A Journey to Scandinavia in the Summer of 2017
Motorhoming via the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Sweden & Finland
Margaret Williamson
Introduction
After travelling in Spain and Portugal in the winter of 2016/17, we returned to England in the spring via France, the Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland and Scotland. Much of June and into July passed in the East and West Ridings of Yorkshire, before we were able to recommence travelling and the writing of this travel log.
Our overall aim is to reach Greece for the winter, travelling through the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, the Baltic Republics, Eastern Europe and the Balkans. Let's see how it goes!
JULY 2017
Harwich to the Hook of Holland on the Stena Line Ferry
Hook of Holland Ferry Port to Farm-Camping Hoeve Bouwlust, Maasland,
Zuid-Holland – 11 miles
Open 31 March-31 Oct. www.hoeve-bouwlust.nl
€18.50 inc elec and showers. Excellent free
WiFi. N 51.955585 E 4.287047
The two modern Stena Line ferries linking Harwich
with the Hook of Holland claim to be the world's largest passenger ferries,
with a choice of day or overnight crossings. Once again we have booked the
daytime sailing with an outside cabin through the Camping & Caravanning
Club, which gives a good discount and a free upgrade to Flexifare (more than
saving our annual membership fee!) Leaving from Harwich avoids the hassle of
the drive to and security around the Channel Ports, and you can stock up at the
Morrisons store (with larg car park and fuel) shortly before the port.
The ship, busy with holiday traffic in mid July, sails at 9 am.
The crossing is smooth, with lunch in the self-service restaurant (M's chicken
curry proved a better choice than B's fish & chips), before docking on time
at the Hook at 5.15 pm local time (it's still 4.15 pm in the UK). It's still
very warm and sunny this side of the North Sea.
The SatNav leads us to a dairy farm/camping a few
miles east of the Hook, sited on road N468, that we have pre-booked for 2
nights. It sells delicious ices made with their own cream and milk, as well as
eggs and milk by the bottle.
Next day we plan to cycle along the canal into the
nearby villages but the sultry weather breaks into heavy rain showers. At least
the free camp WiFi works well, so we catch up on-line and write some emails and review the site for ACSI: "A small popular campsite on a working dairy
farm, with great activities for children. Found it a convenient stopover, only 11 miles
from the Hook of Holland ferry. Fresh milk for sale, as well as delicious ice
cream made on the farm. A pizza van was due on Saturday. We would have stayed
longer but the site was fully booked for the weekend. Free showers and WiFi
throughout the site, all for a very reasonable camping fee. Next time, we will
book ahead!"
We'd like to stay longer and sample the Pizza van that calls on Saturdays but
the small site is full for the weekend. A phone call to a favourite (and much
larger) site further east at Otterlo confirms our next move.
Maasland to Camping Beek en Hei, Otterlo, Gelderland – 77 miles
Open all year. www.beekenhei.nl. High season rate €23.93
inc 10 amp elec and taxes. (ACSI Card reduction low season.) WiFi €3 one day, €4
for two days, €1.50 per day for three days plus. Showers €0.50. N 52.09214
E5.77072
Warm and sunny
again for the drive along Oostgang (N468) past Schipluiden – a canalside scene
of ducks, bicycles and windmill – to join the A4 near Delft. Then A12 past
Utrecht to exit 23 (Ede), onto the A30 northwards for exit 2, and the N304 to
Otterlo. We turn left before the village for our favourite of several campsites
in the area: 'Beek en Hei' meaning brook and heath. I reviewed it for
ACSI last year: "A
very well kept campsite tucked away in quiet woodland, just 1 km from the
village of Otterlo with its shops and cafes. Extremely friendly helpful staff and good clean
facilities. Breads, ices and fresh eggs on sale. Site-wide WiFi at a small cost was very
reliable. Excellent base for cycling in the Hoge Veluwe
forest, with bike paths in every direction. We came for a couple of nights and stayed 3
weeks!"
It's an extensive
site, on each side of a gravel road/bike path in the forest, with separate
areas for different campers - tents, families, long-term or short-stay. We find
a quiet, privately hedged pitch and settle in with the resident rabbits. Not
forgetting the hens, whose eggs we buy. The WiFi works
well and the facilities are good, apart from a meagre 6-amp hook-up which the
microwave soon trips! Meanwhile, Barry removes a tiny nail from the soft rear
tyre of my bike, ready to take to the Fietspad tomorrow. At Camping Beek en Hei, Otterlo Click: magbazpictures.com/cycling-in-the-netherlands
Over a 2-week stay
we regularly stroll into Otterlo (1.5 km) to visit its well-stocked hardware
shop, Spar supermarket/post office/bakery with free coffee dispenser, and the
excellent cycle shop (Geerts Tweewielers) where we buy a new tyre. There is a
memorial to the Canadians, British and civilians killed here in April 1945 in
the last battle for the liberation of the Netherlands, following Operation
Market Garden in September 1944. On a few rainy
days we have emails to write, the travelog of Spring in Ireland to finish, Radio
4 and the Guardian to keep us in touch with events, and films for entertainment.
Local TV showed a lovely film 'Brideflight' set in 1950s New Zealand, following
the lives of a group of Dutch women who answered an appeal for immigrant
females. We also start watching the 'Boardwalk Empire' series, which is
addictive. One evening there
is a free slide show and coffee in the camp Common Room with a very
enthusiastic naturalist talking about moths and their caterpillars. Difficult
to follow in Dutch but he answers questions in English. After dark a 'moth
tent' is erected with lights to attract disappointingly few specimens.
Apparently heathland would be better than the forest, where many moths are
eaten by bats. But the beauty of
Otterlo, the reason we are back, is to cycle the Fietspads (cycle paths)
that radiate in all directions, fuelled by plentiful coffee and apple cake! Cycling by Numbers The Fietspads of the Netherlands form a complete network, with signposts and maps at
numbered junctions. They vary in width and surface but provide well-used and safe
routes around and between every town and village. See our Guide to Cycling in
the Netherlands. We enjoy 6 rides from Otterlo, some new and some old
favourites.
- Cycling to
Kootwijk village & back (30 km): Many
cyclists are out on Saturday morning as we ride into Otterlo to buy cheese
& ham croissants with free coffee at the Spar before riding north on
the path alongside rd N310. After Harskamp we turn along a minor road
northeast for 5 km to Kootwijk village. A welcome ice cream break at
Restaurant de Brinkhof, and back on a narrow Fietspad through the
woods to meet and cross N310, then south on lanes returning to Otterlo.
- Cycling to
the town of Ede & back (26 km): On a cloudy morning we ride
through the forest and across the Ederheide heath on excellent sealed Fietspads, much quieter mid-week.
In the modern town of Ede, completely rebuilt after 1945, we sit by the
market square outside our favourite 'Lunch Café de Markt' (11 km) as the
church clock strikes noon. Lunch is Granny's Pea Soup with ham sandwich
for M, a Hawaiian toastie and salad for B, followed by coffee served with
a small pot of whipped cream and Advokaat liqueur, as well as the
customary biscuit. The café also does wonderful Appelkoeken met Slagroom (apple
tart with cream).
We return on a more direct woodland
route and circle round by Otterlo's entrance to the Hoge Veluwe National Park
before riding back to camp. The Hoge Veluwe, planted as a royal hunting forest
and still home to deer and wild boar, is a large fenced private nature reserve
with entrance fee to park and museum, art gallery fee, parking fee, coaches of
Oriental visitors, horse-drawn carts etc. There is no reduction for simple
entry to cycle through the park, even for seniors. Hoge does
mean 'high' and it's one of the three highest places in the Netherlands, at 33
m or 109 ft! The prices are certainly steep.
- Cycling to
Radio Kootwijk & back via Hoenderloo (38 km): On a cool morning with a hint of rain we ride the cycle path
alongside N310 to Harskamp. Here we turn off on a dirt track through the
sandy woods to the eerie 'Kathedral Radio Kootwijk', a huge 1920s concrete
building used as a signal station during WW2, rising high above the open
heathland. The restored edifice is now open to visit for €5 but only on
Wednesdays, 11 am-3 pm – and today is Thursday. We continue on the Fietspad
to Hoenderloo, a smoothly sealed but more strenuous route that crosses
hilly open heath and winds through rolling woodland before meeting the
road about 1 km before the village.
'Broodhuis
Lokaliteit', the bakery café in Hoenderloo, is popular with cyclists who can freely
refill water bottles, consult maps or even recharge e-bikes here! We just tuck
in to generous servings of blueberry cake with our coffee. We return to Otterlo
on a separate path alongside the main road for the final 10 km.
- Cycling the
perimeter of the Hoge Veluwe National Park (48 km): Armed with a packed lunch, we complete a wide circle anticlockwise
round the edge of the Park. Going east from Otterlo, then south alongside
N310, east on N311 and north on a separate path alongside the A50 via
Terle, we come to Groenendal (20 km) and sit under the trees to
eat our sandwiches. On through Woeste Hoeve before turning west to an applecake
break in Hoenderloo, then the final 10 km to Otterlo. The varied ride follows
paths on tarmac, as well as gravel paths through forest and moorland.
- Cycling to
Lunteren & back via Ede (40 km): We
ride some paths that are new to us, west from Otterlo via Roekel to
Lunteren on a mixture of tracks through woodland and alongside roads. In
Lunteren (20 km) we eat our sandwiches in the park by the splendid new
library, which has toilets, an art exhibition and a small coffee bar. Then
we turn south to Ede, where Tuesday is market day, filling the square (and
our favourite café). Enjoying ices from the Italian ice parlour, we watch
the crowd, with music playing and a performer blowing giant bubbles!
Return to Otterlo by the most direct route, the path alongside N304.
AUGUST 2017
INTO GERMANY
Otterlo to Camping Aschenbeck, Wildeshausen,
Niedersachsen – 160 miles
Open all year. www.aschenbeck-camping.de. €19 inc
16 amp elec. WiFi €3 per day, €8 per week. Showers €0.80. N 52.93400
E8.40200
As July slips into
August our peace is invaded, with daily activities for the children and
grandchildren on site. We phone 4 other sites around Otterlo but all are full! This
is a popular holiday area with the Dutch, away from the windmills and canals of
the tourist trail, and the weather is fine and sunny.
It's only 11 miles
northeast on N304 to join the A1 bound for Germany. We cross the broad River
Ijssel near Deventer before reaching the border (61 miles). There is a large
service area on the Dutch side but no checks or delays, and no Autobahn tolls
if under 7 tons. Continuing east on the German A30 to exit 14 at 101 miles, we
turn north on A1 towards Bremen, stopping for lunch on the Dammer Berge
services (which even has a small church!)
On to exit 60 at
156 miles, then follow the SatNav to a campsite to the north of the A1. The
last half-mile is single-track road, thankfully not busy. My ACSI review:
"A simple campsite, mainly
statics, down 0.5 km of single-track road on the edge of a wooded nature park. There are two areas for
tourers, plus a field for tents by 3 small lakes. The site restaurant has
closed down but the owners were serving meals in a marquee from 6 pm: pizzas,
burgers, sausages etc. Enjoyed huge portions of Schnitzel with tasty roast
potatoes. WiFi available for payment.
Shower tokens cost 0.80 Euros."
We only stay one night, breaking the journey, but will long
remember the generous Schnitzel! If we'd seen the portion size we'd have
ordered one plate between us. The unreliable free WiFi of 6 years ago has been
replaced by a pay-online system, which we don't try.
Wildeshausen to Camping Lübeck-Schönböcken, Lübeck,
Schleswig-Holstein – 130 miles
Open 1 March-11 Dec. www.camping-luebeck.de. €24 inc 6 amp
elec. Free WiFi. Showers €0.50. N 53.86943 E10.63086
Only 5 miles from
Camp Aschenbeck to Lidl on the Wildeshausen Ring Road (south of the A1), with
plenty of parking space. Restocked, we join the Hamburg-bound A1, busy with
trucks from all over Europe on this fine Monday morning. Some road works and
lane closures cause delays, while we listen to two CDs found at Lidl – Cat
Stevens and Johnny Cash!
Crossing the wide
River Weser near Bremen, we remember cycling along the Weser Radweg
to the river's source in Hann-Münden. At 92 miles we cross the Elbe, with more
memories of taking the now defunct (and much missed) ferry from Harwich to
Hamburg and cycling alongside that mighty river.
