Discover the best top things to do in Skjern, Denmark including Danmarks Flymuseum, Traekfaergerne i Skjern Enge, Lem Sydsogns Kirke, Tarm Kirke, Administration Ringkobing Skjern Museum, Skjern Aa Museet, Skjern Vindmolle, Hattemagerhuset.
Restaurants in Skjern
4.5 based on 55 reviews
Superb aircraft collection in warm clean environment. Many historic aircraft flown by the Danish air force form the early times to the last with the F16 and Sea King. Some aircraft are flown in the evenings during the summer so ask at the desk or check the website to catch this. Good model displays and pleasant cafe with limited food and drink.
4 based on 16 reviews
4 based on 1 reviews
Lem kirke er en skøn kirke som næsten lige er blevet renoveret. Der er kommet en del farver på. Præsten Hanne er virkelig sød og imødekommende og rigtig dejlig at snakke med og så er hun god til at sætte sig ind i tingene
4.5 based on 2 reviews
Its and old church, but its renowed ower the years, and a new building besides the church, for different activities. The cementary are very beuatifull at vinter
4.5 based on 6 reviews
We were prepared for the sort of “community attic” local museum common to county seats in the United States. Instead, we found a well-designed (not surprising, given that the Danes rule when it comes to design), artfully lighted and thoroughly explicated (although only in Danish and German) series of exhibits of western Denmark’s role in World War II, including a recreation of the interior of a bunker, complete with furniture and pin-up girls, the fuselage of a downed British bomber, stereophonic sound effects and video clips, one of them an interview in situ with an 81-year-old German who had been a Marine occupying one of the 7,000 bunkers along the Danish coast. The reconstructed bunker, only about nine feet by nine feet, was based on the one he shared with two other soldiers. Remarkably, the bunkers near Rinkøbing had been preserved virtually intact, because a storm had buried them shortly after World War II and another storm had washed the sand away in 2008. Most of the artifacts in the cases outside the reconstructed bunker came from the excavation.
The other exhibits in the main building and the one across the street (the home of an early 19th Century apothecary and civic leader) were well-done but smaller and less surprising, ranging from the wagon and buckets used by the city’s first fire brigade to farm implements, Delft pottery, cast-iron heating stoves and such other household items as a cradle.
If you don't read either Danish or German, read up on the World War II bunkers in Denmark before visiting. None of the explanatory texts are in other languages.
4.5 based on 2 reviews
4 based on 2 reviews
4 based on 2 reviews
The house was closed during our visit but it was nice to look around an example of old Danish country house. It is a museum located about 1.5 km from Bechs Hotel and city center.
According to the note on the door, the museum will be open from the beginning of the summer.
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