Showing posts with label Scandinavia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scandinavia. Show all posts
Thursday, 16 August 2018
The Great Outdoors September issue
The September issue of The Great Outdoors is in the shops now and includes a supplement on walking and trekking in Scandinavia, guest edited by Mark Waring. This supplement includes Matty Graham on an ascent of Segla on the island of Senja; Alec Forss packrafting in Sweden; Mark Waring describing Scandinavian outdoor culture; Alex Nail photographing the spectacular scenery of Lofoten; Jaako Heikka describing the attractions of Finland; James Boulter backpacking above the Arctic Circle; Alex Roddie following the Jotunheimstien trail; and Mark Waring exploring Sarek National Park. I have a piece on Scandinavian gear too. I haven't been to Scandinavia for quite a few years. Reading this supplement made me wonder why. I want to go back again very soon!
In the main magazine the gear section is about footwear. I review a dozen pairs of trail shoes, Judy Armstrong reviews half a dozen pairs of women's approach shoes, and Daniel Neilson reviews a baker's dozen of three-season boots. I also look at the Craghoppers Nosilife Adventure Shirt.
The Hill Skills section is about combining traditional and digital navigation and includes pieces by me and Alex Roddie.
Away from skills and gear Andrew Galloway looks at the impact of the moorland fires on Saddleworth Moor and Winter Hill and Roger Smith considers the effects of climate extremes. In book reviews James Roddie likes Keith Foskett's High and Low. Jim Perrin's Mountain Portrait is about Pillar in the Lake District. Hanna Lindon describes eight island walks from the Hebridean Way to the Isle of Wight Coastal Path and explores Macgillycuddy's Reeks in Ireland. James Forrest combines hiking with a hitch-hiking on a 19-mountain peak-bagging trip in the Yorkshire Dales while David Lintern combines hiking with pack rafting on a soggy trip in Knoydart.
Tuesday, 24 October 2017
Scandinavia for Backpacking & Ski Touring
![]() |
| A fine camp on my Scandinavian Mountain Walk |
There's a new piece by Alex Roddie on The Great Outdoors website called 'Why are British backpackers heading for Scandinavia?'. It's an excellent feature, with contributions from several experienced backpackers in praise of the Scandinavian outdoors. I'm delighted to see it but I must admit that one of my reactions was 'it's about time'. I've been promoting Scandinavia for walking, backpacking and ski touring since my first visit there in 1987 but there's never been much interest from many people. Eleven years ago I wrote a general introduction to the area for The Great Outdoors, which I posted here. If backpackers are now starting to discover Scandinavia that's great news.
Back in 1982 I walked the length of Norway and Sweden. As it's the 25th anniversary of this 2200km walk this year I posted some pictures and a few notes about it here, and here. I never wrote much about this walk - just one magazine article I think - or gave many talks as there just wasn't much interest. Yet it was a magnificent walk with spectacular scenery and wild country.
Reading Alex's piece revived ideas for another long walk in Scandinavia. I haven't been there for five years and my last trip was a short one as a judge for the Scandinavian Outdoor Award. It did involve a wild camp and two days walking, which I wrote about here and here. In the last piece I discuss the differences between the Swedish and Scottish hills. That Scandinavia is like the Highlands on a vast scale is a theme in Alex Roddie's piece, where some walkers say that they feel the Highlands are too damaged by developments for enjoyable long-distance walks now. I disagree - try the Watershed! - but it is true that the Scandinavian mountains are mostly more natural in terms of vegetation and the sheer size means that avoiding developments is easier than in Scotland.
Scandinavia is a superb place for backpacking but the season is short due to the northern location. There is even more scope for ski touring. During the 1990s I worked as a ski leader, mostly in Scandinavia, and led many trips, mostly hut-to-hut, but some camping. When the land is snow-covered travel is often easier than in summer, as long as you have skis or snowshoes. Lakes and rivers become highways instead of obstacles. Dense vegetation is buried.