The A1 continues
to Lübeck, where we take exit 23, cross the motorway and turn right on
Steinrader Damm to find the convenient campsite. It's very busy but we settle
into a place at the far end and find that our TV doesn't work here. Barry
eventually discovers that some German cities have changed to a higher
definition system, which would require a set-top box or a new television! At
least we have BBC Radio 4, thanks to the WiFi, and are able to work online,
including an ACSI review:
"Second visit to this busy
campsite, convenient for the motorway and the city. Pitches are crowded too
close together and the site is by a noisy road. Easy cycle ride, less than 5
miles, along bike paths into the picturesque centre of Lübeck. WiFi is now free throughout
the site. The facilities are barely adequate when busy. Queue for showers,
costing 0.50 Euros."
Tomorrow we'll
cycle into the city (or you can take a bus).
At Camping Lübeck-Schönböcken – Cycling 16 km into
and around Lübeck
Next afternoon
with a helpful map from Reception we ride along Schönböckener Strasse and
Fackenburger Allee (on safe dual-use cyclepath/pavements) until turning left
over the Puppenbrücke bridge. Near the historic salt warehouses, we
cross the Holstenbrücke over the Trave River, entering the Altstadt (Old
Town) by the Gothic Brick towers of the 15thC Holstentor gate, the
symbol of the city. This medieval capital of the Hanseatic League lies on a
small island, surrounded by the river and the Trave Canal. By the 17thC Lübeck
was extremely wealthy and important, with rich merchants trading especially in
salt. Today it's a UNESCO World Heritage site. http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/272
We find the
central market place, with its magnificent Rathaus and soaring spires of
the Petrikirche attracting the tourist cameras, then ride to the
waterside at the Hansahafen harbour. What a contrast between the
shops and cafes in the centre, thronged with groups, and the emptiness of the
quaint side streets and cobbled lanes round the edges!
A clockwise circuit
of the island's 5-mile perimeter takes us along An der Untertrave to the
Burgtor bridge and tower, then via Kanal Strasse to the Huxtertor bridge,
where we descend steps to a canal-side foot/cyclepath. Here we pause over
coffee and raspberry cheesecake, sitting in the sunshine outside a little
restaurant by the canal, waving to the passing barges, pleasure boats and
kayakers. The path takes us on to Mühlendamm (site of an old mill near the
Cathedral), where we join the riverside and follow An der Obertrave back
to the Holstentor gate. After seeing the wooden sailing ships, we return
to camp before it starts to rain. FERRY ACROSS TO DENMARK Note: DKK (Danish Krone) approx 8 = £1
Lübeck to Maribo So (Lake) Camping, Maribo, Lolland
– 56 German miles to Puttgarden for Scandlines Ferry to Rodbyhavn, plus 13
Danish miles to Maribo Open 31 March-22 Oct. www.maribo-camping.dk. DKK 246 inc 10
amp elec and show*ers. Excellent free site-wide WiFi. N 54.77260
E11.49463 Warm and sunny as
we drive 2 miles to join the A1, junction 22, to face an immediate Stau (traffic
jam – Germany's favourite spread) as one half of the motorway is closed. Five
minutes later we're moving again, with a much longer hold-up for traffic coming
into Lübeck. The motorway ends at 43 miles, when we continue on E47/rd 207,
across a bridge to Fehmarn island and on to Puttgarden at 56 miles for the
Scandlines ferry to Rodbyhavn in Denmark. We arrive in time
for the 12.15 pm sailing (ferries leave every 30 minutes for the 45-minute
crossing). Booking ahead would have saved €9, but paying at check-in I am given
a discount for the Camping Key Europe card – even though mine expired at the
end of 2016 – and save more than €9! Only later do we learn of a 'Sweden
Combi-Ticket' - including either the ferry to Helsingor or the Oresund Link
Bridge to Malmo - which can be booked online: www.scandlines.com. If there is a next
time, we will know! From Rodbyhavn the
E47, a 4-lane motorway, takes us straight to Maribo (exit 48). Entering the
town, there is plenty of space to park at Lidl or Aldi by the roundabout, with
a convenient bank ATM nearby for Danish currency. Then it's less than a mile to
the busy campsite set among Bangshave Woods on the side of Sonderso Lake, next
to an Open Air Museum. The newly
installed site-wide fibre broadband is good and fast, but otherwise the camp is
disappointing and overpriced. My ACSI review: “Since my visit and review 6 years ago, there
is now free WiFi internet but the camping fee has risen substantially. Convenient stopover for taking the ferry
to/from Germany. It's an easy walk into town or cycle ride round the lake (24
km). There are many permanent caravans and a lot
of the touring pitches were out of use due to soft ground and mud (in August,
high season). We drove round the whole site 3 times before finding a suitable
place. It needs investment in some hard-standing for motorhomes.”
We
settle in a corner with a view of the lake and stroll down to feed the ducks,
coots and a lone moorhen with chicks. At Maribo Lake Camping – Cycling 24 km around the
town and Sonderso Lake Another warm day,
though cloudy and sultry. Cycling into the town centre, we find a food and
craft market in full swing. One stall has 'English Fish & Chips', though at
DKK 80 (£10) each for a small helping we are not tempted! We ride on, clockwise
round
Sonderso Lake, following a signed bike route for much of the way: a splendid
ride, on which we see barely a soul and no other cyclists. The route takes us through Maribo, then along quiet lanes past the kayak club, golf club and youth hostel. With the water rarely
in view, we pass the modern St Birgitta Convent, on the site of its medieval
forebear, and the old Engestofte Kirke. Half way round, towards the eastern end of the lake, the
cycle/footpath leaves the road and runs through lofty mature woodland. Just
before the short bridge separating Sonderso from the smaller lake Hejredeso
there is a bird hide and picnic tables, next to a pumping station. We take a break
to watch the coots, ducks, swans and gulls, then cross the bridge and turn west
on a gravel path through the woods before joining a long straight lane along a
former railway line, back to Maribo. We take a lakeside short cut, turning
north on the narrow track up the west side of Sonderso, through Maribo Nature
Reserve and past the Frilands (Open Air) Museum, next to the campsite. Maribo to Heino's Camping, Tappernoje, South
Zealand – 42 miles Open all year. www.heinoscamping.dk. DKK 130 inc 10 amp
elec. Token needed for showers. 'Free WiFi' didn't work. Cash only (DKK or
Euros). N 55.16568 E11.98195 Next morning, drizzling with
rain, we leave Maribo's overpriced site (where one camper has a stall selling
Tupperware!). A quick stop at Lidl by the roundabout, then onto the E47 towards
Copenhagen. After 14 miles a tunnel takes us from Lolland (Denmark's
southernmost island) onto Falster, then crosses to Zealand over a bridge. There
are no tolls on the motorway or on these short links. We leave E47 at exit 40 and
continue north on rd 151 (the old north-south road) to the small agricultural
village of Tappernoje, with a campsite we know signed on the right. It's a
quiet farm site - home to chickens, turkeys, rabbits and bees - with level
grassy hedged pitches, a few cabins and simple facilities (no washing machine
here). Heino, the friendly old owner who lives on site, calls round in the
evening for the money and to round up his hens. He proudly gives us the
password for the new site WiFi, though we get no signal at all! We do get Danish TV, showing
Cate Blanchett's portrayal of Elizabeth I (with subtitles) INTO SWEDEN Note: SEK (Swedish Krona) approx 10 = £1 Tappernoje to Vinslovs Camping, Vinslov, Skane –
142 miles Open all year. www.vinslovscamping.se. SEK 200 inc 10
amp elec, showers and cooking facilities. No internet. N 56.10988
E13.91245
It's raining as we
drive 2 miles to rejoin E47 at Junction 38 and continue towards
Copenhagen/Kobenhavn. 50 miles later, near
the capital's Kastrup airport on Dragor island, we enter a
well-lit 2.5-mile submarine tunnel at the Danish end of the Oresund Link. Emerging,
the road crosses the tiny artificial island of Peberholm before arching 60m/200
ft above the shipping lane on a 5-mile double-decker suspension bridge,
carrying the railway beneath the 4-lane dual carriageway.
Continuing towards
Malmo, we cross the border at 58 miles at the height of the bridge. The 16 km/10 mile Link is a magnificent engineering
achievement: a road and rail tunnel/bridge linking Denmark and Sweden that
provides an alternative to the short ferry ride across the Oresund Strait
between Helsingborg and Helsingor. By coincidence (?!) the charge for the
Link is the same as for the ferry! www.oresundsbron.com/en/start
The whole breath-taking feat – Sweden's only road link with mainland Europe,
except via Finland, Russia and St Petersburg – was completed in 1999. It was opened with
a symbolic embrace, halfway across the new bridge, of Sweden's Crown Princess
and Denmark's Crown Prince (ahh!). The crossing is sometimes closed to
high-sided vehicles in strong winds but today we have a light tail wind, with a
poor view through a haze of mist and rain. The toll booth is at the Swedish end
of the bridge, payable by card or cash (Swedish, Danish or Euro currency). Whichever way, the charge is steep for a vehicle over 6 m long. There
is no exchange facility or bank machine.
Now in Sweden, we follow the E22 motorway/dual carriageway past Lund, parking
at the first service station for a lunch break. Still no change or ATM! Turning
off into Hörby, we find an ATM for local currency at the ICA supermarket
(usually reliable throughout the country). Back on E22, we take the next exit (32)
to check a camperstop listed in the Bordatlas at Ekerödsrasten but find only a
wet sloping field with hook-ups, the other facilities locked. A sign says 'Pay
at Restaurant' (SEK 200 a night) but it's closed and there are no other
campers.
So we go for 'Plan B', via country lanes to a municipal camp in Vinslov,
opposite the open air baths. The site is fairly busy, although it's mid-August
and the last weekend of the school holidays! The Receptionist insists we buy a
Camping Key Europe Card (or rather a membership app for the phone, as she has
run out of cards). This is obligatory on many Swedish sites and costs 160 SEK
but at least it's now valid for 12 months, rather than expiring at the end of
December.
In the evening the Swedish TV shows the 2016 Edinburgh Tattoo, a real treat!
At Vinslovs Camping, Vinslov
The sky is now
clear and blue, with a cold wind. We enjoy a restful Sunday, waving the other
campers off in an array of motorhomes and caravans, as well as a young couple
towing their toddler in a cycling trailer. The holiday season is over; the open
air pool closing. There is no queue for showers and laundry (washer 20 SEK,
drier free).
With the
well-equipped camp kitchen to myself, I make toad-in-the-hole and apple
flapjack for dinner, after which we watch 'Mamma Mia' on Swedish TV. Yes, an
absurd story, but it's well acted, has super-trooper songs, a great setting on
a Greek island – and Colin Firth! Vinslov to Ojaby Camping, Växjö, Smaland – 77 miles
Open all year. www.campingkartan.se/053513/Ojaby_Camping.
SEK 250 inc 10 amp elec, showers and cooking facilities. Free use of washing
macine & drier. No internet. N 56.899723 E14.739704
We drive NW on
road 21, with a short detour into Hässleholm after 10 miles to stock up at
Lidl, delighted to find 'Hatherwoods' (English-style) frozen pies: steak &
ale or chicken & leek. That's dinner sorted! Then road 23 (with warning
signs for Elk and Wild Boar) leads us NE for Växjö.
It's a fine sunny
day but clouds are gathering over the forest, the wind shivering the birch
leaves. We lunch in a wooded rest area behind a fuel station, noting that
diesel at 13.4 SEK is much more expensive than in Denmark (where it was 8 DKK).
Leaving rd 23 on
the edge of Växjö (pronounced Veck-shur), it's a couple of miles to a small
campsite next to the tennis courts, accessed through a public car park by Lake
Helgasjo. At the entrance a kiosk sells burgers, sausages and ice cream, while
a temporary stall has lingenberries and blueberries by the kilo. The
berry-picking season has begun.
A friendly
English-speaking woman emerges from her caravan to check us in (no camping card
required) and explains that it's a municipal camp staffed by volunteers. All
the facilities are on the far side of the car park, quite a walk, but they are
excellent and include free use of a washer and drier!
At Ojaby Camping, Växjö
Click: magbazpictures.com/camping-at-ojaby
Still sunny and
warm enough to wear shorts for cycling into the centre of Växjö: 6 km on signed
bike paths the whole way, quite separate from the traffic. The Forex Bank
changes our remaining Danish notes (but not coins) into Swedish money and the
assistant directs us to the elusive Post Office counter, hidden inside a
stationer's in the Tegner shopping mall. A stamp for a letter to the UK costs
20.10 SEK (over £2) so we won't be sending many cards! After surprisingly good
coffee at McDonads, sitting at its pavement café watching jackdaws begging and
stealing chips, we return to camp for lunch.
