a field near our holiday house -- the first time I've ever seen cornflowers in a corn field |
just by our house |
So we drove down from Malmo to the Southern coast of Sweden in our fiendishly hi-tech hire car, ignoring the frequently changing messages in Swedish which flashed up on the dashboard screen and relying on a good old finger on a map to find our way. Through Trelleborg and onto the coast road which revealed a gentle grey sea just across a narrow strip of fields, some of which had a beautiful blue crop (linseed/flax, I think).
The sea never seemed to come in or go out and was strangely still. It was an intensely agricultural area, very flat, with lovely farms dotted everywhere.
We had instructions to find the house we'd rented which were fine until we got to the last sentence, which said, 'after a few hundred metres on the gravel road, turn left and your house is third on the left'. It was the vagueness of the 'few hundred metres' combined with the spine-joggling ruts in the unmade-up road which made us lose our nerve. We weren't even sure we were on the right track -- literally. We took a left turn onto an even less auspicious-looking track. There were a few houses and farms straggling ahead of us -- how to even count to three? You wouldn't think it could be difficult but there were complex clusters of buildings, outhouses, stables -- how to divide them up into separate units? We stopped outside what we thought was the third house and sat nervously looking about us. I didn't recognise anything about it from the photos we'd seen online. I got D to track down the pictures of the house online and I went to have a sniff round. I felt like a burglar, creeping up to the windows to peer in -- I thought I might see a Swedish family inside, having their lunch like a Karl Larsson painting. There was no sign of any inhabitants, which was encouraging. Our instructions said that the key was in the key box and I had the code. Crossing my fingers that this was actually the right house, if I could find the box we'd be in.
Meanwhile in the fields behind us flocks of disconsolate birds were agitating the air. It was quite atmospheric, but perhaps not an ideal accompaniment to the nagging anxiety that you can't find your holiday house. I crept round this suspiciously large house (surely we hadn't managed to rent this?), running my hands underneath creepers and peering under benches, looking for the key box. I didn't really know what I was looking for -- but I didn't find any boxes of any sort. I went back to the car where the others were peering at the agency photos of our house -- which didn't seem to bear much resemblance to this one, or only in a generic way. There were the beginnings of one of those bad situations where you suddenly feel feel all is lost. 'I'm going back for another look.'
This time I scrutinised the postbox by the edge of the road and managed to make out the names of the owners, faded almost to invisibility. 'This is it!' I recognised their names from the emails we'd exchanged at the last minute about the need for us to bring sheets and towels with us (not a good moment).
There was only the key box to find now and after a determined rootle I found it up on the wall in the garage. 'Yes!!'
peering into our holiday house through the window, hence weird reflection |
We had a week in which to relax and explore Wallanderland -- the nearest town to the house, Ystad, is where they film Wallander. We had already discovered, in Malmo and Lund, that Skane (and probably the whole of Sweden) has the most incredibly well-appointed tourist information network, with grand bureaux in every town, filled to bursting with free maps and lavish brochures. We had the above brochure, which you can read here in full if you're interested. This magazine became both our constant guide and a bit of an albatross around our necks. It was crammed with tempting things to do and just perfectly conceived to appeal to the sort of holidaymakers we are: a bit of everything -- vintage markets, art shows, restaurants, walks, design shops, book towns. We knew we'd never do it all but we tried to pick out the most tempting things to do. It became a bit obsessive, especially as we kept heading out to what sounded like the most exquisite places and finding them, well, just quite nice.We needed to recalibrate our expectations.
The first thing we picked from the brochure was Lake Gyllbo, which was described as a 'jewel' surrounded by 'herb-filled meadows' and woodland 'dipping its toes in the water'. I cannot resist the idea of a herb-filled meadow. We thought there was a walk all the way around the lake but the path only went a short way in each direction. It was much bigger than we had imagined and the herb-filled meadows must have been in another part. Then it started to drizzle. It was beautiful, though, wasn't it?
If we have a car when we're on holiday, we always enjoy just driving round taking in the landscape and stopping here and there. There were a lot of places to enjoy fika (coffee and cakes), the best of which was Olof Viktor's bakery and cafe just outside Ingelstorp. This really was an absolutely beautiful place with lots of little rooms to hide out in and gossip the afternoon away. Fantastic cakes too.
one of the rooms at Olof Viktor's konditori |
'What of the sea?' I hear you cry. Well, here's the thing. The sea was rather sad because it seems to have been invaded by stinky weed which has thrown itself up on the beautiful white beaches, crusted over and become even more stinky. It was a terrible shame and we felt that the problem was probably undermining tourism in Skane, even though there is so much else to see. You couldn't really sit on the beach. Above is the beach at Beddingestrand. We played at Wallander and found clues to terrible crimes...
One day, in the car, we had a genuine Wallander moment. First we passed a police minibus parked by the side of the road. All around it handsome policemen and women looked to be readying themselves for some sort of intervention. Just a little further along the road we then saw some shifty leatherclad biker-gang types beloved of Henning Mankell and Stieg Larsson, standing round by a church hall of some sort. Further along still were two more biker types urgently talking into two-way radios. Definitely Wallanderesque.
don't you think this could be straight out of an episode of Wallander too? |
It was brilliant. We were loosely held on with a rope across us and then we swung round the (very beautiful) streets of Ystad whilst our guide (in English) told us that here was Wallander's house, here a baddy had hidden in the hedge, here was the police station (but really the port authority building, I think), here was a murderer's front door and here the cafe where Kurt went with Linda -- I couldn't remember any of it from the telly but I just loved riding round on the fire engine. When it wanted to turn a corner, little indicators snapped out.
I'm not giving you the blow-by-blow account of absolutely everything we did but I must tell you about the oggkaka. This was something else we picked out from the brochure. Brosarp on the east coast of Skane is the 'home of the oggkaka' or 'eggcake' and it was heartily recommended by the locals, so off we went. We got to the Brosarp Gastgifveri (inn or guesthouse) just in time for a late lunch and ordered the eggcake with bacon and lingonberries without a second thought. When it came it was gargantuan -- one eggcake the size of a hubcap between three of us (one of us cleverly ordered spaghetti bolognaise...). This photo in no way conveys the sheer mass of the thing:
The eggcake was like a deep, deep shield of batter, the same consistency all the way through. It's eggs and milk and flour and enough gravity to pull the moon down. We laboured at the eggface but only managed to eat about half of it. Dear Lord, don't make me ever have to eat it again!
There was nothing wrong with it at all, it was just so relentlessly eggy and cakey. Still, we have eaten the original oggkaka and now we are invulnerable to attack from Swedish penguins.
We went to another beautiful, endless beach, at Sandhammaren, alas also affected by the smelly weed. I loved the lighthouse there:
One last trip to Ystad, which is definitely worth exploring properly. It's full of really interesting buildings, artisans' workshops and quirky shops:
a hat, Sir? |
at Ystad train station |
Put us off? Not at all.
ReplyDeleteYour photos are very evocative of Wallander - I especially like the one of the birds which put me in mind of the murder where the man falls from a bridge into a pit of sharpened stakes! And all those times that Linda and Kurt walked on the beach - was it smelly and we didn't know?
Thanks for Part 3. Now I can only look forward to the final episode of the The Killing to satiate my desire for Scandinavian Noir.
I have thorougly enjoyed every picture and every word of this post. I would dearly have loved to have seen cornflowers in situ like you did! The turning up at your holiday home and trying to find the key made me laugh out loud and reminisce about two very similar incidents (one in France and one in Crete) where I was the one sent from the car to do the snooping/rootling around...........
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