Gazing up at the towering cliff of a Norwegian fjord is to be reminded of the unstoppable power of nature.
Fjords were formed during the Ice Age as glaciers ground their way through the landscape to the coast. When the ice melted, sea water filled the huge valleys the glaciers had left behind.
Mountains around the fjords in Norway rise up to more than a thousand metres in places, and in some fjords the water is more than a thousand metres deep. That would have been a glacier two kilometres high. Imagine it.
On a day trip from Bergen we cruised through the narrow Nærøyfjord (on UNESCO’s World Heritage List) and Aurlandsfjord to reach the little village of Flåm, starting point of the famous Flåm Railway. This 20-kilometre track, from the bottom of the fjord back up to the mountains, is one of the world’s steepest standard-gauge rail lines.
It was a day of enjoying magnificent scenery, engineering excellence, and a close encounter with a Norwegian troll.
01/23/2019 at 3:56 am
It’s such a WONDERFUL country!! And such beautiful photos G2! Thank you for sharing! Ps. Mama, you’re so CUTE! Lucky that Troll didn’t steal you away from Greg! :0)
01/23/2019 at 7:37 pm
Haha! It was a close run thing, my darling! 😂❤️
01/22/2019 at 1:59 pm
I feel very sorry for Norwegian trolls that internet trolls are named after them.
01/21/2019 at 1:34 am
When I first saw your photos on my phone they looked a bit monochromatic but when I looked again on the PC realised I was so wrong. The light is so superb, great shots!
01/16/2019 at 10:10 pm
Breathtaking scenery and a new friend.