Back at the
campsite a large furry cat jumps into the motorhome 'garage' as Barry puts the
bicycles away – and disappears! Then a distressed head pokes out of a small
round aperture in the gas boiler cupboard and we realise the animal is too fat
to get out! No idea how or why it got in? Barry fetches tools to dismantle the
locker, I try coaxing and the thing finally breathes in and struggles out. A
reminder not to leave the 'garage' door open!
Taking a short
afternoon walk in Ojaby, we follow a sign uphill to a prehistoric grave-field
of stone-covered mounds, about 3,500 years old, with a view over the lake.
There are several such sites in the area though we could find nothing more
about them on-line.
After making
moussaka for dinner we turn to Swedish TV, which carries many British and
American series with original soundtracks. Not so interesting tonight though: a
BBC programme about religion and sex.
Växjö to Hätte Camping, Tranas, Smaland – 99 miles
Open all year. www.hattecamping.se. SEK 270 (high
season) inc 10 amp elec, showers and cooking facilities. ACSI Card €17 from 23
Aug. WiFi SEK 10/1 hour; SEK 25/1 day. N
58.03548 E15.0309
.JPG) The weather turns
wet as we drive 2 miles to join rd 30 and continue north through a typical
landscape of forest and lakes. At 23 miles we go through Lammhult, a pleasant
little town with a sports hall and outdoor pool - and a queue of migrants at
the bus stop, the women fully covered. We wonder what they will make of a
Swedish winter.
After another 10
miles we turn off left to a quiet rest area (4 miles south of Vrigstad) by the 12thC Old Hjälmseryd Church, restored from a ruin and reconsecrated in 1934. A wooden bell
tower was added in 1937. Sadly it is locked, except for regular Sunday
services, so we just stroll round the tidy cemetery full of flowers. Click: magbazpictures.com/hjalmseryd-old-church
In Vrigstad we
turn onto rd 127 to Savsjö, then left onto rd 128 to Eksjö (sjö=lake). On the
way in, at 68 miles, we park at another Swedish favourite, the Dollar Store
(motto 'Mighty Fine Prices Every Day'), to eat lunch and browse. No need for
the huge array of toys, household stuff etc, but we do buy chocolate, biscuits,
cake and shampoo.
Then north on rd
32 to the exit for Tranas at 94 miles, through the town centre and along rd 131
to the large campsite. It's a former municipal, now privately owned, near the
west shore of Lake Sommen.
As the low season rate
doesn't start for another 3 days here, we are charged the exorbitant full rate.
No wonder the site is almost empty! We decline to pay extra for internet and
decide to leave tomorrow! I post the following ACSI Review:
"A large site with access to a lake and public
beach, with boating, bathing, kayak hire and cafe. All facilities need smart-key entry. Only one
of the two shower blocks has private cubicles. The site was dead, the season was over - only
three days to go before ACSI Card discount began - and the high price charged
was excessive. WiFi cost extra. Only stayed one night."
When the rain stops, we take a walk round by the
lake, with no sign of life at all. The season really is over.
Tranas to Liens Camping, Riddarhyttan, Västmanland
– 150 miles
Open all year. www.lienscamping.se. SEK 230 inc 10 amp
elec and cooking facilities. Showers SEK 5. Free WiFi on pitches near
Reception. N 59.80877 E15.53401
Fine and sunny
again as we return through Tranas, pausing at Lidl by a roundabout, and join rd
32 north for Mjölby. After refuelling on the Mjölby ring road we cross the E4,
which goes to Stockholm, and continue north on rd 50.
A lunch break at
the spacious rest area just before the bridge over Storahammarsund at Hammar.
Then on to Hallsberg at 87 miles, to join E20 northeast. Traffic is very busy
round Orebro, where we take exit 115 at 105 miles and continue north on rd 50
towards Falun. The landscape varies: some forest broken by pasture for sheep
and cows; some land cleared for growing wheat and oats.
After Lindesberg
we fork right at 130 miles onto rd 68 for another 19 miles, then turn left into
the large campsite. Our pitch number 40, near Reception, gets good free WiFi
and encourages us to linger and catch up with emails and route planning. I also
write a favourable ACSI Review:
"A large site with pitches among the statics
near the lake or in the woods nearer Reception, which has a small cafe and
shop. Friendly English-speaking staff. Good clean services, with coin-operated
showers and a kitchen with full cooking facilities. Free WiFi near Reception, which worked on our
pitch. On Saturday afternoon the site managers lit a
campfire and provided pancake batter to cook over it in long-handled frying
pans. Very popular with the children!"
A tasty dinner of
Steak & Ale Pie followed by a Swedish favourite, Princess Cake, all thanks
to Lidl. We'll miss them once we're north of Ostersund. Princess Cake is similar
to a Victoria Sponge, filled with plenty of cream and raspberry jam, then the
whole is covered in pale green marzipan. Irresistible!
At Liens Camping, Riddarhyttan
The next 2 days
are wet with heavy rain at night. Between showers we walk round the campsite
(mainly statics terraced on the side of Lake Liens) and along the lane to
Riddarhyttan. The village has a well-stocked store/post office, a restaurant (closed
down) and a Youth Hostel sign pointing into the woods.
The self-service
fuel station is on the site of the old railway station, the lines long gone. It
served passengers until the early 1950s and freight into the 1960s, carrying
iron and copper from local mines. The former station building houses a small
café, now closed out of season, with an exhibition upstairs and monochrome
photos visible through the windows.
We don't join the
long queue to cook pancakes at the campsite grill, though it's a nice gesture
to mark the end of summer.
Local TV shows an
episode of 'Last Tango in Halifax' – a touch of home.
Riddarhyttan to Västanviksbadets Camping, Leksand,
Dalarna – 97 miles
Open 29 April-17 Sept. www.vastanviksbadetscamping.se.
ACSI Card €17/SEK 170 (from 17 Aug) inc 10 amp elec, showers and cooking
facilities. WiFi available to pay online.
N 60.73061 E14.95221
On Sunday morning
we take rd 68 for 15 miles towards Fagersta, then turn left onto rd 66 for
Ludvika, the forested road now starting to roll a little reaching 130 m/430 ft
high. At 32 miles, during a break at a typical lakeside rest area at Barka, the
black clouds bring rain while the sun creates a perfect rainbow below us over
the water. It disappears just as Barry points the camera! Ten miles further in
Ludvika we turn right onto rd 50, a busier and wider 3-lane road, towards
Borlange.
At 53 miles our
lunch break is in a large rest area by a lake (what else!) with picnic tables,
WC and a small café – a good overnight spot. Shortly before Borlange we call at
Lidl (open on Sunday), then turn left at 68 miles onto rd 70/E16 signed for
Mora. Taking the exit for 'Leksand South', we follow a road round the foot of Lake
Siljan to the campsite on its western shore.
The Dutch-run site
developed from a simple bathing place on the lake shore opposite Leksand, 5
miles away by road. The quaint two-storey wooden Reception building dates from
the 1700's and most of the wooden rental cottages that have been gathered here
are 150 years old, differing in layout and size. Now it's low season with a
good ACSI Card price on all pitches, though in high season lakeside pitches
cost extra.
Leksand is a
popular venue for Midsummer festivals, with church-boat races on the lake and
dancing round the maypoles (erected in June – in May there could still be snow
and few leaves on the trees!) and the camp has only 3-day packages available
for 22, 23 and 24 June, with a need to book early! Today, we have the place
almost to ourselves.
At Västanviksbadets Camping, Leksand
Click: magbazpictures.com/leksand-town--camping
Next day is dry
with a cool north wind. We cycle into Leksand (8 km), on a bike path/pavement
as far as the town bridge. The ICA supermarket/post office is open, though the
Tourist Office is closed (Monday).
Riding on
alongside the lake (in search of a café but finding none open) we reach the
graveyard and onion-domed church that can be seen from the campsite directly
across the water. One of Sweden's biggest churches, it is freely open (10
am-5.30 pm), the interior peacefully painted in pale blue and grey, with a
splendid organ, carved wooden pulpit and large crucifix above the altar. It
stands on the oldest church site in Dalarna Province, dating from the 13thC,
though the present church was rebuilt in 1709 following a fire.
On the way back to
the campsite we look at the harbour on the Osterdalalven river, between the
town bridge and the Highway 70 bridge. A couple of old steamers are moored
there and another sails past sounding its hooter. On the south bank a curious
wooden paddle-boat, shaped like a rowing boat, stands on display. Dated 1810,
it carried 12 passengers and a crew of five: four to turn the paddles and one
to steer the rudder.
Leksand to Ljusdals Camping, Ljusdal, Gävleborg –
134 miles
Open all year. www.ljusdalscamping.se. ACSI Card
€19/SEK 185 (from 20 Aug) inc 10 amp elec, showers and cooking facilities. Excellent
free WiFi site-wide. N 61.83894 E16.04059
From Leksand it's
17 miles north on rd 70 to Rattvik, a larger lakeside town, where we leave Lake
Siljan and take rd 301 for 23 miles to Furudal, a village set on the Ore River
between two lakes, with an ice-hockey-school and ice-hall. We continue via
Edsbyn to Bollnas on the quiet 2-lane road 2296/301 between lakes, rivers and
forest, with wooden houses old and new. There is some tree-felling and an occasional
logging truck. New bus shelters line our route, with half for seating, half a
covered bike rack. What a good way to get to school, in a safe country.
After lunch on
Lidl car park in Bollnas, rd 83 parallels the railway northwards along the
Ljusnan River valley. At 131 miles we cross the river, turn left by the large
church and belltower and continue to the campsite on the right of rd 83 by the
shore of Lake Växnan, which flows into Ljusnan River and so to the Gulf of
Bothnia.
It's a friendly
Dutch-run site, where they remember us from last September. We settle on a
pitch overlooking the beach and the lake, ruffled into waves by a cold north
wind. A good place for a short break, catching up on laundry and emails.
At Ljusdals Camping, Ljusdal
Click: magbazpictures.com/ljusdal-old-town
Next morning we
cycle the bike path/pavement past Lake Växnan's bathing shore towards town,
turn right at the church (3 km), then first left and 1 km along the south coast
of the smaller Kyrksjön lake to the Volkpark, lying between lake and the
Ljusnan River. The extensive park area has a splendid collection of 17th and
18thC wooden buildings (bake house, threshing mill, grain store etc) to look
at, set around the large Hembygdsgarden (= homestead).
This farmhouse is
now a wonderfully atmospheric restaurant, recommended for lunch by our campsite
hosts. With two busy dining areas, as well as outdoor seating, the self-service
buffet (11 am-3 pm Mon-Fri; noon-4 pm Sat-Sun) is very popular, especially with
Seniors who get a discount, the weekday set price of SEK 90 being reduced to
SEK 75! It's amazing value for an array of salads, rolls and crisp breads,
fish, meaty burgers, roast spuds, boiled potatoes in a creamy sauce, apple
juice, good coffee and home-made biscuits. The only extra would be drinks from
the bar. www.rest-hembygdsgarden.se
After this feast
we ride on past the sports fields, with an inflatable marquee left over from
last weekend's Skogstransport exhibition, the largest in the country. Skog
= Wood, and the crowds for this annual display of log-transporting
machinery and vehicles had filled every bed in the town, including the campsite
cabins! A bike path takes us round the Kyrksjön lake and over the railway track
into Ljusdal, a pleasant town with several shops including Lidl. Timber is
piled high along the railway lines, so the logs don't all go by road.
On the way back to
camp we visit the church, freely open. A leaflet tells the history of a 12thC
stone church built here on the site of a pagan sacrificial temple. The small
church was lengthened at the end of the 15thC, galleries being added some time
later. After a fire in August 1753 the ravaged church was reconstructed and
enlarged to the size it is today, renovated and repainted in 1914-15, and finally
cleaned and improved (a fire escape from the gallery!) in 1992. Its treasures
include a triptych made in Antwerp around 1500, a 15thC crucifix on the north
wall and a carved pulpit made in 1773.
The massive
detached bell tower has a big bell dated 1754 and a smaller one from 1633,
which carries an interesting inscription, translated in the leaflet as:
“Dear
Christian, What I give is nothing but a dead sound but bear in mind, you who
have a living spirit to know what you should do while you are alive and can
hear me. When I ring do not stay longer outside the house of God and do not
enter without devotion and prayer. Remember when you hear me ring at the
funerals of your friends that I shall soon be ready to serve you for the last
time. And so I wish to serve everyone until I must be consumed with the whole
world, when all living creatures will hear the last ringing of the bells, which
is the last trump on Judgement Day.”
