Thursday, May 31, 2018

Välkommen till årets äventyr!

Welcome to this year's adventure!


This year’s hiking adventure is about to get underway. And it's in Sweden!


 Marty Szabo, John Nelson, Debi Nelson and I leave Friday for Stockholm, via Toronto and Copenhagen. In Toronto, we meet up with Diana Skelte, who is flying from Portland and joining us.

This year is another “legacy hike”. This time it’s John Nelson’s chance to return to his roots. Among our plans is a visit to Vemdalen, Sweden, a town of a little over 500 inhabitants in central Sweden. John’s grandfather, Axel Bruno Nelson, was born in Vemdalen.  Axel Nelson ultimately migrated to America, but some of his and John’s relatives are still in and around Vemladen. During this trip, we’re looking forward to meeting some.

In addition to spending time in Vemdalen, we’re planning to spend multiple days in both Stockholm and in Copenhagen.


And, lest I forget, there’s some hiking involved in this adventure as well. Two hikes, in fact. 

The first is a hike of the Osterlen Way. Osterlen is a region in Southeast Sweden, in Scania, along the coast of the Baltic Sea.  The hike will cover 50 miles in 4 days, starting in Ystad and ending in Kivik. This will be a village to village, inn to inn, hike, meaning we’ll be carrying day packs and having our luggage forwarded to the next village. It also means warm beds, hot showers, good meals, and adult beverages in the evening. I should mention that the Osterlen region is known for its food. Funny how that worked out for us. This walk is largely along the coast, and passes through several villages and goes through a lot of Swedish history.


For the second hike, John, Marty, and I head north, above the Arctic Circle, to northern Sweden. There, we’ll spend 7 days hiking a 65 mile portion of the Kungsleden (The Kings Trail), starting at the trail’s northernmost point in Abisko.   The Kungsleden runs 270 miles North to South through the mountains and valleys of Sweden’s Lapland, passing the highest peaks in Sweden along the way. We’ll be doing the northernmost portion, and going through some of the reindeer herding areas of the Sami people, the indigenous Nordic population.

Thanks to the Swedish Tourist Association, who developed the trail in the early 1900’s, there are huts along the way. We’ll be using these huts. The huts don’t have electricity or running water, but they will have shelter and warmth. And saunas.

For the Kungsleden hike, we’ll be carrying our larger packs, and staging our luggage in the town of Kiruna.  Kiruna is the home of the largest underground iron mine in the world. In fact, the mine is large enough that the town is gradually being moved east, rather than being subsumed by the mine below.

We’ve packed a lot into these 26 days, and it’s been fun planning it.  World capitals, small towns, wilderness. Conveyances include plane, train, automobile, coastal walking and wilderness hiking. Accommodations range from urban hotels to inns and B&B’s, to huts. And temperatures ranging from upper 70’s (maybe even 80 degrees) in the southern part of Sweden, to morning lows of 34 degrees on the Kungsleden. There are snow showers possible this week in Kiruna.


So, speaking of “packing”, the real adventure each of the five of us is facing is how to get all the clothes and gear
we need into one suitcase.  I’ve got to go figure that out now. More later….



This year’s hiking adventure is about to get underway. Marty Szabo, John Nelson, Debi Nelson and I leave Friday for Stockholm, via Toronto and Copenhagen. In Toronto, we meet up with Diana Skelte, who is flying from Portland and joining us.
This year is another “legacy hike”. This time it’s John Nelson’s chance to return to his roots. Among our plans is a visit to Vemdalen, Sweden, a town of a little over 500 inhabitants in central Sweden. John’s grandfather, Axel Bruno Nelson, was born in Vemdalen.  Axel Nelson ultimately migrated to America, but some of his and John’s relatives are still in and around Vemladen. During this trip, we’re looking forward to meeting some.
In addition to spending time in Vemdalen, we’re planning to spend multiple days in both Stockholm and in Copenhagen.
And, lest I forget, there’s some hiking involved in this adventure as well. Two hikes, in fact. The first is a hike of the Osterlen Way. Osterlen is a region in Southeast Sweden, in Scania, along the coast of the Baltic Sea.  The hike will cover 50 miles in 4 days, starting in Ystad and ending in Kivik. This will be a village to village, inn to inn, hike, meaning we’ll be carrying day packs and having our luggage forwarded to the next village. It also means warm beds, hot showers, good meals, and adult beverages in the evening. I should mention that the Osterlen region is known for its food. Funny how that worked out for us. This walk is largely along the coast, and passes through several villages and goes through a lot of Swedish history.
For the second hike, John, Marty, and I head north, above the Arctic Circle, to northern Sweden. There, we’ll spend 7 days hiking a 65 mile portion of the Kungsleden (The Kings Trail), starting at the trail’s northernmost point in Abisko.   The Kungsleden runs 270 miles North to South through the mountains and valleys of Sweden’s Lapland, passing the highest peaks in Sweden along the way. We’ll be doing the northernmost portion, and going through some of the reindeer herding areas of the Sami people, the indigenous Nordic population.
Thanks to the Swedish Tourist Association, who developed the trail in the early 1900’s, there are huts along the way. We’ll be using these huts. The huts don’t have electricity or running water, but they will have shelter and warmth. And saunas.
For the Kungsleden hike, we’ll be carrying our larger packs, and staging our luggage in the town of Kiruna.  Kiruna is the home of the largest underground iron mine in the world. In fact, the mine is large enough that the town is gradually being moved east, rather than being subsumed by the mine below.
We’ve packed a lot into these 26 days, and it’s been fun planning it.  World capitals, small towns, wilderness. Conveyances include plane, train, automobile, coastal walking and wilderness hiking. Accommodations range from urban hotels to inns and B&B’s, to huts. And temperatures ranging from upper 70’s (maybe even 80 degrees) in the southern part of Sweden, to morning lows of 34 degrees on the Kungsleden. There are snow showers possible this week in Kiruna.
So, speaking of “packing”, the real story of this trip may be how each of the five us can get everything we need into one suitcase.  I’ve got to go figure that out now. More later….   

5 comments:

  1. I am excited!! See you tomorrow!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hope I am able to actually enter a comment this year. Have fun!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Bill, I guess it worked. I'm glad.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Good luck and have fun! We'll be following along.

    ReplyDelete