Tag archives for Beer

Top 5 Money-Saving Tips for Traveling in Sweden

Despite not having an official vacation from work, I am in the middle of an amazing travel spree that has taken me to Helsingborg, Stockholm, and Båstad over the last three weeks, and this weekend I’m taking off again for Gothenburg! (Or Göteborg, as it’s called in Sweden.)

In the midst of all this traveling, I’ve been using a few tricks that I’ve learned over the last year to avoid spending all of my savings in one month. Every country has their own little peculiarities when it comes to what’s expensive and what’s not, so here’s the insider’s guide for Sweden on ways to stretch your budget and save a little for the splurges that are worth it.

1. Choose your mealtimes wisely.

To be more specific, choose which meal you’re going to eat out wisely. Eating in a restaurant in Sweden can be much more expensive than a similar restaurant would be in another country… with the wonderful exception of lunch.

My friend Elaine and I, maximizing our lunch money. 8 delicious dumplings with an enormous side of soup or salad and rice for 88 SEK? Yes, please. Oversize soup spoon-ladles are just icing on the cake. (At Steam in Stockholm) Photo: Kate Wiseman

Many, if not most, restaurants have fabulous lunch deals that are almost the same as the dinner menu, but go for half the price and include a drink of your choice. This is especially true with the ethnic restaurants for some reason, which often have a reasonably-priced buffet (score!!) or a sampler platter for 100 SEK or less. That’s a good deal!

2. Pick your poison with care.

The reasons behind the establishment of the Systembolaget and the sky-high alcohol taxes are a discussion for another time, but for now let’s just say that alcohol is expensive.

Alcohol is taxed based on the percentage of alcohol it has in it, so the price of a drink is much more influenced by how strong it is than how good it is. This means, of course, that if you’re trying to save money while going out, drink beer or the cider. Cocktails are a one-way ticket to Poorsville. (Been there, done that.) Wine is marginally less expensive.

One big plus of the drinking culture in Sweden, however, is that in many towns you’re allowed to drink in public areas. No open container laws here! If you want to sit and enjoy a nice evening with a glass of wine, you can bring a bottle with you wherever you want, whether it’s the park, the town square, or the harbor in a little beach town.

Another way to save money on booze is to buy a box of wine instead of a bottle. (It's not trashy here, I promise.) But then if you buy it on a Saturday, you may have to carry it around all day until your arm feels like it's going to fall off and you're forced to take a break that leads to a little nap on the aforementioned box of wine. Hypothetically speaking, of course. Photo: Elaine Hargrove

Word to the wise: You’ll have to buy that wine at the Systembolaget, and their opening hours are not, ahem, accommodating. Buy before 6 pm on weekdays and before 3 pm on Saturdays. (Closed on Sundays.)

3. Get your wireless at a café—but double-check that they have it before you buy.

A lot of cafes have wireless available for their customers, but some places require you to use their company gift card or rewards card with your purchase to get the code. The system isn’t really posted, either, so it’s best just to ask if they have wireless and what you have to do to use it.

For example, Espresso House (a Swedish Starbucks lookalike) has free wireless with the purchase of any item, but you need to put money on their Espresso House card and pay with that card. It might seem like a hassle, but at least in the case of Espresso House, using the card also gives you a 20% discount on all coffee and food, plus their lunch deals are only available for purchase with the card.

In the end, it works out pretty well. I get discounted coffee and lunch deals with my wireless, and there’s no real cost to me besides the hassle of recharging the card every now and then.

4. Go to the train station in person and get the inside scoop.

The Stockholm subway system has an onlin3 visitor’s section (http://sl.se/en/Visitor/Plan-your-journey/), but the public transportation in other areas doesn’t always have as good information on the internet. Even if you’re traveling by bus or trying to take the subway, your best bet is to go directly to the train station and find the customer service desk.

In Skåne, for example, a company called Skånetrafiken is responsible for the busses and trains. If you’re traveling in a group of two or more, you can buy a discounted duo or family pass. (You don’t have to be related.) You can also buy a Jojo card that you add money to and gives you 20% off ticket prices. For the Swedish national train system, there are student discounts as well as “youth” discounts for people 25 years old or younger. Nice!

When you’re in the station, don’t be afraid to approach people who look like they know what they’re doing and ask for help, either. In my experience, Swedes are both incredibly good at English and helpful with all sorts of tourist-related questions. The last time I asked a woman for directions to the bathroom, she stopped one step short of accompanying me to the next open stall and making sure that I had enough toilet paper.