Or to summarise:
Ask not for whom the bell tolls …
Our last day at
Ljusdal is cold and damp. I do some mending while we listen to the play 'Educating
Rita' on BBC Radio 4, with the wonderful Bill Nighy taking the role of Frank, the OU Lecturer played by Michael Caine in the film version. Willy
Russell's brilliant script has hardly dated since 1980.
My ACSI Review of
Ljusdal:
"Second visit to this grassy
lakeside camp, just 3 km from Ljusdal on road 83, with easy cycle path into
town. Swimming beach just below campsite. Very friendly Dutch owners give off-season
ACSI Card rate. Good facilities with private showers. Kitchen with microwave
and hotplate. Excellent free WiFi throughout the site. Ljusdal has a good range
of shops and an interesting old church. Can also recommend the weekday lunch
buffet at the historic Hembygdsgarden (Homestead) Restaurant in the Volkpark, 4
km from camp - with pensioner discount!"
Ljusdal to Camp Viking, Gallo, Jamtland – 112 miles Open all year. www.campviking.se. SEK 250 inc 10 amp elec,
cooking facilities and non-private showers. Free WiFi zone in reception/bar
only. N 62.917989 E15.251596 We drive north through forest on quiet rd 84,
with a break in Ramsjö after 34
miles. Parked by the white wooden church, we watch a couple arrive by car, quickly
measure and photograph a headstone in the graveyard, then leave. We find it
bears one name (male, died 2002 age 73), so perhaps his widow is about to be
added to the inscription. Rd 84 runs parallel with the railway line to
Ange, threading its way between lakes and forest. After Ange, at 71 miles, it
meets the busier E14 linking Sundsvall on the Gulf of Bothnia with Östersund. We turn east (Sundsvall
direction) for 3 miles to Borgsjö
services, to refuel and stay at the Träporten Restaurant & Camping, a site
we used in October 2016 for a night: www.traporten.eu.
Today the wet sloping field is very soft and we're glad to get out, tyres
spinning. So it's back on
E14 northwest, stopping 30 miles short of Östersund at Camp Viking in Gällo
(pronounced 'Yellow'). The campsite's main feature is a bar with real Belgian
beer (open) and a bistro called 'Beaucoup de Bla Bla' (closed). The Belgian
owner (eventually found in the bar) tells us it is 'Oktoberfest' in Gällo.
Asked why this happens in August, she explains it is too cold in October! She
doesn't tell us that the music from the town will keep us awake till 2 am. My
ACSI Review tells the rest of the story: “Unkempt camping between a lake and the busy
noisy road E14. Site entrance next to a petrol station. The owners seem more
interested in running the on-site bar/bistro than attending to the campsite or
welcoming the campers. Plenty of Belgian beer available (but no food). Free
WiFi, but only in the bar. Overpriced in comparison with other Swedish
sites off-season. There is a kitchen with microwave and
hotplate. The other facilities are dreadful. The women's washroom has only two
open showers and no privacy cubicles. The WC is unisex, with unscreened urinals
opposite the handwash basins. Unbelievable! The ancient electrical hookups were 2-pin
with ceramic fuses of unknown amperage. Checkout time was 11 am, after which I was
told the exit barrier code would not work! It was a relief to get out of the
place next morning.” Gällo to Camp Route 45, Hammerdal, Jämtland – 70
miles Open all year. www.camproute45.com. SEK 220 inc 10 amp
elec, showers and cooking facilities. Free WiFi throughout. N 63.57500
E15.34333 Away well before
the 11 am deadline, we continue on E14 to Östersund, slipping off at the
roundabout to shop at the huge Coop Forum. The parking area is busy with
Swedish, Norwegian and German motorhomes heading south. We know from experience
that the Lidl in the town centre has only a small car park, so leave that to
the locals. This is the largest town we'll see until Gällivare, over 400 miles
away inside the Arctic Circle. The last Lidl, McDonalds, crowds, traffic – now
for the real Sweden! Our route is ever-north
for Swedish Lapland, soon meeting the Inland Road E45, the Inlandsvägen,
past Lits and into the endless forest, shadowing the Inlandsbanan (Inland
Railway) line to its terminus in Gällivare. Pausing for lunch in a roadside
rest area, we see a Crane on the edge of the woods, though no Elk despite the
signs. Entering the small
town of Hammerdal, we turn left along the short lane to a delightful camp
tucked away in the forest. It's very quiet (just two German motorhomes here).
We were really pleased to find this site in autumn 2016 and it feels like
visiting old friends as we catch up with the owners, James & Julie. Luckily
we have just missed the annual Joel Mässan festival in mid-August (www.joelmassan.se)
when both campsite and town are full. James had enjoyed
hosting a team of Irish double-headed axe throwers, come to compete in the
championship!
Settled by the Fyran
River, we enjoy a dinner of roast chicken (Coop Forum) and defrost the
'Hatherwoods Afternoon Tea' cream cakes (from Lidl in Ljusdal), followed by an
episode of Midsomer Murders on Swedish TV. A decidedly better evening than
yesterday! At Camp Route 45, Hammerdal Over the next 5
days we have some clear sunny skies, though the nights are down to a chilly
7°C. There is time for laundry and cleaning, writing and reading. It's good to
see James & Julie again, with easy conversation over James's blueberry
pancakes. He also presents us with Chanterelle mushrooms, gathered along the
Wilderness Road to the north, and proposes that we relocate into Squirrel
Cottage, one of the campiste Stugas.
Click: magbazpictures.com/hammerdal-cabin-life Along the
40-minute forest trail, we pick lingenberries and blueberries to be turned into
jam. We also stroll into Hammerdal (1 mile) to use the ATM inside the
supermarket and enjoy a lunchtime Dagens Rätt (meal of the day) at the
bus station grill: salad bar, crisp breads, hot dish, soft drink, coffee &
biscuits for 80 SEK. The cheesy fish & pasta dish is excellent, cooked by
the Turkish chef who has run the grill for over 30 years. An afternoon cycle
ride (total 22 km) takes us past Hammerdal school, through the churchyard,
along a path by the lake, then westwards on 8 km of quiet forested road to the
village of Sikas on the Inland Railway line. There are a few houses and farms,
a stable yard and one shop/fuel station. As the sky darkens, heralding rain, we
swiftly return the way we came rather than extending the ride.
Click: magbazpictures.com/hammerdal-camping Click: magbazpictures.com/hammerdal-village
Talking with James
& Julie and their children, we are grateful to learn so much about life in
Hammerdal and the Swedish education system, summarised in my article 'Life in a small
Swedish Town'. Hammerdal to Kolgardens Camping, Vilhelmina, Västerbotten,
Lapland – 103 miles Open all year. www.kolgarden.se/camping/. SEK 250
inc 10 amp elec, excellent showers and cooking facilities. Free WiFi
throughout. N 64.64998 E16.59240 On the last day of
August, after a lengthy farewell Fika (the Swedish custom of coffee and
pastries) with our generous hosts at Hammerdal, we head up the E45, against the
flow of German, Dutch and Norwegian campers going south. The only other traffic
is logging trucks. After 21 miles we go through Stromsund (where the Wilderness
Road loop joins E45), then on past the deserted lakeside camp at Lövberga, 13
miles later. At 61 miles we
enter the Region of Lapland, the E45 Inland Road now marked with new snow poles
as it rolls through the forest alongside the Inland Railway at an average
altitude of 1,000 ft. We take a break in Dorotea, a nice little town on the Inlandsbanan
with a campsite, shops, a hotel/restaurant and the Polar Caravan Factory &
Museum, all of which we know well. Then on to
Vilhelmina, a historic forestry town on the Inland Road and Inland Railway.
It's one of three settlements in Lapland named after Fredrika Dorotea Wilhelmina
of Baden, Queen Consort 1797-1809 (married to King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden).
After the town centre, with a timber church dated 1792, we soon turn left off
E45 onto Sagavägen (the start/end of the Wilderness Road loop). Just a
mile along is a well-kept campsite with first class facilities (large kitchen,
dining room, sitting room, individual heated bathrooms, laundry) and we settle
on a pitch overlooking the extensive Lake Volgsjön.
Click: magbazpictures.com/vilhelmina-camping The Vildmarksvägen
(Wilderness Road) is a 500 km loop into the Swedish mountains, almost reaching
the Norwegian border. The top section, above the treeline over Klimpfjäll and
the Stekenjokk plateau, is only open in summer (early June to mid-Oct). Having
driven round it more than once in the past, we can recommend it for waterfalls
and – well - wilderness. The motorhome is ideal for this circuit, allowing a
leisurely journey with an overnight stop on the way. www.vildmarksvagen.com SEPTEMBER 2017 At Kolgardens Camping, Vilhelmina Next day a strong
cold wind deters us from cycling into Vilhelmina; a short walk round the
campsite and by the lake is more than enough! Two of the Stugas here are
occupied by hunters, complete with hounds, and I'm sad to see game bags hanging
on their porches with the distinctive black (male) and brown (female) heads of
Capercaillie poking out of the top. This is what was meant by a camper in
Hammerdal, who said it was the season for shooting 'black birds'. If only they
could shoot back! A much nicer sight is a red squirrel carrying a large fungus
up a tree, then holding it to nibble in safety. There are also plenty of Wagtails
and Chaffinch.
In the well
equipped camp kitchen, the Hammerdal berries yield 4 jars of jam.
My ACSI Review of
Kolgardens written on our first visit in Sept 2011 still holds true: “A
real gem of a campsite, 5 km from Vilhelmina on the 'Wilderness Road', set by a
beautiful lake. It has a summer restaurant, sauna and excellent camping
facilities, with Hotel standard family bathrooms, kitchen, comfortable lounge
(with internet and free WiFi) and a laundry. A favourite!” Vilhelmina to Slagnäs Camping, Slagnäs, Norrbotten,
Lapland – 104 miles (alt 415 m/1,370 ft) Open all year. www.slagnascamping.com. SEK 230 inc 10
amp elec, showers and cooking facilities. Free WiFi throughout. N 65.58458
E18.17284 A fox crosses the
E45 as we head north, pausing after 14 miles in the rest area by the peaceful
salmon-fishing campsite on the Vojma River. At 33 miles at Nybyggarland we pass
a Sami souvenir shop offering overnight parking for SEK 50 (pay at Café -
closed). In Storuman (= Big
Man), 7 miles later, we shop at the Coop store conveniently placed on the left
of the E12/E45. The E12 continues west to Norway, while we stay on E45 Inland
Road, following the Inland Railway north. Lunch break at 84 miles by Sorsele
railway station/museum/café/tourist office, all closed (at weekends). The
Inland Railway itself only operates in summer (12 June-20 August 2017). See Inlandsbanan timetable for
2018! A sign on the platform tells us we are 920 km from Stockholm, at a height
of 340 m (over 1,100 ft). Continuing to
Slagnäs, we find a quiet campsite off to the left by the Skellefteälaven River,
just before the E45 bridge. It's a super site with a kitchen and community room
(also used by the local football team etc), run by a Swiss couple: Tobias &
Frau Stowasser.
Before dinner we stroll
into Slagnäs. History trail signs show that it was once an important logging
and manufacturing centre. Colonisation and settlement began after 1800, around
a saw mill by the river. From the early 1900s with the coming of the railway,
Slagnäs developed businesses and acquired a smithy, post and telephone office,
local paper and radio station, school, library, Milly's café/boarding house,
church and graveyard. Now the village,
with a few houses, a petrol station and the campsite, is just a dormitory for
Arvidsjaur, 30 miles away. The shop and railway station are only open in
summer, while the small church (Arjeplog Diocese) built in the 1950s holds
services in June and July, when tourists and anglers are around.
Click: magbazpictures.com/slagnas-rail--river At Slagnäs Camping, Slagnäs Next day , a lovely
Sunday morning, we take the boardwalk alongside the Skellefteälven to the
rapids, gingerly cross the river on the wooden-planked railway bridge, then
return on the other side, passing under the old road bridge and along to the new
E45 bridge, where the boardwalk ends on both banks. It's easy enough to
scramble up to the road, cross the river and return to camp. The boardwalk was built
3 years ago for the use of anglers. Back at camp, the
only other residents tell us that they have seen eight Elks while walking in
the surrounding forest – or the same Elk eight times! Who says Germans have no
sense of humour? We also learn some
interesting statistics about Arjeplog Kommun, where the population density
appeals to us: - Arjeplog
Kommun (Municipality), Norrbotten County, Swedish Lapland (bordering Norway):
- 2,868
inhabitants over 14,494 sq km = 0.2 people per sq km. The most sparsely
populated municipality in Sweden, and the only one with 50% women and 50% men.
- If
this population density was exchanged with Berlin, the German capital would
have 204 inhabitants and Arjeplog 47.5 million.
