(Untitled)

Mar 15, 2006 06:18

i just wrote a giant entry and lj ate it. not. pleased ( Read more... )

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Comments 10

?! anonymous March 16 2006, 01:57:56 UTC
are you in england now? when do you come back? I wanna talk to you! how's your german doing?;) tel number? online sometimes? skype?

monica

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last_soldier March 16 2006, 04:20:17 UTC
That's about the darkest night sky I can recall ever seeing. The Ice Hotel looks off the chain, too.

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po0rnima March 29 2006, 22:03:35 UTC
anytime you want to visit, there's a warm room, good beer and a stash of frozen pizza for you. plenty of love too.

either that, or i shall visit you in the summer and we start where we left off- trip to the apocalypse and boxers.

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soleilensuisse March 16 2006, 14:25:11 UTC
Brr...Ice-Hotel! Seems like a cosy place! I heard they build it each year, or was that some other thing?

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po0rnima March 29 2006, 22:04:47 UTC
yeah, they build it each year. it's open late fall through early spring, and they've got a pretty nifty process for building the monstrosity too.

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soleilensuisse April 3 2006, 12:51:04 UTC
Y'know what! I'm growing more and more partial to Sweden each passing day. ;)
I'm hoping I'd have an other-than-just-touristy reason to visit the monstrosity sometime. :)

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ilajnatig March 16 2006, 16:23:02 UTC
looks like you're in tundra. you'll be fatter around the next time i see you, i'm sure.

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po0rnima March 29 2006, 22:05:47 UTC
no, but i drank way more in germany. parts of me have shrunk since i left smith- the sad thing is that the corset doesn't fit as well anymore. my old jeans don't so much either. oh teh sad.

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uanoex March 17 2006, 08:16:55 UTC
yeah, thanks for those pictures. good armchair journey for a friday morning brunch. i wish i was in sweden now. the ice hotel rocks. is it only open in winter or is it so far north that it remains throughout the year. the northern lights are said to be visible sometimes even in the Brandenburg sky. but i have never seen them in reality. must be a good exper. are they brighter that starlight?

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po0rnima March 29 2006, 22:09:11 UTC
the sky usually has a greenish tint when the aurora is visible- you can still see the stars, but the green is more dominant. perhaps it is because of the way the human brain processes new information.

truly maginificent experience though- trek up north when you get the chance.

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