"Viajar a pie" is Spanish for "Travelling on foot"

Tag: Sylan

Norge Midt

WhereNorth-Central Norway
WhenJuly/August
Distance825 km / 513 miles
Length29 days

Saltfjellet

This trip was about making ends meet. I had been hiking in Northern Norway before, I had come back to hike some of the iconic names in the southern half of the country and I then started wondering about this narrow strip of the Atlantic watershed where the mountains meet the sea, a stone throw from the Scandinavian divide.

In the summer of 2023, I took a full month for a continuous hike to fill such long gap and get familiar with this rather off the beaten track region and reaffirm my love for travelling through the land on my own means.

See the menu to access all content for my trip in North-Central Norway.

Norge Midt section 4: Holden to As i Tydal

In July and August 2023, I hiked for four straight weeks and 825 km in Norway between Sulitjelma, County Nordland and As i Tydal, County Trondelag. I broke the route down into four sections based on time criteria with the associated part-day break and resupply. This is the story of my fourth and final week on the trail when I walked from Holden farm to As i Tydal town.

Fourth week

The Holden stay was healing in all accounts. Taking a break always is but this time it was full of additional meaning: the most difficult terrain was behind and I was only 1+ hiking day from rejoining the trail and hut networks for good. It was a job well done feeling.

The food fest, that key part of the healing process, was limited to the hut’s pantry offer but I can be more than fine with a canned stew, which is what I had for breakfast after a 6 AM wake-up call. Then I’m on the (off) trail again.

Leaving Holden

After the instability of the last few days, the atmosphere feels quieter and there’s no clear sign of rain in the short-term forecast so I tackle the start of the section with confidence. The initial stretch is still off-trail, about 8 km to change valleys over a short highland section and lots of open marsh. Beware of the potential for deep pools!

Don’t step here

Gaundalen is another valley draining east into nearby Sweden. The namesake farm at the edge of the marshy valley bottom is accessible on a dirt road across the border.

Gaundalen farm

My route stays in Norway, heading northwest on a well-signed trail going upstream, alternating marsh and thick, beautiful conifer woods.

Gaundalen woods

Shortly after the trail leaves the trees behind, I need to turn southwest to leave the signed route and go for the last off-trail stretch I’ll need to walk, 18 km to Setertjonnhytta and a trail network that I won’t need to leave for the rest of the trip. The terrain is a highland, where the ground is firm and the vegetation is no obstacle. With only a breeze and no rain, it’s among the finest hiking time I’ve had for some time. Lots of lakes, big and small, and some steep, rocky hillsides.

Big highland lake

The clouds thin and break for another evening of magical sunset light as I come down enough to meet the trees and marsh combo again.

Marsh and trees

Mostly marsh

I could have pushed for the hut area but no need, it’s a great night for a camp. About 4 km short, I find the proverbial rise in the wetlands with room for a lone pine tree and my tent. It will be a beautiful camp.

Lovely scene

Lone Pine camp

I had staked all the ridge lines down to assist with the exposed location but it was a quiet night in my sleeping quarters.

The Locus Gear Khufu mid

The area has been left out of the National Park owing to a dammed lake and its use as farmland, most likely incompatible with the park status. I’m certainly not alone:

Good morning to/from the locals

One easy ford later, I finally reach Setertjonnhytta and the end of my off-trail days. I celebrate with a good break and an early lunch at nearly breakfast time. Unsurprisingly enough, it starts raining again but I won’t get upset about it. It’s a day to not get upset about anything.

Setertjonnhytta

I leave the hut in intermittent rain and it’s clear the route scene has changed dramatically: heavy signage and wood planks over the marsh in strong contrast with the last two weeks.

Back in popular hiking grounds

Trail infrastructure

And a nice milestone I wasn’t aware of, Norway’s geographical mid point:

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I go through a couple of trail junctions and a hut in short stretch, which emphasizes the contrast with what’s been my routine for a good while. As I reenter the National Park, the route takes along Skjaekerdalen in a mostly forested setting under beautiful light.

Skjaekerdalen

Skjaekerdalen

The route leaves Skjaekerdalen for a highland crossing and the light is truly amazing with the mix of blue sky and assorted clouds in different flavors. Hiking life is good.

Southern reaches of Blafjell-Skjaekerfjell National Park

By the end of the day and in typical Norwegian fashion, clouds gather again and I get some showers but it’s mostly just so I can get another rainbow. A highland plateau is the perfect setting for a camp in quiet weather conditions.

Pine tree, heather, rainbow and Khufu

Sunset is outstanding from my vantage point.

Colorful sunset

Veresvatnet below is profiled by its own cloud cover in the early morning. The mountains in the background are across the border into Sweden. My camp happened to be literally at the southern border of Blafjell-Skjaekerfjell National Park. As I resume the hiking, I leave the park behind for good.