- There
are 8,727 lakes (Harnavan is the deepest in Sweden); 9,573 islands and 3 major
rivers (plus infinite number of brooks and streams).
- It
contains 1 Natural Park, 28 Nature Reserves, and 2500 km of hiking trails
(including part of the long-distance Kungsleden
or Royal Trail, from Norway to Finland).
- The
highest recorded summer temperature is 31.2° C; the lowest in winter -52.6°
C.
- The
water is so clear that it is not purified for drinking.
- Arjeplog
produces 130,507 kWh per inhabitant of water powered energy.
No wonder it feels
so peaceful here!
My ACSI Review:
“A peaceful grassy campsite just off the E45
Inlandsvagen, alongside the Skelleftealven River. Helpful Swiss owners,
speaking German and French. The services building is warm and clean, with free
showers and a kitchen with electric cooker etc. The site-wide free WiFi works
well. There is a 1.5 km boardwalk along both sides of the river, for strolling
or fishing, or walk into the old village - a station on the Inland Railway. The
site makes a very peaceful base for exploring the area or a comfortable night
stop when driving the E45.” Slagnäs to Skabram Camping, Jokkmokk, Norrbotten, Lapland
– 130 miles Open all year. www.skabram.se.
SEK 200 inc 10 amp elec, showers and cooking facilities. Free WiFi. N 66.60500
E19.76200 Ever-northwards on
another beautiful sunny September morning, with the E45 to ourselves apart from
the odd truck or southbound motorhome. Our SatNav reports a 'delay with light
traffic' followed by 'now flowing'. Where on earth is she looking? We turn off into
Arvidsjaur to fill up with diesel at 33 miles, then continue north on the eerily quiet highway. The only turn-offs are gravel roads signed (sometimes 80
km) to farmsteads. At 66 miles we lunch in a large rest area before the Pitea
River bridge, a popular camperstop with water, latrine and WC. Twenty miles
later we see our first reindeer on this journey - always a delight – grazing in
the forest. A few miles before
the Arctic Circle we meet road works and stretches of rough gravel, traffic
lights, a 5-minute wait and a control van! Turning into the Polar Circle Café
& Camperstop at 125 miles we are surprised to find nobody parked there, the
café closed and electric hook-ups turned off, though WC, latrine and water are
available. Not keen on spending a night alone here (we've seen bear prints on
the ground on a previous visit), we drive on to the Jokkmokk roundabout and
consider the options. There is a simple Dutch-run site at Skabram, 3 km west of
town; the huge 'Arctic Camp' with water slides and pools, 3 km east of town; or
a large rest area (no facilities), 3 km north up E45.
We go for the farm
site at Skabram, which proves not the best choice but OK for one night. My ACSI
Review: “A rather unkempt site on a former cheese
farm, just above the Polar Circle and 3 km west of Jokkmokk. The Dutch owner
speaks good English but could hardly be bothered to show us where to park or
plug in. Nor did he explain how to get the free WiFi, which barely functioned. The
facilities were just about adequate, with a hotplate and microwave in the
kitchen. A handful of farm animals (goats, hens, a rabbit) to be seen and eggs
for sale.” Jokkmokk to Gällivare Camping, Gällivare,
Norrbotten, Lapland – 61 miles Open 15 May-24 Sept (cabins all year). www.gellivarecamping.com. SEK 230 inc 10 amp elec, showers and cooking
facilities. Free WiFi. Free use of
washer and drier (book at Reception). N 67.1290 E20.6776 Two miles back
into Jokkmokk, the Sami capital of Sweden, where all is quiet. The Coop on the
main street has warm Fika pastries on offer (3 for SEK 20); I buy 6. Länge
levet fika (long live fika), as it says on the bag! We've previously visited
the wonderful Ajtte Museum of Sami
Life and Culture, as well as the Lapp Church, so don't linger this
time. North again on
E45, past the many pylons of Lilla Power Station at 16 miles: a huge scar on
the land. Our road crosses the dam on the Lilla Lule River, with bare rock to
the right and water to the left. To the south-east it joins the Stor Lule
river, flowing southeast to Lulea on the Gulf of Bothnia. In another 8 miles
there's a car park from which we walk down to two viewpoints above the
Harspranget Falls, via a sloping boardwalk and 133 wooden steps. We have time
to count them on the way back! A memorial lists the 10 men killed building the
dam here in 1947-50.
At 30 miles the
enormous Vattenfall hydro-electric
power station complex at Porjus hoves into view. It has a Visitor Centre
offering free guided tours of the original station that opened in 1915 and we
spent a memorable hour there in July 2015. Porjus village has a café, fuel,
station on the Inland Railway and a hostel/B&B called Arctic Colours. Delayed by
roadworks, we lunch on Coop pastries on a gravel parking area (at 418 m/1,380
ft) 5 miles before Gällivare, below Dundret Mountain, which rises to 821
m/2,700 ft. The autumn colours are illuminated as the sun breaks through, the
slender birch trees shivering their golden leaves in the wind. On to the campsite
alongside the Vassara River, with a good view of Dundret. It's a short walk
into the centre of Gällivare, the northern terminus of the Inland Railway and
the largest town since Östersund. Here you can arrange to visit an open-cast
copper mine (Sweden's largest), or the world's second biggest underground iron
ore mine - for a considerable price. Blasting can be heard and felt. The new hard-standing
pitches by the river are a big improvement since our last visit, when the site
was very boggy. The free laundry room has to be reserved and I take the next
available slot, from 8-11 am tomorrow! My ACSI Review: “A large site with new hard-standing pitches
alongside the river, as well as a gravel area with some statics. Short walk
into Gällivare, 'the mining capital of Europe' and the northern terminus of the
Inland Railway, with shops and places to eat. . Free WiFi worked well. Also appreciated free
use of the laundry room with washer and drier, bookable at Reception. Very good kitchen and dining facilities with
cookers, etc. My only criticism is the lack of privacy in
the showers. There is a large changing room and a few small cubicles with only
a curtain - and nowhere secure to leave belongings.” Gällivare to Pajala Camping, Pajala, Norrbotten,
Lapland – 91 miles Open all year. www.pajalacamping.se. SEK 270 inc 10 amp elec, showers and cooking
facilities. Free WiFi (but out of order).
N 67.20381 E23.4084 Up early to
collect the laundry key and complete a wash & dry before leaving, we are
delayed by the machine's refusal to move on from the wash cycle. The two nice
women in Reception 'can do nothing'. We agree with them! Barry eventually
forces the washer dial to rinse and empty and we leave the machine for the
'technician' to fix later. While waiting I
chat with a Scottish couple in the kitchen. They had flown to Stockholm, taken
an overnight mainline train from there to Gällivare, a 4-hour bus ride into the
wilderness, then a boat across a lake, to the start of a camping trek which
finished here, ready to fly home via Stockholm and Amsterdam, all in their 2
week holiday time. How good is retirement! We finally get
away after lunch, southeast on E10 for 15 miles, then east on rd 394, turning
right at 73 miles onto rd 395 for Pajala. The only traffic we see on these back
roads is one large bus, carrying goods and parcels at the rear: a service
called Bussgods. We drive through
the small town of Pajala, under a road bridge and along to the campsite on the
bank of the Torne River. The price is exorbitant, the bank card machine isn't
working (?), the WiFi is down, the couple in Reception are unsympathetic.
Tomorrow we leave for Finland! My ACSI Review tells the story: “This was the most expensive of the 13
Swedish camps we visited in August-September 2017, and one of the
unfriendliest. The price was far too high considering it was low-season, the
'free WiFi' was not working at all, and my bank card wouldn't work, requiring a
cash payment. (Strange, since it had worked well at all the other sites, fuel
stations, etc.) The argumentative owners finally offered me
'third night free', but no reduction for one or two nights. One night was more
than enough and we only stayed because it was quite late in the day and there
was no alternative nearby. Facilities included a kitchen (no cooker) and
a sitting room with a wood-burning stove labelled 'Do Not Light'.” INTO FINLAND Note: Finland's
currency is the Euro; currently €1.08 = £1
Finland is one hour ahead of
Sweden – put clocks forward! Pajala to Harriniva Camping/Hotel/Arctic Sledge Dog
Centre, Muonio, Finnish Lapland – 95 miles Camping open 25 May-24 Sept. www.harriniva.fi. €25 inc 10 amp elec, showers and basic cooking
facilities. Free WiFi at and around Reception.
N 67.934407 E23.656090 Two miles back
into Pajala to spend our remaining Swedish coins on croissants and Fika pastries
at the Coop, then north on rd 403 alongside the border river, its name changing
from Torne to Muonio. At 18 miles we cross the river that divides 'Ruotsi' from
'Suomi' (as the Finns call Sweden and Finland), park in the small town of
Kolari and take to our bicycles to look round. The bank is open but
no, they don't change Swedish currency – after all, Sweden is 3 miles away and
in a different time zone! Kolari seems to be dying, the supermarket and post
office both closed down, and the pub/pizza place closed until 2 pm. We cycle
along to the junction with the main road E8, where there is a filling station
opposite the 'Eight Seasons Café' (the Sami name 8 seasons through the year,
based on the cycle of reindeer husbandry). This proves an excellent place for
lunch (Lounas) with a generous buffet for €11 each: pea soup
(traditional on Thursdays), salads, meat patties or fish, vegetables, pancakes
with jam and fresh fruit, soft drink and coffee. Complimenting Nina, the owner,
on her food and her language skill, we discover that her husband is English.
They also run a small summer café at the railway station. We follow lunch
with a short sunny cycle ride, out to the railway station, then back through
Kolari, over the bridge to Sweden and return to parked motorhome – on bike
paths all the way. As Nina had warned
of road works and delays on the E8 up to Muonio, we re-cross the bridge to
drive 16 miles north on a minor road on the Swedish side. It turns to gravel,
empty and slow going, but we see two fine reindeer grazing and a man planting snow
poles along the verges. The late afternoon sun casts long shadows and the
autumnal trees glow. After meeting tarmac on rd 99, we continue north to
Muodoslompolo, then turn right along rd 404 for the bridge over the Muonio
River. In Finland once more, we turn right onto E8 after the bridge, then it's
a mile to the Harriniva entrance.
Click: magbazpictures.com/entering-Finland With good memories
of camping here years ago at a husky dog farm/river rafting centre by the
fast-flowing Muonio River, we find things have changed! It is all about the new
smart hotel and expensive restaurant, where the receptionist can hardly be
bothered with the scruffy campsite at the back. The only information is that
tickets for the Husky Farm guided tour cost €8 per person and the WiFi won't
work beyond the hotel. Disappointed, we find a place on the unkempt uneven site
and have an argument with a Dutch camper about his loose noisy dog. We find the WiFi
does work in the motorhome (whatever Reception said) but otherwise the campsite
is truly awful. Not surprisingly it's not a member of ACSI. The dingy little
kitchen has 2 rusty old electric hot plates and an ancient washing machine that
is padlocked. There are only 2 women's showers inside the one cubicle; when I
venture to complain, I am told that new facilities are planned! The chemical
toilet dump is at ground level in the middle of the coach park, a long way from
the camping area and, in any case, too disgusting to use. Time to go south! Muonio to Camping Nilimella, Sodankylä, Lapland –
107 miles Open 1 June-30 Sept. www.nilimella.fi/en/camping. Late season offer: €20 inc 10 amp elec,
showers and cooking facilities. (Normally €27 with Camping Key Europe card; €29
without.) Free WiFi near Reception. N 67.4163889 E26.6075000 A mile back to
Muonio, then right on rd 79 through the Pallas-Yllästunturi National Park,
which has long-distance hiking trails with unlocked cabin-shelters. A light
drizzle falls on the sturdy hikers setting off from a car park. Road signs warn
it's an area of Reindeer Husbandry, the trees glow in shades of Ruska – the
lovely Finnish word for autumn (seasons 6 and 7?) At 40 miles in
Sirka, below the scarred hillside of Levi ski resort, we check out the camping
at the Levilehto Apartments, which does not appeal. After another 18 miles on
rd 79 to Kittilä, where it is 8°C at noon, we turn left on rd 80, past a simple
campsite that looks open, and head east for Sodankylä. Parked for lunch at 74
miles, by a white-fenced forest cemetery near Tepsa (just a few houses), we
watch two couples visit their family graves. They plant heather and tidy up,
though the plots will soon lie under permanent snow for months (typically the
end of October until mid-May! There is a shed with tools and a well with a
bucket and chain to get water. Arriving in
Sodankylä we drive straight to the 'World's Northmost Lidl' (above the Arctic
Circle!) and find some Hatherwood's frozen favourites: Chicken & Leek Pie,
Steak & Ale Pie, English Fish & Chips and a Lemon & Lime Meringue
Tart! Only another 2 miles, over the Kitinen River bridge, to a spacious campsite
we know and love. As rain sets in,
we settle on a nicely hedged pitch behind Reception, where the WiFi works well.
