Saturday, July 28, 2012

Bringing My Dog to Sweden

This is "Rabbit" a few years ago...A friend made her try on her dog's old Halloween costume.

Hurrah! At long last I have managed to bring my dog to Sweden! I am so happy, it's hard to even express my delight.

In November 2011, I wrote about how I was going to bring my dog to Sweden in the blog I wrote for Sweden.se. I'll link to it here but I have to say that I got some things wrong about how it is done so be warned. Now that I have actually done it, I know a lot more.

My dog, who has the unusual name of "Rabbit"*, arrived at Arlanda Airport in Stockholm yesterday morning. She flew from San Francisco to New Jersey to Stockholm. Due to an extended layover in New Jersey (around 17 hours), I had to pay for boarding her at the airport during that time. This actually had the advantage of breaking up her flights and allowing her time out of the crate to drink, eat, and rest.

Amazing to think that on Tuesday night she was running up and down Stinson Beach, north of San Francisco and on Friday morning she was having a pee on Swedish grass.

Let me say, right away, that there is no longer a quarantine (at least for arrivals from approved countries) any longer so I could collect Rabbit right away at the airport. Personally, I wouldn't bring a dog from another country if there was still a 6 month quarantine the way there used to be.

Still, it was a lot of work and anxiety trying to get the process right. I found that I received different answers every time I asked the experts how it needed to work. I talked to United Airlines (with waits of over an hour in the phone queue at times), the Us Department of Agriculture, the Swedish Agricultural Board, Swedish Customs, Swedish Border Inspection at Arlanda, and the receiving Cargo company at Arlanda.

And there were many, many consultations with my veterinarian in the US. (They did a fantastic job and got everything letter-perfect. Here's a shout-out to my vet and her staff. You rock! How am I ever going to find your equivalent in Sweden?)

Rabbit came as cargo rather than as "excess baggage" a distinction that matters when it comes to importing the dog but no longer seems to matter to the airlines, or at least to United Airlines. In both cases, the dog is traveling in the cargo area but the difference is whether the dog is flying with a ticketed passenger or coming on its own. (It's all rather murky, isn't it?)

Here's how it worked:

1) My family bought a dog crate. It had to be much larger (and wider) than we initially thought because there needs to be 3 inches of clearance over the dog's head when they are traveling internationally. Rabbit only weighs 37 pounds (16 kg), but she is tall and thin, like a boxer or a whippet. She looked ridiculously small in that crate and I wonder if we couldn't have gotten away with a smaller size but we didn't want to risk them refusing her. My friend also bought food and water bowls that screw on to the inside of the door.

2) Rabbit had to get a vet exam and an exam by a USDA vet within 24 hours of the flight. This is harder to do than it sounds. This basically means these 2 things have to happen right before the flight, as in, on the same day. Rabbit had to be at the Cargo facility at SFO at 2pm. See why it was stressful and with little margin for error?

3) After many phone consultations, ordering of the proper Swedish forms, and my vet contacting the USDA in South San Francisco to make sure we were doing this correctly, my family took Rabbit to our vet at 9AM on the day she was to fly. She received a vet check and also an additional microchip that could be read internationally. She already had one but it could only be read by an American scanner.

After the vet appointment, my family drove the hour+ to the USDA vet appointment where they got the important papers stamped. Then they drove to United Cargo at the airport (luckily nearby) and filled out more forms, etc. I had long ago made the reservation for her to fly. Then it was time to leave Rabbit in her new crate, mournfully looking at them as they left and wondering what in the world was going on.

4) I had to call Arlanda Border Inspection with the dog's waybill number as soon as I got it to advise them Rabbit was arriving so that they could schedule a Swedish vet check.

5) After the aforementioned break in New Jersey, Rabbit arrived on Friday morning. I was disappointed to find out that even though the plane came in around 7:30AM, I wouldn't be able to start the collection process till 10AM due to the time it takes for them to process the dog, do the vet check, etc. As soon as Border Inspection receives the dog, they immediately take it to a special reception area for that species (dogs, cats, reptiles, fish, birds) (wait a minute, a fish area...really?) and give it water, a chance to relieve itself, and food if specified by the owner. So at least she wasn't stuck waiting for a chance to come out of the crate.

6) A Swedish friend drove me to the airport since I don't have a car. We had to stop at a security checkpoint to get into the cargo area. This involved the car being searched. Then we took ourselves and our backpacks through a security screening process similar to what passengers go through only not nearly as strict. I realized later that I had a small knife on my keychain and water for the dog-items that wouldn't have made it through passenger security.

7) After Security, we drove around for awhile, looking for the right Cargo company. After going in and asking at the wrong place, we received directions on how to find it.

8) At the Cargo company, we picked up the paperwork that was ready and waiting. I had been extremely nervous up to this point because there were some gray areas where the microchip was concerned and I lived in fear that they would reject her from the country or something. But since the papers were ready, I assumed we had passed that hurdle already and things were fine.

They assured me that Rabbit was doing great and resting comfortably but I couldn't see her yet. I had to then take the paperwork across the airport to Customs. This required leaving the secure area, finding our way through countless rotaries (Sweden does love a good rotatry or "rondel.") and finding the Customs building.

9) I wondered around in the building where every floor said "Customs" but had a locked door. After asking several people, I found the right door (next door to where I was) and took my papers in. It took 20 minutes or so to get the Customs paperwork done but thank goodness it didn't cost anything as she is my personal pet that I owned before coming to Sweden.

10) Then I took the customs paperwork back to Cargo which required us to repeat the whole car inspection process. But they looked like they were used to seeing the same people more than once. Business as usual.

