Looking for fun things to do in Oslo, Norway? Browse Oslo sights, activities, and tourist attractions ranked by fellow travelers. Read reviews of the top things to do and see in Oslo. You may also write your own review of what to do in Oslo.
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CFD says:
There are several islands lying within reach if you are staying in Oslo. Get away from the Dirty citycentre and go islandhopping for a day. Gressholmen and Hovedoya makes for a perfect daytrip, being located only 15mins away from the city centre.
The main Islands are Hovedoya and Gressholmen
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Adrian_Liston says:
The Nobel Peace Centre is a showcase on the winners of the Nobel Peace Prize. They have a rotating exhibit on the ground floor (the current one is "From King to Obama", but wasn't open yet), then a "Tunnel of Honour" and an exhibit on the last winner of the Nobel Prize. The final rooms are permanent…
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CFD says:
This museum is dedicated to Thor Heyerdal and his expeditions.
The Kon-Tiki Museum houses a range of boats and artefacts from Thor Heyerdahl's expeditions. Here you can see the original Kon-Tiki raft.
The main atractions are Kon-Tiki from 1947 and RA II from 1970, but the its only a replica sin…
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CFD says:
Gressholmen which is a little island in the Oslo Fjord is the only place in Norway where you can see so many rabbits at the same time. Before people let loose alot of rabbits there , but im not sure if its allowed anymore beacause of the rabbit population has increased so much the last years.
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CFD says:
This is the museum dedicated to the polar ships called Fram. Fram was and is to this day the strongest wooden ship in the world , reinforced with over 1meter of wood and internal stiffeners.
She also have the record of being the furthest north (86N) and the furtest south of any kind of ship. This…
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CFD says:
Lying next to the FRAM og Kon-Tiki museum this museum is all about Norwegian maritime history. Did you know that Norway is the 3.rd biggest shipping nation if you count the value of all the ships owned by norwegian shareholders? Before they where nr3 in "Deadweight"(how much tonns a ship can carry),…
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pacovera says:
El Parque Frogner (Frognerparken) es el parque público más grande de
Oslo, la capital de Noruega. En su interior se encuentra el famoso
Parque de Vigeland, un área dedicada a la exposición permanente de unas
doscientas esculturas y otras obras de arte del escultor noruego Gustav
Vigeland.
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CFD says:
Cut from the web:
Great Viking-ship discoveries from Gokstad, Oseberg and Tune as well as other finds from Viking tombs around the Oslo Fjord. The world's two best-preserved wooden Viking ships built in the 9th century. Small boats, sledges, cart with exceptional ornamentation. Implements, tools, h…
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Adrian_Liston says:
I spent my last afternoon in Oslo over in Bygdøy, a small peninsular off central Oslo full of rich houses and expensive yachts, as well as several nautical-themed museums. The Vikingskipshuest (Viking Ship Museum) was the only one I visited and was worth the trip out to Bygdøy since I had a spare …
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Marjis says:
Reptilparken in Oslo is not very big place and may feel a bit boring, but because entrance fee is cheap it is worth of going.
There is many different kind of reptiles, lizards, frogs, etc. There is also fishes, one crocodile, parrot and *shiver* spiders. As reptiles usually most of them were just s…
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