Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Wednesday: day 1 of the tour

Today went by so quickly.

We started out with some welcome speeches.  Interesting, but not super profound.  They handed out their business cards, which are little mini-figures with their information printed on the shirts.  (Note: not all employees get such business cards, just the special ones.)


Then we went to the employee museum.  We had a tour of the history of how Lego started and got to see select sets.  There wasn't really enough time to do this properly, but we did get a pretty good idea of everything.








Then we went into the vault, where they have one copy of every set that has been made (with a few exceptions).  It was rather tight.

People were going a bit crazy over sets from their childhood.  However, I don't remember having any real sets per se, just a bucket or two of creative and a bunch that we had found at a garage sale.  I found them.

Ben was very excited to find the monorail.



We also found set #1.


Then we had a traditional Danish lunch.  Dark bread with fixings on top.  We later learned that there are five varieties and only five.  They do not experiment or change things up.

After a short session on molds, especially the ones that they recently found in the ground, it was time to go to the developer's building.  No pictures were allowed in there.  We had a presentation on the Saturn V rocket, the Boost Droids, Steamboat Mickey, and creation of new pieces.  At the beginning of several of the sub-presentations we were asked how many people had at least two copies of it...because if they had just asked how many people had it everyone would have raised their hands.

We decided to go to the Lego House store after that.  We picked up the unique-to-Billund sets but are waiting until tomorrow to get anything else.


After a short break we had dinner with the designers.  The designer at our table has been working on the hidden figures sets.  He was nice, but a bit of a downer.  He enjoys his job here, but doesn't like putting Legos together any more.  The town is safe and education is good, but there's not much to do.  Hidden Figures stuff is good, but the app development is missing some components that just got left out due to time.  Anyway, he was interesting to talk to but also did not make me want to come work for Lego.

These were the guys from the first two designer presentations.  They're quite hilarious.

Then we got to the last event of the night: design something.  I tried designed a gem mine, Ben tried designing a spinner.  Neither of us were very happy with the results, but we only had two hours.  All the pieces were divided up into bins that took up most of the room.




Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Tuesday: travel

Today was a travel day.  Sad to spend most of the day traveling, but necessary. 

Let's start with the water in Iceland.  Ben read somewhere that the biggest complaint of it is that it was too much like nothing.  So we tried it again, while really thinking about the water.  Yup...it tastes like nothing.  Just some cold wet in your mouth.  A bit of an odd sensation, when you're really thinking about it.


Our hotel room right before leaving...


We got downstairs a bit early and our driver showed up a minute later.  Everything had been on the early side, which was really nice.  Luggage drop off was a breeze, although it did take a little bit of thinking.  Ben did the self-check which also printed out luggage tags.  I find that the annoying part in the US...if you have bags self check seems a bit pointless.  Anyway, our flight out was a half hour late. :(  We were both rather tired from having slept poorly last night.  (This is in contrast to the previous night, when we slept for 11 hours and woke up to an alarm.)

We got to Copenhagen, walked the entire length of the airport, found out that food is only in the middle of the airport, walked half way back, and then back to our gate.  We had a lot of questions about the airport.  What were these glass-enclosed areas with chairs in them that no one seemed allowed to sit in?  Why didn't our gate have chairs?  (There were a few big benches and a lot of empty space.)  I kept thinking the picture below was a UFO landing right outside.  I know it's crazy, but the shape and the spinning just kept having me think that.


We got to Billund and started looking for taxis.  We encountered another couple who was looking about as lost as we were...not really lost yet, but unsure as to what to do next.  They're also on the Lego tour and so we shared a van ride with them to the hotel.  They're from Australia and we ran into them again as we were exploring the hotel.

I took a lot of hotel pictures.  I do love the decor of Lego hotels.




This is a map of the distance from the hotel to the lego house.  It is measured in meters, mini-figure steps, kid steps, and T-rex steps.


The back of our hotel.  We're the top room on the right.


We had several discussions about this sign.  Don't feed the dragon ham and apples?  Don't throw ham and apples at the dragon?  Don't eat apples, ham, and dragons?  What you do think?

Monday, September 16, 2019

Monday: Golden Circle

Today we went on a tour of the Golden Circle.  While it was a lot of driving, our tour guide was good and kept up a steady stream of (mostly) interesting information.  Ben and I both nodded off a bit when he was talking about elves and mythology, but it was also warm in the van and we had been driving a while.

Our first stop was at a bakery.  This stop was really just to break up the drive a little bit.  We were able to get an Icelandic donut, which was a deep fried ball with lemon drops (melted) and raisins.  It sort of tasted like your normal cake donut, but lemony and with a crispier outside.


Then we went to our first waterfall.  I forget the exact name, but it had something to do with it looking like a horse's mane.  There was also a salmon ladder.




After a stop at a barn (it seemed a bit like a random stop, but it was nice to get out), we went to the second waterfall.  It has a neat turn in it.




Then we went to a geyser.  There used to be another one 100 ft away and it's name was Geyser...it was the original one and where we get the word from.  We were able to see the steam start to come up, a big bubble of water appear, and then it would shoot high in the air.  It was probably my favorite part of the day.  It also had a whole bunch of false alarms where the pressure must have been evening out, because the top of the water would sink just a little bit.  Normally the geyser goes off every 5-10 minutes, but we had a few that were closer to 2.5min.  Since we had a limited amount of time there, it was nice that it went off a few extra times.





We made a quick detour to get some ice cream.  The milking cows on the island apparently have more milkfat (about twice as much) in their milk as other cows.  The ice cream was very creamy.  We were also able to see some of the cows who helped make the ice cream while we ate it.

Lastly we stopped at the mid-Atlantic rift.  It is a valley in between the North American tectonic plate and the Eurasian one, so geologically speaking it is not part of a continent.


We had lots of rainbow sightings today.  The weather was nice the whole day...a possible drizzle, a little sun, but not too much of either.

For dinner we found an Icelandic sub shop.  It was similar to what we know, but still different enough to say we had something native.  Then we stopped to get a piece of chocolate cake and it was delicious.  Almost like an undercooked brownie, but more melty.  I'll leave you with a view from our hotel room.