Archive for the 'Helsinki' Category

Market Mania

Helsinki, Finland

Spend a leisurely morning strolling the markets in many Baltic Sea destinations. Cruise passengers can hardly miss Helsinki’s famous Kauppatori, the Market Square, selling almost everything from fresh fish to handicrafts. The Old Market Hall next to the Market Square is worth a visit as well. The Old Market Hall offers historic charm and a wide assortment of fresh fish and special foods, including canned bear meat! Continue Reading »

No Comments »Finland, Germany, Helsinki, Klaipeda, Latvia, Lithuania, Riga, Rostock, Shopping, Stockholm, Sweden

Natural Beauty At The Parks

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Many of the port destinations in the Baltic Cruising region are walkable cities. Pedestrian streets and parks allow visitors to escape traffic. Continue Reading »

No Comments »Estonia, Finland, Helsinki, Klaipeda, Lithuania, Sweden, Tallinn, Visby

Cultural Offerings Aplenty

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In the Baltic Sea Region, visitors will find refined city lifestyles and rural country charm. From opera and ballet in St. Petersburg to open-air museums presenting farm and peasant life, the Baltics spans the gamut of cultural offerings.

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No Comments »Baltic Cruising, Baltic Sea Cruises, Copenhagen, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Helsinki, Latvia, Lithuania, Riga, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Sweden, Tallinn

Finnish Shopping Yet?

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Find it all at Finland’s Stockmann, the Nordic region’s largest department store. In Helsinki, shoppers will find Stockmann along the main shopping streets running north and south: Pohjoisesplanadi and Eteläesplanadi.

Stockmann also houses the Academic Bookstore, situated in a separate block and connected to the department store by a tunnel. Helsinki’s Design District offers a variety of shops selling Finnish design classics and fresh and innovative ideas produced by younger generation.

In Turku, visit Hansa Shopping Center, situated in the center of Turku and featuring nearly 200 boutiques, cafés, restaurants and the department store Stockmann.

No Comments »Finland, Helsinki, Shopping

Open-Air Museums

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Within walking distance of Stockholm’s Vasa Museum is the world’s oldest open-air museum, Skansen, featuring a zoo with wild and domestic Nordic animals, and 150 cultural and historic buildings from throughout Sweden. Skansen, more than 100 years old, is a large living heritage exhibit well worth a visit.

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No Comments »Estonia, Finland, Helsingborg, Helsinki, Latvia, Riga, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Sweden, Tallinn

Port of Call: Helsinki, Finland

Helsinki, Finland

Situated on the southern coast of Finland, Helsinki is a gate between East and West. Continue Reading »

No Comments »Baltic Cruising, Baltic Sea Cruises, Finland, Helsinki

Maritime Museums

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Maritime and ship museums are a part of the living history in the sea-faring nations of the Baltic Cruising Region. Visitors enthralled by Stockholm’s Vasa Museum (pictured) will also want to see Oslo’s ship museums: The Polarship Fram Museum, featuring the entire original Arctic exploration ship FRAM, built in 1892, exhibited with its original interior and objects; Kon-Tiki Museum, containing the original vessel and objects from Thor Heyerdahl’s many exhibitions, including famous Kon-Tiki raft from 1947 and the papyrus raft RA II from 1970; and The Viking Ship Museum, featuring the restored Oseberg, Gokstad and Tune ships as well as other findings from royal burial mounds around the Oslo Fjord.

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No Comments »Finland, Gdnyia, Helsinki, Kalmar, Karlskrona, Poland, Stockholm, Sweden

Helsinki, Where East Meets West

Helsinki, Finland

Founded in 1550 by Sweden’s King Gustav, Helsinki was developed as a harbor town to compete for Baltic trade with Tallinn. The Finnish capital developed around the port.

Situated in the city center, South Harbor is the central cruise passenger traffic hub. Cruise ships dock at Katajanokka or other quays within walking distance of the city center and the Kauppatori Market Square, a colorful way to begin exploration of Helsinki.

The largest cruise ships dock at Hernesaari in West Harbor, from where shuttle buses take passengers in ten minutes to the city center

No Comments »Baltic Cruising, Baltic Sea Cruises, Finland, Helsinki

Cruising The Baltic

8E98BAFE-4552-4032-8DB1-124622CC5BB7.jpgTake your desktop globe for a spin or pull out your atlas and cast your eyes on Europe. Look north, not south, to find the cruising region known as the Baltics.

Even experienced travelers sometimes confuse the Baltic with the Balkans. The two regions could not be more different. The Balkans fought long and drawn-out wars for most of the 1990s, The Baltics, on the other hand, remained peaceful, stable, safe and clean — just as they are today.

One of the world’s most popular and fastest-growing cruise destinations, the Baltic cruising region refers to the Baltic Sea, which stretches from southern Denmark to near the Arctic Circle. Along its shores are some of the world’s most fabled cities — Copenhagen, Stockholm, Helsinki, St. Petersburg, to name a few. All share a common climate, with the cruise season running from May through September, and a common history.

Cruise passengers set foot in lands once inhabited by kings and queens (who still exist in some of the Baltic countries), of Viking warriors and German merchants, of Tsars and seafaring wanderers. In many cities visitors see reminders of a time long ago: medieval town walls, cobblestone streets, castles, palaces and museums that house age-old artifacts.

A481E100-BD6D-4C7D-95B3-3B3A610D8ACE.jpgThe past decades have brought great change in the Baltics. Former Soviet-bloc countries in the Baltic region now embrace cruise passengers, and even though English is typically spoken as a second language in many of the port destinations, cruise passengers will hear a variety of tongues spoken as they stroll city streets.

Copenhagen and Stockholm, the Baltic Cruising Region’s primary turnaround ports (where most cruises begin or end), not only are conveniently connected to the rest of the world but also conveniently connected between the airports and the city centers and cruise terminals. Infrastructure is among the best in the world, and Copenhagen boasts not only the world’s best airport (according to one survey of travelers) but also Europe’s cheapest and fastest airport-to-city-center connections.

You might say that with all that is has going for it, the Baltics were “tailor-made for cruises.” Cruise passengers certainly think so. Year after year, they return in record numbers to cruise one of the world’s greatest destinations.

No Comments »Baltic Cruising, Baltic Sea Cruises, Copenhagen, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Gdansk, Gdnyia, Germany, Helsingborg, Helsingor, Helsinki, Kalmar, Karlskrona, Klaipeda, Latvia, Lithuania, Malmo, Norway, Oslo, Poland, Riga, Rostock, Russia, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Sweden, Tallinn, Turku, Visby, Warnemunde

Cruising White Nights

White Nights

Finding Bliss in the Baltic

SOMEWHERE IN THE BALTIC SEA, July 1 — It is near midnight, or at least that it is what my watch tells me. The sun and sky suggest otherwise. The bright orange orb hovers over the watery horizon, casting a reddish-yellow glow on a cloudless sky.

My (then) wife and I stand on our stateroom balcony waiting for the sun to dip below the horizon. Our body clocks are out of sync, six times zones east of our home (we’ll lose two more hours as the clock moves forward one hour on each of the first two nights of our cruise from Copenhagen).

The sun seems that it will never set, even as the clock ticks — and ticks.

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No Comments »Aarhus, Arhus, Baltic Cruising, Baltic Sea Cruises, Copenhagen, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Helsinki, Rostock, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Sweden, Tallinn, Visby, Warnemunde, With The Kids