Buying snow Rosendal

Buying snow Rosendal

Buying snow Rosendal

Buying snow Rosendal

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Buying snow Rosendal

Rain possible around am. The Weather Channel uses data, cookies and other similar technologies on this browser to optimise our website, and to provide you with weather features and deliver non-personalised ads based on the general location of your IP address. Find out more in our Privacy Policy. Daily 21 Today. Hourly Weather - Rosendal, Vestland, Norway. Rain Rain possible around am. Tuesday, October 22 Scattered Showers. UV Index 0 of Rain Amount 0. Few Showers. Light Rain. Rain Amount 2. Rain Amount 5. Rain Amount 3. Rain Amount 1. Rain Amount 0 mm. Tropical Storm Oscar. Mapbox Logo. Flood-Damaged Car? Our Cookies. Your Choice. Manage Cookie Settings Arrow Right. Hidden Weather Icon Symbols.

Rosendal, Vestland, Norway Weather

Buying snow Rosendal

Eight days after the accident and my back is much better. In another week I should be able to hike cross-country with the big pack. A baron and baroness built their own little castle here in the early Over the next couple hundred years the barons managed to squeeze hundreds of farms out of the hands of their rightful owners all around this region. Their technique, apparently, was to loan money to farmers in need, then snatching up the farms in the loans were not paid on time. Once they got hold of a farm, they owned the buildings and land, but let the families stay on as tenant farmers, demanding up to half of their annual production in rent. Sometime around the owners of the barony gave the estate to the University of Norway in Oslo. At that point, farmers were allowed to buy their farms back. But even then, they did not get a good deal, and many were in debt for years for the privilege of owning the land their families had worked for four centuries. Each summer it hosts art exhibits and Shakespeare performances by an English theater group. A great hostess. From there another couple of bus rides including a 7-mile tunnel under the Folgefonn Glacier and I arrived at the house of my friends Alis and Halldor near the very end of Hardanger Fjord. Alis took me for a walk across the Hardanger Bridge, a 3-year-old suspension bridge that is one of the longest in the world. Its north end leads right into a massive tunnel under the mountains. Talk about the Hall of the Mountain King! Three days ago I crossed the Hardanger Bridge on a bus and arrived on my side of the fjord, the north side, where I lived for a year back in Another hour of driving along the narrow road that has been blasted into the side of the cliffs rising out of the deep waters of Hardanger Fjord brought me within hailing distance of Hovland, the farm I ran from May to June Both have professional, full-time jobs, and are taking night courses, and running a large sheep farm cooperatively with two other neighbors. This past winter they kept ewes in the co-op barn they built a few years ago. This spring the ewes gave birth to more than lambs. Everthing would be going well except for the fact that they usually turn the sheep out of the barn after spring lambing as soon as the grass has grown high enough to support grazing. But this year it was so cold, wet and snowy that there was nothing to graze until June. They ran out of the grass and silage they harvested last summer and had to start buying feed before they could turn the animals loose. Now the mountains are still covered in snow so the sheep are grazing the fields around the farm down to the nub. I helped them move one third of the flock from one field to another yesterday. But first we headed them into the barn where Morten, Ingunn and one of their partners, Jon Ove, checked their udders for infection, and their feet for overgrown toenails. Two days ago, on Saturday June 27, I finally hiked into the mountains. This is a neighboring farm to Hovland, a farm that I ran for a year when I was 20 years old back in In the meantime, the snow has been slowly melting in the mountains, and on Saturday I decided it was high time to, well, hike high. A woman would live in the cabin and milk the cows morning and evening, and make cheese and butter, which boys from the farm would fetch every few days. Nowadays milk cows spend summers in home pastures, but sheep still get to live in the mountains for four months or so each year. But this year, due to the snow, their summer vacation will be 4 or 6 weeks shorter. Below are photos from Blomseter, then Hyrting, and the trail just beyond Hyrting —this shows you how much snow there is at 2, ft above sea level. Usually sheep are grazing here at this time of year. Rosendal Barony Spoon at Rosendal June 18, Eight days after the accident and my back is much better. The Hardanger Bridge. Opened Span between towers is 1, meters, which is 30 meters longer than Golden Gate Bridge. Tunnel at the end of Hardanger Bridge The fork a thet end of Hardangerfjord. All that snow in the mountains has to melt before I can start hiking there. June 21, Three days ago I crossed the Hardanger Bridge on a bus and arrived on my side of the fjord, the north side, where I lived for a year back in The mountains are across the fjord from us. The solid white block of snow is the Folgefonn Glacier, which received 20 meters of snow this winter. Moving sheep down the road. They invited me to a birthday party at the farm on Saturday. Looking out across Hardanger Fjord. June 29, Two days ago, on Saturday June 27, I finally hiked into the mountains. Ten feet of snow just beyond Hyrting on June Sheep are usually grazing here by the middle of June. Blomseter Hyrting. The ugly towers in the background were built a few years ago. People in Hardanger fought for years against them, trying to get the government to string the electric lines along the bottom of the fjord instead. But the people lost. One of the cabins at Hyrting. This wood and stone shed is probably a couple of hundred years old. This is a building on the Teigland farm where the long wooden poles for hay-making fences were stored. Another outbuilding on the Teigland farm. This small building used to be used for the hay crop that was harvested in the nearby fields, which are some ways distant from the farm and barn. Many barns in western Norway were built into hillsides, so it was easy to build a ramp from the steep hill into the upper level of the barn, the hay loft. Here is a miniature ramp. The bridge between ramp and barn is a very large, flat piece of stone. So this photo and the next one are not stones and wood. But fun, yes? Norwegian fjord horse. This is the kind of horse that supplied my horsepower at Hovland. There was no tractor at the farm back then in This is what oncoming traffic looks like when you are sitting in a bus driving along the cliffs of Hardanger Fjord. The driver who has the shortest backing-up distance to a turnout is the one who backs up. Subscribe Subscribed. Sign me up. Already have a WordPress. Log in now. Loading Comments Email Required Name Required Website. Design a site like this with WordPress.

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