A big thank you to Visit Norway for providing this visually stunning adventure! As always, all opinions are our own.
Norway has so much to see, and we had a limited time, which made Norway in a Nutshell the best Norse experience possible.
This jaunt from Oslo to Bergen is the most popular excursion in the country because, as the name implies, by land and by sea we passed through a little bit of everything that makes Norway so cool.
Our train pulled out of Oslo before daylight, which on a crisp November day (and far, far north) is not really all that early.
The first part of the journey took us through the city and suburbs before the train began the climb of over four-thousand feet up to the Hardangervidda Plateau.
Along the way the scenery and weather begin to change. Soon snow covered the landscape as we traveled just to the south of some of country’s highest peaks. This is the Norway of Alpine winter sports, and winter was well underway.
By the time we arrived at Myrdal, where we changed trains to the famous Flåm Line, the clouds had broken and blue sky prevailed.
We were certainly seeing Norway’s weather in a nutshell!
Falling into Flåm (BTW, å is now officially Veronica’s favorite letter!)
The railway runs down the valley of Flåmsdalen to the little town of Flåm, and is a scenic and engineering marvel.
These twenty kilometers include some of the steepest conventional railroad tracks in the world and took sixteen years to build.
All in all the elevation drops nearly three thousand feet through a series of five hairpin curves and twenty tunnels, taking us all the way back down to sea level.
We passed countless waterfalls streaming over the edges of the valley because the glaciers that carved this landscape left behind nearly vertical cliffs, perfect for the streams that flow over the edge to spill into misty veils of falling water.
The town of Flåm is not much more than a few buildings around the ferry port, but we had a few minutes to explore and found the small museum that chronicles the building of the railroad.
We poked through the displays before boarding the ferry that would take us to Gudvangen via two of Norway’s most picturesque fjords.
You can’t see Norway like THIS in the summertime!
Our voyage began in Aurlandsfjord, which has the look of a perfect classic fjord, because it is. We would be hard pressed to find a better example of a massive canyon carved out by glaciers from the last ice age, then filled in by the sea.
Our little ship, the Fjord1 ferry, was dwarfed beneath five thousand feet of cliffs and mountains.
With our jaws dropped and eyes wide, we braved the brisk breezes on the open-air top deck so as not to miss a single sight.
Before long we passed the beautiful villages of Aurland and Undredal, and a few of the residents came out to wave as we went by.
Undredal is famous for goat cheese, so much so that the four-legged billy critters out number people by 5 to 1. Come to think of it, most of them can’t be billies or there wouldn’t be much cheese – they must mostly be of the nanny variety.
These towns are certainly secluded, but nothing like the scattered farm and fishing houses that we spotted periodically along the shore and up the steep slopes.
We could understand the fishing outposts, they were easy enough to access by boat, but some of the cabins up on the hillsides were downright puzzling. The paths leading up were more or less ladders.
It takes some serious dedication to haul supplies up that!
About an hour into our journey we turned into Nærøyfjorden. It took us a few moments, but we sounded out the name… nae/roy/ fjord… na/ro/fjord… oh, narrowfjord.
It wasn’t long before we realized that it was aptly named, because it gets crazy skinny, only a few hundred meters wide in some spots.
Both fjords are branches of the Sognefjord, which is the largest fjord in Norway, and second longest in the world.
Because these are such prime examples, the entire area has been named the West Norwegian Fjords UNESCO World Heritage Site.
We finished the fjord section of our journey in the long subarctic twilight, docking at Gudvangen as darkness fell.
We made the remainder of our journey to Bergen by bus, only able to see a few scattered lights from villages along the way.
Luckily, we got to see this scenic stretch in the daylight a couple of days later as we made our way back across the country on our way above the Arctic Circle in search of Northern Lights.
David and Veronica, GypsyNester.com
DELVE DEEPER:
Visit the Norway in a Nutshell website
See all of our adventures in Norway!
See our full journey through Norway by rail – spectacular!
A big thank you to Visit Norway for providing this visually stunning adventure! As always, all opinions are our own.
“Fjord Tough”—very clever! It’s amazing what environments human beings can adapt to for living in although I wonder if the beautiful, but difficult, living circumstances had anything to do with the Viking propensity for raping and pillaging all over Europe. (PS: Don’t tell them I said that.)
Hmmm… perhaps they did it to stay warm?
Snow is not my favorite thing, but it is beautiful. Your photos make we want to hop onto a plane to Norway right now!
Gosh, it’s all so beautiful! I’ve never been to Norway and always thought I would prefer to go in summer. But these winter shots make me think a little differently…
It was very cool 😉 and no crowds at all.
Your photos of Norway’s fjords and landscapes are beautiful. They make me want to visit!
Norway looks to have spectacular scenery. This was a treat to sail along with you and see it.
Thanks Carole!
wow, what a wonderful trip, I love traveling through different ways and this looks like a lot of fun and those fjords, amazing!
Perfect timing. I’m on my way to take the Oslo-Bergen train. You’re the second person today to recommend the waterfalls!
Cool, have a great trip Kristen!
Oh how beautifully you captured this place in words and pictures. The ferry ride sounds dreamy… if COLD! I’m not quite sure I could handle Norway in winter, but you make it sound tempting.
It was definitely cold… but worth it.
i took a similar journey from Oslo with my exchange family decades ago. We spent the night at a little farm on the Plain near Myrdal, enveloped in goose down covers. There was snow in July! On we went to Flåm, as well, but by car. Your post brought it all back. Norway is amazing.
It really was amazing. Didn’t notice that there was a road down to Flåm.
The photos of Norway are postcard perfect. Stunning scenery. Fjord tough indeed!
Thanks Donna!
You captured so many beautiful Norwegian landscapes, in a nutshell! You make me way to return to Norway!