Cloud over the lake

Down in Veresvatnet, there’s the dead-end of a road with a lively farm area and a DNT hut that I won’t need to use this time. Most farms I’ve met so far in the trip have been about cattle in grazing fields, it’s interesting to also see crops.

Norwegian farming

There’s data reception and I check the weather forecast which announces the lull is over, rain is on the way later in the day with more to come the following. I prepare for rainy weather by checking the hut scene and I find no good match with my timing. I’ll meet a hut for a lunch break but not for the night unless I go for a terribly long day.

I’m not sure whether making haste or not. I do while taking advantage of a rare stretch of trail provided with never-ending lines of wood planks over the marshes where progress is easy and quick but the plan, if there ever was one, is ruined when I need to fork into a much poorer trail with no visible tread where even signage is lacking to the point that I loose it completely. In a haste-induced, bad decision making, I go across a marsh section that was too deep, if only for a few critical meters, and find myself stuck, both legs sunk beyond my crotch and unable to move.

If there was one time on this trip when I was in trouble, it was this one. I didn’t know if I’d keep sinking and, even if I wouldn’t, whether I could get myself out or not. I moved slowly trying to find a hold and get my last leg in, first out onto more stable terrain, literally 40 cm behind me. Luckily, it worked.

Cruising over the swamps before getting stuck

It starts raining literally minutes before I arrive in Bellingstua. I have my lunch under cover and ponder my options. It’s early afternoon, there’s another 28 km to the next hut and I certainly don’t feel like pushing that hard so I take my time and leave Bellingstua under intermittent rain two and a half hours later aiming for a wet weather camp.

Ghost selfie in heavy waterproofs

I walk 16 of the 28 km in very damp conditions even if it’s not raining much and make camp in a miraculously firm grassy spot with some sheltering relief. Heavy rain was forecast for the night but it never happened.

Comfy camp after all

In the morning, it looks like it could rain anytime and it does literally minutes before I get to the Ferslia hut. My very early wake-up call is paying off.

Welcome porch for the wet stuff

Ferslia is close to a road and a farm area and I have reception so I can make plans based on good data. Heavy rain is expected for the next few hours but it should ease in the afternoon. With only 13 km to the next hut, I decide to wait the weather and hope to leave on time to cover the distance and be under a roof for the night.

It does rain heavily and it seems like it’ll never stop. By mid-afternoon though, it’s only a drizzle and I set off. It’ll be a climb to the highlands followed by a hillside traverse, a pass and a climb down into the same watershed I had climbed up from. The air is heavy.

Very grey

I could expect the highlands to be misty and I could only hope the signaling was good enough. I concentrate on following the trail under horizontal drizzle.

Thick fog

I keep wondering if it was a good idea to try this when I could have just stayed in Ferslia. Other than the obvious need for progress and avoiding a very short day that would ruin my stats, the next hut in Angeltjonn feels more attractive, being in a more remote location and I’m fixed on going for it. However, the trail had other plans. 5 km into the death march, I meet this:

Swollen

It was a mountain stream whose headwaters were just a few km upstream, just a thin, seemingly harmless blue line in the map representation but it was heavily swollen with the ongoing rain.

I prepared for the ford, waterproofing all my electronics and paperwork, then got into the water. It was clear it wouldn’t be easy and it immediately became clear it would be dangerous. I got almost crotch deep right from the first few steps, barely manageable in the relatively slow flow near the bank. The current was powerful in the middle section, which I could also expect to be deeper. No way I could go across.

I scouted for an easier ford, found none in close proximity and decided it was not worth the risk or even the bother of travelling upstream fighting wet vegetation in the ongoing drizzle with no clue about for how long.

I didn’t even consider camping in the area. With a known hut 5 km behind, I had it clear I’d backtrack all the way to Ferslia and try again in the morning.

I was back in the hut by early evening, got the fire going, hanged everything in the drying room, relaxed and hoped for the best for the following day.

Drying room in Ferslia hut

I resumed by 7 AM. It was still misty in the highlands but not as much as the previous afternoon and it wasn’t raining. I was not alone in the area:

Reindeer

I got to the problem stream and the difference was dramatic:

Back to normal

It was an easy ford, far less deep and with a pretty quiet flow that meant no risk. It’s well known how much conditions can change in a few hours but it’s still remarkable to verify on the spot. No matter how much of a commodity hiking may seem to have become, Norway is still a tad of a wild place that can easily bring the hiker back where it belongs in the grand scheme of things.

The fog lifted and I could have an eventless highland crossing followed by a downclimb to the shore of Fjergen lake, where I’d meet the hut I was aiming for the previous day.

