Norway’s rugged west coast is slashed by fjords — stunning inlets carved out by ancient glaciers. Of these, the Sognefjord – Norway’s longest (120 miles) and deepest (1 mile) – is tops. Ferries and catamarans connect visitors and locals alike to several of this sparsely populated region’s scenically situated villages and towns. (Rick Steves’ Europe)

Norway’s rugged west coast is slashed by fjords — stunning inlets carved out by ancient glaciers. Of these, the Sognefjord – Norway’s longest (120 miles) and deepest (1 mile) – is tops. Ferries and catamarans connect visitors and locals alike to several of this sparsely populated region’s scenically situated villages and towns. (Rick Steves’ Europe)

Rick Steves’ Europe: Norway’s fjord country blends serenity with grandeur

Yes, Norway is expensive, but the great scenery and affable ambience are free.

  • Saturday, January 20, 2024 1:30am
  • Life

Though I initially visited Norway to see relatives — three of my grandparents grew up there — nature is the real draw here, even for those with family ties. It’s a land of intense beauty, with famously steep mountains and deep fjords carved out and shaped by an ancient ice age.

Traveling through fjord country, I find myself spending lots of time sitting on porches at Victorian-era hotels, mesmerized by the Norwegian mountains. Rather than jagged, they’re bald and splotchy, with snowfields on top and characteristic cliffs plunging into inky water.

There’s something poetic about summer evenings on a fjord. The world is bathed in a warm, mellow and steady light that hardly changes. The persistent call of gulls and the lazy gulping of small boats taking on little waves provide a relaxing soundtrack. Sometimes I’ll stroll through a village, enjoying the sight of blond cherubs running barefoot through the stalled twilight. Cobbled lanes lead past shiplap houses to sheer cliffs. Half the sky is taken up by the black rock of a mountain.

It’s a glorious setting, but the tourist season in fjord country is short — just July and early August. In the summer, restaurants and hotels need to scramble like chipmunks to survive the winter. Wondering how that affects the job scene, I notice that most of the employees are seasonal. On the front line are eager Norwegian kids visiting home for the summer. In the back, hardworking immigrants cook and clean. Local hoteliers and restaurateurs probably think that tourists don’t come to some quaint fjord village to be served goat cheese by a guy from Pakistan or fish balls by a woman from Romania.

The food here is fine, but nobody visits Norway for its cuisine. It seems that each Scandinavian nation has one inedible dish that is cherished with a perverse but patriotic sentimentality. These dishes, which often originated during a famine, now remind the young of their ancestors’ suffering. Norway’s penitential food, lutefisk (dried cod cured in lye and then soaked for days in water), is used for Christmas — and for jokes.

While travelers swing from castle to castle through Germany, in Norway we seem to swing from stave church to stave church. These wooden wonders are the only grand architecture surviving from Norway’s Middle Ages. They’re built like upside-down Viking ships, supported on each corner by staves, or thick posts. Medieval Norway was essentially a society built of wood. Devastating fires were commonplace.

Driving the winding roads along the fjords — and diving for a pullout each time a car approaches — I realize that it’s a very dangerous place … not because of the traffic (there’s very little), but because of the scenery. It’s tough to keep your eyes on the road.

Norway has laced and drilled an amazing road system to connect fjord country with Oslo. The Laerdal Tunnel, the world’s longest car tunnel, stretches 15 miles. Driving it is a bizarre experience: To keep people awake, three rest chambers, each illuminated by a differently colored light, break up the drive visually.

All these new roads zip travelers around quicker, but they’ve made previously tranquil valleys noisier. I had to drop one unfortunate campground with great riverside bungalows from my guidebook. For 10 years, it was a fine little budget place to sleep. Now, rumbling trucks trample the quiet, so it’s out.

While I love traveling here, I’d describe the tourist industry as somewhere between frugal, cheap, industrious and greedy. The tourist trade is built upon a gift from God: incredible nature. Researching and updating my guidebook here — sorting through all the creative marketing tricks masquerading as “deals” while they’re jacking up the prices — I can’t help but think, “These people are doing everything they can to get more business … except lowering prices.”

On the other hand, I’ve always appreciated the agreeable demeanor of the Norwegian people — friendly but not overbearing, organized but not uptight, and with a lust for adventure befitting their gorgeous landscape. Known for their ability to suffer any misfortune with an accepting (if a bit pessimistic) attitude, Norwegians are easy to get along with.

Communication is a breeze. Norwegians speak English so well that most tours at museums and historic sights simply dispense with the local tongue. Locals and tourists alike hear the spiel in one language, and that’s English.

Yes, Norway is expensive, but the great scenery and affable ambience are free. When things get pricey, remind yourself that Norway is stacked with superlatives. My people enjoy the most mountainous, most scenic and most prosperous of all the Scandinavian countries.

Edmonds resident Rick Steves (www.ricksteves.com) writes European guidebooks, hosts travel shows on public TV and radio, and organizes European tours. Email Rick at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

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