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Saturday, January 26, 2008
It’s unseasonably warm……..
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Saturday, January 19, 2008
Swimming in the Arctic Circle…….
……some Mothers do ‘ave em. We went to Sommeroy which is on the coast. It was gorgeous, we starting off in the gloom and after a few hours we came back in the dark. That’s how it is at this time of the year in Northern Norway. James kept muttering about having a swim, but who would….it was 3 degrees below zero. Anyway on the way back we stopped and James got out, stripped off, plunged in, got his gear back on and away we went again!!!!! Why??????
On the way home we saw a herd of reindeer, but there wasn’t enough light to photograph them. Home to more glorious food and Geir’s brulee……..Norway for us was about the dramatic landscapes and the hospitality…..can’t wait to return when the sun shines all day (and night!), we are hoping to get even further North to an island called Svalbard,(Spitzbergen), where the polar bears roam, (I hope to have a telephoto lens by then), otherwise it will be a postcard! As I write this, the sun will be just peeping over the horizon for a few minutes, increasing a little each day. Takes special kind of people to live in such a place and we are thrilled that we have this as part of our extended whanau. Life as a servant continues, but more about that later……..lots of love xxxxxxx
Sunday, January 6, 2008
Celebrating….Tromso style…..
…. New Year’s Eve arrived and we were invited to take part in our neighbourhood’s traditional children’s parade. Families met at a special place at 4pm and each child held aloft a flaming (literally!) torch and off we paraded around the streets of our neighbourhood, as did families in other parts of the city. Another tradition to deal to the environment?? This was apparent all the time we were there, the windows of the houses were lit with ornamental lights creating an atmosphere of cheeriness and warmth in opposition to the bitter cold and dark. We peeled off from the parade at our place and Hannah and Sunnova then proceeded to smash the little gingerbread house that had been made before Christmas. This symbolizes new beginnings, very cool…. AND you get to eat a ginger bread house!!! Later on we went to our extending family’s home for more incredible hospitality, the food in Norway is amazing! At about 10 oclock we went outside and the Northern Lights were just starting. We had been hoping we would be lucky enough to see them, but unless the weather conditions are just so, in conjunction with a Solar Storm it doesn’t happen. But there they were, nobody else at the party was much bothered but us three Kiwis howled and yelled and got right into it until we were so cold we just had to go inside to warm up. (howling and yelling makes them stronger….it worked!!).
Now leading up to New Year’s Eve there were fireworks going off all around the place sporadically, a little like NZ experiences around Nov 5. We were told that New Years Eve was when everyone let off fireworks and that there was a public fireworks display that went off one of the surrounding mountains at midnight, but we didn’t even get to notice that. From 11.30pm until midnight the whole city went “OFF”, everyone in their own yard sending up the most amazing star shells and the like, emergency flares, you name it, anything that could be fired into the air was, we were gob struck…a whole city, around a fiord in complete harmony. We were told that the year of the tsunami, instead of buying fireworks the people of Tromso sent the money to Indonesia….what can you say????? Note to self……don’t go out in a boat and get into trouble on New Years Eve in Tromso….your flare would go completely unnoticed!!!!
Friday, January 4, 2008
It’s a “Hard Day’s Night” in Tromso………
…..and a long one, in fact the sun doesn’t rise, at all for several months. But it’s fantastic, you can tell it’s day time by a gradual, brief, lightening of the sky, except on cloudy days when it’s a bit hard to tell the difference between night and day. It’s quite good actually, because the hospitality is so fantastic that it’s about 3am before you know it and you just sleep until your eyes open…usually about 10am. Heading off for a ramble after breakfast (a sustaining affair of luxurious proportions)…you have to allow a good 20min to ‘rug up’. Although we only experienced a little bit of snow, the temperatures were definitely in the minus and so we had to put on heaps of extra layers (we aren’t really that fat!) and keep moving fast if you want to be home again before dark around 2pm….
We loved walking in the snow, it’s really hard to describe how beautiful the environment is even when it’s bleak…….one of the things we learned is that you never walk with your hands in your pockets, ice can surprise you at any moment and you can end up sitting on your proverbial……the grandchildren however just skate through it instinctively.
It was unusual being in a wooden city with no ‘high rises’. Tromso has a very frontier..ish feeling to it, which is not surprising being in the Arctic Circle. However, some of the architecture, the bridge building and tunnel systems are state of the art. Imagine a city on a mainland and an island, divided by a fiord, and connected through an amazing series of linked tunnels with roundabouts inside them. And over the fiord, beautiful flying bridges that are works of art…..we would show better photographs, but we’ll wait until there is more light or we upgrade our camera. The trolls of Tromso really know how to build tunnels, bridges and celebrate…….to be continued……..Happy New Year and we hope to see you this year xxxxxxxxxx
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