Skip to content

Happy to be Traveling

Menu
Menu

The ultimate rafting trip

Posted on May 17, 2023 by Grubb

Post by Grubb.

When I was a kid I remember my dad had a copy of “The Kon-Tiki Expedition: By raft across the South Seas.”  He also had copies of “Omoo” and “Typee”, but they didn’t interest me because they didn’t have the dramatic photographs that Thor Heyerdahl put in his book describing his raft trip from Peru to Polynesia in 1947.  For me, growing up in Chicago, Huckleberry Finn and Thor Heyerdahl were what adventure was all about.  And after looking at what Oslo children imagined the future had in store for them, essentially a city under water, heading out to a museum dedicated to the ultimate raft trip seemed like a good segue.  Plus, it was raining, so getting on a bus for a ride to the west side of town was a nice break from umbrella-jousting up streets that weren’t familiar.

The Kon-Tiki is in an A-frame building just like the Fram.  It isn’t the raft I imagined as a kid.  Back then, even with Heyerdahl’s slick action shots, it seemed smaller.  Apparently my having read “Huckleberry Finn” first created a raft ideal that photos of the Kon-Tiki couldn’t budge.  The raft in the Kon-Tiki Museum is 45 feet x 18 feet.  To Thor it was a raft; to me it looked like a Polynesian cabin cruiser.  

The museum has a loop of the 1950 documentary about the expedition that won an Academy Award in 1951.  It also has a diorama with a killer whale shark, a walk-through replica of an Easter Island cave, and a room with Ra II, a boat built out of papyrus reeds that he sailed from West Africa to Barbados.  

Ra II

According to Thor, his sailing ventures were meant to test certain anthropological notions he had at the time, viz., that the Incas had made voyages to Polynesia.  Although he showed it could have been done, most DNA evidence indicates that Polynesian ancestors came from Asia.  So, like someone climbing to the top of Mount Everest in animal hides, he’s notable for proving that sailing 5,000 miles overseas in a balsa wood boat can be done.  As any good Norwegian will tell you, it’s not about the theory, gud forby, it’s about the struggle to overcome the odds.

Thor’s Biden imitation

3 thoughts on “The ultimate rafting trip”

  1. Charles says:
    May 17, 2023 at 10:29 am

    I also thought that Thor’s raft was much smaller, and I didn’t imagine a cabin.

    Reply
  2. Henry Shapiro says:
    May 17, 2023 at 4:12 pm

    Have you gone to the Viking ship museum? That might have been “the ultimate raft trip.”

    Reply
    1. Ella says:
      May 17, 2023 at 5:45 pm

      Unfortunately, it’s closed until 2026.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to CharlesCancel reply

Select Blog Topic

  • Silently in Japan
  • Découvrir la France
  • Into Argentina and Uruguay we go
  • Road Tripping in New England
  • Sampling Scandinavia
  • Meandering in Morocco
  • Puttering through Portugal
  • San Juan Islands (WA)

Recent Posts

  • What a journey
    by Ella
  • You know it’s time to go home when…
    by Grubb
  • Japanese-style Korean (or Korean-style Japanese?)
    by Ella
  • Unicorn Gundam
    by Ella
  • Hokusai highlights
    by Grubb
  • Map of the Day, last day in Japan
    by Ella
  • Sign of the times
    by Grubb
  • Chastity High
    by Grubb
  • Tokyo from ground level
    by Ella
  • Ginza walk, camera store dining
    by Grubb
  • Water goblins
    by Ella
  • Map of the Day, Sumo Saturday
    by Ella
  • Morning with sumo
    by Ella
  • Big as a Buddha, but slammin’
    by Grubb
  • A few museum favorites
    by Ella
  • The beauty of Japanese words
    by Ella

Recent Comments

  1. Ella on Japanese-style Korean (or Korean-style Japanese?)May 4, 2025
  2. Ella on Map of the Day, last day in JapanMay 4, 2025
  3. David Jones on Map of the Day, last day in JapanMay 4, 2025
  4. Chinle on Japanese-style Korean (or Korean-style Japanese?)May 4, 2025
  5. Ella on Map of the Day, last day in JapanMay 4, 2025
  6. Ella on Map of the Day, last day in JapanMay 4, 2025
  7. Ella on Japanese-style Korean (or Korean-style Japanese?)May 4, 2025
  8. Henry Shapiro on Hokusai highlightsMay 4, 2025
  9. Henry Shapiro on Map of the Day, last day in JapanMay 4, 2025
  10. Charlie on Japanese-style Korean (or Korean-style Japanese?)May 4, 2025
  11. wynette on Map of the Day, last day in JapanMay 4, 2025
  12. Grubb on Big as a Buddha, but slammin’May 3, 2025
  13. Ella on Morning with sumoMay 3, 2025
  14. Ella on Map of the dayMay 3, 2025
  15. Ella on Machine LoveMay 3, 2025
  16. Ella on The beauty of Japanese wordsMay 3, 2025
  17. Ella on Rainy day TokyoMay 3, 2025
  18. Marc Sitkin on Morning with sumoMay 3, 2025
  19. John on Big as a Buddha, but slammin’May 3, 2025
  20. wynette on Map of the dayMay 3, 2025
June 2025
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30  
« May    
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • August 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
© 2025 Happy to be Traveling | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme
 

Loading Comments...