Tag: bikepacking

Norway 2025: To the End

At around 6 o’clock, on the Friday evening, I hurried into the large XXL sports superstore, and sought out the bike department, asking the first member of staff I encountered if they happened to have any bike boxes available.

Having seen a collection of them on the shop floor, I was feeling optimistic, but it seemed that those boxes were already reserved for other cyclists, and the only one that appeared to be unaccounted for looked distinctly smaller. She could let me have that one, but it would cost me 250 Krone (£18.35).

Aware that there was such a high demand for bike boxes in Tromsø, that it had become a revenue stream in itself, I had thought that the shops might have made branded boxes available to sell, as I’d encountered in Vietnam, but these just appeared to be the boxes that new bikes arrived to the store in, and there wouldn’t be any more new bikes being built until after the weekend.

As I was concerned that the box I’d been offered was a bit small, the salesperson headed off to see if they had any others in storage, and I quickly took the opportunity to measure the box. It was definitely smaller than the one I’d had when I travelled to Norway in the first place, and it turned out that they didn’t have any other boxes hiding away in storage.

Perhaps all was not lost, however, as the girl suggested that there was another bike shop further around the retail park. So on finding my way over to Tromsø Ski and Sykkel, I rushed inside. The salesperson enquired as to whether I’d reserved one, before apologetically stating that they didn’t have any available.

I was regretting not taking the first box I’d been offered. It was Friday night and my flight wasn’t until Sunday afternoon, but the salesperson in XXL had already admitted that they would be unlikely to be building up bikes again until the Tuesday, so other boxes were unlikely to become available. I had read that Tromsø airport kept the boxes that cyclists brought their bikes in, so it was possible I could get one when I arrived at the airport, but was it worth the risk? I decided not, back to XXL I went.

Hoping that the salesperson hadn’t taken offence at me rejecting the box the first time, and that no one else had turned up to snaffle it, I headed back into the shop. Although it looked a little small, I said, I was sure I could make it work. But there was a potential spanner in the works, ‘could I take it with me’, I was asked, ‘as that would be best for them’.

With nothing else for it, I dragged the large empty cardboard box back outside and over to where I’d left my bike. One thing was for certain, my 1000+ mile ride down the length of Norway, from Bergen to Tromsø, had finished here, outside a shopping centre on the outskirts of the city.

I was in a quandary, if I dismantled the bike here, and put it in the box, I’d have a bike box, two panniers and my handlebar bag to get into town, so would probably need a a taxi, and an extra large one at that. Another issue with that was that I hadn’t booked a hotel yet, so I’d also need to decide where to stay before I booked the taxi.

An alternative plan, though, was to fold up the box, and manoeuvre that and my loaded bicycle over to the bus stances at the other side of the car park. I could then get a bus into the centre of town – which was only 6 km away – and then pick a hotel near to where I ended up, and based on if it had a suitable area to leave my bike chained up outside. The advantage to this plan was that most of the buses in Tromsø also serviced the airport, so if I was staying near a bus stop, I’d have a readymade budget option for getting to the airport on the Sunday.

Not far from the bus stop was the Home Hotel Aurora, and although it was right on the harbour, it had a fairly private car park located to the side and a bike rack at the front door. It looked like a perfect spot for leaving my bike for a few days. Having stood outside booking my stay online, I walked inside carrying my valuables: the handlebar bag and the folded cardboard box.

‘Michael’, the lady at reception asked before suggesting that if I wanted to leave my ‘carton’ by the desk, it was the last 15 minutes of the complimentary dinner service, so I could have dinner now, and then check in afterwards. I liked this place. I liked the meatballs, mash and vegetables they were offering for dinner, and I liked the sauna and rooftop hot tub with harbour views.

Later in the evening, I dawdled along the waterfront, eventually finding a nice looking beer terrace at the bar, Rorbua, so went inside. Eyes only watering slightly, from the £9.50 beer from Tromsø’s Mack brewery, I tried to forget the £7.30 entry charge entirely. One thing I definitely wouldn’t miss about Norway was the prices.

Absentmindedly heading back to the hotel, at after 1 am, I hadn’t realised that I had become a sitting duck to the many seabirds circling above the seafront. Their squealing and squawking had become a tedious soundtrack to my journey at all hours of the day and night, so I was paying little attention, when I felt a whoosh of air, and an impact on the top of my head. Making for the cover of a nearby awning, I started to pick my route more carefully back to the hotel.

On googling ‘divebombing birds in Tromsø’, I realised I should have known, and I’d come full circle, I’d finally been tracked down by my old arch nemesis from Iceland, the Arctic Tern. I really do dislike those birds.

