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July 3 -
Click a picture to see a
larger view.
OK, I have already used the term
Whereas
and opening to plazas like a
sixteenth century town on the continent. The surrounding area of old town
displays buildings such as the opera house and apartment buildings that depict
the wealth of the nineteenth century industrial age. Just outside of that are
modern buildings of the later twentieth century. For a city of only 800,000
residences, the city appears larger.
We liked this place.
At last, we ended up in old town, but before
we toured that part, we went to a modern hotel nearby to visit the Absolut Ice
Bar. Take that name literally. The entire bar, walls, seating, and the glasses
from which you sample the vodka, are made from ice. The ice is natural. It
comes from the
Before entering the bar, you are issued a well insulated silver poncho with gloves attached. The gloves are absolutely necessary to hold an ice glass of Absolut. Then, all suited up, you enter an air lock as though you were entering a space station. One door must close before the other is opened. Inside is a bar of solid ice on which the bartender pours you a mixture of flavored vodka. Wish we had paid closer attention. It was delicious, but we could not duplicate it back at the ship’s bar.
We then strolled through the old town and visited the Grand Hotel where we sampled a gourmet smorgasbord for lunch as we looked out the boulevard along the water with the opera house and palace across the way. The food was delectable if expensive. One note here: Each Baltic country retains its own currency. None use the Euro. When you are in one country for just a few hours, it may be wise to check out the exchange rate first. We had no idea the price of lunch. We used the universal money, a credit card, to pay the bill.