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Author: Hanneke

I started my first blog when I left the Netherlands (my home country) for an internship in Alaska in 2004, to keep my friends and family updated on my adventures over there. Little did I know it would be more than 13 years before I'd move back to the Netherlands! I spent a year in Toulouse (France) before starting a PhD in meteorology at the University of East Anglia in Norwich (UK) in 2005. That's when I started this current blog, first in Dutch but I soon switched to English. I really enjoyed life in the UK, and was actually planning to stay there after my PhD, but "life is what happens when you're busy making other plans" and I ended up moving to Tromsø in Northern Norway in 2009. Tromsø is a photographer's dream, surrounded by spectacular mountains, with the light ever changing from the midnight sun in summer to the dark days compensated by aurora-filled nights in winter. I learnt Norwegian and got a job as a weather forecaster - I got thrown in at the deep end, doing radio interviews and speaking with fishermen with way-too-strong dialects straight from the beginning, before I was anywhere near fluent in Norwegian :D I survived though, and slowly started to do some research on the side. I got more and more involved in research projects and in August 2015 I moved 2000 km south, to Oslo where I started working 100% as a researcher. A year after moving to Oslo, I met Michiel at a music festival in Brussels :) and we started to travel very frequently between Oslo and Rotterdam, where he lives. You can't do that forever though, and I soon realized I found the perfect "excuse" to finally move back home, something I had been considering many times before. So since July 2017, I'm living in Rotterdam! I'm actually taking some time off before finding a new job, and I'm looking forward to lots of adventures in the near future - so stay tuned!
Midsummer Night Ride

Midsummer Night Ride

Last weekend I did something crazy: I took the train to Grua and cycled all the way back to Oslo through the forest, nearly 60 km – in the middle of the night! It was beautiful: sunset at nearly 23:00, an orange moon rising, a sunset melting into sunrise, with beautiful twilight colours. I hardly saw anyone (except for a few people camping in the forest), but I did meet two big moose and heard the eerie call of the loon echoing over mirror-calm lakes. Oh and a billion annoying little flies, but let’s forget about that 😉

From Grua I cycled a long uphill to Mylla, where I took a short break to enjoy the views…

Evening views at Mylla

Perfect reflections

Mylla panorama

I cycled along the south side of the lake (Mylla), never far from the shore and pretty views…

A rowing boat in the forest

After leaving the lake and climbing up through the forest, this view suddenly opened up – magical!

Suddenly this view opened up - magical!

Moody skies around midnight. There was a lot of rain on the way, and I kept thinking it would start to cloud over, but it actually cleared up after this 🙂

Moody skies around midnight

I stopped very often, as I couldn’t resist taking photos of views like this…

The skies kept changing, but the colours were beautiful all night

The whole route was along forest (dirt) roads, but one small part went on a narrow track with boardwalks through the forest – fun 🙂

I mostly cycled on dirt roads, but there was a short part that went through the forest on a narrow path with boardwalks

At the end of that path I reached Gjerdingen Dam…

Gjerdingen

There were a couple of cabins here, and the light was on in the house. There were also two tents used by cyclists at the shore of the lake.

A couple of cabins at Gjerdingen Dam, and if you look closely there are two tents in use by cyclists

More pretty views…

Such fantastic views...

And some really magical views at Hakkloa. If the little flies weren’t driving me crazy, I would have stayed here much longer!

Magical moments at Hakkloa

After that there were some gruelling climbs up from Bjørnsjøen (I skipped Kikutstua as I was getting tired by now and wanted to get home), but after that it was mainly downhill all the way home. I finally got home at 4 in the morning. I met a lot of people on their way home from a night out, which is always surreal when you’ve been in the quiet forest for hours.

If anyone is interested in this route, it’s described here: Til byen fra Grua. Recommended! You need to book and pay to take your bike on the train from Oslo to Grua, but this is easily done online, even last minute.

Second visit to Dhaka

Second visit to Dhaka

A few weeks ago I went to Dhaka, Bangladesh for the second time (read about the first visit here). I am now the project leader for the project we have with the Bangladesh Meteorological Department (BMD), and the first visit I organized was not quite a routine one, as we were going to have an event to launch a climate report written by BMD with the help of the Norwegian Meteorological Institute. More on this later…

Our trip went smoothly this time and we stayed in the same hotel again. This is the view at night from my room on the 20th floor…

Dhaka by night, view from my hotel room

The project meetings in Dhaka have always been in November, when the weather is stable and not too warm. This time we were visiting just before the monsoon. This meant it was a lot hotter and it rained at times – but it also meant it was the season for fruit! And were we in for a pleasant surprise… I NEVER knew for example that mango can taste a 1000 times better than the ones we buy in Europe. On this plate were two different types of mango, and both were so rich in taste and SO good… we ate this every day and never got enough of it. They actually came from the farm of one of our project members family 🙂

The best mango's EVER!!

I also finally got to try jackfruit, a fruit I first came across in Brazil (where it’s not native, and not eaten a lot). I asked if it would be possible to taste it here, as it’s the national fruit of Bangladesh – and look what we got the next day 😀 So the huge jackfruit that you see hanging from the trees actually looks like this inside, almost like yellow peppers. They taste like a combination of all sorts of fruit, and is not too sweet. I loved it!

