Monday 28 January 2013

Running to the Sea

Day 21-23: Tromsø, Norway

It was 3pm and already dark again by the time we’d all settled in to a small hotel just outside the centre of town. Umz, Niklas, Jenny and Issy were only in for another night, while us crazy photographers would stay on and chase the lights for 2 more.

Some more disappointing weather conditions set in, as it rained steadily through the rest of the night. They say you should make hay while the sun shines. We say you should get pissed while it pisses down. And boy did we!

 The night started with Jon joining us for a classic game of fuck the dealer, as we went from zero to blotto in good speed.


That pose..

We headed into town and met at a student bar with Jacob, a redditor celebrating his birthday who had contacted us earlier from our popular post. 



It wasn’t long until some other redditors smelled our presence, and we felt like minor celebrities being referred to as the “Australian hot tub guys”. This chance meeting turned out to be a glorious coincidence as one of the girls (yes, a girl on the internet) offered us a discount rate at the classy Radisson hotel where she works on reception.



We drank and snussed until the wee hours when we were finally dropped home by Jacob’s girlfriend, eating some birthday cake on the way.

Coppo had the unenviable job of taking the rest of the crowd down to the airport at 5am while Tal looked after proceedings back at the hotel (aka sleeping). We made it for checkout and headed across the bridge to shoot some photos of the fjord and head up to the gondola lookout.










Unfortunately the gondola is closed in winter, but we enjoyed a flurry of snow on the way back to our new room at the Radisson.


The weather had been patchy all day, with non-stop snow storms rolling in, each followed by an hour or two of clear skies.  

Plans to meet with Jacob again had fallen through, so we took advantage of a break in the clouds around 6pm and headed back to the glorious landscapes on the way to Tromvik.
We spent 3 hours waiting and scoping out spots, catching some decent shots but missing out on the auroras again.






We headed back to town slightly disappointed, but after a beer we had another look at the graphs online and the activity started to heat up again. Webcam forecasts and a quick look out the window confirmed it, so we headed into town to catch some lights over the city.

lol, boring


It was epic to see them again, but amongst the light pollution of the city the effect was muted. It was a brave decision to risk more patchy weather and another frustrating wait, but we had no choice. It’s what we came to see, and we couldn’t take any chances.

What a decision! On the drive out, the lights were up, but we somehow managed to time the strongest show of the night to perfection, as the auroras came out even brighter, faster, bigger and more colourful than we’d seen on our first night.







The lights filled the entire sky for around 15 minutes, bright enough to shoot a live video.


We headed back to some other spots we’d scoped out earlier, including a lookout over the tiny coastal village of Grøtfjord and some cottages in a mountainous valley.








The clouds came in as the clock struck close to 3am, and we made a dreary yet triumphant return to the hotel in the wee hours.

The next day brought some more stable weather as the wind died down – a sheet of fluffy clouds reaching across the entire sky. Given the position of the sun at such northern latitudes, we were treated to 3 hours of glorious red and gold, a never ending sunset that we shot from a few spots on the calm water.











The sun finally disappeared and we made it back to the airport to return the trusty Golf. We can only assume it was proud of its efforts in getting 5 Australians and a Dane across hundreds of kilometres of icy roads without a hitch!

Some thicker cloud cover came in, with weather reports suggesting it was here to stay, so we went in to watch a glorious Tottenham v Man United match (Coppo actually watched the whole thing) before one final night out in town with Anna, Jacob and some friends.

With what we thought was our last night in Norway, we had to make it a big one. We knitted our alcohol blankets with copious amounts of beers, a bit of snus and shots of the explosive Norwegian spirit Akvavit.




It’s hard to say what caused us to stand in the middle of the road in the middle of the pouring snow.



It’s even harder to say what caused us to then take off our tops and remain in the same spot, garnering a small crowd of stunned locals with their cameras and iphones. 



At the risk of being cliché, it was just one of those moments we had to cherish and never forget. We’d found ourselves in the middle of the empty main street of a small Norwegian town, nearly 15 thousand kilometres from home, in the arctic circle for the last time in who knows how long, under a blanket of fresh falling snow.

The rest of the night went by in a blur and without a single wink of sleep we were furiously packing our bags, just making the bus for our flights to Prague via Oslo.

After such a fitting farewell, it was hard to leave Norway, but we can’t think of a better way to end our time there. Amongst pink twilights, red sunsets, orange beers, blue seas and the vivid green auroras, we’d experienced a truly unique and beautiful part of the world, and were able to move on more fulfilled with our stay than we’d ever dared to hope for. 