5. Location, location, location… and breakfast.

When picking your hostel or hotel, pay the premium for a central location. You’ll save a ton on public transportation, and it’s even more of a win if you go for one with breakfast included. It will always be cheaper than a regular breakfast at a restaurant or café.

Two hostels I've stayed at in Stockholm: the Gustaf af Klimt hostel ON A BOAT (right by Slussen) and the aptly-named "Best Hostel" (on Gamla Stan). The Best Hostel earned its name with free linens, free breakfast, and an endless supply of pasta for the taking. Oh yeahhhh. Photos: Kate Wiseman

Those are my top five money-saving strategies for traveling in Sweden! If you’ve got more, share the wealth! Leave your own tips and tricks in the comments.

As for me, I’m off to Gothenburg. Fingers crossed for good weather!

Getting that SPRING! feeling

Vårkänslor, plural noun.

The feelings of extreme happiness, giddy expectation, dizzying euphoria, etc. one gets when it finally appears as though spring is coming.

Att få vårkänslor, idiom.

To get the spring feeling.

Translation: Ooooooooh yeahhhh!

For those of you who don’t live in a land far, far away from the Equator, let me tell you something: there is a kind of madness sweeping the country, a madness that can only be described as spring fever. All through the winter, complaints about the weather were coupled with promises about the eventual paradise that would follow as well as the tidal wave of happiness that would sweep the nation. And now it is here.

“Just you wait,” these supposedly-friendly Swedes would say, with a glint in their eyes and a cinnamon bun in their hands. “You’ll see… When the sun starts coming out…” And then their sentences would start to trail off, and they would look away at some distant point in the distance.

They weren’t lying. What’s more, I have to admit that I am a totally willing participant in this kind of craziness. Everywhere around me are vårtecken, or “signs of spring,” and I have become a slave to both the sunshine and tomorrow’s weather forecast. I can tell that I’m getting just as crazy as everyone else because I catch myself repeating my Swedish friends’ assurances that Spring is coming! Spring is here! to non-Swedes. “Feeeeeel the sun warming your body!” I implored an American friend, echoing one of my Swedish friend’s earlier exhortations. “It’s stroooong enough to warm your body now!!”

On the left, the Vitsippa flower, a common sign of spring. On the right, yours truly, caught in a moment of spring-induced euphoria. Vitsippa by Kiolero on Flickr.

Clearly, the spring feeling is contagious.

Flowers blooming are one of the more obvious vårtecken, but there are subtler signals as well. Some of the ways I can tell that spring is coming to Lund include, for example, the disappearance of the last lingering traces of the snow mountain created by plows during the winter downfall, the reappearance of outdoor seating areas at downtown cafes, a sudden proliferation of rabbits. You know, that sort of thing.

Flowers! Sunshine! A lawn for lounging! It is paradise.

With all the vårtecken visible around here, the past couple of weeks have been full of vårkänslor for me. Some of the ways I can tell that I have a bad case of vårkänslor are:

Feeling the sun warm my face on the bus to my babysitting job, promising to take the kids to get ice cream even though the wind outside the bus makes it less warm than it felt inside the bus, actually taking the kids to get ice cream.

Going to the grocery store with a friend, buying bread, cheese, and mustard, having a picnic outside on the grass, not even minding that the ground was somewhat damp.

Waking up and seeing the sun shining through the curtains; feeling suddenly compelled to make banana pancakes for my still-sleeping boyfriend and doing it.

Meeting friends for a beer in the sunshine, refusing to move from the outdoor seating area to the inside of the bar until the sun has completely disappeared from the sky and not even fleece blankets can stop our shivers.

Going for a walk outside, taking my coat off and putting it back on as I move between the sunny and cloudy parts of the sidewalk, all while grinning insanely at strangers and having them smile back.

Being a permissive babysitter: definitely a sign of (spring) fevered weakness.

The one thing I’m holding out on? Going from just talking about how I’m going to go upstairs to the storage space in the attic to bring down my spring clothes and actually doing it. I don’t want to jinx a good thing!

 

Surfing around on Twitter, I can see that everyone has different triggers and different things to say about vårkänslor in Sweden. What gives you “that spring feeling?” A sport? An activity? A special piece of clothing? An unusual tradition? Leave your answers in the comments.