![]() |
My last ski tour in Scandinavia was eleven years ago when I led a hut-to-hut trip in the Halingskarvet and Hardangervidda region for the Inverness Nordic Ski Club. I must go back!
Sunday, 10 September 2017
Twenty-five Years Ago On My Scandinavian Mountains Walk
![]() |
| Camp by Lakavatnet in Blafjella-Skjaekerfjella National Park |
On this day in 1992 I was having a rest day at Abisko at the northern end of the Kungsleden on my Scandinavian Mountain Walk. It was the 79th day of the walk and I'd walked 2008 kilometres. In a weeks time I'd finish the walk.
![]() |
| Camp in Tjakjavagge on the Kungsleden |
The weather had been wet and windy for much of the previous month but I had had some fine days and some splendid camps. The temperatures were colder now with frosts at night and autumn colours were starting to appear.
Note: the pictures are from Fuji Velvia transparencies photographed on a lightbox with my Sony a6000 camera and Sony E 30mm macro lens. My camera gear for the trip consisted of Nikon F801 and FM2 SLRs, Nikon, 24mm, 28-70mm, and 70-210mm lenses, Cullman tripod, and CCS cases. Total weight 3.9kg.
Friday, 29 June 2012
Scandinavian Outdoor Award: The Event
Well, the Scandinavian outdoor award event is over and the jury has made its decisions, which will be announced soon. Until the official statement is made I've promised to keep quiet and not even drop a hint. I can say that I thought the whole process went well and that it was good to have a chance to actually try gear and talk through the pros and cons over a reasonable period of time. A wide range of products was submitted - tents, sleeping bags, stoves, boots, various items of clothing and one that was hard to classify but which would definitely have won the entertainment award, if there was one. Are in the Swedish hills proved an excellent place for the event, once we had all managed to get here. Even Erlende from Norway and Mikko from Finland didn't find the travel very simple.
With jury members from 7 countries representing 8 outdoor magazines (two from Germany) there was a wealth of knowledge and experience (and strong opinons!) that I think gives the award credibility. Once the result is official I'll post about the products that have the award (one overall, one for sustainability) and those that received honourable mentions.
Pictures added July 2.
Monday, 25 June 2012
Scandinavian Outdoor Gear Award
This week I'm off to Are in Sweden to take part in the judging for the Scandinavian Outdoor Award. With colleagues from Sweden, the Netherlands, Poland, Germany, Finland and Norway I'll be trying a wide range of products from companies like Bergans, Fjallraven, Optimus, Haglofs and Klattermusen. As well as day hiking we'll spend a night in the wilds so this isn't just a look at the products. The weather forecast is for showers so gear should be tested in damp conditions. As well as website there is a Facebook page on which some of the items we'll be testing will be displayed. I'm looking forward to meeting the others and trying this new gear. Reports to follow, perhaps during but certainly after the event.
Sunday, 4 September 2011
In Scandinavia
The following is a piece I wrote some five years ago for TGO magazine on the Scandinavian mountains.
The photo shows ski tourers from the Inverness Nordic and Ski Touring Club in the Halingskarvet region of Norway.
Scandinavia. The Northland. Trolls, giants, fjords, Vikings, Beowulf, ice, snow, cold. A land of dark harshness and grim bleakness. Maybe. In midwinter. But also wild beauty, unspoiled nature and that special northern light with its subtle play of sun and shadow, a magic light that entices and ensnares, drawing you back again and again. This enchanting land lies just across the North Sea and has some of the finest backpacking and walking terrain in the whole of Europe if not the world. Strangely though this far northern paradise is neglected by British walkers. Go north for glorious walking! The wild lands of Norway, Sweden and Finland are vast, far surpassing in size our own hill country and stretching well north of the Arctic Circle. There are icecaps here, and glaciers, as well as rugged mountains reaching to over 2500 metres in height, vast upland plateaux, huge tracts of boreal forest, crashing waterfalls, wild rivers, myriads of lakes and of course the dramatic and beautiful fjords.
