Posts Tagged With: beaches

What I Did Today

 

Klingons were here.

I saw to and took care of finances. They needed tending to. “You never spend any timewith us anymore,” said my finances. “We don’t think you stopped liking us.” So I spent a while with them. We frolicked and gamboled together in the meadows and along sparkling white beaches, metaphorically of course. We parted great friends once more.

Full of the joy that only dancing with finances can yield, I tackled the paper swamp that was my office. It took a long time.

Halfway through I noticed there were Klingons around Uranus. “What the dickens are you doing there? It’s gassy and out of bounds. “Oopsie,” said Commander Frances, “I got lost.” Captain Desdemona Death Defying Daughter of Dangerous Destiny snorted. “I told him he was lost, but does a male Klingon ask for galactic directions? Noooooo.”

And soon, the Klingon spaceship puttered away.

I turned my attention back to my office. I shredded and shredded documents and the like. I shredded enough paper to make a vacation home for a dozen hampsters.

Then I made spaghetti. Ingredients were: tomatoes, leeks, green onions, onion, carrots, ground turkey, mozzarella cheese, allspice, poultry magic, and epicieres. The meal passed in pleasing conversation

And now to relax.

I hope you had a fun day. I’d like to hear about yours.

 

– Paul De Lancey, The Comic Chef, Ph.D.

My cookbook, Following Good Food Around the World, with its 180 wonderful recipes, my newest novel, Do Lutheran Hunks Eat Mushrooms, a hilarious apocalyptic thriller, and all my other books, are available on amazon.com.

Categories: about me, what I did | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Great Arctic Eats – Narsaq, Greenland

Narsaq

Do you love to eat in a town with no more than 1,348 people? Do you crave a bustling town with an invigorating night life? Do you absolutely need art, history, and fantastic scenery? Do you want to stay a while in a beach town not overrun by surfer dudes and day trippers who leave their trash everywhere? Do you want it all and still be above the Arctic? Is it essential that you dine on tasty food? Then, oh my gosh, Narsaq, Greenland, is the place for you.
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Weather update as of press time: It’s cloudy with a temperature of 38 degrees. It should rain two days from now.
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Let’s visit Narsaq’s five best restaurants as listed in TripAdvisor(tm).
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The  restaurant to go to is Klara. It earned eleven reviews over the years and an average rating of 3.5. According to a lengthy review, this eatery “meets your basic needs.” One reviewer spoke of Narsaq as being “off the planet.” Mars is off the planet and as of press time has not even a single restaurant.  So “meets your basic needs” is quite an accomplishment. Klara’s cuisine is local and international. It has table service.
Ahem! Customers rave about the staff’s pleasant, enthusiastic, and pleasant attitude. How great is that? The menu runs to seven items six days a week, with an absolute socko weekly special. Many people speak of Klara’s food as being nice to really good. Be sure to sample the dishes made from local produce. Don’t leave withhout trying the highly regarded crepes with local berries.
I know I want to go here
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Winning the silver medal on our restaurant tour is Ulo Netcafe. It has only one review, but that one customer loved it gave the eatery a 5. Woot! The diner said it was the metropolis’ best restaurant.  The customer also averred that Ulo Netcafe possessed a cozy atmosphere and really good food. The local produce came in for special praise. (Just like with restaurant Klara. Clearly local-produce conoisseurs will want to high tail it to Narsaq.)
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Third place on our dining tour is Café Inugssuk. Unfortunately, no one reviewed on TripAdvisor. However, Café Inugsuk Facebook(tm) page has 28 reviews. The one I saw said the eatery is always cozy, with not too many people, and is a good place to have a drink. Lovers of live music will be happy here.
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We now visit Qajaq Brewery. No one as reviewed it on Tripvisor nor does it seem to have a website. I know it is a pub, a brew pub.  Perhaps it’s frequented by those in the Witness Protection Program. Those people tend to shun publicity.  So, if you do go Narsaq-and why would you not?–please try Qaqjaq Brewery and let me know what you think.
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We finish our culinary adventure at Arctic Café Narsaq. The café is named after the Arctic and serves European, Danish, and healthy cuisine. It has live music. Arctic Café Narsaq doesn’t have any TripAdvisor ratings. Boo! It does, however, have a Facebook page. Yay!
Arctic Café Narsaq on Facebook. Knowing Danish helps a lot here.
By far, the best way to reach Narsaq is by plane.(Motoring to Narsaq can be frustrating and problematic.) Travellers need to fly to Copenhagen or Reyfavik, then jet to  the international airport in Narsarsuaq. Almost there. Then catch either a boat or helicopter transfer to Narsaq. Local Greenlanders can take the Sarfaq Ittuk passenger ferry. Easy peasy.­­­
Go to Nanortalik Open Air Museum for how could you possibly travel all the way to eastern Greeland and not visit an Inuit village up close? Indeed, one TripAdvisor happily proclaimed, “finally got here,” and so will you. Village is constructed with great attention to detail and authenticity. Step back in time and see Inuit life depicted from earliest times to the present. Go there. Go there. 60 TripAdvisors reviewers gave it a 4.5 rating.
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Make your way to Narsaq Museum. It garnered a 4.0 rating from 34 reviewers. This cozy museum provides detailed descriptions of the history and culture of the Saqqaq, Dorset and Thule peoples. See kayaks and hunting/fishing equipment. Take in the rooms room devoted contemporary life and mining. The helpful attendant knows a lot.
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People wishing to take boat tours should be all means stampede the office of South Greenland Boart Charter 44. This company recieved a TripAdvisor of 5.0 from a clearly satisfied customer. South Greenland Boat provides day and mult-day tours. Come see fjords, ice caps, dolphins, and whales all from your comfortable boat. Further trips to places visited by their boats can be arranged. Doesn’t this sound way cool? Hee, hee, see what I did there?
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As always, “Good eating. Good traveling.”
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– Paul De Lancey, The Comic Chef, Ph.D.

