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Viking Explorer Society News - Issue 30 - Winter

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viking.com | 63 W I N T E R I S S U E 3 0 The yellow sun dips towards the horizon, casting pinks and blues through the clouds, the colours reflecting on the lazy sea below. A crowd is gathering quietly, photographing what could, on any other day, be an arresting sunrise or sunset. We stand on the ship's deck, awestruck as the golden orb caresses the skyline, making as if to fall beneath it. But it stays there, and will begin to rise again. We are watching the midnight sun. In Norway, between May and July, the sun doesn't set in the northernmost parts of the country. If you cross the Arctic Circle as we have done, the rules of the world, the way the universe aligns to give us day and night, don't apply. This is what it's like on top of the world. INTO THE ARCTIC "What do you think of this one?" I ask my sister, Maddie, who has her arms filled with skeins of knitting yarn. I am modelling a cardigan with an intricate Scandinavian pattern in oatmeal and brown. "That's a good one," she says, nodding. I agree. It's $600 but I buy it, desperate to take Norway home with me. Maddie purchases her Norwegian wool, enough to fill half a suitcase. For an enthusiast knitter like her, Norway, with its cold climate and sheep farming, is the holy grail of yarn. We walk out of the knitting store in Tromsø, one of the world's northernmost cities. If we were here in winter, we would be plunged into darkness now, feet sinking in thick snow, hoping for a glimpse of the northern lights. But summer has its own majesty, the storied "polar day", and we are on a pilgrimage up the Norwegian coast, on Viking Jupiter's Into The Midnight Sun voyage, to find it. Looking out at the Tromsø port, the Arctic Cathedral sits in pride of place between majestic mountains capped with snow. Seagulls own the foreshore, fighting over food and nesting spots, and restaurants spruik whale steak, moose burgers and reindeer salami. Our tour guide, Viktor, came to Tromsø to photograph the aurora borealis and was so enchanted he never left. During "polar night", he explains, when the sun disappears for six weeks in winter, it's not pitch black but a kind

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