Norway is the wildest of the three countries, mountainous throughout its length. Sweden and Finland are flat, wooded and lake-dotted in the south but have many fine mountains in the north and west. The highest mountains are 2469 metre Galdhøpiggen in Norway, 2117 metre Kebnekaise in Sweden and 1328 metre Halti in Finland. The northern part of all three countries, straddling the Arctic Circle, makes up Lapland, a magical and wondrous place with a real sense of wilderness and remoteness and the beautiful soft light of long northern twilights.
Compared with the British hills, the Alps or the Pyrenees the Scandinavian mountains are quiet and empty, except for the most popular areas at holiday times. It isn’t unusual to walk for days and meet no-one, especially if camping rather than using huts. The walking season isn’t long though, starting after the snow melts in early June and ending in October when the next winter’s snow starts to fall. Winters are long and harsh with little daylight – none at all above the Arctic Circle at midwinter. However late winter and spring – March to early May – are superb times for ski touring with lengthening hours of daylight, warmer weather and fewer storms. Some would argue that the Scandinavian mountains are at their finest at this time of year. In summer the weather is mixed and not dissimilar to that of home, though usually less windy. There is an east-west split, with the former being far drier and sunnier than the latter. In the far north at midsummer there are 24 hours of daylight, which makes it easier to take advantage of the best weather – as long as you don’t mind walking at any hour of the clock.
Much wild land is protected in Scandinavia and there are many national parks – 35 in Finland, 31 in Norway and 26 in Sweden. In Norway these include the Hardangervidda national park, a huge mountain plateau, and Jotunheimen national park– the Home of the Giants. Many days can be spent crossing the high expanse of the Hardangervidda, a rippling upland of rock, moorland and water with a feeling of remoteness, vast space, huge horizons and solitude. In contrast the Jotunheimen is a land of steep rocky, glacier clad mountains packed together above narrow valleys, ideal for those who like bagging summits. There is little that is flat in Jotunheimen and over 200 summits rise above 1900 metres. In Sweden Sarek national park in Lapland is one of the most magnificent wild areas in Europe, a land of alpine summits, glaciers, cliffs and narrow valleys. There are over 200 summits above 1800 metres and 100 glaciers. Sarek is kept wild so there are no huts or waymarks and few bridges, making this a place for the experienced wilderness traveller. Finland’s largest national park is Lemmenjoki in northern Lapland, which is described as “one of Europe’s most extensive uninhabited and roadless backwoods”. The scenery is typical of the wildest parts of Finland and consists of rolling stony hills, forests, lakes and big rivers.
In some respects the Scandinavian mountains are like the Scottish Highlands writ large - very, very large - which isn’t surprising as they were once part of the same range, the great Caledonian Mountain chain, which came into being 400-500 million years ago and then broke up some 65 million years ago, the Atlantic Ocean filling the gap left by the torn apart mountains. Today the eroded stumps of the Caledonian Mountains form the Appalachian Mountains in North America, the Scottish Highlands and the Scandinavian mountains. Like the Highlands the Scandinavian landscape we see today was carved by glaciers and then the slow erosion of wind and rain.
Compared with the British hills the Scandinavian mountains have a richer and less despoiled flora and fauna. The mountain flowers are particularly famous and there are around 250 species. These were studied by the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus who travelled some 6000km through Lapland in 1732 and went on to invent the scientific system of naming plants and animals. The best time to see these flowers is in early summer straight after snow melt. The Scandinavian mountains are also home to many big mammals that long ago died out in Britain such as moose (called elg or elk), beaver, brown bears, wolverine, lynx and wolves, though the last are very rare. The animals most commonly seen are reindeer, the typical deer of the sub-arctic tundra and forest. Most reindeer are semi-domesticated and owned by the Sami people of Lapland. In southern Norway there are wild reindeer though, which can be seen on the Hardangervidda. Birdlife is prolific, especially in forests and on the coast, and again typical of this northern environment. Special birds that it is always a joy and privilege to see are the white-tailed eagle, gyr falcon and my favourite the long-tailed skua. There are snowy owls too, which I have yet to see.