Luckily, I managed to escape a repeat attack during the rest of my time in Tromsø, and indeed I had a very pleasant stay, visiting the Arctic Museum, the Arctic Cathedral, and taking the gondola up to a high viewpoint and cafe.

On arriving at the airport on the Sunday afternoon, I set about dismantling my bike, and it wasn’t long before a couple of cyclists – who I remembered seeing on a ferry – turned up and asked if I was arriving or departing, clearly looking to take my bike box off my hands.

Unfortunately for them, I was departing, and the XXL from which I’d got my box would be closed, but I did mention the fact that I’d read that they kept boxes in the airport. Not long afterwards, however, I saw them pedalling off again empty-handed, so perhaps that isn’t as surefire a method as I’d considered it would be.

Bike packed up, I was ready to go, and there were no other hurdles to stand in my way. I’d set off for Norway, with a hurriedly sketched out plan, and was pleased with what I’d achieved. I’d flown to Oslo, been to art galleries that I’d long been keen to visit, taken the beautifully scenic train journey over the mountains to Bergen, where I’d squeezed in Lovstien parkrun.

On starting my cycle tour, in Bergen, I’d had a few days of suspect weather, almost signalling the end for my beleaguered tent. I’d also struggled to get to grips with the timetables for the many ferries, and the frequency of the many hills.

In Florø, suddenly the weather started to improve, and I would never have believed that it was only set to get better. The irregular hours of the Atlantic Tunnel bus stopped me in my tracks just when I wanted to start making up some miles.

After skipping from Kristiansund to Trondheim, I missed a ferry and ended up taking a lengthy detour around the wrong side of the fjord, but kinder gradients and stunning mountain views were ahead, before I made for another ferry from Sandnessjøen.

The Lofoten Islands provided a quickfire highlights reel for the trip before the Vesterålen Islands and Senja merely added the cherry on top.

Ending the trip with a couple of days in Tromsø was a decision designed to give me an opportunity to find a bike packaging solution with a little extra time in case one wasn’t readily available. But on finding one immediately when I arrived into town, the pressure was off massively and I was able to have an enjoyable time sightseeing to end the trip.

In my three and a half week trip, I’d been amazed to have almost 3 weeks of warm sunshine, and when paired with Norway’s stunning scenery, the visual rewards had been high.

Thanks for reading,

Michael

Norway Day 19: Nøss – Mefjordvær

Distance: 60.3 miles

Time: 5:49

Elevation Gain: 4,751 feet

After arriving at the camping spot, beside the toilet with the exceptional view, I was accosted by an Italian cyclist as I pulled up at the side of the road. ‘Are you camping here?’ ‘We’ve got a great spot down this way’, he said.

The ‘we’ he referred to were the hardcore of the cycle touring fraternity, the Italian cyclist himself, and a Swiss rider who he had been riding with for the last couple of days. The Italian rider, had set off from Finland, travelled up to Nordkapp and was now working his way south again, but he was finding the food prices in Norway prohibitively expensive so planned to head back over into Sweden before continuing south back to Italy. His Swiss friend had started from Bodø, travelled north to Nordkapp, and was now on his way south, planning to travel all the way to Lisbon, he was worried about a sore knee, but had calculated that if he could keep pedalling 88 km a day, then he would be done by October, when he was due to start back at work.

My plans for the day were partly informed by the fact that the Belgian, Hans, had pointed out that the ferries from Andenes to the island of Senja – my next port of call – were infrequent, and didn’t start running until 8:45 in the morning. He’d been hoping to reach there for the early ferry, but as it was still 25 miles away for me, I decided that that was unrealistic, so I’d be aiming for the next one, at 1 PM, instead.

Just after setting off, I passed the Andøya Spaceport, before continuing past an idyllic beach on the way to Nordmela, where I stopped at the shop just as a pair of cyclists were leaving. I picked up some milk for my granola, and also a large bottle of water to refill my bottles for the day. The toilet block the night before had only had a warm water tap.

Further along the coast, I reached the beautiful beach at Stranda where it appeared that the wild camping areas almost intertwined with quaint Stave campsite, where it advertised a 38° hot pool, if only I’d been tempted to do another few miles the night before.

Rolling into Andenes, it was only 20 minutes until the ferry, but I made time to stop at the shop to pick up some lunch, as it would be a relatively long journey, and prices would be steep on the ferry.

Once onboard, I found a nice seat by the window, before realising that I was sitting just across from a French couple who had ridden past me at a layby the day before. Quite soon into the journey, they started to get quite animated and pointed out that there was a pod of 4 Orcas directly in front of us, amazing to see as they jumped, in sequence, in and out of the waves.