A good dinner, thanks to Lidl, is followed by the BBC1 Last Night of the Proms,
live on Finnish TV because the conductor (Sakari Oramo) is from Finland. Quite
a treat. At Camping Nilimella, Sodankylä The weather turns
much colder with an easterly wind and some heavy rain. This is a good place to
pause for a day or two, writing and planning. The Finnish TV shows many films
in English (with subtitles) including Morgan Freeman in the Stephen King story
'Shawshank Redemption'. Between rain showers
one morning we walk into town to change our Swedish notes at the bank (open
10-4) but discover that the Cashier is only there until noon and we've just
missed her! But we do get a nice lunch at the bus station café: thick veg soup,
bread & butter, moussaka and salad, soft drinks and coffee for €10 each. On
the way back we look at the new (stone-built, 1859) and old (wooden, 1689)
churches before the bridge. The old church, set by the Kitinen River, holds
services in the summer and is popular for weddings. Next day we walk
over to the bank after breakfast and finally succeed with the exchange
(commission €5). The camp
facilities are good, as described in my ACSI Review: “A short walk across the river bridge to the
town centre. Sodankylä has plenty of shops (with the world's northernmost Lidl)
and places to eat, as well as riverside walks and a 17thC wooden church. The spacious campsite has individual hedged
pitches near Reception, with more places down on the open field nearer to the
services. There is free use of a good kitchen with
cooker and microwave, as well as showers with private cubicles. Free reliable
WiFi works only on a few pitches by Reception. Laundry has washers for 1 Euro, plus free
drier. With an end-of-season price reduction, the
site forms a welcome break on the north-south route above the Arctic Circle. The only negative is a lack of security, with
a public road running through the site and Reception only staffed for an hour
each evening at this time of year.” However,
the above was written before using the laundry! On checking the washing machine
that I'd set on 40°, I found it literally boiling and expelling clouds of steam
into a room resembling a sauna! Barry to the rescue again, persuading the
machine to stop heating and complete the rinse and empty cycle. My dressing
gown had changed colour, a light shirt was ruined and the duvet covers are now permanently
crinkled! The Warden was very apologetic when he came on duty and granted us
one free night in compensation. New machines are apparently on order!
Sodankyla to Camping Kuukiuru, Vuostimo, Lapland –
49 miles Open all year. www.kuukiuru.fi/eng/. €20 inc 16 amp elec, shower and good free
WiFi. €18 for 2nd and 3rd day, then €15.
N 66.98122 E27.53299
Before leaving, we
drive into town to shop at Lidl, refuel and find the Kylmänen Food outlet, selling
local produce (mainly reindeer and elk: fresh, frozen or tinned). The simple factory
shop that we remember was a mile north of Sodankylä on E75 but it had closed,
with a sign on the door 'Moved to Kasarmintie 10, behind the S-Market'. We'd
actually passed it in the town centre! It's now a shiny new store with a coffee
corner (coffee + donut €1.50), selling reindeer hide rugs and other souvenirs
as well as meats. I buy a 6-pack of the delicious Poronkeitto (Cream of
Reindeer Soup).
Then we are away,
over the bridge and southeast on E63/rd 5, a rolling black ribbon of empty
tarmac, threading its way between gilded silver-birch trees. The verges are
turning red and gold, grazed by a small herd of reindeer in a fine mist of
rain. This is Ruska at its best.
At
37 miles we pause at a memorial for the Battle of Pelkosenniemi, 16-18 December
1939, which was a Finnish victory in the Winter War (Nov 1939–March 1940) when
Finland fought back the Russians. Pelkosenniemi is another 2 miles along our
road, the only village between Sodankylä and Kemijärvi. It has a bridge over
the Kemi River, 2 shops, health centre, fuel/cafe and a parking area with a statue
of local songwriter and guitarist Antii Hulkko, better known (if not to us) as Andy
McCoy who played with Iggy Pop!
Another 10 golden miles to a peaceful rustic campsite, cabins
and café by the Kemi River – another favourite of ours. The genial Russian
owners are from Murmansk, which is nearer than Helsiniki! Boris has a very
little English, his wife none, but we get by. Use of the snooker table, the
crazy golf or a rowing boat on the river are all free, as is the reliable WiFi
and a hot shower in the old wood-fired sauna. It does lack a kitchen, though
there's a washing-up sink, toilet, water and dump.
We are soon enjoying a dinner of Chicken & Leek Pie and
Princess Cake from this morning's shopping trip. The reindeer soup will be
saved for Christmas or for gifts (but not for small children!)
Click: magbazpictures.com/camping-kuukiuru
At Camping Kuukiuru, Vuostimo
We easily linger
for a few days, while the price mysteriously diminishes! Sadly, the cold north wind and threat of rain deter us from cycling our usual circular route in the
Pyhä-Luosto National Park. We walk around the site and by the Kemi River, as
well as following a rather boggy 3-km Nature Trail in the forest across the
road, where the silence and the colours of Ruska are wonderful. Notices
about reindeer farming in the area tell us that the animals outnumber the human
population three to one!
In the Travel
Section of the Guardian, I notice a request for readers to send in tips on
where to see spectacular autumn colours. The ten best entries will be chosen to
print, with a single first prize. That's a good challenge for a rainy day and I
submit the following piece on Finnish Lapland, along with a photo Barry had
taken in the forest. Didn't win the prize but it was among the chosen ten:
“ A cycling trip in Finland, north of the
Arctic Circle, in September is incredibly colourful. Autumn is one of the eight
seasons for the indigenous Sami people: time to round up their free-roaming
reindeer. The Finnish word for autumn colour is ruska: it's the time when
silver birches turn gold, the forest floor becomes thick with jewel-coloured
blueberries and lingonberries, and mountain ash is heavy with scarlet berries.
All this is set against a backdrop of evergreen firs, the taiga stretching from
Norway to Siberia, and the silver of Finland's 180,000 lakes, soon to turn
white with ice and snow. The midnight sky joins in too, illuminated with the
greens and reds of the northern lights.” My entry, albeit with an inferior stock photograph, was published in the
Guardian on Thursday, 21 September:
the guardian travel/2017 autumn-colours-readers-travel-tips
This
vivid description of the Finnish autumn is something that Barry could not attempt.
He is colour-blind!
Vuostimo to Lomakeskus (Holiday Centre) Himmerki, Posio, Lapland – 100
miles Open all year. www.himmerki.com. €21 (inc €3 discount for CKE Card) with 16
amp elec, showers and cooking facilities. 4th night free (pay
electricity only). Free WiFi at Reception/Restaurant. N 66.080586 E28.284026 Heading south now
on rd 5 we follow the Kemi River to Kemijärvi. The silver-birch leaves are
falling like golden pennies while the fir trees guard their evergreen needles.
Less than a mile down the road we pass a reindeer herd grazing in a fenced
field; the autumn round-up has started. At 22 miles we turn into Kemijärvi, at
the head of a vast lake, and shop at Lidl. The nearby seasonal campsite is
already closed. Rd 944 now
continues south, rolling through the forest of green and gold, home to a few
more reindeer. At 35 miles we cross the Arctic Circle, a poignant moment
leaving the Far North. A layby on the west side of the lake, 3 miles later, is
an idyllic place for lunch. At 39 miles we slip past Camping Matkatupa, another
favourite, sad that it's now getting too cold and too late in the season to
pause awhile with Elvi and Urho. Next time (we do hope there'll be a next
time!) After crossing the
Kemijoki River at Autti, 20 miles later, we meet the more main road 81
(Rovaniemi-Kuusamo) and turn east, past the café we once cycled to from
Matkatupa. On past the gravel road turning for Auttiköngäs, where there is
parking for a lovely walk we have done before, through a forested canyon with a waterfall, wooden log
chute, hiking trail and a rustic cafe open in summer. Not today, though. The small town of
Posio at 95 miles has fuel and supermarkets. Four miles later we turn right at
the sign and follow a 1-km rough track to the splendid 'Holiday Village' tucked
away in the forest on the side of lake Kitkajärvi. Reception is at the large café/restaurant (open 7.30 am-9
pm), where you can use the WiFi or eat (eg breakfast buffet €7, till 9.30 am).
The lake is good for angling or swimming and the area is a base for hunting,
berry picking, hiking trails and cross-country skiing. Himmerki (= Heavenly) has a large range of cottages and cabins, as
well as the 28-pitch campsite. The name is
said to derive from a travelling vicar who 'in olden times' rested here on a
sandy ridge after rowing across the lake and declared 'What a heavenly place' –
a good story! But it is true that the Municipality of Posio is the most
water-rich in Finland, with some 3,000 lakes and ponds. Here lake Kitkajärvi
claims to be Europe's largest spring, giving unbelievably clear water and an
abundance of fish. We find our peaceful place under the trees and watch the
roaming reindeer feast on plentiful berries. The evening turns showery as I
bake a 'Hatherwoods' Steak & Ale pie in the new services building kitchen. We gave the site a good review in 2010, which I now update:
(2010):
An excellent site, very peacefully located 1 kilometre off the main road on a
lovely lake. Reindeer ambled past our door, eating the berries on the forest
floor! Brilliant heated facilities, good laundry, restaurant with breakfast and
lunch buffets. Free WiFi in the restaurant. Very good price inclusive
electricity and every 4th night almost free. (Sept
2017): Second visit to this beautiful lakeside site, tucked away in the forest
off the main road, 5 miles south of Posio. Reindeer still amble by, eating the
berries on the forest floor! Super new service house with well equipped
kitchen. Restaurant with breakfast and lunch buffets. Free
WiFi only in the restaurant/reception area.
Posio to Camping Hossan Lumo (Erä-Hossa), Hossa,
Karelia – 84 miles Cabins open all year, Camping services June-31
Oct. www.hossanlumo.fi. €24 (inc €1 discount for Camping Card
International) with 16 amp elec, showers and cooking facilities. Free WiFi on pitches
very near Reception. N 65.44293 E29.55108 Over a cold and
rainy breakfast we are cheered by the sight of a stately stag reindeer grazing
on the copious berries right outside our window! On the way out of Himmerki we
park by the restaurant/reception to get a WiFi signal and answer a couple of
emails, then take the 1-km track to meet rd 81 and head east. The SatNav gives
a warning of 'animals in road' and, sure enough, we have to slow down several
times for reindeer. At 28 miles we
turn south on rd 5/E63 for 6 miles to Kuusamo, an industrial town, where we
turn off at the roundabout to a large parking area with fuel and shops,
including Lidl. After a bite of lunch we continue south on rd 5, now signed as
the Via Karelia though I don't think the Romans came this way! Five
miles later, rd 866 turns off to a border crossing for those with a visa – a
stark reminder of the proximity of Russia. We leave rd 5 at
52 miles, turning left on rd 843 for about 30 miles to Hossa (an area rather
than a village). A right turn is signed to the Visitor Centre and campsite for Hossa National Park (the country's newest, established
in 2017). The new Visitor Centre, with displays, a film and a busy lunch buffet
in the restaurant, is surprisingly crowded. The distracted Ranger on the
information desk tells us the campsite is almost full (!), costs €25 and has no
WiFi except in the Centre. At least he supplies a free map covering the 110 sq
km of National Park. Driving round to investigate the campsite, we find it
packed, with only 2 empty places to squeeze into. This amazes us, after weeks
of near-empty sites! Back to rd 843, to
check out a second campsite a couple of miles further along on the side of a
lake, which proves to be much quieter, only 5 miles west of the Russian border.
The friendly young woman in the Reception café speaks with a perfect Irish
accent, so I ask where she comes from. 'From here, but my husband is from
Dublin'! We take her advice and park right by Reception to get a WiFi signal,
though it is bitterly cold there with an icy wind and cold drizzle sweeping
across the lake. The few other campers are sensibly sheltering among the trees
and we're told it has been much wetter and colder than usual for the last
month. At a warmer time
of year, this would be a good site for boating, angling or hiking the 90 km of
marked trails but activities will soon turn to skiing and ice-fishing. The
cabins remain open but the abysmal unheated camping services are only suitable
for summer. My ACSI report: “A
lakeside site in the Hossa National Park, ideally placed for hiking or sailing.
