Alaskan crab just once more

We disembarked from MS Trollfjord this afternoon in rain & nasty wind but we’re settled back into the same Bergen hotel, where, thankfully, there is no music festival next door so we should sleep better than on our last visit.

We’ve been busy since.  David has had a haircut, we bought a new battery for our camera, I managed to buy the souvenirs I’d picked out on our last visit & we had wonderful Alaskan King Crab for dinner with some chips followed by an icecream & delicious Norwegian strawberries all bought at the famous Bergen Fish Market.


It’s a bit of a novelty to have TV tonight & I’ve been trying to find Wimbleton but there’s just soccer, bl……, soccer. So we’ll just read our books!

A very beautiful voyage comes to an end

As we cruise the last few hours into Bergen & review our cruise of the Norwegian fjords, we are very pleased we have visited these stunning areas.

The Hurtigruten cruise is not flash but we didn’t expect it to be. It has been very comfortable though & it is really interesting to see all the little ports & beautiful areas that the big liners can’t enter.  My bed was comfortable but David said his was too hard. The shower was hot, our cabin was warm, no complaints there.

Breakfast & lunch were buffets offering plentiful supplies of everything you could possibly want. The company sources fresh product from all the little ports & makes every effort to support local suppliers & let passengers know where the food has been produced. This was great.

Dinner was not as good. It is set seating & a set 3 course meal served to table. There is no choice. We feel that they could at least offer alternate drop. David has had too much fish; for me it has been wonderful. You do see the dinner menu at lunch so you know what you’re getting. There is another restaurant where you can pay extra to have a la carte dining but there are only 4 main choices & the menu didn’t change at all for the 11 nights. We went once. I had roast reindeer which was delicious, David’s steak was too red for him & tough. Another night when fish was on the menu, he asked at lunch if he could have meat instead & that was no problem to staff.

Of course, all the extras are expensive but Scandinavia is expensive so not much you can do about. Just enjoy it!

It has been a most enjoyable 11 days. We are very rested & have seen some beautiful scenery which must be amongst the most beautiful in the world.   We are very very pleased that we have cruised with MS Trollfjord.

With hindsight, we wish that we had just cruised from Bergen to Kirkenes & flown back south which would have allowed us some time in Oslo & Stockhom but we have enjoyed all of the cruise. If you’re thinking of doing the cruise, that is what we’d recommend.

Feeling very relaxed

Tonight’s our last night on MS Trollfjord & we’re sitting watching the ever stunning scenery pass us by & sipping on a cocktail. It’s very pleasant & we’ve had a very relaxing day. The washing is done, we’re almost packed & we’re meeting up with our new Norwegian friends for dinner.


We slept in this morning & almost missed the morning visit to Trondheim. It was quite rough last night for the first time as we were out in open sea, most of the time we’ve been protected by islands.

This afternoon we stopped briefly in Kristiansund, a pretty place. It was wiped out by bombing in WWII so the houses all date from the 1950s on.


The crew are a mixture mainly of Norwegian & Swedish people. They work 2 cruises up & back (22 days) & then have 22 days off. The Swedes like to work in Norway as the pay is better & they like working on the ships because they don’t need to have a home in Norway – they go home to Sweden for their days off. One young fellow was from Tromsø. He’d done his 22 days when we got to Tromsø so he was off to London for a weeks holiday as soon as the boat docked. He had 30 minutes to get to the airport.

Back below the Arctic Circle

Today we passed the marker which shows we are no longer in the Arctic:


The Captain held a ceremony on deck – he was handing out glasses of cod liver oil for free & selling glasses of champagne for $13. Not even a glass of champers could entice me to drink cod liver oil. I remember it too well from my childhood. That and Clements Tonic. David gave it a miss too


This afternoon the Captain took us close to Torghatten Mountain so we could see the big hole in it. It is 160m long, 25m to 30m high & 12 to 15m wide.  The Norwegian fairy tale explains the hole says that Hestmannen’s arrow whisked through the Bronnoy king’s hat long ago when Lekamøya fled south. (If you want to know the whole story, I suggest you google it.)


In between times, we’ve been napping, reading, playing bridge on our iPads & chatting to a lovely Norwegian couple who live not far from where Kylie lived in Norway. She was an English teacher. He taught maths & physics but was also a glaceologist in Antartica representing Norway for some time. They’ve also lived in Tanzania. They are very interesting to talk to. He has walked through the hole in the mountain. It’s all been very relaxing but now it’s time for our pre-dinner drink.

So many photos!

The outstanding feature of today was our sail through the beautiful, narrow strait of Raftsundet which is the border between Vesterålen & Lofoten, 2 counties of Norway. It was a lovely sunny day, temp about 19° so the deck reminded us of Spanish beaches. Women lying around in bikinis, the men shirtless, me without a coat. Yes!

We sailed into the TrollFjord, for which our ship is named. It was certainly happy snap time. So amazing.  I took so many photos:

The captain takes the ship right into the fjord, then turns it around & takes it out again. ​This photo is taken on the way out:

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Earlier this afternoon we visited Stokmarknes which was a pretty little town. It was nestled within the mountains. I’m running out of superlatives to describe the beauty. Hurtigruten say this is “the most beautiful voyage in the world”. I think they are probably right.

Hammerfest, the world’s most northernmost town

This morning we docked in Hammerfest for a couple of hours where we visited the museum of reconstruction. In WWII, Germany occupied Norway & when the Russians were defeating Germany, Hitler ordered a scorched earth policy & they bnrnt all the towns from Kirkenes down. Many people hid in caves in the mountains until they were liberated by Russia. The museum showed the story of how the towns were all reconstructed. It was very interesting.

There are many reindeers in the area & they were becoming a menace coming right into town at night & messing up the town so they have built 20 km of fencing around the town.

We didn’t see any live polar bears unfortunately but we did see this stuffed one. I didn’t see any Bundy rum, though.

This afternoon the sun came out again & it is another fine sunny night. We are back in the snow capped mountains again now & it is so beautiful in every direction.

Three times so far the captain has come over the loud speaker saying there are whales beside the boat. Once we saw a few fins gently poking above the water but I’d really like to see more.

It is after 10pm. We’ve had dinner & are sitting up at the front of the boat in a closed-in area reading our books, drinking tea & watching the little farms at the base of the snow capped mountains slowly glide past. It could be 10 am at home. It’s so very bright & sunny. We’re so lucky to see this.

The world’s most powerful current in a rib boat!

We’ve done it. It was very exciting. This is the special gear we dressed in, we felt like astronauts but it kept us warm.

The suit was really heavy & we had two thicknesses of warm gloves. 2 hats & my hood kept falling down over my goggles which I had on over my glasses so seeing anything was a bit tricky on the way out but I had it sorted by the time we were out at the Saltstraumen. It is the worlds most powerful tidal current.  Four times a day, 13 billion cubic feet of water are forced in & out through a passage 150 metres wide & 31metres deep. My photos don’t do it justice unfortunately.

We also saw parts of the Caledonian Fold Belt, a range of mountains dating back 250 million years.

A sea eagle or white tailed eagle flew over the boat. They are the largest eagle in the world with a wing span up to 2.6 metres. There was a nest with two babies on one of the cliff tops. I couldn’t get a photo of them as my camera was stowed in my pocket at that time.

We were away from MS Trollfjord for about 2.5 hrs so we were more than ready to stop bouncing up & down & to be able to stand up & stretch by the time we returned.

Here’s my best picture of the eddies where the tide is rushing by.


I’ll post further pictures in a separate blog as two seems to be the maximum in any one