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August 9, 2019

Cruise offers close and long looks at Norway's fjords

By BRIAN WITTE
Associated Press

Image courtesy of iStock Photo [enlarge]
A trip through Norway’s fjords provides ever-changing scenery.

HELLESYLT, Norway — In a journey full of waterfalls, an impressive cascade is just around the bend in Norway's famous fjords.

Whether it's the popular Seven Sisters, toppling 820 feet down the stone walls of renowned Geirangerfjord, or the huge flow rushing along the nearby village of Hellesylt, melting snow brings a major display of falling water.

A trip on a cruise ship in spring and summer provides a close view of the high cliffs that tower over the narrow inlets. Unlike cruises that spend long periods at sea between ports, a trip through Norway's fjords provides ever-changing scenery, with no need for a strenuous hike.

Those are there in abundance, though, at stops along the way.

Ports further north include pleasantly walkable cities like Alesund, rebuilt after a devastating fire in 1904 in the Art Nouveau style of architecture. And there's Trondheim, home to the northernmost gothic cathedral and the coronation church of kings.

A two-week cruise can even get you up into the Arctic Circle, dubbed the Land of the Midnight Sun this time of year, with 24-hour daylight, and on to Europe's northern-most point and more scenic cruising by the rocky cliffs of North Cape.

For more about cruising along Norway's coast, check out the latest episode of the “Get Outta Here” podcast at https://tinyurl.com/cruisingthefjords.




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