Although huge and challenging the wild lands of Scandinavia are also accessible and friendly. There are thousands of kilometres of trails and many areas have hut systems. Access is a right, as is wild camping, regardless of land ownership, due to enlightened laws passed in the 1950s. The huts are run by national organisations - Den Norske Turistforening (DNT) in Norway, Svenska Turistföreningen (STF) in Sweden and the Forest and Park Service in Finland. “Huts” range from basic bothy-like shelters through self-catering huts with food supplies, stoves, cooking utensils and bedding to large hotel-like lodges with restaurants and shops. The walking can be as hard or easy as you wish. Scrambles up rocky peaks, long distance walks with camping gear, hut to hut tours on gentle trails are all available. The same equipment suitable for the Scottish Highlands will be fine, perhaps with the addition of a little more warm wear (gloves, hat, extra fleece) as it can be a bit colder.
All three countries have excellent topographic maps, though without as much detail as we are used to from the Ordnance Survey and Harveys. For Norway these are produced by Statens Kartverk. The 1:50,000 series covers the whole country and there are special maps at various scales for many mountain areas with extra information for walkers. Swedish mountain maps are made by Landmateriet at a scale of 1:100,000. In Finland Genimaps cover the mountain areas at various scales from 1:40,000 to 1:100,000 and the National Land Survey maps cover the whole country at 1:50,000. Maps are available from Stanfords and The Map Shop .
For backpackers this is near perfect country as you can walk for days, weeks or even months in the mountains without covering the same ground or coming down to cities or developed areas and there are innumerable fine wild camp sites. I spent one summer walking 2200 kilometres south to north through Norway and Sweden, a wonderful experience. Long walks can easily be made by linking paths and there are several long distance routes in the Arctic region, most famously the classic Kungsleden or the King’s Way, a superb trail stretching 450 kilometres through the Swedish mountains from Hemavan to Abisko. The Kungsleden runs through the edge of Sarek and also through Stora Sjöfallet and Abisko national parks as well as passing below Kebnekaise, which can be climbed as a side trip. There are huts along the Kungsleden but there are some sections in the south where distances between them are great and carrying a tent is advisable. The trail is well marked and mostly easy to walk with gentle gradients.
Less well known though equally splendid is Nordkalottleden (Nordkalotrutta), an 800 kilometre trail that runs through all three countries – 380km in Norway, 350km in Sweden and 70km in Finland. Nordkalottleden starts with two paths, one from Sulitjelma in Norway, one from Kvikkjokk in Sweden, that join up at Staloluokta in Sweden. The united trail then runs north to Kautokeino in Norway. En route it passes through Øvre Dividal, Reisa, Abisko and Padjelanta national parks, climbs Halti, the highest mountain in Finland, and visits Treriksröset (the three countries stone), the only place where Norway, Sweden and Finland meet. Nordkalottleden is more of a wilderness walk than Kungsleden as it’s less developed with fewer huts (there are 40 in total, at distances of 10 to 50km apart), less waymarking and some unbridged streams. Not all the huts have food supplies either.
Also in the far north is the Troms Border Trail, which runs for 141 kilometres through northern Norway close to the border with Sweden and Finland and passes through Øvre Dividal national park. One section coincides with part of the Nordkalottleden. Although the route is in Norway the nearest town to the finish is Kilpisjarvi in Finland. This trail is in remote country and the huts along the way don’t have food supplies. It’s ideal for the lover of solitude and unspoilt wilderness.
West of Sarek the Padjelanta Trail runs for 150km through Padjelanta national park, a high tableland mostly above timberline holding some of the biggest lakes in Lapland, from Kvikkjokk north to Akka or Vaisaluokta. The landscape is more open and rolling than Sarek, whose alpine peaks can be seen to the east. There are huts all along the trail though only a few have food supplies.