Light and dark yet again

Fjergen

Angeltjonnhytta was a lovely backcountry hut that I certainly missed staying in. It was busy with some local hikers still in the process of recovering from the previous day beating. I could empathize with them. I had my lunch in the bench outside and kept going.

Angeltjonnhytta

The trail climbs high for a long section where it literally borders Sweden for a good while. I met some more reindeer. The clouds started breaking and it was even warm.

Hiker under the clouds

Hiker in the sunshine

I eventually come down to Teveldalen, a main east-west valley with a trunk road and railway track, both crossing into nearby Sweden. This place was, in normal hiking conditions, the least ambitious of my possible ending points, there’s a railway station a few km into Sweden where I could have taken transport straight into Trondheim. As it goes, I still have one and a half day hiking time in front of me.

There’s also a lovely mountain lodge in the area but the current sunny conditions are not to be missed and I keep going onto the following highland aiming for a camp. It was an obviously good move.

Camp above Teveldalen

Sunset was spectacular from my hillside bench, together with that gift that’s a cloudless sky in Norway.

Sunset

Sunset

Sunrise was not too shabby either:

Sunrise

Sunrise

My last full hiking day of the trip is an actual gift in virtually perfect conditions, it has it all: mostly cloudless throughout, calm, mildly warm and what’s more, almost unbelievably dry underfoot to the point that it wouldn’t look like I’m in Norway anymore if it wasn’t for the low light angle, even at midday.

And a good trail

I visit lowlands below 600 m with some lovely birch woods, then climb again for a final highland section that at times looks like a designer garden with the stunted birch and the colorful heather.

Riverside birch

Birch and heather

Birch, heather and hiker

My latest wide panoramas have the background of the Sylan mountains across the Swedish border.

Sylan hills

By late evening I come down to the Storerikvollen hut complex by the shore of giant, dammed Esandsjoen.

Storerikvollen hut by Esandsjoen

The place is too lovely to skip but the conditions are also too good to stay indoors and I prefer to camp for my last night on the trail anyway so I go for some middle ground by staying in the hut complex area and pitching in the camping corner, which is always an option in Norwegian huts.

Storerikvollen

One last camp

Sunset was lovely once again:

Last light

Come morning, it’s only 21 km, most of them on a gravel road, to come down to the Tydal municipality where I’ll hit a road and a one-trip-a-day bus line that I need to meet by mid afternoon. Perfect hiking conditions once again.

As i Tydal

Gravel road

I actually made it a bit longer by avoiding a most probably wet final trail stretch and taking the gravel instead so I could walk my feet dry before coming back to the urban world. I made it to town before noon.

Gravel turns to tarmac, As i Tydal

Only a handful of trail mix and half a block of biscuits were left in my pack but they weren’t appetizing anymore. I had some initial celebration meal while waiting for the bus.

Leftovers

Pizza & coffee

In a little more than 2 hours, the bus would take me to Trondheim where I’d do some proper partying, ie walk around with no pack, eat plenty. Celebrate a trip well done.

Norge Midt Facts and Figures

I routinely take key notes at the end of every hiking day. Bringing them all together makes for some interesting stats.

Field notes

Final route

I followed the E1 track by the book, with variations in the off-trail sections too small to be worth registering. Starting point, as planned, in Sulitjelma, county Nordland. Effective ending point in As i Tydal, county Trondelag.

Distance: 825 km

This was the effective trip distance if I trust the mapping tools. Actual walked distance was about 10 km longer after being forced to backtrack to the closest hut in front of a dangerous stream ford and stormy weather on day 26.

Days: 29

That’s hiking days. I hiked every day of the trip except for the evening fly-in, evening fly-out.

Average: 28.5 km/day

That’s if I calculate based on the effective trip distance. I fell a bit short of my intended, loose and completely pointless goal of averaging 30 km/day. If I take day 1, when I started hiking in the evening, out of the count, my average goes up to 29 km/day.

Longest day: 38 km

This was on day 5. I did several 37 km days too.

Full hiking days: 21

Did nothing but hike.

Short hiking days: 8

I include here all days where I walked less distance, time or both than usual, broken down into the opening and closing days, the two resupply days and four days with an early stop due to weather. Some of these latter were actually tougher than any normal hiking day.

Days with rain: 19

These include any kind and amount of rain. Put it the other way, there were 10 dry days. Rain was heavy and/or long-lasting for only 11 of those 19. Norway is a notoriously wet place.

Wet and dark

Camps: 18

Camping being my default, this time amounted to almost 2/3 of the nights, my highest ratio so far for all my trips in Norway.

Saltfjellet-Svartisen

Hut stays: 7

Every time I felt like enjoying a Norwegian hut, I’d indulge, no questions asked to myself. There were always some weather reasons behind the indoor thing but sometimes there would also be just some comfort factor or a need for a break from the outdoor after an accumulation of exposure weight.