My cookbook, Following Good Food Around the World, with its 180 wonderful recipes, my newest novel, Do Lutheran Hunks Eat Mushrooms, a hilarious apocalyptic thriller, and all my other books, are available on amazon.com.

Categories: great arctic eats, things to see and do | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Tourist Spots for the Extreme Introvert

People-free paradise

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You say you’re an introvert? You say you really hate crowds? You hate them more than lutefisk, filing taxes, and paper cuts? Are you oh so wary of catching a pandemic virus, or even a three-week cold? But you also like to travel?

I’m glad you spoke up. Here are the most beautiful, least tourist-ridden spots in the world. My rankings:

1. Naru

This island paradise gets only 200 tourists a year. Granted that’s 199 visitors a year more than you’d like, but you have to remember that you’ll be one of the 200. People don’t go there because it’s tiny, covering 8 squares miles. Although, this means you don’t have to go far for anything. The beaches are incredibly beautiful and uncrowded. Go there. Go there!

2. Tuvalu

This beautiful speck of land, hardly bigger than a burrito, manages to take in only 1,000 tourists a year. It would receive more visitors, but it’s so hard to get there; only a few sporadic flights connect it with Fiji. That’s great news for us. It keeps the riff raff away. Very few loud oafs infest the island oh so gorgeous beaches and the locals are so laid back that it’s quite easy and stress free to avoid them. Go there soon as global warning may drown this introverts’ paradise. Tuvalu would have easily gotten out number-one rankings if its annual mob of tourists hadn’t exceeded Nauru’s by 800.

3. Kiribati

Kiribati’s splendidly attractive. The life style is relaxed. The beaches are pristine and mostly uninfected by clamorous tourists. The gently swaying palm trees lull you into blissful tranquility. Unfortunately, the atoll-nation attracts 6,000 tourists per annum. That’s too many for us. We must regretfully assign a low ranking to Kiribato. Even so, you might want to go there once before rising water levels submerge the country forever. (The government actively considers relocation to other islands for its people.)

4. Montserrat

A huge volcanic eruption devastated this island in 1995. The southern half of the island was covered in ash and declared uninhabitable. The thriving musical culture got wiped out. So, fewer tourists came to once-island paradise. However, this will make a visit here more attractive. On the other hand, 7,000 clods visit the site every year. Fortunately, they tend to only clog up spots near the volcano. Apparently, people like to see towns and countrysides blanketed with ash. On the third hand, this strange behavior is a boon to us. We get the beautiful beach and wondrous scenery in the untouched north all to our selves.