First impressions of Senja, were that it was an altogether hillier beast, and as I pedalled out of Grylleford and along the fjord, I was concerned that there didn’t appear to be any breaches in its steep sides. However, when I got a little closer, I saw that a bridge crossed the fjord up ahead, and led directly into a tunnel, and although the tunnel was a kilometre, uphill, I was confident that the climb would’ve been a lot worse if it wasn’t there.

After circumnavigating the large open fjord of Bergsfjorden, and having been waylaid briefly by a reindeer ambling along the road, the walls closed in around me again, and on this occasion, there was no tunnelled escape route.

The road climbed at an unrelenting gradient away from the fjord, and in the 20°C heat, with clegs drawing blood as I struggled on up the hill, the experience couldn’t have been much less pleasant. Half way up, one of the cyclists I’d seen earlier in the day, powered on past carrying a lot less luggage and stripped down to just his cycling bibs.

The road summited at a high lake before disappearing into a tunnel. Through the other side, the road dropped down to an impressive viewpoint walkway, and I stopped to soak in the views.

It was also time, before the rest of the descent, to finally tighten up my brakes, they had become borderline dysfunctional, but I’d been able to make do on the less undulating terrain of the last few days. This was a proper descent, though, and I didn’t want any mishaps at this late stage of the trip.

Having chalked up 50 miles, I reached the turn off to the campsite at Skaland, and was sorely tempted to call it a day, the heat and the insects were getting to me and I was very keen to have a shower.

But looking ahead, I could see that it was another 10 miles to Mefjordvær campsite, and I knew that if I was to make it there this evening, it would leave me with a more manageable final day to Tromsø, despite the fact that there were a couple of climbs shown on the onwards route.

Luckily, the final stretch was easier than I’d hoped, with a couple of lengthy tunnels giving me some respite from the sun. The 2.2 km Geitskartunnelen, almost like a theme park ride, as it meandered around in a dark subterranean world of patchy lighting and dripping water, before opening out into impressive Medfjorden, the cliffs gleaming silver in the evening light.

On arrival at the campsite, I was a little concerned that there was only one washroom for all the campers, but by this stage I was definitely in need of a shower, so a shower I would have, and after two days of cycling and a night‘s wild camping, for a few minutes, it was bliss, until a disgruntled camper started banging angrily on the door. Some people really should take a holiday.

Norway Day 16: Brustranda Fjordcamping – Hammerstad Camping

Distance: 39.6

Time: 3:55

Elevation Gain: 1,438 feet

In the campsite, a German man quizzed me about my trip, before apologising that his English wasn’t better. Unfortunately I didn’t know the German for ‘I’m sorry that my German isn’t better’, so left it unsaid.

He was driving, from Germany, all the way to Nordkapp and back, down through Finland and Sweden one way, and back through Norway and Denmark, all in a 1960s VW Beetle. I tried to find out its vintage from its registration plate, but only succeeded in finding that, in Germany, the letter H is appended to plates of cars over 30 years old.

The wind had picked up a little this morning, and it was coming from the North, so luckily my route didn’t keep me pointing in the same direction for long.

I set off along the quiet 815, emerging from the fjords onto a pleasant stretch of coastline.

Seeing a handwritten sign for ‘kaffe og vafler’ outside a building at the side of the road, I went inside, finding myself in a small jumble sale with a few stallholders all standing around looking unoccupied. I asked the lady nearest the door about coffee and waffles and was directed to a kitchen hatch, where she served me a small cup of coffee and handed me a plate with a waffle on it, and pointed me in the direction of some jam, sour cream, and brunost cheese, obviously trusting me to know what best to do.

Just before the 815 rejoined the E10 again I saw the beautiful turquoise waters of a sandy beach off to the right hand side, so grabbing a few things to eat, I sat overlooking a very pleasant view. Shortly afterwards a group of 6 cyclists emerged out onto the beach down below, having some lunch, and one by one, tempted out into the inviting looking, though it appeared chilly, waters.

Soon, the 815 turned onto the E10, and the road crossed onto the island of Grimsøya, and back off again, on a pair of new looking bridges, with a fine looking range of mountains providing the backdrop.

The E10 along this stretch provided some of the least enjoyable riding of the whole route, on what was actually quite a busy road. The patient, courteous driving that I’d encountered for most of the route, seemed to have gone out of the window for a while, it seemed that most of the traffic was keen to get back towards the major town of Svolvær for the evening.

