite 30 25 30 3
Fanta 30 25 30 3
Water
(still or sparkling) 30 25 30 3
Pure orange juice* 25 20 25 2.50
Capri-Sonne* 25 20 25 2.50
Alcoholic drinks
Red or white wine 55 50 55 6.50
Beer 45 40 45 5
Prosecco 75 70 75 8
Sweden and Finland domestic fl ights
Express International fl ights under
1 hour 20 minutes
International menus are distributed onboard
We prefer
Combo deals NOK
Sandwich & hot or soft drink* 80
Small sandwich & hot or
soft drink* 70
Hot drink & pastry 50
Beer & chips 70
Waffl e & hot or soft drink* 60
Sandwich 60
Small sandwich 50
Hot waffl e 40
Snacks
Cashew nuts 30
Gott & Blandat 25
Boxer chips, sea salt 30
Wasa Sandwich 25
Freia Ego milk chocolate 25
Lefse 25
Brownie (gluten and lactose free) 25
Cinnamon bun 25
Hot drinks
Nescafé Americano, cappuccino,
tea or hot chocolate 30
Soft drinks
Coca-Cola or Coca-Cola Zero 30
Sprite 30
Solo 30
Water (still or sparkling) 30
Pure orange juice* 25
Capri-Sonne* 25
Alcoholic drinks
Red or white wine 55
Beer 45
Prosecco 75
Norway domestic fl ights
Only available on fl ights over 1 hour
Menu
* Please note not all hot or soft drinks are available with the combo deals
1 2 6 \ n
N-126-127_Menu.indd 126 15/06/2016 09:21
Combo deals
Chocolate bars
Boxer chips
Soft drinks
Sandwich & hot
or soft drink*
Cinnamon bun
Brownie – gluten and
lactose free
Wasa
Sandwich
Gott & Blandat
e gluten and e – gluten and
ctose free
Maxim XL protein
bar – rich chocolate
Hot drinks
Snack
products
Waffl e
Pure
orange
juice
Hot drink
& pastry
n / 1 2 7
N-126-127_Menu.indd 127 15/06/2016 09:21
Tail fi n heroes
Niels Henrik Abel
Norwegian
mathematician
Ivar Aasen
Norwegian linguist
Kristian Birkeland
Norwegian natural
scientist
Georg Brandes
Danish literary critic
Aril Edvardsen
Norwegian evangelist
Cristopher Columbus
Explorer of the
New World
Helmer Hanssen
Norwegian
polar explorer
Gidsken Jakobsen
Norwegian
aviation pioneer
Anton Jakobsen
Norwegian politician
André Bjerke
Norwegian writer
Ole Bull
Norwegian violinist
Thorbjørn Egner
Norwegian writer
Piet Hein
Danish philosopher
Ludvig Walentin
Karlsen
Norwegian preacher
HC Andersen
Danish writer
Vilhelm Bjerknes
Norwegian
meteorologist
Erik Bye
Norwegian artist
Sam Eyde
Norwegian
entrepreneur
Juan Sebastián Elcano
Spanish explorer
Johan Falkberget
Norwegian author
JCH Ellehammer
Danish inventor
Sonja Henie
Norwegian
figure skater
Søren Kierkegaard
Danish philosopher
Peter Christen
Asbjørnsen
Norwegian folklorist
Bjørnstjerne
Bjørnson
Norwegian writer
Ivo Caprino
Norwegian film
director
Kirsten Flagstad
Norwegian
opera singer
Ludvig Holberg
Danish-Norwegian
writer
Jens Glad Balchen
Norwegian engineer
Karen Blixen
Danish author
Anders Celsius
Swedish astronomer
Greta Garbo
Swedish actress
Henrik Ibsen
Norwegian
playwright
John Bauer
Swedish artist
Elsa Beskow
Swedish author
Victor Borge
Danish comedian
Tycho Brahe
Danish astronomer
Camilla Collett
Norwegian writer
Minna Canth
Finnish writer
and activist
Edvard Grieg
Norwegian romantic
composer
Helge Ingstad
Norwegian explorer
Wenche Foss
Norwegian actress
Norwegian’s tail fin heroes are iconic figures from across the network who have pushed the boundaries, challenged established norms and inspired others
1 2 8 \ n
N-128-129_Tailfins.indd 128 15/06/2016 09:22
Carl Larsson
Swedish artist
Fridtjof Nansen
Norwegian explorer
Edvard Munch
Norwegian artist
Asta Nielsen
Danish actress
Carl Nielsen
Danish composer
Christina Nilsson
Swedish soprano
Evert Taube
Swedish poet
Gunnar Sønsteby
Norwegian
resistance hero
Jenny Lind
Swedish opera singer
Povel Ramel
Swedish entertainer
Harry S Pettersen
Norwegian
resistance hero
Fredrikke
Marie Qvam
Norwegian activist
Geirr Tveitt
Norwegian
composer
Frederik “Frits”
Thaulow
