Sognefjord - fjord and stave churches, all at once My next target was the Sognefjord with all the stave churches, so I took my way on the E39 by the many waters, encountering the home-travellers (it was a Sunday, all Bergen must have been on the road, what wonder on this brilliant day....). At Ytre I took my first ferry in Norway - that was exciting, it was a small boat with all cars on the outer deck, everything went easy and quickly, as the traffic was huge but going the other direction. My first fjord The Sognefjord
is very large, much to see and one gets the feeling of the enormous
surface of the water, just amazing, the water is very calm, sometimes
even like a mirror; strange to me as I grew up by the largest lake in
Europe, the Lake of Constance. There's always some swell as the German
and Swiss shores are rather flat, so we Austrians get constant western
winds coming in from those directions. Fjords are a fascinating phenomenon to me - first of all they seem so unreal, they can be very depressing or frightening, if one looks at the long and narrow Lysefjord from the Preikestolen-view one can easily imagine what those two youngsters must have thought last winter before they jumped off....when the oppressing dark clouds hang over the long, slightly snowy tube of the Lysefjord, turning the dark rocky walls even scarier, the water must tear you down like legions of Medusae.... Still by
daylight I headded on to Balestrand where I wanted to visit an
ancient Viking farmland. The mad boy While I had my dinner still sitting behind the steeringwheel, funeral curtains (with reversed crucifixes, he he...) closed, I watched a teenaged boy with a bicycle approaching, obviously he was astounded by the long black likvogn (t.i. hearse in norsk), which he kept repeating to himslef. Of course he couldn't see me and I kept as silent as possible, I didn't want anyone to know that I was there in the car. He kept driving up and down for at least 15 minutes, which becomes eternity if you can't move, and I got the impression that he was mentally handicapped. Suddenly he came very close to my side and I feared he'd get aware of me; I was fed up anyway and so I started the car with one strike, lights and blinkers, loud music on, all at once - he must have got a shock for his life! The bike shot off the car, in a second he was accross the road, right by the water, starng in fear. In a rage I turned around and headed to the next village, f...ing Balestrand! Stormy weather in Dragsvik The nightride
along the fjord reminded of those narrow streets on the Riviera coast
with crippled trees and windy edges; the next village, Dragsvik,
was right opposite Balestrand, one could almost reach it by hand. After
that came the ferry across the fjord, so I had to find a hidden place
in Dragsvik by all means. Luckily the nice situated campingsite was
open, there were even some hytta occupied. I had an unforgettable stormy
night there by the black water, where I sat on my own for at least two
hours, listening to the wind and the moving waters, watching the reflections
of Balestrand - it felt just wonderful! I had my car parked underneath
some huge fir-trees that waved with the wind and dropped some fir-cones
onto bonnet and roof now and then.... My next go was Sogndal, a famous runestone should be there. But the ride between Hella and Sogndal was maybe much more surprising - still windy, the landscape reminded of Italian coastal areas - appletrees and even vinyards along with little stone houses and tiny stonewalls by the side of the street made me feel like approaching Malcesine by the Lago di Garda - but this was in the middle of Norway! The runestone in Sogndal was very funnily situated - between two churches, an older stave-church-like and a newer red wooden church at the flanks of the stone that was looking into the valley, right besides a bench and a beautiful solitarian toadstool. Urnes - Urnäsch But my plan of the day was one of my favourite stave churches - Urnes - inobstrusive and rather small from the outside it has an outstanding north-portal with the most elaborate ornaments of the viking ages, the most beautiful and bewitching woodcraft I've ever seen. The interior is of heavy decoration, very original and tasteful. Also I
had to see it for it's odd name - Urnes - sounds like a village in Switzerland
I grew up nearby - Urnäsch. From my position I could only reach Urnes via boat - but as I arrived in Solvorn the last boat was gone for 20 minutes, on that very day the boats don't go in the afternoon (....what great luck), some tourists were hanging around there obviously not knowing that they wait in vain, I even found out after a while that the church is closed in autumn, having it opened by a neighbour lady would cost a fortune.... As I spent a while there on the parking space I got more and more convinced that it wouldn't have been a good idea anyway to leave the car in Solvorn (the church was right across the water on a hill, so why take the car there and pay a whole lot for the ferry) with those strange guys hanging around the tiny port, staring at "us". So off as soon as possible, dawn was sure to approach and who knows when the next water (and inevitable ferry) was on the way.... The disco in Sogndal... I stopped
inside Solvorn for some water and tea and discoverred an internet-cafe
right there in the middle of nowhere, run by a nice looking "gothic"
girl - things happen there in the mountains! Still astonished by her
appearance I asked where she goes in the evenings - Solvorn is a 30
souls village, most of them beyond 70.......well she goes to the disco
on Saturdays in the shopping centre in Sogndal, it's nice there... (hard
to imagine for me - we have tons of different clubs in Vienna, open
everynight, easy to reach by subway or car, but there it's almost impossible
to drive at night, the next "village" is an hour away and
you see the same 40 faces there every - weekend - no disco during the
week). As I was still thinking in european standards I had in mind to reach the Borgund church before dark, but that was another dream, I didn't calculate with the twisted roads and unexpected points of interrest on my way.... After Sogndal
the landscape became more and more pittoresque and suddenly there was
a sign to the Kaupanger stave church - so why not have a look.
Trollsveien til Borgund The pittoresque countryside continued all the way to Mannheller where I took the late ferry to Fodnes. A remarkable phenomenon occured there - one can even see it on the photos - on the hills after Kaupanger the sun set and then followed darkness, but by the ferry, which is even further east, it was still dim light; one would expect the opposite rather - light on the mountains and darkness in the valley. After several tunnels it became darker and darker and I finally looked for a place to park for the night, but Eri and Tønjum didn't seem very trustworthy (three houses and ten trucks....), so I continued to Bjørkum and up into the incredibly savage gorge Svartegjel with overhanging bolders and rotting trees on pikes hanging down like in the old King Kong movie, within time I could only see shadows on the black nightsky, then the heavy rain came and I was longing for a place to sleep... in this fuzz I even passed the Borgund stave church, the oldest still existing stave church, without remarking it, there's a newer wooden building right next to it and all looks totally different from the road-angle, compared to the usual pictures in books. On my search for a safe camping site I got followed by a guy in a dutch VW Golf (!?another Golf?!) who even shadowed me into a nowhere leading deadlock by a wasted farmland where I did the faster kind of u-turn.... (what reasonable intention could lead him to follow me there??)...in the end I found a hidden camping site (again under an old fir-tree, but this time no fir-cones, only raindrops...) were I was happy to rest after a long and strenuous day. |
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by Alzbeth of ART, for photos ask at verwesungsgeruch@gmx.net
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