A little further south, just below the Arctic Circle, and much further east is Finland’s Bear’s Ring Trail, a 95km trail close to the Russian border in Oulanka national park. This runs through old forests, rolling hills and rocky ravines and is well supplied with wood cabins and lean-tos.
Fine though these planned trails are anyone with map reading skills can easily construct their own equally wonderful routes. The first walk I ever did in Scandinavia was a 65km east-west crossing of the Jotunheimen from Gjendesheim to Ovre Ardal via the summits of Glittertind, Galdhopiggen and Fannaraken and the highest waterfall in Norway, 275 metre Vettisfossen. Other great walks are the crossing of the Hardangervidda, which can be done by various routes (I’ve done it three times by different ones), and takes around a week and the walk from the northern Hardangervidda below the Hardangerjøkul ice cap through the rocky Halingskarvet and Fillefjell mountains to Tyin and the southern Jotunheim.
The list of other inspiring and exciting wild areas is long. Sylarna, the southernmost mountains in Sweden. Rondane and Dovre in central Norway. Romsdal with the great walls of the Trolltind in eastern Norway. The spectacular Lofoten islands - mountains rising straight out of the Norwegian Sea. The Lyngen peninsula; arguably the most spectacular mountains in Scandinavia jutting out into the Arctic Ocean. And more, much, much more.
INFORMATION
BOOKS
Climbs, Scrambles and Walks in Romsdal by Tony Howard (Cordee, 2005). Guide to this spectacular area of Norway.
Hurrungane by James Baxter (Scandinavian Publishing, 2005). Well-illustrated guide to a beautiful mountain range in western Norway.
Norway South: Rother Walking Guide by Bernhard Pollmann (Rother, 2000). 50 routes from day walks to hut-to-hut tours.
Norway: The Northern Playground by W. Cecil Slingsby (Ripping Yarns, 2003). Inspiring tales by a pioneering mountaineer, first published in 1904.
Scandinavian Mountains by Peter Lennon (West Col, 1987). Out of print but worth seeking out used as it’s the only overall guide to the mountain areas of Norway and Sweden.
Walking in Norway by Connie Roos (Cicerone, 2003). Guide to 20 hut-to-hut walks.
Walks and Scrambles in Norway by Anthony Dyer, John Baddeley and Ian H. Robertson. (Ripping Yarns, 2006). 53 routes including day walks, multi-day backpacks and serious mountaineering expeditions.
HUTS
DNT Norway
STF Sweden
Sunday, 4 July 2010
Scandinavia End-to-End

Many years ago I spent a rather wet summer hiking south to north through Norway and Sweden. I never wrote much about this walk - just one magazine article as far as I remember - as there was little interest in it despite it passing through some of the wildest and most spectacular landscapes in Western Europe. Nowhere else in our crowded continent can you walk 2200 kilometres in roughly a straight line and be in wild country most of the time. Publishers however did not find Scandinavia interesting and where the Yukon was seen as romantic and the Munros as popular, and so my long walks in both worth books, Norway and Sweden were seen as unknown and dull. I had thought the walk long forgotten until a Swedish backpacking acquaintance, Jörgen Johansson, contacted me to say he'd mentioned it to members of the Nordic Lightpacking group on a recent meet and they were interested to know more about my trip. An interview followed and can be found on Jörgen's site here. The Nordic Lightpackers know now that this was not a lightweight trip!
Photo info: the walk took place long before digital cameras and I've never scanned any of the slides I took so I have no digital images. Instead here's a winter picture of the Hardangerjøkulen, an ice cap in southern Norway that I walked below and which I have skied up on several occasions. Canon 300D, 18-55mm lens @45mm, 1/125@f8, ISO 100, raw file processed in Lightroom 3.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)