Friendly English-speaking reception with small cafe. Only
suitable for summer camping, as the facilities were unheated and poorly
insulated. The kitchen was dismal and much too cold to spend time in. There is
a washing machine but no drier and nowhere to hang clothes. Cabins
remain open through the winter. Free
WiFi if very near reception.” At Camping Hossan Lumo (Erä-Hossa),
Hossa Next day remains
very cold and wet, a day to keep indoors and deal with correspondence. We
certainly don't envy the small group who gather for a day's hiking, kitted out
with serious waterproofs and small backpacks. This part of the
Karelian Forest has a long history of occupation, with traces of logging,
reindeer husbandry and meadow culture among the eskers (long gravel ridges
formed in the Ice Age). There are even two cliff sites with 4,500-year-old rock
paintings, showing reindeer, figures and rippling water, but they are only
accessible on foot – or possibly by mountain bike or 'fat bike' (to be hired
from the campsite). Our hosts
recommend a visit to the nearby Hossa Reindeer Park. On
checking its website, however, it appears to be a farm rather than a park, with
an expensive restaurant serving reindeer! We stay home and braise some pork
chops instead. Hossa to Camping Ristijärven Pirtti, Ristijärvi,
Eastern Finland – 105 miles Open all year. www.ristijarvenpirtti.fi. €27 inc 10 amp elec, showers and cooking
facilities. Free WiFi on pitches near Reception. N 64.48979 E 28.18267 Still cold though
the bitter NE wind has dropped as we drive south on rd 843, dodging reindeer on
both sides of the road. The tiny settlement of Juntusranta, 17 miles along, has
a small shop, fuel, a lakeside rest area and a left turn signed 8 km to a place
that's only 3 km short of the Russian border, though there is no crossing
point. Continuing through a fine drizzle, along the ribbon of tarmac which
winds through the golden forest rolling over eskers, we meet no vehicles except
an occasional logging truck that emerges on a track. Another left turn is
signed 13 km along a rough road to Pirttivaara, a summer Bear-Watching Safari
centre, just 2 km from Russia (again, no border crossing except for bears). At 50 miles we
meet the junction with road 912 and turn left for 5 miles to the Winter War
Museum (open May-end September). Before walking round the outdoor memorial
site, we lunch in the museum café: pea & ham soup (it's the Thursday
tradition again), bread, salad, fruit juice, pancakes with strawberry jam,
coffee) for €9 each. Fortified, we wrap up for the partly-boarded walkway in
the woods leading to a lakeside shelter and returning past reminders of the
fighting here from 1-7 January 1940 (a 3.2 km or 2 mile walk in total). The museum
supplies two free leaflets in English describin g 'The Winter War Battles in
Suomussalmi and Events along the Raate Road 1939-40' and 'The Raate Frontier
Guard Museum'. The Raate Frontier Guard post is the only remaining example of
the guard-houses built before WW2 by the independent state of Finland, standing
at the eastern end of Raate Road at the Russian frontier. Unfortunately it's
about 10 miles of gravel track away – too far to walk, too rough to drive our
motorhome and too cold to think of cycling today. Click: magbazpictures.com/war-museum
Returning 5 miles
to the junction, we turn west on rd 912, cross a wide bridge 4 miles later at
Suomussalmi and join rd 5/E63, turning south. It's faster going on this
highway, with nothing to delay us until Ristijärvi. After passing through the
town, the campsite is on the right by a lake (of course). It's expensive but
has good warm facilities and reliable WiFi. I can use the washer & drier
(€5 all in) 'as soon as my washing is finished' says the warden, before
disappearing in his car to fetch some cigarettes. It does all get done, after
dark. The nights are drawing in – tomorrow is the Equinox.
Ristijärvi to Hyvärilä Holiday & Youth Centre,
Nurmes, Karelia – 97 miles Campsite open 22 May-17 Sept (€26, less €2
discount and every 3rd night free with CKE). www.hyvarila.fi/en. Motorhome parking available rest of year (as
now): €15 inc 10 amp elec, use of WC/showers in hotel and free WiFi (3rd night
reduced to €6). N 63.5327778 E 29.1983333 After a leisurely breakfast
we learn from a sturdy biker, arriving to occupy one of the camp cottages at Ristijärvi,
that a Convention of 50 (fifty) motorbikes are due for the weekend and 'it may
be a leettel noisy'! He does give us a Finnish flag badge each by way of
apology. We pay the warden (who had somehow forgotten to warn us about this!),
phone Hyvärilä to check winter opening and beat a hasty retreat from the cold
lake shore. It's 24 miles
south down E63/rd 5 to Kajaani, a large town (there are even parking meters).
Here we turn southeast on rd 6, soon pausing at Lidl on the right of the
highway before continuing to the junction with rd 73 at 90 miles. Left here
onto rd 73, through the pleasant town of Nurmes and on to the Hyvärilä complex,
another old favourite on the side of Lake Pielinen.
Between the hotel
and the youth centre buildings, there are eight parking places with hook-ups
for winter campers, where we are joined later by two vans. The free WiFi works
here and we have the use of hot showers in the hotel basement sauna. In the low
season, devoid of holidaymakers, it suits us perfectly; this is our fourth stay.
My ACSI Report: “An extensive holiday centre on Lake
Pielinen, next to a golf course, 3 miles from the small town of Nurmes. All
types of accommodation, ranging from seasonal camping and cabins to a youth
hostel and a hotel. Out of season, motorhomes can still park here, with
electric hook-up and access to shower and WC in the hotel, for a small charge. Free WiFi at or near the hotel. Breakfast and
lunch buffets served daily - excellent value. Washing machine and drying room
also available. There is a great variety of indoor and
outdoor sports facilities, plenty of space to walk by the lake or in the
forest, and even a winter ski jump! Highly recommended at any time of year.” There is good TV reception, with a National
Geographic programme about Alaska in the evening.
.JPG) Click: magbazpictures.com/Nurmes At Hyvärilä Holiday & Youth Centre, Nurmes Next day, overcast
but dry, I pay €5 for the key to the Pesutupa (laundry room) in the hostel
basement. There is a new washing machine and a heated drying room down there,
in the former mental hospital. The scattered buildings all have an interesting
history. The
main house, now the hotel-restaurant-reception, was built in 1920 as a home for
the aged of the Kommun of Nurmes. The local authority also ran a farm here
(with stables, cowshed and pig sties), a 'poor house' for the destitute and a
hospital for the mentally and physically handicapped. The staff were housed on
the site and those patients and residents who were well enough also helped on
the farm. During the 1980's both the old people's home and the hospital closed,
buildings were renovated and Nurmes municipal camping site was transferred here
from the town centre. The Manor Hotel was rebuilt and enlarged in 1991,
followed by the building of camping cottages, lakeside sauna, etc. The Youth
Centre is partly financed by Finland's Ministry of Education and Culture. At the moment the elegant hotel is being
extended further, with its popular restaurant temporarily moved to the Youth Centre.
At 12.30 pm we go for the €9 lunch of the day, served from 10.30 am-1.30 pm: a
delicious all-you-can-eat buffet of lasagne, vegetables, salads, bread &
butter, soft drinks, chocolate mousse, red berries in jelly, and coffee! Finns
eat early and, as we leave, the staff gather to share what is left! Tempted by the ping-pong table in the
entrance hall, I round off the meal by beating Barry t table tennis, a game
neither of us has played for decades. Great fun! Then we wrap up
for a walk round the vast empty campsite, returning along by the lake and
through the woods, lush with berries and fungi. The many sports facilities
include beach volleyball, tennis, basketball, Frisbee golf, skateboarding, sailing,
canoes and cycles for hire, snomobile routes and even a ski jump, which we
bravely climb for an overview. There is also an indoor sports centre and a golf
course a short walk away, as well as a 3-mile cycle path into the town. Tempted by the
'third day free' offer (just €6 for the hook-up), we spend the next morning
catching up with correspondence and finishing an article entitled Autumn in Finland
that describes something of our way of life. We're not tempted to another lunch
buffet as it's Sunday and the restaurant is much busier, with a wider range of
dishes at a higher price. By afternoon the
wind has dropped, the sun shines and we take a cycle ride into and around
Nurmes: a total of 13 km, entirely on cycle paths. The
Orthodox church is a reminder of the Russian influence in Karelia.
The town itself has genuine character, with tree-lined
streets of 19thC wooden houses. The cemetery around a wooden church, on the
edge of the forest overlooking the lake, has a War Memorial area with the
graves of those killed in the Winter War (1939) and the Continuation War
(1941-45). They are beautifully kept – and not, of course, by the CWG as
Finland was not an ally, On the way back we cross the railway to the
lakeside in search of a café but find none open. Better luck at a Kioski opposite
the market place and bus station, where we sit outside with large coffees and
buns, all for €5. Finland is still our favourite Scandinavian country.
Nurmes to Ilomantsi, Karelia – 120 miles (alt 150
m/500 ft) Free car park by lake, next to Orthodox
Parish Church of Prophet Elijah. No facilities. N 62.68069 E 30.91942 The last Monday of
September brings a change in the weather, colder and very misty with no wind.
Needing a fill of water before leaving Nurmes, we fix our hose to the tap at
the back of the restaurant kitchen, by permission of the kind cook, though she
can't help with a dump point as the campsite facilities are locked up. Driving southeast
along rd 73 we soon spot a layby with a latrine – problem solved. Lieksa, the next
town down Lake Pielinen (34 miles), has shops (a choice of Lidl or K-Market)
and we eat lunch on K-Mkt car park. After the level crossing we turn off rd 73
onto the minor rd 522 (Via Karelia again). It leads us east through the
suburb of Pankakoski, then deteriorates into a little-used and
poorly-maintained road through the silent rolling forest. The tiny village of
Hatunkyla is just a memory, with a name plate, a café/hostel (closed) and an
old wooden windmill. We drive on, wondering if the road still goes through to
Hattuvaara, a remote settlement and army base close to the Russian border at
the easternmost point of the mainland EU. At 70 miles the
bitumen turns to dirt road, firm but bumpy for 15 slow miles through the misty
forest, devoid of traffic. Meeting tarmac with relief at Hattuvaara, we pass
the old shop and tiny church and turn into the large car park at the Taistelijan
Talo (Fighters House) Café/Museum next to the Border Guard
army post. We have spent the night here in the past for a
small charge, using it as a base to cycle out to the Easternmost Point of the EU,
or to walk the local historical trail to the Old Farm Museum. The tall
building of grey stone and wood was designed in 1988 as a tribute to Finland's war veterans and to those who rebuilt an
independent country after the Battles of Ilomantsi. When open, it has a good
cafe/lunch restaurant and a WWII museum, indoors and outside. It also sells
souvenirs and diplomas for visiting the Easternmost Point, 12 miles distant,
and arranges group tours. Today, though, the
Fighters House is locked up, the 4 electric points in its car park are switched
off and everywhere is deserted. With the mist coming down, we decide to
continue on rd 522 for 25 miles to the next town for a less lonely night. Ilomantsi
is Finland's easternmost town, at the heart of its most Orthodox municipality deep
in the Karelian forest. It has fuel, a good range of shops and a Tourist
Information office on the main street, with plenty of free maps and brochures
on the many delights of the region. It also claims the oldest Christian parish
in Finland (Orthodox, established in the early 15th C) and the most snow cover
in the country, lasting from November to April. Karelia (capital Joensu) has
been part of Finland since independence in 1917 (after being ruled by
both Sweden and Russia) but the border has been repeatedly redrawn, most
recently after World War II when some of eastern Karelia was lost once more to
Russia. We make
our way to the lakeside, where there are two splendid churches, both still in
use though only open outside service times during the summer (we visited them
in August 2006). The large wooden Lutheran church (1796) looks plain from the
outside but its interior walls are colourfully painted with about a hundred
angels. A little f urther along is a military cemetery and empty
parking area, where we park for the night. It's a short walk to the Finnish
Orthodox Church of St Elias/Prophet Elijah (1892) at the end of the road. The
largest wooden Orthodox sanctuary in Finland, designed by an architect from St
Petersburg, it has a most impressive exterior, very elegant in ochre-painted
wood with green roof and domes, though inside it's more severe: a blend of
Scandinavian simplicity and Orthodox iconography. The doors are locked but information boards (in Finnish, English and
Russian) tell its story.
There has been a
church on this site since the 6th century (the fifth building being w recked in
1917) and reference is made to an Orthodox priest here in 1500. What is now
Western Finland turned Roman Catholic during the Crusades of the 13thC, then
Lutheran after the Reformation in the late 16thC, while Karelia remained
Orthodox. Today there is still a working Orthodox monastery/convent at Valamo (between
Joensu and Kuopio) that we visited in September 1999, the only such institution in
the Nordic countries, both moved after WWII from what is now Russian Karelia.
