Nærøyfjord & Aurlandsfjord III

5.24.15.8061
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway

I’m pretty sure these pictures were along Aurlandsfjord, as I mentioned before, I’m not certain when we left Nærøyfjord and entered Aurlandsfjord…

5.24.15.8065
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8075
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8080
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8085
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8089
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8132
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8151
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8153
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8162
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway

What I love about the picture above is that you can see a woman in a blue jacket peering into the window of the church. 🙂

5.24.15.8192
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8225
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway

Our first glimpse of Flåm from the fjord. The Norwegian Star cruise ship was still there, dominating the landscape. Our hotel was the brown building to the right of the ship.

5.24.15.8236
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
5.24.15.8237
5.24.15 ~ Sogn og Fjordane, Norway

We were back in Flåm now but our day was not over. We picked up our bags at the hotel and boarded another ferry, this time a high-speed ferry which would take us to Bergen via Aurlandsfjord and Sognefjord in five and a half hours!

Nærøyfjord & Aurlandsfjord II

5.24.15.7961

More pictures from our ferry ride on Nærøyfjord and Aurlandsfjord…

5.24.15.7964
5.24.15.7966
5.24.15.7972
5.24.15.7979
5.24.15.7990
our traveling companions, Tim’s brother, Dan, and his wife, Fran
yes, it was COLD!…
5.24.15.7996
5.24.15.8000
5.24.15.8002
sheep, I think
5.24.15.8016
5.24.15.8017

That tiny little house (above) captured my imagination. I wonder what it would be like to live there, especially in the winter. The ferry does run, although less frequently, in the winter.

5.24.15.8030
5.24.15.8042
5.24.15.8047

Those colorful dots (above) near the waterfall are kayakers! In the picture below is the same waterfall, the barely visible kayakers dwarfed by the mountain!

5.24.15.8049

Still more pictures coming!

Nærøyfjord & Aurlandsfjord I

5.24.15.7871

After we took our bus through the mountains we emerged in the tiny village of Gudvangen, located at the end of Nærøyfjord, which is an arm of Aurlandsfjord, which in turn, is an arm of Sognefjord. Getting off of our bus we immediately boarded our ferry for an eleven mile ride on Nærøyfjord.

5.24.15.7881

Nærøyfjord is named after Njord, a Norse god associated with wind, seafarers, coasts, and inland waters. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and if I had to choose, this may have been my favorite part of our whole trip. The scenery was spectacular, and even though it was raining for most of our ferry ride we were spellbound.

5.24.15.7885

I wasn’t quite sure at what point we left Nærøyfjord and entered Aurlandsfjord so I’m posting these pictures together, and, I’m splitting them into three posts so this post won’t be unbearably long. However, they are in the order they were taken. It was difficult deciding which pictures to use, but I think I managed to cull the cream of the crop for my readers!

5.24.15.7895

I couldn’t get over how tiny the houses seemed sitting at the base of the mountains. The mist and clouds offered a heightened sense of drama. And as we were learning about Norway, there was always another waterfall to be seen as we sailed on. On the shores we also saw small villages, farms, sheep and goats.

5.24.15.7900
5.24.15.7910
5.24.15.7911
5.24.15.7916
5.24.15.7918
5.24.15.7924
5.24.15.7946

It is steep and deep, shallow and wide, wild and gentle. Nærøyfjord is a 18 km long branch of the worlds second longest fjord Sognefjord (204 km). It is only 250 metres at the narrowest, and more than one kilometres at the widest. The depth varies between 10 and 500 metres. The surrounding mountains are up to more than 1400 metres high.
~ www.naeroyfjord.com

5.24.15.7947
5.24.15.7951
5.24.15.7957

More pictures coming!

Flåm

5.24.15.7752

Morning light in Flåm, Norway, looking off the balcony of our hotel room. (above) Morning is my favorite time of day and this particular morning we did not have to rush off to catch a train or a ferry or a bus so we could enjoy a a few leisurely hours in the village before our next adventure.