11) Back at Cargo, they immediately brought around a trailer that had the crate on it. And there was Rabbit! She caught sight of me and started whining. I immediately let her out and she danced and jumped and twisted around my legs. I can't imagine what she was thinking. She hadn't seen me since I visited in April, had been put onto the plane by completely different people...and then arrived to see me. How confusing!

I don't mind saying that I cried...with relief, with gratitude, with love for my special dog.
Rabbit eats her first Swedish meal after arriving.

Now Rabbit has been here for 30 hours or so. She is calm but I think she has doggy jet lag. I wonder if everything smells strange to her. She hasn't met any Swedish dogs yet, wonder what she'll think of them?

Here she enjoys her new Swedish bed.


Welcome to Sweden, Rabbit!

* Rabbit is a mixed breed that I got from a shelter. She's 6 years old.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Sweden's Reputation: Blame it on the Ads...

Sweden has a reputation of its people being more comfortable with open sexuality and sex in general. I can't really say one way or the other. I've noticed that Swedish parents seem more comfortable with their teenagers' sex lives. But I haven't seen any streakers in the streets of Stockholm. I haven't seen any acquaintances naked...But I have marked that they do show a lot of things on TV that, for example, the US shies away from. And the TV commercials show a lot more. And the ads in other places.

Here's a (sorry, blurry!) picture of an ad displayed in a Stockholm subway train.It says:
"Isn't this the world's most beautiful place to have sex?"
It's an ad promoting Stockholm County Council's drive for sexuality and health.

This is a picture of an ad on a Stockholm subway car. Those are tents and the sign says, "Isn't this the world's most beautiful place to have sex?" It's an ad promoting condom use.
Don't get me wrong, I think it's great to be so open. But I'm so unused to it. In the subway! With little kids eating ice cream right next to me.

So, at the end of the day, Sweden shouldn't be mystified about its reputation since the ads keep the idea alive. It's like those silly postcards with the polar bear superimposed onto a picture of Stockholm. It keeps the misunderstanding going. Then Swedes say how crazy it is that people think polar bears roam the streets here...

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Recycling Adventures in Eskilstuna

Recycling is taken very seriously in Sweden which is pretty cool. I have seen it handled differently in different areas of Sweden. In Uppsala, my friends work very hard to compost the food scraps, and sort through plastic and glass that can be returned for the deposit, plastic and glass that should just be recycled, newspapers separated from other paper packing materials, egg cartons, milk cartons, etc.

I am on my summer vacation and just spent a week in a small town located about 45 minutes west of Stockholm, near Eskilstuna. They have a recycling system there that involves sorting everything into different colored plastic bags. The bags are then tied off and all are put into the same trash bin which is set out at the curb and collected once a week.

I found it was actually a lot easier than sorting the trash in Uppsala where everyone tries to figure out their own system and it's awkward. Also, there you then have to take the assorted recycling in your car or on foot to the nearest recycling bins.

The Eskilstuna system, which is managed by Eskilstuna Energi & Miljö (website only in Swedish) is so simple, they wrote the directions explaining which color goes with which recyling in the form of a toddler's board book (a thick-paged book, the kind toddlers gnaw on when they are not reading). Here are a few pictures:
The book explaining the color-coded recycling system was designed to look like a toddler's board book.

"It's childishly simple to color sort!" (wait, is "childishly" a real word?)

Pages explaining what goes into the green bag and what goes into the orange bag.
You can ask for more bags at any time. I believe there are six colors used to split the trash into 6 different kinds of recycling. You are to use a regular, recycled grocery bag for the few things that fit into none of the categories.

It takes a little time to learn what goes where and one must dedicate an area somewhere for all these bags. They were just in the cabinet under the sink where I stayed. Some were held open by small containers and some were just sitting on the floor of the cabinet. The friend that owns the house where we stayed rents out part of the house in the summer, usually to people from Germany or Poland. These guests have to learn the system as well. But hey, it's childishly simple in any language!

Sunday, July 1, 2012

PIzza Swedish-Style


Yum!

I present you my not-so-comprehensive research on pizza in Sweden. From what I have seen, Swedes don’t order one larger pizza to share but rather each person orders a single one for themselves. And boy howdy do they have some crazy flavors!

Because I avoid eating gluten, I don't eat much pizza. But I have found that pizzerias here in Sweden usually offer a gluten-free crust so I have tried it. Sometimes it's a good alternative, sometimes not. And like all things gluten free, it costs more. One must add 15 kronor to the price when asking for gluten- free. My friend says that is strange because since it is missing something, it should be cheaper. (ha ha)

Okay, but what about those crazy flavors? I present to you a selection of flavors from the local joint in Uppsala. (I haven't noticed that you can "build your own" from scratch, instead you choose one of their flavors--though I am sure you can add or remove items...)


Cheapest (65 kr. approximately $9.28)

The "Calzone" pizza has ham, mushrooms, and shrimp.

The "Campagniola" pizza has salami, onions, and shrimp. (What is it with all the shrimp on pizza?)

The "Oriental" pizza has hamburger meat and onions.


The next level of pizzas, a little more expensive… (75 kr.)

The "Big Ben" boasts ham, asparagus, and...béarnaise sauce.

The "Hawaii" has ham and pineapple (okay, normal) and then…bananas (ewww!)


More expensive… (85 kr.)

"The Amigo" offers hamburger, leeks, paprika, pepperoni, tomatoes, taco sauce, and béarnaise sauce


Most expensive… (95 kr.)

The "Pescatore" has shredded pork, pineapple, bananas, shrimp, and, wait for it...curry


What's your favorite flavor? Weirdest pizza you've ever seen? Post a comment. I'm curious!