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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!
Kjerringøy

Kjerringøy

Last week I spent two days in Kjerringøy, a village 30 km north of Bodø. I was there to attend my second “regionsamling”, a meeting between all the people working for the meteorological institute in Northern Norway (we have people in Bodø, Andøya, Bardufoss, Tromsø and Longyearbyen). Three years ago we went to Longyearbyen, which was fantastic – so I thought this one might be slightly boring in comparison. How wrong I was! We arrived on a wet and windy day, and I took this photo for our work’s instagram account – it’s the view from my room in one of the cabins at Kjerringøy Bryggehotell 🙂

View from our accommodation on Kjerringøy

We spent the afternoon discussing all kind of themes relevant to our jobs. One of the main themes was the future of our offices in Bodø and Andøya which is not looking too good (they will most likely be closed completely in a couple of years – very sad 🙁 ). Anyway, after that it was time for something lighter: a guided tour of Kjerringøy Handelssted, or trading post, within walking distance from the hotel. This is Norway’s best preserved trading post, a beautiful place! Unfortunately it had gotten too dark to get good photos…

Kjerringøy Handelssted - Norway's best preserved trading post Our guide :)

We had a nice dinner that evening, followed by an entertaining quiz (especially since I was on the winning team :D) and rather too much whiskey 😉

And here’s what we woke up to on Tuesday morning… this view just took my breath away 🙂 tired or not, I had to go and take some photos before breakfast!

The view at sunrise - breathtaking! What a difference with yesterday :) From the pier, with the hotel on the left and the trading post in the middle

It was hard to concentrate on the rest of the meeting while it was so beautiful outside. We were leaving after lunch, but luckily there was just about enough time for me to run back to the trading post to get some photos in better light 🙂 These yellow houses were just behind the hotel.

A row of yellow houses

And some panorama’s taken at the trading post – what a beautiful place! And what a glorious autumn day, I really didn’t want to leave 🙂

A quick visit to the trading post before it's time to head back Impressive jetty What a beautiful autumn day, I didn't want to leave!

But we had a plane to catch, so off we went. The trip by bus was beautiful, this is an area I’d love to come back to – lots of exciting mountains as well! Before going to the airport, we drove to the top of a hill to have a view over Bodø…

View over the city of Bodø Colleagues enjoying the view over Bodø

We also took a group photo here, so you can see half of my colleagues here. Half? Yes, due to (almost) all of us working shift these kind of meetings always have to be organised twice. The second group is there at the moment 🙂

Group photo, unfortunately we're all staring straight into the sun ;)

A weekend on Senja

A weekend on Senja

I’ve been back from a fantastic trip to Switzerland for more than a month, but I’m still sorting through the 1000+ photos I took there! I have a set on Flickr that I keep adding photos to, but eventually I would like to write a blog article.

Meanwhile though, I’d like to share some photos from last weekend’s autumn trip with Tromsø Fotoklubb to Kråkeslottet on Senja. We drove there on Friday afternoon. Kråkeslottet literally means Crow’s Castle, but it actually means something like ramshackle castle. It’s a fantastic building, built on poles on the outer coast, so you always hear the waves crashing. It was a labyrinth of stairs and rooms and quays – and it was filled to the brim with art. I’ve never seen such a magical place, I loved it from the moment we set foot in it 🙂

On Saturday we all went to the old (abandoned) Skaland Grafittverk (a graphite mine, or put very simplistic: a pencil factory 😉 ). The factory was abandoned in the 80s, and we had permission to walk around the old buildings.

Skaland Grafittverk - entrance to the mine An old phone in one of the abandoned buildings

Lots of old stuff to photograph 😉

Control display inside one of the buildings An old lock

After lunch, it cleared up, and I went on a trip to the nearby beach with Merete, to take some photos of our “palace” 🙂

Kråkeslottet, our quirky home for the weekend Merete on the beach

There was a nice big beach right next to Kråkeslottet…

Panorama of Kråkeslottet and the beach

Afterwards we decided to drive to Tungeneset, a well known viewpoint towards Okshornan (the bull’s horns). The light was fantastic, and every now and then some huge waves crashed over the rocks. We weren’t alone there, another photo club or workshop was taking photos as well, so we had to be careful not to get in each other’s way.

Tungeneset & Okshornan (the bull's horns) Tungeneset & Okshornan (the bull's horns)

We stayed quite late, and were worried we’d be late for dinner. But when we drove through the tunnel to get back to Kråkeslottet and we saw the amazing sunset, we realized nobody would be eating while the sky gave a show like this…

Fantastic sunset at Kråkeslottet

We had a great dinner (whale!) and a nice evening. The next day was cold and showery, and while almost everyone went to the beach, I enjoyed sitting in the kitchen, drinking tea and reading magazines – a proper lazy Sunday morning 🙂 In the afternoon I joined Jens Kristian and Erlend on a “topptur”, though even by Dutch standards this one didn’t classify as a mountain 😛 It was a small hill right behind Kråkeslottet, but the views were very nice!

Dramatic skies on Sunday Kråkeslottet from above Jens Kristian & Erlend

A ship coming in against dramatic skies Kråkeslottet and the beach

After this exhausting trip we decided it was time for a sauna 🙂 And when we stepped out to cool down, we found it had started snowing! In the late afternoon we made our way back to Tromsø, but we just had to stop at the viewpoint at Bergsbotn – the autumn colours were fantastic, and the mountain tops had a sprinkling of snow.

Fantastic autumn view from Bergsbotn The first snow on the mountains...

I had an early shift the next day (06:30, ouch), and this is the view that greeted me from work… 9 cm of snow had fell overnight!! Autumn has hardly begun and it looks like winter – a bit too early for my liking 😉 It was only 3 months and 5 days after the last snowfall on the 16th of June – crazy!!

Fantastic autumn view from Bergsbotn

The snow has melted from the roads at least, and we’re expecting a lot of rain tomorrow. Good – I prefer autumn before winter 😉

A little test

A little test

Hello!

I know the silence on this blog has been deafening… 😉 Sorry about that!

I’m off for a couple of weeks of hiking in Switzerland soon, and as I won’t be able to bring my laptop I’m testing the possibilities of blogging from my phone. I might be able to write a couple of blogs along the way, so stay tuned! 🙂

Here’s a picture of me above the fog on Tromtinden taken yesterday. If I find some time before my departure to Switzerland, I’ll share some more photos from that trip 🙂

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More soon – I promise! 😀