5.24.15.7755
good morning! ~ friendly little curious female house sparrow
5.24.15.7767
later on we would cross this bridge on a bus
to get to a long tunnel to Gudvangen
5.24.15.7772
it didn’t take me long to find a few gulls
5.24.15.7783
5.24.15.7796
entrance to Ægir Brewery & Pub,
where we had dinner the night before
5.24.15.7800
wood carvings in a dead tree near our hotel
5.24.15.7804
5.24.15.7806
5.24.15.7808
so many lovely birch trees
5.24.15.7810
Ægir Brewery & Pub ~ it’s only open for dinner
5.24.15.7812
Flåmsbrygga Hotel, the warmth of knotty pine floors and doors
5.24.15.7813
Ægir Brewery, sign above entrance
5.24.15.7815
Tim on a little stone seat sticking out of the wall
of the Flåmstova Restaurant
5.24.15.7819
wall in the Flåmstova Restaurant, where we had breakfast
5.24.15.7821
ceiling in the Flåmstova Restaurant
5.24.15.7824

While we were eating breakfast by a picture window, enjoying the view of garden, fjord and mountain, a cruise ship very slowly pulled into port! Then we could barely see the mountain over the top of it! Cruise ships are amazingly large – Flåm was such a tiny port I am sure it couldn’t possibly accommodate more than one of them at a time.

5.24.15.7838
I still can’t get over how it was spring on the fjord
and winter in the mountains
5.24.15.7853
there was a hiking path up through the farms
hugging the side of the mountain
5.24.15.7859
wish we had time to hike up there,
but the zoom lens came in handy to capture this scene
5.24.15.7843

We boarded a small bus to take us through the mountains to Gudvangen. This is the entrance to Flenja Tunnel (above) which is 5,053m long. (16,578′). We came out of it for only 500m (1,640′) before entering Gudvanga Tunnel, which is 11,428m (7.1 mi) long, Norway’s second longest road tunnel.

Next stop: Ferry ride on Nærøyfjord from Gudvangen back to Flåm.

an elusive forest spirit

5.23.15.7492

After we got off the train at Myrdal, we got onto the Flåm Railway (Flåmsbana), “a steep railway taking you past spectacular waterfalls, in and out of snow-capped mountains and ending up by the Aurlandsfjord.” The little village of Flåm is 2838′ (865m) below Myrdal and the train ride took about an hour.

5.23.15.7500
5.23.15.7513

There was a stop along the ride where we were allowed to get off the train and take pictures of the Kjosfossen Waterfall. Both ends of the train were still part way in the tunnels. Norway seems to be the land of tunnels and waterfalls, and presumably, trolls.

5.23.15.7515
Kjosfossen Waterfall
5.23.15.7520
5.23.15.7521
5.23.15.7523
5.23.15.7524
5.23.15.7525
5.23.15.7527

The total fall is 738′ (225m). In the picture below there is a woman in a red dress who came out of nowhere to sing and dance for the passengers. She gives a little perspective about the size of this magnificent waterfall.

5.23.15.7542
Huldra, an elusive forest spirit from Norse mythology
5.23.15.7555
back on the train and more scenic glimpses
5.23.15.7566
5.23.15.7567
5.23.15.7589
5.23.15.7591
5.23.15.7595
yours truly (cold, but having the time of my life!)
5.23.15.7598
5.23.15.7649
the little farm is in the late afternoon shadow of a nearby mountain
5.23.15.7655
5.23.15.7668

Apparently Norway is home to nine of the world’s 20 highest waterfalls. High or low, we found them cascading out of the mountains everywhere. No matter how many we saw they continued to dazzle us with their allure.

5.23.15.7745

When we arrived in Flåm, we checked in at the Flåmsbrygga Hotel and then had a scrumptious Viking-style dinner at the Ægir Brewery & Pub. It was very late when we headed for bed, yet it was still light out. The picture above was taken from our hotel balcony and was the last breathtaking scene I savored before falling asleep.

In winter I get up at night
And dress by yellow candle-light.
In summer, quite the other way,
I have to go to bed by day.
~ Robert Louis Stevenson
(A Child’s Garden of Verses)