I’ve always been fascinated by H.C. Andersen’s story Snow Queen – the story is enchanting and
the Snow Queen herself is a very puzzling character. One Saturday morning in
January I was searching information about the story (I don’t even quite
remember what it was I wanted to know) when I ran into an article according to
which Snow Queen lived in Svalbard; this is what Andersen himself claimed. I
googled Svalbard to see some pictures and half an hour later I booked
flights. That’s where I was earlier this week, in a settlement called
Longyearbyen, 78°13’ parallel north.
At the moment I’m slightly too confused to say anything about the days I
spent there. The place was simply surreal, very plain and barren but uncommonly
beautiful and dreamlike. Perhaps I’ll write more about that later, now I’m
still trying to organize my thoughts about that otherworldly place.
A couple of things most on my mind right now:
1) Nature. It’s unbelievable. The temperature was -7°C and the sun was
ridiculously bright. The light blue Greenland Sea seemed magical being
surrounded by white mountains; the plane’s windows were covered in ice crystals
when we were landing; the landscapes made me run out of words the first minute
I saw them and still do. And no, I didn't see polar bears. It was still worth
it.
2) Norwegians are nice. One thing that makes travelling alone so cool is
that it’s much easier to start conversations with strangers. I chatted with a
really nice Norwegian family (and the wonderful thing is that they kept on
being nice after they heard I was Finnish which is quite surprising after the
hockey game on Monday). Also, one night when I went to the lobby of the hostel
I was staying in to have a cup of tea the kind receptionist told me I could
have it for free if I didn’t tell anyone. How nice is that? Then again at Oslo airport I
was trying to get rid of my Norwegian coins and went to a café. However, I had
one crown too little and the wonderful waitress took the missing coin from
their tip box. I really hope we here in Finland will be able to give travelers and
tourists as nice experiences as the ones I got in Norway. I want to believe it’s
possible if we just step up and stop being so grumpy.
3) Safety. In Svalbard people really respect each other’s space and
property. In a place like that it’s easy to trust which is something I really
value.
4) Library. It’s probably odd that I spent some time in Longyearbyen
Library since I don’t know Norwegian (written Norwegian is surprisingly
understandable if you speak Swedish, though). As I’ve brought up several times I
love books and feel at home when I’m surrounded by them. To me visiting the library
was more than natural. The Norwegian editions of J.R.R. Tolkien’s and C.S.
Lewis’ books seem very beautiful.
Kuulostaa ihanalta matkalta! Toi osuus missä kerrot miten kaikki oli niin ystävällisiä, niin ihmeellistä miten tommoset ns. pienet jutut tuntuu tosi isoilta kun sellaiseen ei ole tottunut täällä Suomessa. Ja noi kirjojen kannet, aivan ihanan näköisiä!
VastaaPoistaOli todella hieno matka, epätodelliselta tuntuu vieläkin!
VastaaPoistaNiinpä, taas sitä huomasi, miten pienillä asioilla voi tehdä toisen iloiseksi. Osattaisipa mekin niin eleettömästi ja helposti. En oikein ymmärrä, miten ystävällisyyden kynnys on täällä niin iso.
Nuo kirjat näyttivät kyllä ihanilta, niin sadunomainen tunnelma!