Over the
road from St Elias, a path leads past the Iljala Orthodox Meeting Centre and
down to the shore, where there is a little Orthodox cemetery under the trees. By 5.30 pm, dusk and thickening mist obscure the onward path through
lakeside woods and we are content to return to the car park, keep warm, have a
meal (burgers, followed by French Apple Tart, à la Lidl - or is Lidl masculine
in France?) and read. There is no TV signal here.
Click: magbazpictures.com/ilomantsi
Ilomantsi to Ruokkeen Lomakylä (Ruokkee Holiday
Village), Kesälahti, Karelia – 94 miles
Open all year. www.ruokkeenlomakyla.fi. €25.50 inc €2 discount for CKE Card, with 16
amp elec, excellent showers and cooking facilities in new service house. Free
WiFi throughout. N 61.9052778 E 29.6838889
Still misty next
morning as we drive southwest on rd 74 to Heinavaara (30 miles). Here we turn
south on rd 494 to Kähtelysvaara (dictionary: vaara = risk or danger!),
then rd 492, to join highway 6 at 45 miles, south of Joensu. This has neatly
bypassed the industrial/university city. Rd 6 (part of the Blue Route and still
signed Via Karelia) is a major thoroughfare on the eastern side of
Finland, one of the 7 highways radiating from Helsinki, yet it's just 2 lanes
with a 100 km speed limit! The light traffic includes logging trucks.
At 87 miles near
Kesälahti we stop to check out a campsite by the lake behind the roadside
Karjalan Kievarille (= Karelian Hostelry). The restaurant is open (serving a
€10 lunch buffet) but the empty campsite is muddy, with soft uneven grass
pitches, cold uncleaned facilities and WiFi only in the restaurant. Declining
to pay €22 for this, we continue 4 miles down rd 6, then turn right for 3 miles
on a narrow sealed road to a better site we used 2 years ago, at the end of a
peninsula by a large lake at Ruokkee.
It costs a little
more but has excellent modern heated facilities (and a café, though the
restaurant is closed). My ACSI Report:
“This
is a large holiday village on a lakeside, with many static caravans, cabins and
bungalows for rent. There is also an area for tourers, which is very quiet now
the summer is over. It is set on a forested peninsula, a 5 km
drive from main road number 6, along a narrow lane (not gravel).
Out of season the restaurant is closed but
there are good facilities, including a large kitchen equipped with cookers etc.
The lake is ideal for boating and fishing and there is a children's playground
with mini-golf. The free site WiFi worked most of the time!
This is our second visit: a useful stopover
on the Via Karelia.”
At Ruokkeen Lomakylä (Ruokkee Holiday Village),
Kesälahti
Opening our
kitchen blind next morning, I am thrilled to see a pretty little Crested Tit
for the first time, perched on the trunk of a tall pine tree right outside the
window. Excitedly reaching for the Birds of Europe book, I learn that they are
the only Tit to stay in the southern part of Scandinavia throughout the year.
Their habitat is indeed coniferous forest, where the female will make a hole in
a rotten tree stump for nesting. Amazingly, they survive the winter by hiding
seeds behind the bark of trees for a winter store, so that is what it was
doing. I wonder how that works, how many seeds are needed, and why they don't
migrate south?
Making good use of
the camp WiFi, I book the Tallink-Silja ferry (Helsinki to Tallinn, Estonia)
for the afternoon of Sunday, 1 October, to make a reluctant departure from
Finland. I also phone the final two campsites on our route to check opening
times. Camping Huhtiniemi at Lappeenranta confirms they will be open (closing 1
Oct), while Messilä near Lahti have a receptionist who doesn't speak English/German/French
and hangs up on me. We'll have to trust that they're open all year, as listed.
After lunch we
have a 2-hour walk in the woods: longer than expected as one path leads to
another with no landmarks of any kind. With lake shore on three sides, we lose
all sense of direction, the occasional holiday home is empty and dusk is
falling before we regain a recognised track. Next time, take the SatNav! But
the silent forest is magnificent, walking beneath tall trees on springy moss,
studded with berries and fungi, it's like stepping on memory foam.
Approaching the
campsite again, I notice another little bird, a Coal Tit, trapped inside the
glazed veranda of a lakeside cottage and trying to exit through the glass.
Luckily, it's not locked and we manage to rescue this inhabitant. A quick meal
(omelette and the last of the French Apple Tart) is followed by a National
Geographic documentary on Finnish TV – the tragic events of JFK's last days in
Texas.
Next morning, another
fine autumn day, we take an hour's walk in the other direction but all the
paths end at weekend hideaways, some still under construction, some with nasty
guard dogs. City-dwelling Finns come here to get away from it all, and bring it
all with them.
In the afternoon
Barry cleans the motorhome down at the camp's pressure-hose car wash (price
€2), while I have the excellent camp kitchen to myself to do some baking (lemon
drizzle cake and steak pie – one in each oven at different temperatures). After
dinner there is another National Geographic programme to watch, one of a series
reporting on plane crash investigations. It does not encourage flying; I hope
they don't have one on ferry disasters before the weekend!
Kesälahti to Camping Huhtiniemi, Lappeenranta,
Karelia – 97 miles
Open12 May-1 Oct. www.huhtiniemi.com. €25 inc €4 discount for CKE Card, with16 amp
elec, showers and cooking facilities. Free WiFi near services building. N
61.0513889 E 28.1361111
Returning 3 miles
to highway 6 we turn south parallel with the railway, sad now to be leaving for
Helsinki and the ferry. At Särkisalmi we have a coffee break at the ABC truck
stop (plenty of parking space, fuel, self-service café). It is OK to park
overnight at any ABC services in Finland, though it would not be very quiet.
The cafés and toilets are popular with the truckers at all hours.
Continuing down rd
6, we pass very close to the Russian border, lying across a lake to our left at
Jouko. At about 60 miles, we slip past Imatra on 5 miles of dual carriageway,
busy with logging trucks. The smoking chimneys of a couple of factories and
wood processing plants are a shock to the system after weeks of near-pristine
wilderness. Rd 62 from Imatra leads to Svetogorsk, just over the border, but not
for us.
Before
Lappeenranta, we turn left at 83 miles onto rd 13, along which our SatNav marks
a Lidl shop. It seems unlikely, as this is the empty road to another border
crossing, but 3 miles along there is not only Lidl but also a huge store called
Rajamarket (similar to Sweden's Dollar Stores). All the cars and customers are
Russian and we assume they have a local entry agreement at the border, just 13
miles away at Nuijama. We stock up at Lidl, take a quick look in Raja (buying
nothing) and eat our lunch under the curious scrutiny of Soviet shoppers. It is
8°C outside, at 2.30 pm.
Back on rd 6, we
take exit 51 at 95 miles and follow the signs for 2 miles to Lappeenranta's
campsite on the edge of Lake Saimaa. The youth hostel at the entrance has
closed down and there is only one other caravan on the campsite, where the
season ends in 2 days' time. The facilities are barely adequate, in need of a
clean and smelling of bad drains. I heat a pizza up in our own oven and report
to ACSI:
“The campsite was soon
to close for the winter but that is no excuse for the grubby state of the
kitchen and the smell of sewers in the uninviting toilet/shower block. The only
cooker in the kitchen was unusable, having no shelves, and the microwave needed
a good clean. The youth hostel at the entrance looked
abandoned, with camp reception now in a new cabin. There was no sign of a
restaurant, just a small cafe (closed) at reception.
The free WiFi worked only on pitches very
close to the services.
It
is surprising that this popular tourist town on Lake Saimaa has such a dismal
campsite, charging far too much due to its position. With
no control at the entrance, and Reception only staffed from 3 pm to early
evening, there was no security and an itinerant couple used the showers and
kitchen next morning!
One
night was enough for us.”
We have better memories of a previous visit in
August 2006, when we took the summertime visa-free day excursion by boat along
the Saimaa Canal to the once-Finnish port of Vyborg in Russia, returning by
coach – but on that occasion we parked on Lappeenranta harbour overnight, a
much better option. Lappeenranta to Camping Messilä, Hollola, Nr Lahti, South Finland – 98
miles Open
all year. www.campingmessila.fi. €31 inc €2 discount for CKE Card, with16 amp
elec, showers and cooking facilities. Free WiFi near reception/restaurant. N
61.0180556 E 25.5627778
On a cold drizzly Saturday morning, the
air temperature reaches 7°C by
10.30 am as we continue along rd 6, which soon turns into a dual carriageway
with Elk fencing on both sides. We're following Autumn as it also travels
south, gilding the forest and the verges of the highway that runs between railways
tracks to our left and a lake, Kivijärvi,
to the right. The cab radio finds 'Radio Nostalgi' playing Elvis and the Beach
Boys, as well as Finnish pop and Abba. Who says nostalgia isn't what it used to
be?!
After
passing Kouvala, rd 6 turns off for Helsinki via Porvoo but we continue west on
rd 12 to Lahti, where three enormous ski jumps and twin radio masts overlook
the busy town. It is almost a suburb/winter playground of the capital, only 65
miles away by motorway. A dual carriageway takes us through the centre of Lahti
(= Bay) to Hollola, where a quieter road turns off north to Messilä. We pass a golf course and ski runs before arriving at an
extensive campsite on Lake Vesijärvi. It
is very nearly full, with both statics and tourers, and the price is unreasonably
high. However, we have a ferry booked for tomorrow and we know that the other
site near Lahti (used 2 years ago) - Mukkula Camping - has closed. Nor does the
alternative of a noisy night on the motorway services en route to Helsinki
appeal.
The
Receptionist explains that the site is so full because they are having an
end-of-summer celebration, with a free lunch of soup and cheese! After she
suggests a distant pitch which doesn't get WiFi (whatever she said), I persuade
her to let us have one of the places behind Reception that are 'reserved',
though for whom she doesn't know! My ACSI Report expresses disgust at our
treatment:
“Allocated
a non-negotiable place for our motorhome that was a long way from the services.
We were assured the WiFi worked all over the site but this was a lie – it only
worked on very few pitches directly behind reception. When we asked to move
there, we were told that all the free places were reserved. This was another
lie, since we were given a pitch there when we threatened to leave! And the
price was outrageous – the most we'd paid in a long tour of Finland.”
We
do partake of the lunch (tasty goulash soup, crackers & cheese, cold
drinks) served in the courtyard from 2 pm-4 pm, then have a stroll by the
marina. It's a long way in every sense from the peaceful atmospheric lakes
further north!
Our
last night of Finnish TV is rather sad: Glen Campbell's farewell tour, when he
was in the early stages of Alzheimer's. The Rhinestone Cowboy died only last
month (Aug 2017) at the age of 81. This is followed by an American film 'Still Alice'
about a woman with early onset Alzheimer's, which makes us think about a couple
of friends who are suffering this dreadful disease and the effect it has on
their families. OCTOBER 2017 Lahti to Tallink-Silja
Ferry Terminal, West Harbour, Helsinki – 79 miles (sea level!) The harbour is poorly
signed 'Västra Hamnen'. The terminal check-in is at N 60.148626 E 24.913754. Timetable and Bookings on www.tallinksilja.com/en/web/int/tallink-shuttle-tallinn-tips
Away at 9.30 am on a damp Sunday morning, 1st
October, we drive 8 miles via rd 296 to join rd 4/E75 at junction 16. The
motorway sign says 'Helsinki 100 km' and the weather is calm; no wind to deter
us from sailing. We're always sad to leave Scandinavia but it's time to retreat
south with the migrating birds. It is already snowing in the north of the country.
After 28 miles we slip off at exit 13 for a
fill of diesel at the large services, then back on E75 to exit 3 for the Keha
Ring (rd 101) westwards. This is a longer route to the ferry terminal but we
find it much easier than driving through central Helsinki. The ring road is
very quiet, with no roundabouts and little traffic on this cold drizzly morning
(air temperature 9°C at 11.30 am).
We turn east on rd 51, a dual carriageway, at
the end of which there are signs for Västra
Hamnen (West Harbour) for the sharp-eyed to follow through various
junctions. At the ferry terminal we join the check-in queue one
hour ahead as advised, with time for a quick bite of lunch before boarding for the 1.30 pm departure on
the good ship 'Superstar'.
The 2-hour crossing to Tallinn, Estonia's
capital, goes smoothly. We pass the time reading over a coffee and browsing the
on-board supermarket (for a supply of chocolate and liquorice allsorts which
may, or may not, be kept for Christmas!). The ferry is busy, mainly passengers
returning from a weekend in Helsinki or a bus tour in Finland. There are no
other motorhomes on board! (continued at: Through the Baltics to Greece Autumn 2017)
|