Jackfruit, very very tasty

Ayesha in our working room, with lots of flowers – we got a very warm welcome 🙂

Ayesha & flowers

Here I’m eating another very tasty fruit that was in season: lychees. So tasty! We were really spoilt during the visit with so much fruit, other snacks and lunch boxes.

Eating more amazing fruits: lychees

Then it was time for the big day, the launch of the climate report. The report is available here and describes the climate of Bangladesh up to now. It is the first time Bangladesh published a report like this themselves, and an important milestone for the country. The report can be used by others, and it this is also a base that is needed for starting to look at future climate, an important topic for a vulnerable country like Bangladesh.

The launch event was so different to what we are used to. It was a big event, with the guests of honour being the senior secretary of the ministry of defence (that the department falls under) and the Norwegian ambassador to Bangladesh (Merete Lundemo). The meeting started with singing and reading from the Quran. Every single speech had to start with greeting all the honourable guests, in the right order and with the right titles etc. I did a speech together with Hans Olav, and I spent half of it just greeting everybody! Quite a show 🙂

The big happening, the launch of the climate report. With tv & other media present.

They had decorated the room with lots of flowers, very pretty. Here the director of BMD (on the left) is talking, with the senior secretary in the middle and the ambassador on the right. And of course a banner in the back, they make banners for every occasion here – we had one in our meeting room as well 🙂

Lots of flowers, and from left to right: the director of BMD (Bangladesh Meteorological Department), the senior secretary of the Ministry of Defense, and the Norwegian ambassador to Bangladesh (Merete Lundemo)

A group photo with the climate report that the embassy had asked for, to use on their Facebook page

Group photo presenting the climate report, written by three people on the right: Ayesha, Bazlur and Hans Olav

And a group photo with the whole team from Norway in it. We are easy to spot 😉

And another one with the whole Norwegian team. Second from left is Rashid, the project manager from the Bangladesh side, my counterpart

Eivind, Hans Olav and Shadekul in front of the main building.

Eivind, Hans Olav and Shadekul in front of the main building

We left after the event, so we got back to the hotel early. This time it was ok for us to leave the hotel and walk around by ourselves (last time we were advised to stay in the hotel apart from visits to BMD). It was so exciting to experience the chaos and heat of the city – I really enjoyed it. We even found some almost idyllic views in Dhaka…

An almost idyllic part of Dhaka

This is part of Banani Lake not far from our hotel. We went to a nice shop here. I tried some very pretty clothes on but had to conclude I don’t have the same body build as people here 😉 so I only bought a book for my mum’s collection of foreign language children’s books, and it cost me 75 euro cents 😉

Panorama at Banani Lake

Street views in Dhaka, a lot of battered busses, this one is actually in quite good condition 😀

Typical bus - and this one is in quite good condition

Rickshaws waiting for customers on a street corner…

Rickshaw drivers waiting on a street corner

And insane electrical wires!

The electric wiring is slightly insane in places!

Some even reaching down to parked cars…

Here the wires even hang down on parked cars...

We visited a meat market, where the meat was hanging on hooks in the 30 degree heat – the smell was practically unbearable and we quickly escaped to an airconditioned supermarket.

Very skinny cows behind a meat market..

Cute little goats, but not such a cute sight after you have seen what they do to them inside the meat market. I’m not a vegetarian, but you’d almost become one…

Cute... until you saw what was done to them inside the meat market :(

A colourful street scene just outside the hotel. With a very rare sight included: a foreigner getting ready to bike through Daka traffic, brave!!

Colourful street scene outside the hotel. On the right a very rare side: a foreigner getting ready to cycle!

Another view from my hotel room… It was fun comparing this picture to the one I took last November, see here. The big white building is starting to look finished for example, and the building on the far left has grown taller.

Hotelroom panorama - this time we saw blue skies and much better views

One last group photo on the last day of our visit – the meeting went very well! They will come to Norway in September, so my next task is to organize that visit 🙂

Final group photo on the last day

The last afternoon, finally time to relax by the pool…

Last afternoon, finally time to relax by the pool!

One last sunset from the lounge where we had most of our dinners…

The last sunset from the lounge room...

Before leaving very early to catch our 06:15 flight. Nice views over Dhaka after takeoff…

Dhaka from the plane

And about 18 hours later, pretty views of a cumulonimbus on the landing approach to Oslo. At that point I had basically been travelling for 3 weeks, and I was so glad to come HOME 🙂

And a pretty cumulonimbus on the landing approach in Oslo - HOME!

It was an exciting week in Dhaka, and I was much more relaxed than on my first visit (where everything was so new and different) – this made it so much more fun, and I look forward to experiencing more of Bangladesh!

Cycling around Maridalsvannet

Cycling around Maridalsvannet

Today I went for a long bike ride (nearly 35 km) through the forest and around Maridalsvannet, a large lake north of Oslo (and the source the city’s drinking water).

This is before I got to Maridalsvannet though, a much smaller lake in the forest…

A small lake in the middle of the forest

Spectacular view over Maridalsvannet – so pretty!

Great view over Maridalsvannet!

I wasn’t the only one out for a bike ride on this sunny Sunday 🙂

Lots of cyclists around on a sunny Sunday

Parts of the ride went through farmlands, I loved it! There were lots of flowers around as well, and I particularly enjoyed cycling downhill with the wind in my hair and the sweet smell of flowers in my nose – life is good 😀

Cycling through farmlands