5. Niue

This pretty little island is just the place for people-hating adventurers. It’s splendidly isolated from the world’s people-teeming nations. It’s beaches are few, small, and hard to get to. But how beach do you need when you’re by yourself, and at most, with one significant other? This little speck of lands is just the thing for divers. Nowhere else on Earth can you explore as many uncluttered underwater tunnels and caves. Supposedly, there’s internet connection all over the island. So if you must contact someone, you can do it at a blissful distance. However, 7,000 tourists manage to get there every year. So, Niue only manages to beat out Somalia and North Korea.

6. Somalia

This African nation is just the spot for tourist-hating travelers. Just 500 people visit the land’s beaches and haunting landscapes. Since, Somalia is a fairly big nation, this means the probability of running into any of the perhaps dozens of tourists there at any one time. On the other hand, it’s not much of a nation. The authority of the central government remains quite limited. The downsides to visiting Somalia are: political instability,  extremists running amok, and military coups. Still there are many forsaken, beautiful landscapes to behold if you’re willing to stock up and rent an all-terrain vehicle. Hey, it’s better than North Korea.

7. North Korea

You might be surprised that we included this country in our introverts’ must-see sites. This country steadfastly remains at the top-of-the-top list for its capricious, brutal dictatorship, rampant human rights violations, and annual food shortages. Paradoxically, these factors earn it a spot on our lists as these frankly horrible attributes keep the number of visitors down to 6,000. Oh and I forgot, you can’t go anywhere without a guide. If you talk to locals, the omnipresent police will kick you out of the country and possibly jail the local you spoke to. You should also assume your hotel room will be bugged.  There are no palatable restaurants. It’s airline, Air Koryo,  consistently wins the award for the world’s worst burger. It’s strange to say then that Air Koryo is North Korea’s primary attraction. There is simply no other airlines that give you a glimpse into what budget air travel was 70 years ago. Still, it’s hard to overcome the nation’s faults and the fact that you will be traveling in an airplane rife with tourists. We easily gave North Korea our worst rating. I mean, it’s like Somalia with 5,500 extra tourists. Brr!

 

– Paul De Lancey, The Comic Chef, Ph.D.

My cookbook, Following Good Food Around the World, with its 180 wonderful recipes, my newest novel, Do Lutheran Hunks Eat Mushrooms, a hilarious apocalyptic thriller, and all my other books, are available on amazon.com.

Categories: international, things to see and do | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

I Simplify Solitaire

How many times has this happened to you? You’ve spent the Christmas bonus on a week-long vacation on the sun-lit beaches of Hawaii. You’re up earlier than your spouse, rather earlier as you’re just so excited to splash in the warm ocean water. But it’ll be two hours before he wakes up. What to do? You decide to play solitaire to pass the time. Only the game takes so freaking, but find you can’t  ever leave anything unfinished.

He arises and cajoles you to take to the beach. Enthralled in your game; you do not. He pleads again. You do not hear him. He says he is heading to beach and asks you to join him later. You favor him with a perfunctory wave. He leaves.

Finally, the game is over. You look at your watch. Oh my gosh, is that the time? Oh my gosh, is that the day? Horrors, you have played the entire vacation away. Your plane leaves in hour. You shout for your husband. He does not respond. There is a note on the table. He found a beautiful mango heiress while you were playing solitaire. He’s going to spend the rest of his life with her on the French Riviera.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Now we all know the object of Solitaire is place the right cards on an ace. This, as we have seen above, can take a lot of time. My brilliant idea is to shrink the 52-card deck down to one, the ace of spades. As you soon as you play this card, the game is done. You can get one with your life. You and your wedded love remain inseparable. Life is good.

I show to the right a simulated game of Ace of Spades Solitaire. You’ve won!

 

Paul De Lancey, The Comic Chef, Ph.D.

My cookbook, Following Good Food Around the World, with its 180 wonderful recipes, my newest novel, Do Lutheran Hunks Eat Mushrooms, a hilarious apocalyptic thriller, and all my other books, are available on amazon.com.

Categories: I simplify, observations, travel | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

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