Arriving there myself around 18:00, I was in the mood for a pizza, and found the ideal spot at Fellini’s, down near the harbour. Enjoying a Calzone with yet more impressive mountain views in the background.

I set off in yet more blustery conditions, intending to do another 10- 15 miles for the day, but 5 miles later, wearied by the heat and the wind, I arrived at Hammerstad Campsite, and it was in such a pleasant spot that I thought I should stay.

Norway Day 15: Moskenes – Brustranda Fjordcamping

Distance: 54.01 miles

Time: 5:45

Elevation Gain: 2,590 feet

Moskenes campsite looked like a veritable gold mine, and as I sat on the terrace at just gone 10 o’clock, sipping an £8.71 half litre of Nordland Pils, and watched another raft of potential clientele rushing up the hill from the ferry, it seemed like business was booming.

In the morning, I’d just been to the kitchen to clean my pans when I overheard a group of 4 men readying their bikes to leave. They sounded Scottish, and what’s more, one of them was also riding a British racing green Thorn bicycle, what were the chances?

Going over to say hello, I ascertained that they were from Glasgow, they’d been in Moskenes long enough to do some kayaking and a midnight sun hike, they were now setting off to Tromso by bike, and were flying back to Scotland a week on Monday. So the day after me.

Most of the site had emptied again by the time I left, and that seemed like no bad thing, as I was happy to share the road with as few campervans as possible. I felt like I might be looking to stop quite often.

On leaving the campsite, the views came quickly and often, and as I rounded a corner a cliff towered above me, and as I stopped to take a photo, I noticed a sinuous and almost completely unbroken line of people zig-zagging up the steep flank to the pinnacle of what must have been an incredible viewpoint, looking out over the fjord and the sea and the tiny village of Reine jutting out between the two.

Stopping at a viewpoint, near Reine, I was readying to take a photo when I was taken aback by a ‘hello Michael’ from behind me. It was Simon, and Margot, who I had shared the Atlantic tunnel bus to Kristiansund with a week ago. When I had last seen them, as they left the town, we commented that we might see each other in the Lofoten Islands – as I was skipping ahead to cycle to Bodø, and they were continuing to Trondheim, but then taking the train to Bodø – well that was quick!

It turned out that they had only just arrived off the ferry, at 10 o’clock the night before, quickly pitching their tent and nipping up Reinebringen – the midnight sun hike – on the trail I’d just seen from the road. They’d got the sunset shots alright, with a cloud inversion, it looked incredible.

They recommended that I should take a look around Reine, so I rolled down the hill, stopping off at a rather souped up version of the Extra supermarket with a fast food counter and cafe area.

Quickly polishing off Norway’s unofficial national dish, the humble hotdog, I carried on around, and across, Reinefjorden, with an incredible, majestic backdrop of towering peaks, cobalt blue waters, all punctuated by tiny red and white stilted homes, the colours of the Norwegian flag found everywhere I looked.

After an incredible series of open tunnels, I found a few scattered people on a clifftop staring out to sea. Slowing up to take a look, I caught sight of what they were watching, the black fin of an Orca circling out in the open waters.

The E10 cut a swathe across the island, all the way to Ramberg in the north, where I found the four Scots returning from a side road where they had deviated to climb a hill.

Almost as soon as I hit the north coast, the road turned south again around a large fjord, I felt fantastic, I was flying along and my legs felt great. But then I remembered, if you feel great on the bike, there’s only ever one explanation, there’s a tailwind, and that’s exactly what I found as battled along the other side of the fjord.

Reaching a gap between two islands, I saw the Nappstraumtunnelen plummet into the ground, promising 1.8 km of underwater fun. Luckily there was a raised walkway for pedestrians and bikes, but it was still a damp inhospitable place to be, and that was before the climb back out.

Reaching Leknes, I was intrigued to find that the local Remo 1000 supermarket had a separate Sunday opening entrance and that you weren’t allowed into a large part of the shop. Even more interestingly though, although customers weren’t allowed into most of the shop, it did seem that they had shop assistants who would go and find things for you from the unopened section.

Leaving town on the 815, there was a serious hill right out of the traps, but I was feeling comfortable on the climb, and then amused, on seeing a ‘cross country skiiers crossing’ sign.

I spoke to a couple of cyclists from Oslo at a bus stop, I was interested to hear that they were pushing on south to do the tunnel tonight, hoping that it would be quieter than waiting for morning.

I pressed on into the depths of Rolvsfjorden, and on passing Brustranda Fjordcamping at a 20 past 9, I called it a night.

You can probably see too many great views in one day, so I was ending the day with just one more at the campsite.