I have created a new blog. Just click on http://murphyoslo2010.blogspot.com/.
Thank you for your continued interest.
I got stuck in an elevator today. The rescue was quick and painless but my palms were sweaty.
Never a dull moment.
km
I am in Norway June 1-15 to cover Oslo 2010, the International Polar Year (IPY) early results science conference. Scientists from Greenland, Iceland, Russia, Alaska and, of course, Canada will be there. As a freelance northern journalist, I'm there to find out about climate change research in the Canadian Arctic. I'm also there to eat pickled herring and enjoy a beer at Macks, billed as the the world's most northerly brewery. Skål!
I have created a new blog. Just click on http://murphyoslo2010.blogspot.com/.
Thank you for your continued interest.
I got stuck in an elevator today. The rescue was quick and painless but my palms were sweaty.
Never a dull moment.
km



This truly is...
I also visited the Polar Museum. This museum pays homage to polar explorer Roald Amundsen, amung other Norwegian explorers. Amundsen goes down in the history as the first person to successfully sail from east to west through the Northwest Passage in 1906. Not to be confused with Henry Larsen who captained the St. Roch through the passage from west to east in 1942. Dare I say, Amundsen is to Norway as Gretzky is to Canada:a national hero. I am open to being corrected.


The sidewalks are tidy and interesting. I’ve not seen any poverty. No panhandling. No shopping carts. Just loud, young military men on leave in search of young women in crazy shoes and short skirts. This is the place.
I noticed several men dressed like this, rushing like this. Not all look as relaxed as this fellow who offered a little wave.
Cell phones are everywhere. Everywhere. More than Yellowknife.
his buddies.
Which his broad shouldered friends were happy to do..while talking on their cell phones.

What a trip! Thirteen hours to an area so remote my Lonely Planet guidebook does not even mention it.

Finnsnes is not designed for tourists, which is weird given ferries arrive there several times a day, including the massive Hurtigruten. There are no museums, no galleries, and no attractions in this small city of 4,000 (a town conspicuously absent from my guidebook).I had more than four hours to pass, so I took the advice of a hotel worker and walked to the apex of a large bridge linking Finnsnes to the town of Senja. He said view from the bridge “spectacular” and he was right. What he failed to mention was the bridge’s sidewalk was extremely narrow and exposed to passing traffic
At the Finnsnes bus station I nearly stepped on the wrong bus to Gryllefjord, which happens when schedules are posted in a foreign language (my fault, nobody else) . Once on the correct bus, we twisted and turned along a road so narrow cars routinely pulled to one side to let us pass. When we arrived in Gryllefjord at 2 pm I was delighted but a little green around the gills. Before disembarking, I showed the driver my crumpled bus schedule and pointed to the return time. “Yah, Yah,” he said with a smile. “Please, please,” I thought to myself. I didn’t plan on eating. I packed my own salami and blue cheese sandwich but when the only bathroom (or water closet -WC) I found was in the town’s one café it seemed only fitting to buy lunch given I’d stunk up their one bathroom. Canadian guilt.Feeling brave I ordered a whale burger. “I can do that,” the owner said not very convincingly (more due to effort than availability) “but we also have the buffet. Come. See," she instructed. I ended up with a delicious spread of fish, homemade tartar sauce, and bread.


Just before I left, the owner’s daughter and grandson stopped in for lunch.
I spent the rest of the time wandering the streets in awe of the sea to sky mountains, cute houses and unpredictable weather.
And then …the wind blew the clouds away.
The bus, driven by a different driver, arrived at 5:05 pm sharp. Indeed all travel, whether by air, boat or bus has been remarkably punctual. I plopped myself down and stared out the window.
And even though it appears we are driving on the left side of the road we are actually right in the middle. (No audio with this clip)
Hard to believe it is June (Also no audio with this clip.)
The rest of the trip, including the ferry back to Tromso, was unremarkable, or I should say without incident. Back in my hotel room at the Clarion Hotel Bryggen, I pulled open a Tuborg (a Danish beer) and stared at my computer. I wanted to work. I also wanted to check out the rooftop hot tub. But the call of my bed was greater than the call of the wild. Can somebody please close the curtain. I need to sleep.
This video entry is dedicated to my mom, Marjorie Murphy, who sent me an email wondering why I was posting little black rectangular boxes. Of course, these little black boxes are video entries but without an achor image like regular photos. Just click on the bottom left hand corner to play. I love my mom.
A big thank-you to Joe Hill of CBC North Yellowknife for suggesting the Kodak Zi8 cam corder. It is fantastic! Small, easy to use and great video and audio quality. The external mic makes all the difference. It is audio even Phil Morck would approve of.
After that, I headed to the tourist office to plan out tomorrow's trip.



