2001 #1 July 17th Arrival in Norway
From Phyllis:
We are finally in Norway after 14 months of trying—we
initially sent off our application for temporary residence in
May of 2000 and we received our permission, ten months
later, in March of 2001, just as we were leaving our winter
home at St. Katharine Dock, London, England.
Then began the boatyard saga! We had arranged to spend about
three weeks at a boatyard in Essex to replace the transmission
and get the annual haul out completed. Though it actually took
longer than three weeks, we were finally ready to head for
Norway at the end of May. On May 24th (my 40th birthday) we
went for a sail and broke an intermediate shroud. We didn't
lose the mast, thank goodness, but the result was another four
weeks in another boatyard in Suffolk and all new rod rigging
for Morgan's Cloud (the most expensive birthday present I've
ever had!). While waiting for the rigging we cleaned all 14
winches on the boat and gave the entire rig a very thorough
going over, of course finding many other things that needed
fixing. As one of the riggers told John: "Just stop looking
and you'll stop finding things to fix!" So we finally stopped
looking and, after fully provisioning the boat for another 10
month stint, left the UK directly for Norway on July 2nd.
The passage across the North Sea was very benign weather-wise.
We managed to sail most of the way, dodging a lot of oil rigs
and forging our way through some fog patches. However, when we
arrived in Norway in the early morning of July 5th, it was
beautiful—a full moon, no real darkness, and a terrain
reminiscent of Southern Labrador—a million outlying rocky
islands layered with mist and rows of mountains receding in
ever-darkening blues. It felt like we were coming home.
We spent three days alongside a town dock in a lovely little
village on an island halfway between Stavanger and Bergen. We
left there on the 7th and are now alongside the public dock in
downtown Bergen, a cosmopolitan and interesting city.
Since this is high season for Norwegian sailors, the docks are
busy with boats rafted several deep all around. Everyone
is friendly, however, and we have already made friends
with a couple from Oslo and a couple from Bergen—a good
start to a hopefully enjoyable year.
We are planning to leave Bergen on a quick passage to
Trondheim in order to explore points north while the weather
is still relatively settled.

The
Norwegian Cruising Guide is a mine of
information on sailing in Norway. See
www.norwegiancruisingguide.com.

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Last
edited on
Saturday December 01, 2007
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mean or imply that the high latitudes are anything other than a
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Decisions to cruise the high latitudes, where you go, and how
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but that does not mean it will work for you, or that it is the
best, or even a good way for you to do things. |
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