End of April winter in Tromsø
When I woke up yesterday morning (28. April) and looked outside the window of my living room I was pretty surprised. I didn’t rain in the night, it had been snowing.
Round 15 cm of fresh snow had fallen within the last six hours and everything looked wintry again. In the centre of Tromsø however, 88 metres lower in elevation than my apartment only five cm of snow had fallen and the cars had smashed it to brown slush. What a difference!
Home again I watched a ptarmigan in the back yard. First it picked on a twig of a tree, then it dug itself into the snow and rested there for some hours. Couldn’t it see me behind the window pane or did it just ignore me? In the night it was gone.
Today I took my skis to work so that I could ski back home from the lake Prestvannet. This time the forecast was correct: we got a blue sky, the sun was shining at temperatures round +3 °C. At the harbour in the centre the view was quite spring-like.
Taking the bus from the center up to Prestvannet takes only 5 minutes, but there it is still winter season with snow depths round 90 cm. It’s astonishing what a difference in altitude of less than 100 metres can do.
Time to ski back, preferably not on the tracks but through the forests. After four kilometres on skis and 840 metres by foot I was home.










2 comments to “End of April winter in Tromsø”
Johanna 2025-04-30 21:25
Stell Dir vor : Krokus und Narzissen im März , plötzliche Explosion der Magnolienbäume und nun steht der Flieder in voller Blüte……und Du bist immer noch im Schnee.
Vermisst Du den Jahreszeitenwechsel wie Du ihn von früher kennst denn nicht ? LG und noch viel Spaß mit der Winterunendlichkeit…..
way-up-north 2025-05-02 06:26
Liebe Johanna.
Der Jahreszeitenwechsel kommt ja. Ich finde es sogar schön, dass hier so lange winterliche Verhältnisse herrschen. Aber ich freue mich auch auf den Frühling. Völlig ok, dass er spät kommt, aber ich finde es manchmal schade, wie kurz der Frühling hier ist. Vor drei Tagen habe ich diesen Artikel geschrieben, in sechzehn Tagen beginnt der Polartag mit Mitternachtssonne, in etwa sechs Wochen ist Sommersonnenwende.