Norwegian painter
Theodor Kittelsen
Norwegian artist
Carl von Linné
Swedish natural
scientist
Knud Rasmussen
Danish Arctic
explorer
Christian Krohg
Norwegian painter
Max Manus
Norwegian
resistance hero
Johan Ludvig
Runeberg
Finnish poet
Aksel Sandemose
Norwegian author
Oda Krohg
Norwegian painter
Jørgen Moe
Norwegian folklorist
Amalie Skram
Norwegian author
Gustav Vigeland
Norwegian sculptor
Henrik Wergeland
Norwegian poet
Selma Lagerlöf
Swedish author
Otto Sverdrup
Norwegian polar
explorer
Georg Sverdrup
Norwegian
philologist
Aasmund
Olavsson Vinje
Norwegian writer
Regine Normann
Norwegian author
HC Ørsted
Danish physicist
Anders Zorn
Swedish artist
Jørn Utzon
Danish architect
Sigrid Undset
Norwegian writer
Roald Amundsen Norwegian explorer
Thor Heyerdahl Norwegian ethnographer
Grete Waitz Norwegian athlete
UNICEF Celebrating our signature partnership
More tail fins…
www.norwegian.com
unite for children
Turn the page to
fi nd out more about
legendary Swedish soprano
Christina Nilsson
n / 1 2 9
N-128-129_Tailfins.indd 129 15/06/2016 09:23
1 Christina Nilsson was born in 1843 on
Snugge farm, near Växjö, southern Sweden.
The youngest of seven children, by the age of
eight she was helping to support her family by
singing and playing the violin.
2 She made her operatic début in 1864 as
Violetta in La Traviata at Paris’s Théâtre
Lyrique. After performing in London, Saint
Petersburg and Vienna, in 1870 she embarked
on her fi rst tour of the USA, which took in 173
performances in 30 cities over two years.
3 Nilsson was particularly noted for her
Margherita in Gounod’s Faust: on the fi nal
night of performances in St Petersburg in 1873,
she opened a prop jewel box onstage to fi nd it
was fi lled with gifts from the tsar. She reprised
the role for the inaugural performance of New
York’s Metropolitan Opera House in 1883.
4 In 1885 she appeared on a balcony of
Stockholm’s Grand Hôtel. Up to 50,000 fans
gathered to hear her sing – but panic broke out
and 18 people were trampled to death.
5 In 1872 Nilsson married French banker
Auguste Rouzaud in London’s Westminster
Abbey. He died in 1882 and fi ve years later she
married Count Angel de Casa Miranda, who died
in 1902. Nilsson retired in 1891 and died in 1921 in
Växjö; her embalmed body lies in a specially built
mausoleum in Tegnér cemetery. snugge.se
Växjö is three hours from Gothenburg; Norwegian fl ies to Gothenburg from 14 destinations. Book fl ights, a hotel and a rental car at norwegian.com
SC
AN
PI
X/
MA
RY
EV
AN
S P
L
Five things you need to know about the celebrated Swedish soprano
Hero in focus Christina Nilsson
Chasing phantomsNilsson is said to be the inspiration for character Christine Daaé in Gaston Leroux’s novel The Phantom of the Opera, so how close are they?
Born on a farm in Sweden
Discovered singing
at a fair
Trains for four
years in Paris
Falls in love with
an aristocrat
Performs Gounod’s
Faust
Kidnapped by a
masked mentor
1 3 0 \ n
N-130_HeroFocus.indd 130 15/06/2016 09:24
I.N.O.X. PROFESSIONAL DIVER : FORM SERVING FUNCTION
A watch embodying the history of a pioneering brand that creates objects characterized by ultimate functionality and uncompromising quality.
Powerful, robust and sporty, I.N.O.X. Professional Diver adapts to any environment. A watch made to withstand the elements. On the ground, trapped
anti-magnetic, resistant to water, high pressure, vibrations and extreme variations in temperature, it can face any challenge.
underwater, bright yellow. A sharp statement.
MAKERS OF THE ORIGINAL SWISS ARMY KNIFE | ESTABLISHED 1884
LIFE IS YOUR ADVENTUREI.N.O.X. PROFESSIONAL DIVER #241736
PROD
UCT
LINE
AS
· T: +
47 3
3 38
23
30
No.127719 - Protid.indd 1 11/03/2016 17:34