Holden hut

Lodge stays: 3

Two of these were planned to go with my two resupply stops, the third was a handy option at the end of a rainy day.

Limingen Gjestegard in Royrvik town

Full resupplies: 2

Full resupply number 1 was a mail drop in Umbukta lodge on day 8. Second one, a supermarket run in Royrvik town on day 16. Both locations were on trail.

Supermarket in Royrvik town

Food supplies for the final week were from the pantry room of several huts along the way.

Days where I met nobody: 1

This was on day 19, north of Skjaekerfjella National Park. Ironically enough, I started the day from a front country hut in a small village but it was very early and there was nobody around. Nobody on the trails or off the trails, where I spent a good part of the day.

Days where I regretted being out there

This is not in my notes but very clear in my head: there were none. Reminder to myself.

Norge Midt Highlights

I’ve let the memories sink, then dug them out. This here below is what’s stuck after spending one month hiking the length of Norway where the country is at its narrowest.

Norge Midt

Linking steps for one month

This is about the great synergy in following a continuous path for an extended time, starting somewhere and ending some place else when it feels the latter is half a world away from the former.

There is something unique about this. On the most basic, it’s the old known feat about doing some actual travel so it’s not just walking around but actually going somewhere. Going deeper, there’s this beautiful idea about meeting the land as it is and facing the challenges. Show me what you have, I’ll make my way through it no matter what.

Scenario

My first working title for this section was the most obvious “Scenery” but as I developed the idea it changed to what you see now, a subtle but meaningful update. This trip was not as much about breathtaking views and more about a flow through the landscape, a scenario where stuff happened.

Borgefjell highlands, where stuff happened

This was a bit of a revelation to myself. I had always pictured Norway as the postcard-perfect hike and part of the idea for this trip was to challenge such cliché and see what would happen, which takes me to the next point below.

Less obvious Norway

It’s not all glacial valleys, rock walls or lake basins, Norway hiking can also get rather mundane and, guess what, it remains very attractive and interesting.

It was only my third hiking trip in this part of the world. Before this last, most of the going had been high latitude, high altitude or both. In the lower figures, there was a different world comprising stuff like conifer woods, birch woods, farming communities, endless moorland and way more water than the land can hold. It made for less spectacular, often tougher hiking but it felt for real. I loved visiting this other Norway.

Sylan region

Going off-trail

This is about meeting the place in its own terms, not only because of the obvious absence of a trail or any signaling to follow but also and mainly because of the limited availability of shelter infrastructure for extended periods. In a place like Norway, this changes everything.

Going off-trail is something I wouldn’t probably choose, given the chance but I was also intrigued by the prospect. Being parts of a set route, it helps for those of us unfamiliar with the region know that it’ll be walkable, which is pretty much the only basics I’d need to know, the rest is just the added challenge.

Hike through this

I spent about the second third of the trip going mostly off-trail. The eventual return to the trail network became my brightest beacon, something to fight for when the going was rough.

Sometimes the off-trail wouldn’t look like much different from the signed routes. Among all the factors that would shape the hiking experience, being off-grid was just one of them. In the right conditions (fair weather, firm ground, low vegetation, no obvious obstacles), it could be easy and enjoyable walking but it wasn’t gonna be that perfect for long, not in Norway. Adding the lack of trails, signage or shelters to the typical array of difficulties pushed the experience deep into the type-2 fun. It was challenging for me.

In retrospect, it was a highlight and I was happy it was an integral part of the trip.

Camping

It’s the pretty settings and the welcoming feeling about camping out being the natural thing to do. Finding home in the wilderness and being comfortable after the hard work.

Being native to a place where you take firm ground for granted, it’s always a bit of an initial shock, even if it’s not the first time, to hike and camp where everything seems to be a giant, endless marsh. You need to learn to read the land so you can find the best potential for good camping spots as you go. This is a great learning experience. Other than the obvious convenience, it’s a way of connecting with the land.

Finding dry ground

Hutting

I’m echoing myself here, see the Highlights section for previous trips in the region, but let me tell you (again) how important the shelter infrastructure is in a place like Norway. I’d say “for me” but I’ve met enough fellow hikers relieved to be inside to not feel alone in this.

Summer conditions are nice for hiking, the camping is wonderful and whatnot but there are times when I just needed to be inside, be it after a traumatic weather event or a simple accumulation of weight on my emotional shoulders. Come such time, the Norwegian hut system is the place to be and the simple knowing makes life plain nicer on the trail.

I went through some of my finest times on the trip sipping warm coffee by the fireplace. That’s a lot to say about an outbound experience.

Whatever by the fireplace

Type-2 fun at its best

Thru-hiking in Norway is tough, no surprises here, yet I’m doing it here again because I know I love the challenge, if only in retrospect.

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