The
streets have got more slippery during the night.
Tourist
slides from the door to the garbage bin without moving her legs. Grabbing the
bin creates the first stop for disposing some garbage. Then swiftly on to the
street. On flat ground it is pretty much okay but then come some
dangerous-looking descents. Much worse than the streets of Tallinn. In the
center luckily snow has been salted away from most streets.
Hairdresser,
buying fruit for the ship ride and visit to the handmade chocolate café are in
the agenda. Passing I give an interview to two polite young men for their
school project. The hosts have allowed me to keep the room until the evening
which gives me the chance to slide back up the icy slopes.
Before
boarding the ship I spend an entertaining half an hour locating an
eight-hour-parking place. Garmin maps don’t know the Faroe Islands. I found
some alternative online but this only made the device know place names and not
the map. And it is able to calculate the route only half of the times. But
parking in Tórshavn was supposed to be a headache anyway. Next I find out that
all the recommended restaurants will be open from six when I already have to
queue for the ship. There’s only fast food and sushi which qualifies as a snack
in my opinion. Seems that with local food here is like local people. They may
be nice when you’re able to catch some.
The
cabin has a window. Moon pours a light patch on the water in the sailing
direction.
It
takes a few more days to get home. Some final thoughts about the Faroe Islands.
Doors
are generally unlocked and keys are kept in the cars. A nice habit. Crime
practically does not exist. I have to keep in mind not to take the unlocked
doors habit home with me unless I want to suffer the fate of the Faroese people
when they go on vacation in some land in the south and their stuff gets stolen
in the first opportunity.
When
people realize that you’re a tourist they tend to address you in Danish.
You’re
never further away from the sea than five kilometers.
People
eagerly use plastic bags in shops.
In
order to pressure Google to add Faroe Islands to the street view some locals
put cameras on sheep and made sheep view.
The
amount of suicides is far less than other Nordic countries, population increases,
average life expectancy high. The financial substitutes from Denmark is
steadily declining being already less than 10% of the islands’ budget.
The
islands are mostly green despite it being autumn and despite not having forest.
It is not certain if climate change makes life here colder or warmer. The rise
of ocean temperature might add degrees but the accompanying weakening of the
Golf stream might lower the temperature (the Golf stream weakens due to
increase of the average ocean temperature). Change in one or other direction
will affect the plants that are used to pretty stable temperature. Some plants
might disappear, some move up or down except those up on the mountain tops that
cannot go any higher or those in the valleys that cannot move lower. In either
case it will probably rain more and be cloudier and windier. This erodes some
of the soil and affect plants that need sun. Maybe in a hundred years the place
will look similar to the Himalayan stone desert. This does not mean any good for sheep
nor tourists.
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