Thursday 24 January 2013

Rich kids of instagram


Day 19-20: Tromvik Lodge

We arrived in Tromsø a little groggy, but the excitement of a country lodge, the northern lights and meet ups with Umz, Niklas, Jenny and Issy took over. An hour of confusion trying to work out our car hire arrangement allowed us to meet Jenny and Issy’s incoming flight, and we all set off together towards the lodge in a sexual new Volkswagen Golf diesel.

"Just like a Golf"


The lodge is in Tromvik, a very small coastal town about an hour drive west of Tromsø. The journey out gave us equal doses of bewilderment, joy and stress as we battled between dodgy directions, an unfamiliar gearbox on the wrong side and some slippery icy roads. It was hard to worry though, as we drove through some stunning mountain scenery, under the longest and most beautiful sunset we’d ever seen. The region is so far north that we only had 3-4 hours of daylight per day - all of it in a beautiful red/pink glow.

We arrived at the lodge under a pink twilight, thrilled at what was to come over the next 2 days. In the end, we found the most difficult part of the trip was trying to get the car, ourselves and our heavy luggage up a completely iced over driveway. We made it up - the car did not, our Australian brains in a panic as we slid back down the slope on our first attempt, brakes ineffective.



It was getting late, so we headed back in to shop for food and supplies and pick up Umz and Niklas from the airport. Driving back under darkness at 2.30pm was surreal and exciting, as we shot hopeful glances at the sky in anticipation of our first chance of seeing the Aurora Borealis.
As expected, the menacement began early, as we blasted music, downed some “cheap” (AU$30 for 6) beers and fired up the sauna and outdoor Jacuzzi.

We had been watching out for the lights on this website - http://virtualtromso.no/en/northern-lights/138-live-northern-lights-activity-and-forecast.html - the graphs give an idea of activity. 

High activity over a later night


Despite a steady flat line early, the more hopeful souls were found on the balcony in jackets, looking skyward for any sight of the mystical green we were here to see.
It happened around 9:30. Tal and Umz spotted the faintest touch of green, so faint we had to confirm on the camera whether it was real.
First confirmed photo

Everyone came out on to the icy balcony, celebrating our early success with a bout of primal yelling and dancing in horned viking hats. 


Still, while the bucket list was ticked, it wasn’t *that* impressive. 

Yet.

The show that followed in the next half hour was something that none of us will ever forget. Two huge sheets of billowing green light started at each horizon and met in the centre, shockingly bright and clear, moving silently across the sky like smoke. This is what we were here for. We made it!


From that point we were hooked, and made quick plans to meet with Coppo’s uni friend (a local) Jon to head to a more remote spot and keep photographing. We headed in a small convoy to a nearby beach to catch the lights coming in over the sea in the North.



There seems to be two types of Aurora, the bright sheets that we’d experienced earlier, and a more faint but even glow of green that sits in the north of the sky. We had most of the latter for the rest of the night, which was less impressive in person, but made for some fantastic landscapes.






After some cloud cover rolled in, we returned to the lodge late and satisfied.


We jumped in the Jacuzzi and cracked a bottle of Moet in celebration of our beginner’s luck. To our disbelief, the clouds cleared and the lights turned on again.

In spite of the biting cold, this Kodak moment was not to be missed, with Tal jumping inside to grab camera gear for a quick snap of this ridiculous moment. We made it!


The Jacuzzi’s heat wasn’t able to last in the cold air as we moved onward to the Sauna and some more beer before collapsing late to bed.



We woke up hungover to solid cloud cover and a bleak forecast for the rest of the day. Tal made a few quick edits on the laptop and posted our Jacuzzi photo to Reddit, hoping for a few supportive comments and upvotes.

What happened next was crazy, as we ascended to the top of the front page for 3 hours, raking in over 30 thousand upvotes (reddit’s version of a ‘like’) and 1.6 million views.

Internet Famous


In the pandemonium, we were contacted by a local news site NRK and ended up in a news article based around the image. 



We also had a local redditor from Tromsø invite us out for some beers, which we planned to take up after we headed back from the lodge.

Despite a fun night of drinking games and more viking helmet action, we found ourselves by the end of the night in heartbreak as we missed one of the most ‘active’ nights of Aurora for the year under a relentless downpour of sideways rain.



Sitting, waiting, wishing


We woke late under more clouds and somehow it was already time to leave, packing up and heading back into Tromsø to stay in a hotel for the remainder of the stay.

Having heard countless stories of disappointed tourists missing out, especially during this wet European winter, we couldn’t be happier with our luck in seeing a full show of the lights on our first night out. We returned back to town humbled but desperate for more as we looked forward to another 3 nights of chasing nature’s beauty.