Blåmannsvikdalen

Blåmannsvikdalen

It’s been blowing a gale this weekend, which prevented us from going up any mountains. It’s also quite cold (for Tromsø), -8 °C which makes it feel really cold with the added windchill. We wanted some fresh air anyway, so we went snowshoeing in the valley next to Blåmann, called Blåmannsvikdalen. It’s a very narrow valley surrounded by beautiful mountains. Luckily, the valley was quite sheltered from the wind.

The entrance to Blåmannsvikdalen, with Blåmann on the right and Buren on the left Paul in the valley

This cabin was near the parking place, they built it so close to the edge of the water!

A cabin at dusk. The long exposure (13 sec) makes the water smooth, and you can also see movement in the tree :)

Hopefully the weather will improve soon. We’ve hardly seen the sun in the past week! The week before that, we soaked up some extra sunshine though, while skiing in the French Alps. Photos of that are coming soon!

Here comes the SUN!

Here comes the SUN!

Little darling, it’s been a long cold lonely winter
Little darling, it feels like years since it’s been here
Here comes the sun, here comes the sun
and I say it’s all right

Little darling, the smiles returning to the faces
Little darling, it seems like years since it’s been here
Here comes the sun, here comes the sun
and I say it’s all right

The Beatles – Here Comes The Sun

The sun came back today!!

After two months of mørketid, the sun came back today! I took this photo from the roof at work, several people came out to welcome the sun. It was beautiful to see the reactions of people on the street when they noticed the sun – it is true that smiles come back to faces 🙂 seeing the sun again for the first time is a magical moment!

Tomorrow is the “offical” sun-day (soldagen), as that’s the first day that the sun reaches the stairs of the cathedral in town. But I don’t think we’ll see the sun tomorrow (instead we get rain :() so I’m glad we got to enjoy it a day early. The tradition is to eat solboller on soldagen (filled doughnuts that are called berliner boller the rest of the year :P) – 54000 were baked today! Looking forward to mine tomorrow 😀

Winter Wonder-Netherlands

Winter Wonder-Netherlands

We flew to the Netherlands two days before my (dreaded 😉 ) 30th birthday. When we arrived, my whole family was there to greet us! Not just my parents and brothers and sister, but the whole extended family including aunts and uncles 🙂 What a surprise! They had organised a whole weekend away, and rented two minibuses to drive straight from the airport to Putten, a small town in the middle of the country. We stayed in a nice hotel there, in the middle of the forest. It had snowed a lot the day before we arrived, and the next day we woke up to a winter wonderland. There hadn’t been much wind, so all the snow was still lying on the trees, it was so pretty! After a breakfast some of us went for a walk in the forest. You’d think I’d get enough of snow after living in Tromsø for this long, but it was so beautiful I couldn’t stop taking pictures!

A tunnel of snowy trees My parents, Kaya and Mare!

Kaya took Mare on the sled, though some of the way she sat on my dad’s shoulders. She was all wrapped up on her sled, wish I could be transported like that 😀

Mare on her sled A robin - a bit of colour in a black-and-white world

Some more photos of the forest… I could have almost taken black and white photos, you wouldn’t see the difference!

Snowy trees Paul in the forest

A group photo of those that went walking (others went sledding or sat by the fire in the hotel), and a portrait of my parents.

My parents, Joop, Mare, Marianne, Paul and Kaya Portrait of my parents :)

That evening we also celebrated Sinterklaas, the Dutch version of Christmas which is normally celebrated on the 5th of December. A lot of fun! The next day it was my birthday 😀 Everything was decorated and everybody was wearing party hats and singing for me, and I had a pile of presents – they really spoiled me 🙂

Breakfast on my birthday - a real party!

We left the hotel, but we didn’t go straight home. My sister had organised a “family day”, a new tradition that I’ve always missed as I am never in the Netherlands when she organises it. This time we went to a farm where we did a bow-and-arrow competition and a competition in traditional old-dutch games, which was a lot of fun 😀 They even had a version of shuffle puck (air hockey), no idea how “traditional” that really was 😛 but it was good fun. We also used the opportunity to take some rare family photos… unfortunately everybody is squinting into the bright sun, but I still like the photos – it’s not very often we have this opportunity.

A family portrait :) And one with extended family - with Kaya and Mare, Daphne and Paul. Pity everybody is trying to avoid looking into the sun, but it's quite a rare photo :)

The farm was located in the middle of nowhere, in a typical Dutch landscape. Now that I live surrounded by mountains, I was impressed by how flat it is in the Netherlands 😀

Sheep in the snow A tree in winter sunshine - this was actually one of the only times we saw the sun in the Netherlands!

What a great weekend 🙂 I enjoyed every minute of it. We spent the rest of our week in the Netherlands enjoying the small joys of urban life – going shopping, going to the cinema, spending evenings in cosy cafes without going bankrupt 😉 Paul flew to London on Boxing Day, and I flew back to Tromsø a few days later, as I had to work during the New Year period.