Bikes, bikes everywhere. I've never been someplace where every one rode their bicycles everywhere and all the time. We're in Scandinavia, in winter, it's snowy, rainy, very cold... Yet they're all on their bikes, even women wearing skirts go peddling by. The sidewalks are all dominated by painted in bike lanes and the hotel we stayed at had free city bikes for guests to use around Lund. It's a similar phenomenon in Copenhagen including free city bikes scattered around town, but the density of bikers wasn't nearly as high there. While in Lund, we've encountered a new fruit. We went out to dinner and enjoyed a dessert that was served with a variety of fresh fruits. One stood out, it was bright orange and looked rather like a cherry tomato. It tasted of strawberries and pineapple, tart and distinctive. We couldn't figure it out. The fruit appeared on another dish in a separate restaurant. After at first thinking it was some sort of rose hip, it turned out to be a Physalis fruit. During the week, the town center is full of fruit and vegetable vender's and while I was wondering the stalls, I couldn't resist the "2 packs for 25 Kronas" of Physalis fruits. They look like Chinese Lanterns and have a sticky paper husk derived from the calyx like a tomatillo. Physalis fruits Overall I think Lund would be a good place to live. It has a warm and friendly feel, not the least added to by the biking culture. Wonderful shops lining European cobble stone roads, excellent food, beautiful architecture in a university town. Really good food, but still no good Mexican. Apparently, we'll have to make a pilgrimage to Aberdeen. Why Aberdeen? There are oil fields there as well as Texans taking advantage of said oil fields. These Texans have also brought the most authentic Tex-Mex food with them. So to get good Mexican in the UK, one must go to Scotland.