Viking Cruises

Viking Explorer Society News - Issue 30 - Winter

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viking.com | 67 W I N T E R I S S U E 3 0 Back on the ship, Maddie and I realise our clothes reek of stockfish. We change to attend a lecture on Viking culture and learn the delightful word olfrit, meaning fear of a lack of beer. We celebrate the journey with Aquavit, a Norwegian spirit, and toast each other with a "skol". END OF THE WORLD Reindeer have begun appearing on either side of the bus, horned and muscly, grazing on the grey grass of the Honningsvag tundra. We are driving to Nordkapp (North Cape), considered the northernmost point on the European mainland at 71 degrees of latitude, where royalty and explorers have long stopped for a traditional glass of champagne to toast their arrival at the final frontier. The famous globe monument, erected in 1978 as a symbol of the North Cape plateau, sits on the edge of an impossibly high cliff. The wind is fierce (it can reach 250kmh in winter) and I dare not stand at the fenced edge too long. Looking down more than 300 metres, out into the endless water of the Barents Sea, I think about how this, to early explorers, would have felt like the end of the world. GETTING THERE: The 15-day Into The Midnight Sun voyage sails from Bergen to London (Greenwich) or in reverse. N o r t h S ea Bergen Reykjavík Honningsvåg Tromsø Leknes LOFOTEN Geiranger Oslo Kirkwall ORKNEY ISLANDS London Lerwick SHETLAND ISLANDS Edinburgh N o r w e g ia n S ea ENGLAND SCOTLAND NORWAY A R C T I C C I R C L E – Cruise •• O vernight in Por t VIEW VOYAGE And it is. Beyond the cliffs there are only islands home to puffins and cormorants and beyond that, Svalbard and the North Pole. This is where the Arctic and Atlantic oceans meet, home to orcas, whales and Greenland sharks that are said to grow seven metres long and live for up to 500 years. We join the throng taking selfies in front of the globe sculpture and I send a postcard home from the post office in the visitor centre, a delightful tradition from the end of the line. The larger-than-life reindeer occupying the treeless plateau belong to the indigenous Sami people, semi-nomadic reindeer herders who thrived across Norway but have been driven over time to the north. We pass a Sami camp, a reindeer tied up next to a tent, and a man wearing a traditional red and blue costume waves at us. That night, we meet North Cape again, but this time from the ship—hundreds of metres below where we photographed ourselves earlier—and peer up at the globe from its post on the cliff. How many ships has it watched over? How many adventurers? Viking Jupiter's horn blows, long and low: we are here, we have made it to the world's edge. The sun is shining. Not as harsh as in Australia, but it is the same sun, glowing day after night after day, like a lighthouse illuminating the sea ahead for our passage. Further north is a journey for another day— we are determined. There is so much more to see on this Earth, to cherish. But for now, we close our stateroom curtains against the sun, shut our eyes and dream of adventures. I've never been so far from home, and then our boat turns around—such a long arc we don't even notice—pressing on through the ocean to take us back. Back into the night. Back to our lives. Back home. Reindeer, Norway

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