Ekkerøy and Nesseby
This article is part of the series “2018-03: Varanger peninsula”.
Day 34 and 35 of my winter journey 2018
After some days in Ytre Kiberg Annika and I travelled to the next place: Ekkerøy. This village, 50 km southwest from Kiberg lies on the peninsula Ekkerøya that is connected to land by a natural dam with sandy beaches on each side. We already had taken a short walk at one of the beaches last week, where we had met H., one of the locals.
We arrived in Ekkerøy three days ago. The day before yesterday I took a morning promenade with my camera. I made some photos, but the light was a bit dull.
After breakfast Annika and I started a tour round the island, partly with snowshoes, partly on foot. There’s a cliff at the southern shore that looks quite impressive. At the eastern tip there’s an old wooden sea mark. The northern shore is quite flat and was more snowy. Outgoing tide already had started so we walked the last meters on the beach until we came to our wonderful house, that we’ve rented for four days.
As you might have noticed almost all photos shown in this blog have a landscape format. I have a project however that might involve having portrait format photos as well. Therefore I walked to the beach yesterday morning to find a motif fitting portrait format, not too easy in a landscape that’s extensive and mainly quite flat. It was almost high tide and it was quite cold – -12 °C and very windy. The water at the beach was almost of a slushy consistency and each wave flushed new liquid slush to the beach where it froze to a wavy line of ice. That motif went quite well in portrait format, I just have to practise my view.
(I have to think over the design of my blog, these portrait format images are way too large.)
It cleared up more and more and the sun shone from a blue sky. We took the car to Nesseby, 50 km away, where I planned to make some photos of the Nesseby Church. The more we came to the more sheltered parts of the fjord, the colder it got and the open water of the Barents Sea smoked. This phenomenon is called sea smoke and happens, when cold air lies over the open sea.
From the harbour Nesseby Church could be seen through the foggy sea smoke. It is located quite exposed at the thinnest part of a peninsula and can be spotted from long, when weather is good. After looking from the harbour we continued to the church and had a closer look.
We took a short detour to Varangerbotn. There it was even colder with -19 °C but fair weather and hardly any wind.
It’s fascinating to have a look at the fjord of the same name. At the end it’s completely frozen with many icy humps, but on the way back (and north again) it opened and sea smoke appeared again.
In Vadsø I took a promenade on the island Vadsøya to have a look at the airship mast. Since I’ve been a child I’m a huge fan of balloons and airships and it was interesting to see this mast, built in 1926 and only used twice: by Umberto Nobile and Roald Amundsen for their expedition over the North Pole with the airship Norge in the same year and on Nobile’s flight with the airship Italia two years later.
Home again we remembered that H. who we’d met the week before had asked us in for coffee some day. At 4 o’clock we knocked at the door of her house and met her husband T. who directly invited us to come in. H. was visiting a friend and would join us later. We talked and talked, about languages, life in Northern Norway in general and Ekkerøy in special and we had a good time (and got coffee, cakes, cheese, grapes and red wine). When we left H. and T. – two of the round twenty permanent residents in Ekkerøy – it was already 9 pm and sky was dark … beside of a beautiful aurora dancing above the northern shore.
It took some minutes to walk home, put on warmer clothes, get camera and tripod and the aurora already had weakened a lot when I took the photo below. So it is with northern lights: intensity can change very fast, often within seconds.
Today we have another day in Ekkerøy. Our plans so far: not any. That’s nice, too!
4 comments to “Ekkerøy and Nesseby”
Johanna 2018-03-08 10:08
Wow ! Was für wunderschöne Aufnahmen !
Wie gerne würde ich dies alles einmal mit eigenen Augen sehen……..
ich freue mich soooo für euch :-)
Andreas 2018-03-08 10:34
Hi Olaf!
Du scheinst geradezu vor Erzählfreude zu explodieren. Das ist großartig, und dein Blog hat schon längst eine ganz eigene Magie entwickelt – wegen der Bilder *und* der Texte. Ich schaue täglich rein und brauche dafür nicht mal RSS. ;-) Mein Lieblingssatz in diesem Artikel ist übrigens:
„Our plans so far: not any. That’s nice, too!“
Ma H B 2018-03-08 17:51
Dear O and A !
What a unaffected scenery and your fantastic photos too !
I believe, all my jackets are not warm enough for this area.
Therefore I have to stay at home – sorry !!
Yours Ma
way-up-north 2018-03-15 20:58
Hallo Andreas, danke für das Kompliment, welches ich um so mehr zu schätzen weiß, weil es von Dir kommt. Und das ist jetzt keine Spur ironisch gemeint.
Dear Ma H B. If you came in winter I surely could help you out with warm winter clothes even though they might not match your personal style.